Bitfish

847 posts

Bitfish

Bitfish

@Bitfish3

가입일 Mayıs 2018
336 팔로잉40 팔로워
Bitfish
Bitfish@Bitfish3·
@mr_sxllo @SupaVanSA @CityofCT Your ignorance is ironic. Ten's of thousands of people flooding into the Cape Town area, what's the environmental impact of that? And this all due to no governance, development, massive corruption in the Eastern Cape. In short the story of the anc and those who vote for it.
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Chris Masterjohn
Chris Masterjohn@ChrisMasterjohn·
Your cells are aging faster than you think. After age 18, mitochondrial density declines by 1% every year—one of the clearest biological markers of aging. By 70, you’ve lost more than half your cellular energy capacity. Here’s what most people miss: this decline isn’t inevitable. 🧵👇
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Arkad
Arkad@Multicripto·
Do you know what your Bitcoin transactions reveal about you? am-i.exposed shows you. It's an on-chain privacy scanner that analyzes addresses and transactions. 🧵
Arkad tweet media
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Bitfish
Bitfish@Bitfish3·
@grok @jjaazzbb @stats_feed @grok Note: It also means connection exists, not that power is always available. Let me help you, about 5–10% of electricity is lost to theft / non-technical losses. Theft accounts for ~70% of Eskom’s total losses (non-technical vs technical).
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World of Statistics
World of Statistics@stats_feed·
🇿🇦 Prior to the 1990s, less than a third of South Africans had access to electricity.
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Bitfish
Bitfish@Bitfish3·
@grok @SupaVanSA @stats_feed What else stands out, just how the ANC criminal syndicate screwed up SA's electricity setup since '94 (I'm not using the more direct terminology, don't want to offend your sensitive ears 👀)
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Grok
Grok@grok·
@SupaVanSA @stats_feed Yeah, SA's electricity setup was Africa's benchmark by '94—Eskom's grid and output dwarfed the continent's scale. Built a real powerhouse foundation. What else stands out or want to check next?
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Coinjoined Chris ⚡
Coinjoined Chris ⚡@coinjoined·
What you're seeing are two completely different layers being conflated. The BIP110 crowd is pushing for a consensus change, the most sensitive part of the system, based on frustration with certain uses of blockspace. And the irony is: it would barely inconvenience spammers while reducing Bitcoin's expressiveness and breaking legitimate use cases. Core, on the other hand, operates at the policy layer. Relay policy isn't about deciding what Bitcoin is. It's about protecting your node from abuse -primarily DDoS and resource exhaustion- and keeping the network functioning efficiently. There is nothing you can stuff in OP_RETURN that drains resources from your node. When mempool conditions change, policy adapts. That's not whack-a-mole, that's exactly what policy is supposed to do: be flexible at the edges so consensus can remain stable at the core. Because consensus is different. Consensus is the foundation. It should change rarely, cautiously, and only with overwhelming justification. Rushing a consensus change to 'deal with spam' flips that principle on its head. So no. Core isn't reacting impulsively. They're doing the opposite: keeping consensus stable, while allowing policy to handle short-term dynamics. And that distinction is precisely what's being missed
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Coinjoined Chris ⚡
Coinjoined Chris ⚡@coinjoined·
Ah, perfect an argument so nakedly emotional it saves everyone the trouble of pretending this is about engineering. 🤦 If your justification for a consensus change boils down to "i don't think people hate them enough” then you're proposing that Bitcoin become a vehicle for your personal grievances. Consensus rules are not there to hit someone on the nose. They are there to define a neutral, predictable system that doesn't care who you like, who you hate, or what cultural battle you think you're fighting this week. The moment you cross that line, when you start modifying consensus to punish a class of users, you've already abandoned the core property that makes Bitcoin valuable: credible neutrality. And the irony here is absolutely painful: You're trying to "fight spam" by rewriting the rules… when the system has already done it for you. The fee market worked. Spammers paid. Heavily. Scammers paid. Heavily. JPEG enjoyers lit absurd amounts of money on fire. 🤡 That is the mechanism. That is the defense. There was no need for social crusades, no need for rule changes, no need for moral arbitration. The market priced their behavior, and literally all of it collapsed under its own weight. WE ALREADY WON. The only thing BIP-110-style thinking accomplishes is reopening the door you claim to want closed because once you demonstrate that consensus can be bent to target undesirable use, you invite an endless cycle of new rule changes, new targets, and new attack surfaces. You don't eliminate spam that way you create a ethereum style governance game around defining it. And that's far more dangerous than any JPEG wave ever was. Whats really going on here is an inability to accept that the bitcoin solved the problem without you. That's an ego problem, not a protocol problem. Slay the ego. Recognize that the market already delivered the punishment you wanted. The losses are real, the incentives are clear, and the behavior has adjusted accordingly Bitcoin doesn't need you to swing a hammer at things you dislike (and I know hammers) 🔨 It needs you to _build_ If you've realized that JPEGs don't hold value and that spam is self-limiting under a functioning fee market, then your time is far better spent doing something productive: Make Bitcoin more useful for actual financial activity. Make it easier, cheaper, safer to use for people who derive real value from it. Expand the demand for blockspace instead of trying to curate who is "worthy" of it.
BitMEX Research@BitMEXResearch

.@knutsvanholm on why we should change Bitcoin’s consensus rules with BIP-110: “From my point of view, even if all it accomplishes is like a hit on the nose on these spammers, I think it’s worth doing it because I don’t think people hate them enough” 🤡🤡🤡 youtu.be/hBvlmFgQENw?si…

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Bergsma 🚀
Bergsma 🚀@abinition·
@adam3us Supporting people like hodlonaut, Luke, Kratter and Mechanic. These guys are helping to save bitcoin from the woke DEI cult. So relieved to see BIP-110 deployed. We shall never grow complacent again.
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🇦🇺Luke Mikic- The 9-5 Escape Artist🇵🇪
🚨 JUST IN: Bitcoin's MVRV Z-Score just dropped below 1 for only the 6th TIME in 17 YEARS!!! Every single time this has happened, Bitcoin has pumped AT LEAST 700%. 5 for 5. A PERFECT track record. IS THIS THE MOST RELIABLE BUY SIGNAL IN ALL OF FINANCE?!!! ⚡
🇦🇺Luke Mikic- The 9-5 Escape Artist🇵🇪 tweet media
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Hans Amato
Hans Amato@HansAmato·
I spent $12,000 on therapy over 2 years trying to fix my anger before someone checked my blood Was snapping at my girlfriend over nothing. Road rage every commute. Constant irritability that I'd mask all day at work and then explode the second I got home. Therapist said it was unprocessed childhood trauma. We spent 2 years unpacking my relationship with my father Here's what was actually happening in my body: my gut was leaking endotoxin into my bloodstream which was keeping my immune system in a permanent inflammatory state. Chronic inflammation elevates cortisol. Elevated cortisol burns through magnesium. Low magnesium destroys GABA production. Without GABA your nervous system has no brake pedal I didn't have an anger problem. I had no neurological ability to regulate a stress response because my inhibitory system was running on empty Nobody tested this. Not my therapist. Not my doctor. Not the psychiatrist who suggested I "might benefit from an SSRI to take the edge off" 3 practitioners. 2 years. $12,000+. Zero blood draws Fixed my gut. Restored magnesium and zinc. GABA came back online. The rage disappeared in weeks. Not managed. Not suppressed. Gone. Because the thing causing it was gone I think about those 2 years of therapy sessions analyzing my childhood while my body was on fire and nobody thought to check. Talking about my father while my cortisol was 3x baseline because my intestinal lining had holes in it The mental health industry is billing $280 billion a year in the US. Almost none of it starts with blood work If you're doing everything right psychologically and still can't control your reactions, you might not have a mind problem. You might have an inflammation problem that no one in the room is trained to find
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Natalie Brunell ⚡️
Natalie Brunell ⚡️@natbrunell·
In our brand new sit-down, I handed @saylor every anti-Bitcoin argument the internet has and he responded to ALL of them. I dare any Bitcoin critic to watch this interview and not reconsider at least one of their arguments. TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 Michael Saylor address Bitcoin bear market and negative sentiment 8:37 Big Tech was once doubted but ultimately won 10:22 Why Bitcoin didn’t hit higher price predictions 16:57 Long-term return expectations 23:12 Why retail didn't participate in last bull market 33:55 How is $STRC performing? 56:49 Handling the critics and volatility cycles 1:13:54 Is quantum computing a threat to Bitcoin? 1:33:47 What's the strongest argument against Bitcoin? 1:35:53 Does Strategy's Bitcoin cost basis matter? 1:43:30 Bitcoin mentioned in the Epstein files
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🇦🇺Luke Mikic- The 9-5 Escape Artist🇵🇪
How I used to get taxed to death in Australia, before I left forever.🇦🇺 💰Me: Earn $500,000. 👮Gov: We'll take 48.5% of that, $242,500 thanks. 🏡Me: Buy my family a $1M home. 👮Government: Open your wallet, we want: 🥊$40,000 stamp duty on day 1. 🥊1% land tax, or $10,000 every year. 🥊10% GST for new homes, another $100,000 🥊Sell for $2M? 48% cap gain, You owe us $480,000. 🚗Me: Buy a nice $90,000 family car. 👮Gov: "33% Luxury car tax," another $29,000 thanks 🥩Me: Take my family to dinner. 👮Gov: Don't forget your 10% GST on ALL purchases. 🚴‍♂️Me: Buy a $1,000 bike online 👮Gov: 5% import taxes, ON TOP of the 10% GST. 👴Me: Dodge bullets for 50 years to retire with $2M. 👮Gov: We have a few ways to prevent that... 1 - 15% contribution tax. Every year you want to put $25,000 into your retirement account, we take $4,000 immediately. 2 - Owh, your assets in your retirement account pay you a dividend... that'll be another 15% tax thanks. You find 10% dividend growth, well, another $30,000 per year is due because that's "income," technically... 3 - You're going to love our new plan. Imagine your assets don't receive income from dividends, but they simply rise in value, you don't owe any taxes right? I mean, you didn't sell anything? Well, that's not modern or progressive enough, we want 30% of the "unrealized paper gains," you're generating. So, if you get a 20% return this year, you owe us $120,000, even if you don't sell a thing! Kinda neat right? 👶Me: Fine, tax me to death, but please let my kids have some crumbs. 👮Gov: AHHHHHH, we claim to not have "inheritance taxes," BUT your kids still pay taxes when they sell those assets. ✈️Me: Inflations 10%, these taxes are nuts, I'm leaving. 👮Gov: Slow down a moment, you owe us another 47% tax on all of the assets you're taking with you, even if you don't sell them. 🇦🇺I left Australia in 2022 on one of the first flights out of the country after the borders reopened. It was the toughest decision of my life. But, it was by far the best decision of my life. 🇨🇦🇺🇸🇬🇧🇪🇺🇦🇺Western countries are all on the same path, and we saw how this ended in Russia, China, Venezuela and Cuba in the last 100 years. 🇷🇺🇨🇳🇨🇺🇻🇪 If you're on the fence about leaving, and doubting whether things could really get "that much worse." These were 2 of the books that helped me make the decision: Atlas Shrugged The Sovereign Individual.
🇦🇺Luke Mikic- The 9-5 Escape Artist🇵🇪 tweet media
Richard Cooper@Rich_Cooper

How you get taxed to death in Toronto, Canada 🇨🇦 Me: Earn $220k+ in income CRA: Lovely. We’ll take 53.53% of that Me: Treat yourself to a exotic car for the hard work CRA: Add 23% Tax Me: Put $100 in the gas tank CRA: That'll be 35% Tax Me: Make $250k capital gains on stocks CRA: That'll be 66.7% Capital Gains Tax Me: Investment income retained in corporation CRA: That'll be 50.17% tax mate. I could go on, but the harder you work, and the more value you create in the economy, the more they punish you in Canada.

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Stephan Livera
Stephan Livera@stephanlivera·
1. It does not address low hanging fruit. A) lots of the text inscription stuff is already small and fits under 83 bytes, B) large inscriptions like images are done cheaper in witness anyway C) You're just pushing them to spam the utxo set which is worse 2. So you're admitting it's not a real incremental risk vs what we already have since basically 2009, just a 'perception' for normies. Kinda giving up the game there.
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𐕣 JUDEN PRIEST 𐕣
𐕣 JUDEN PRIEST 𐕣@anonemus349832·
@nicknorwitz Clinical experience is necessary to understand what the data actually represents. Uffe Ravnskov gets laughed out of the room because he has no clinical experience and consequently thinks he is making apples to apples comparisons when actually the same number is shared by oranges.
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Nick Norwitz MD PhD
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz·
When clinical experience makes you a worst doctor. 🧵👇 Of all the arguments and counterarguments I faced in academic medicine, none is more confused than the topic of “clinical experience.” Let me be clear: clinical experience has value. Insights gained from treating hundreds or thousands of patients hone a physician’s instincts in ways nothing else can. I know many experienced clinicians—including dear mentors and family members—who are extraordinary doctors and nothing short of heroes. But that does not excuse using “clinical experience” as a shield against data. Too often, I see the darker side of that phrase. It’s invoked as a virtue signal for what is often something else entirely: confirmation bias. Decades of exposure to the same dogma, seeing the same problems through the same lens, can create a visceral resistance to new ideas that challenge old models—even when those models have clear limitations. When “clinical experience” becomes a reason not to engage with evidence, it stops being wisdom and becomes dogma. And that is dangerous. It is dangerous for patients. I know that personally, because I have been that patient. I have sat across from the physician who cites “clinical experience” while refusing to engage with the data—or even the reasoning. That is medical paternalism at its worst, cloaked in the respectable language of experience. 👉 So let’s make an important distinction. There is the humble, open-minded clinician—someone whose experience has taught them the limits of their knowledge and the importance of continuing to learn. And then there are those who cite “clinical experience” as a final refuge when they have no better argument. P.S. Now, some might ask whether this critique is disrespectful to the profession of medicine. My answer is simple: no. In fact, the opposite is true. And precisely because I respect it, I believe it can be better.
Nick Norwitz MD PhD tweet media
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz

I wrote today’s letter in a frenzy — hellfire in my heart, frustration in my arteries (no plaque though), and, strangely, hope alongside it. staycuriousmetabolism.substack.com/p/is-medicine-… Across these 27 pages, I walk through specific cases where science has gone wrong — where a process that presents itself as meritocratic and truth-seeking fails so completely that I struggle to describe it to fellow academics without sounding conspiratorial. This is my first sincere attempt to fully articulate what I’ve discovered through my journey — as a scientist, as a patient, as a medical trainee, and as someone who simply wants honest answers to hard questions. There is much more to come. For now, my most raw and transparent reflections are shared with my premium community. But make no mistake: the long-term goal is far bigger. I intend for the ideas in this letter to reach — and be wrestled with by — tens of millions. I’ll give you one spoiler. We end not in cynicism, but in possibility. I believe we are entering something new — perhaps for the first time in history: the people’s era of science, where the power to question, scrutinize, and course-correct no longer lives solely inside institutions, but in your hands. Honestly, I was tearing up as I wrote the conclusion. *And special thanks for those behind the scenes who are nothing short of warriors for intellectual integrity and scientific truth, especially when it's inconvenient, or even personally dangerous. ht/ @realDaveFeldman @AdrianSotoMota @davidludwigmd @janellison

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Nick Norwitz MD PhD
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz·
I thought I saw all the weakest arguments. But now there’s a thread suggesting that Cleerly shouldn’t perform a blinded analysis because baseline plaque was too low. I was going to explain why that’s absurd but @JeremyAnso here via @grok beat me to it 👇. Also, for those reading with working neurons, think about the implications of this new set of mental gymnastics. Consider it a level 1/10 thought puzzle 🧩
Nick Norwitz MD PhD tweet media
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz

I feel like I can breathe again! Get ready for a rant I've been waiting to let loose for a year. 🔥 First, here are the core facts about the Keto-CTA study to date: 🚨PART 1: THE FACTS 👉From its inception, Dave, Adrian, and I, being associated via the funding body (the Citizen Science Foundation), were blinded to certain elements of the data. The purpose was to protect the integrity of the project. 👉The profound irony is this also meant that, prior to publication, we couldn’t perform certain ‘checks’ and had to trust others to do so. Speaking for myself, it’s now painfully clear that was a mistake. 👉However, after the April 7th paper was published, "anomalies" (if I’m being polite) were noted with the Cleerly scans. 👉 Cleerly refused to redo the scans, despite multiple requests and being offered payment. 👉Importantly, and to my dismay, the original Cleerly reads were UNBLINDED, introducing a major source of bias. 👉At additional expensive, the scans were rerun through HeartFlow in a properly blinded analysis, and via the pre-specified QAngio methodology. 👉HeartFlow and QAngio agreed with each other and were discordant with the Cleerly analysis. 🚨PART 2: THE NEW NEWS What happened next was brilliant! And, truth be told, I only found out about it yesterday. For my own legal security – and at the recommendation of my friend and colleague who was taking the worst of it on the back end – there was a lot I didn’t know until this point. This is what happened… 👉Several participants independently submitted their scans to Cleerly as a workaround to obtain a truly blinded Cleerly analysis. 👉Those results were highly discordant with the original Cleerly analysis and aligned with the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses. The difference between the original Cleerly scans and the repeated blinded scans was massive! The original unblinded analysis reported a +20.9 mm³ mean increase in non-calcified plaque volume, while the blinded repeats showed a -5.1 mm³ mean decrease. I mean, MY GOODNESS!!! I basically did a backflip when I found out (@realDaveFeldman can release the footage of the meeting at his discretion) If you’ve been following the KETO-CTA story up to this point, the consistency of the findings across HeartFlow, QAngio, and now Cleerly itself (based on the blinded reads) should bring much-needed clarity. The converging results fundamentally reshape the narrative and directly refute the claim that the study demonstrates massive, unprecedented plaque progression in LMHR and near-LMHR And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. LET ME REPEAT: And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. 🚨 PART 3: NEXT STEPS In terms of next steps, I’ll quote my colleague Dave: “we have already taken steps regarding last year’s paper that contained the original Cleerly analysis.” I’ll leave it at that for now so I don’t overstep. But let me say, that’s the highly polished and diplomatic version. I certainly have stronger words about this process, but perhaps now is not the time. Where I will speak more plainly is in regard to the behavior of some detractors over the past several months. In a few cases, I’ve reached out privately to individuals who should know better, gently suggesting that, in light of the new evidence (Heartflow and QAngio), it might be time to reassess or lighten the abuse. For anyone sincerely paying attention—and for anyone with even modest insight into how scientific bureaucracy works—I hope it is now clear why we were not more forthcoming earlier in the process. 👉And trust me when I say, it’s never been harder to keep my mouth shut about anything in my life. I've accumulated more cortisol AUC in the last 11 months then in the entirety of my life to age 29. 🚨PART 4: SPEAKING FOR MYSELF Speaking for myself, I have been beyond frustrated and disappointed. At multiple stages, it has become painfully—and increasingly—clear to me that our scientific system, which presents itself as purely meritocratic, is far more political than most would imagine. These are difficult words for me to say as someone who comes from a family of doctors and scientists and who has spent his entire career in academic institutions—multiple Ivy League universities @Harvard @dartmouth, two doctorates, and top-ranked institutions in both England @UniofOxford and the United States. I was groomed in conventional academic medicine. If I have any bias, it’s to see the best in conventional medicine and modern scientific process. Most of my loved ones have made their living within this ecosystem. But when you pull back the curtain, the reality can be sobering. To those detractors who have verbally abused or personally attacked my colleagues and me—perhaps out of naivete or ignorance—I will say this plainly: it’s time to check yourselves. Too many people have spoken out of turn, seemingly to score points rather than to engage thoughtfully with an evolving scientific story—one that has been evolving for quite some time. When the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses were released, that alone should have prompted serious reflection. At minimum, it should have raised questions. The subsequent silence from some of the loudest critics, after they believed they had “won” a round, is telling. Science deserves better than scorekeeping. It deserves intellectual honesty and the humility to update one’s position when new evidence emerges. At times over the last year, the lack of curiosity, sincerity, and intellectual honesty from people who I tried to give the benefit of the doubt has made me want to vomit. And trust me when I say, this isn’t a victory lap. This is a promise. We are now over a hurdle that I have been waiting for almost a year. And frankly, I am ready to run headfirst through brick walls with my colleagues and friends by my side — those whom I trust to pursue the hard questions and the honest answers — and do so indefinitely using the tools and resources at our disposal, even when, and especially when, the scales are improperly tilted against us. Lucky for us, the intellectual environment is expanding — the black box of academia beginning to crack open. So someone hand me a crowbar, because I’m committing myself fully and completely, over the coming years and decades, to prying it wide open. Not gently. Not quietly. But decisively. My final words of this verbose dissertation? LFG

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Charlie Smirkley
Charlie Smirkley@charliesmirkley·
Four platforms. Results: 18.9, 6.0, 5.6, 0.7 mm³ (n = 8 self selected). If four thermometers gave you readings that far apart on the same glass of water, you would pick your favorite and call it accurate? Even if right about everything: HeartFlow shows 6.0 mm³/year. QAngio shows 5.6. PARADIGM found healthy people accumulate 3.2 mm³/year. People with metabolic syndrome: 5.6. . . . . Anyway, your three analyses are not independent. You commissioned bc Cleerly disappointed you. Three post-hoc expressions of the same prior are not three independent replications. They are a reason to run a new study. You're also now soliciting more participants to resubmit and offering to cover costs. Whatever those future results show, they are obviously compromised. Mendelian randomization data across 312,000 participants show a log-linear relationship between LDL and cardiovascular disease. Steep from 70 to 150. Flattening above 190. You are measuring the plateau and concluding the curve doesn't exist. Measuring altitude versus oxygen saturation but only between 5,000 and 8,000 meters. Your own co-author acknowledged the study cannot address the broader question of whether high ApoB drives atherosclerosis. That's your paper, not mine. Yet you write "And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. LET ME REPEAT" The causal evidence you are dismissing: Mendelian randomization across 312,000 participants using nine independent genetic polymorphisms. CTT meta-analysis of 170,000 across 26 statin trials. PCSK9 trials totaling 46,000. Ezetimibe: 18,000. Bempedoic acid: 14,000. Five independent pharmacological mechanisms, same result: lower LDL, fewer events, proportional to reduction. PCSK9 loss-of-function carriers with lifelong low LDL: 88% lower coronary risk. Abetalipoproteinemia with near-zero ApoB: virtually no atherosclerosis across a lifespan. Your n=100 over one year with four platforms that can't agree on the same scans does not move this needle. You told me to try harder. I'd suggest engaging w/ the measurement science instead of calling critics stupid. If your data were as clear as you claim, insults would be unnecessary.
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Charlie Smirkley
Charlie Smirkley@charliesmirkley·
A study of 100 finds plaque progression on keto. The rebuttal? 8 participants resubmitted scans and got different numbers. Eight. Self-selected. With no preregistered protocol, no independent oversight, and no way to verify if others resubmitted and got unfavorable results.
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz

I feel like I can breathe again! Get ready for a rant I've been waiting to let loose for a year. 🔥 First, here are the core facts about the Keto-CTA study to date: 🚨PART 1: THE FACTS 👉From its inception, Dave, Adrian, and I, being associated via the funding body (the Citizen Science Foundation), were blinded to certain elements of the data. The purpose was to protect the integrity of the project. 👉The profound irony is this also meant that, prior to publication, we couldn’t perform certain ‘checks’ and had to trust others to do so. Speaking for myself, it’s now painfully clear that was a mistake. 👉However, after the April 7th paper was published, "anomalies" (if I’m being polite) were noted with the Cleerly scans. 👉 Cleerly refused to redo the scans, despite multiple requests and being offered payment. 👉Importantly, and to my dismay, the original Cleerly reads were UNBLINDED, introducing a major source of bias. 👉At additional expensive, the scans were rerun through HeartFlow in a properly blinded analysis, and via the pre-specified QAngio methodology. 👉HeartFlow and QAngio agreed with each other and were discordant with the Cleerly analysis. 🚨PART 2: THE NEW NEWS What happened next was brilliant! And, truth be told, I only found out about it yesterday. For my own legal security – and at the recommendation of my friend and colleague who was taking the worst of it on the back end – there was a lot I didn’t know until this point. This is what happened… 👉Several participants independently submitted their scans to Cleerly as a workaround to obtain a truly blinded Cleerly analysis. 👉Those results were highly discordant with the original Cleerly analysis and aligned with the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses. The difference between the original Cleerly scans and the repeated blinded scans was massive! The original unblinded analysis reported a +20.9 mm³ mean increase in non-calcified plaque volume, while the blinded repeats showed a -5.1 mm³ mean decrease. I mean, MY GOODNESS!!! I basically did a backflip when I found out (@realDaveFeldman can release the footage of the meeting at his discretion) If you’ve been following the KETO-CTA story up to this point, the consistency of the findings across HeartFlow, QAngio, and now Cleerly itself (based on the blinded reads) should bring much-needed clarity. The converging results fundamentally reshape the narrative and directly refute the claim that the study demonstrates massive, unprecedented plaque progression in LMHR and near-LMHR And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. LET ME REPEAT: And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. 🚨 PART 3: NEXT STEPS In terms of next steps, I’ll quote my colleague Dave: “we have already taken steps regarding last year’s paper that contained the original Cleerly analysis.” I’ll leave it at that for now so I don’t overstep. But let me say, that’s the highly polished and diplomatic version. I certainly have stronger words about this process, but perhaps now is not the time. Where I will speak more plainly is in regard to the behavior of some detractors over the past several months. In a few cases, I’ve reached out privately to individuals who should know better, gently suggesting that, in light of the new evidence (Heartflow and QAngio), it might be time to reassess or lighten the abuse. For anyone sincerely paying attention—and for anyone with even modest insight into how scientific bureaucracy works—I hope it is now clear why we were not more forthcoming earlier in the process. 👉And trust me when I say, it’s never been harder to keep my mouth shut about anything in my life. I've accumulated more cortisol AUC in the last 11 months then in the entirety of my life to age 29. 🚨PART 4: SPEAKING FOR MYSELF Speaking for myself, I have been beyond frustrated and disappointed. At multiple stages, it has become painfully—and increasingly—clear to me that our scientific system, which presents itself as purely meritocratic, is far more political than most would imagine. These are difficult words for me to say as someone who comes from a family of doctors and scientists and who has spent his entire career in academic institutions—multiple Ivy League universities @Harvard @dartmouth, two doctorates, and top-ranked institutions in both England @UniofOxford and the United States. I was groomed in conventional academic medicine. If I have any bias, it’s to see the best in conventional medicine and modern scientific process. Most of my loved ones have made their living within this ecosystem. But when you pull back the curtain, the reality can be sobering. To those detractors who have verbally abused or personally attacked my colleagues and me—perhaps out of naivete or ignorance—I will say this plainly: it’s time to check yourselves. Too many people have spoken out of turn, seemingly to score points rather than to engage thoughtfully with an evolving scientific story—one that has been evolving for quite some time. When the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses were released, that alone should have prompted serious reflection. At minimum, it should have raised questions. The subsequent silence from some of the loudest critics, after they believed they had “won” a round, is telling. Science deserves better than scorekeeping. It deserves intellectual honesty and the humility to update one’s position when new evidence emerges. At times over the last year, the lack of curiosity, sincerity, and intellectual honesty from people who I tried to give the benefit of the doubt has made me want to vomit. And trust me when I say, this isn’t a victory lap. This is a promise. We are now over a hurdle that I have been waiting for almost a year. And frankly, I am ready to run headfirst through brick walls with my colleagues and friends by my side — those whom I trust to pursue the hard questions and the honest answers — and do so indefinitely using the tools and resources at our disposal, even when, and especially when, the scales are improperly tilted against us. Lucky for us, the intellectual environment is expanding — the black box of academia beginning to crack open. So someone hand me a crowbar, because I’m committing myself fully and completely, over the coming years and decades, to prying it wide open. Not gently. Not quietly. But decisively. My final words of this verbose dissertation? LFG

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Bitfish 리트윗함
X Freeze
X Freeze@XFreeze·
The “Wikilaundering” scandal is finally blowing wide open and it’s worse than we thought A massive investigation by The Bureau of Investigative Journalism just exposed the ugly truth: Wikipedia is corrupt to its core You do not get information. You get propaganda.... articles manipulated by the highest bidder, billionaires, PR firms, and woke activists Here’s exactly how the rot works: 📍 Shadow Network: London-based PR firms like Portland Communications run secret “black hat” editors and middlemen to bypass every rule 📍 Reputation Scrubbing on Steroids: They delete scandals, human rights abuses, and even controversial Epstein files for powerful politicians...... while scrubbing migrant worker deaths and slave labor scandals for Qatar, covering up ties to terrorists, and burying corporate crimes for billionaire clients 📍 The Price of Truth: Billionaires and corporations pay huge money to bury failures and push lies while their “achievements” sit at the top 📍 Gatekeeping at Scale: A tiny insider group controls what billions see as “fact” Wikipedia is not an encyclopedia It’s a bought-and-paid-for propaganda brochure run for the elite and woke activists This is exactly why Elon was hell-bent on creating Grokipedia.......the exact opposite: information that can’t be corrupted, altered by price, and is written by real AI that delivers raw data and unfiltered truth instead of the sanitized woke lies sold to the highest bidder Stop trusting the laundered version of reality
X Freeze tweet media
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𐕣 JUDEN PRIEST 𐕣
𐕣 JUDEN PRIEST 𐕣@anonemus349832·
@bricktop1969 @nicknorwitz @realDaveFeldman What they got was coin-flip results from blinded analysis because the length of time between scans is below the blind detection threshold. So he's just celebrating measurement noise introduced by the method because he's not a credentialed or competent statistician.
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Nick Norwitz MD PhD
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz·
Real-time reaction screen shots from the moment I saw the *blinded* Cleerly re-analysis. And, trust me, I can't act. (Courtesy of @realDaveFeldman)
Nick Norwitz MD PhD tweet media
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz

I feel like I can breathe again! Get ready for a rant I've been waiting to let loose for a year. 🔥 First, here are the core facts about the Keto-CTA study to date: 🚨PART 1: THE FACTS 👉From its inception, Dave, Adrian, and I, being associated via the funding body (the Citizen Science Foundation), were blinded to certain elements of the data. The purpose was to protect the integrity of the project. 👉The profound irony is this also meant that, prior to publication, we couldn’t perform certain ‘checks’ and had to trust others to do so. Speaking for myself, it’s now painfully clear that was a mistake. 👉However, after the April 7th paper was published, "anomalies" (if I’m being polite) were noted with the Cleerly scans. 👉 Cleerly refused to redo the scans, despite multiple requests and being offered payment. 👉Importantly, and to my dismay, the original Cleerly reads were UNBLINDED, introducing a major source of bias. 👉At additional expensive, the scans were rerun through HeartFlow in a properly blinded analysis, and via the pre-specified QAngio methodology. 👉HeartFlow and QAngio agreed with each other and were discordant with the Cleerly analysis. 🚨PART 2: THE NEW NEWS What happened next was brilliant! And, truth be told, I only found out about it yesterday. For my own legal security – and at the recommendation of my friend and colleague who was taking the worst of it on the back end – there was a lot I didn’t know until this point. This is what happened… 👉Several participants independently submitted their scans to Cleerly as a workaround to obtain a truly blinded Cleerly analysis. 👉Those results were highly discordant with the original Cleerly analysis and aligned with the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses. The difference between the original Cleerly scans and the repeated blinded scans was massive! The original unblinded analysis reported a +20.9 mm³ mean increase in non-calcified plaque volume, while the blinded repeats showed a -5.1 mm³ mean decrease. I mean, MY GOODNESS!!! I basically did a backflip when I found out (@realDaveFeldman can release the footage of the meeting at his discretion) If you’ve been following the KETO-CTA story up to this point, the consistency of the findings across HeartFlow, QAngio, and now Cleerly itself (based on the blinded reads) should bring much-needed clarity. The converging results fundamentally reshape the narrative and directly refute the claim that the study demonstrates massive, unprecedented plaque progression in LMHR and near-LMHR And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. LET ME REPEAT: And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. 🚨 PART 3: NEXT STEPS In terms of next steps, I’ll quote my colleague Dave: “we have already taken steps regarding last year’s paper that contained the original Cleerly analysis.” I’ll leave it at that for now so I don’t overstep. But let me say, that’s the highly polished and diplomatic version. I certainly have stronger words about this process, but perhaps now is not the time. Where I will speak more plainly is in regard to the behavior of some detractors over the past several months. In a few cases, I’ve reached out privately to individuals who should know better, gently suggesting that, in light of the new evidence (Heartflow and QAngio), it might be time to reassess or lighten the abuse. For anyone sincerely paying attention—and for anyone with even modest insight into how scientific bureaucracy works—I hope it is now clear why we were not more forthcoming earlier in the process. 👉And trust me when I say, it’s never been harder to keep my mouth shut about anything in my life. I've accumulated more cortisol AUC in the last 11 months then in the entirety of my life to age 29. 🚨PART 4: SPEAKING FOR MYSELF Speaking for myself, I have been beyond frustrated and disappointed. At multiple stages, it has become painfully—and increasingly—clear to me that our scientific system, which presents itself as purely meritocratic, is far more political than most would imagine. These are difficult words for me to say as someone who comes from a family of doctors and scientists and who has spent his entire career in academic institutions—multiple Ivy League universities @Harvard @dartmouth, two doctorates, and top-ranked institutions in both England @UniofOxford and the United States. I was groomed in conventional academic medicine. If I have any bias, it’s to see the best in conventional medicine and modern scientific process. Most of my loved ones have made their living within this ecosystem. But when you pull back the curtain, the reality can be sobering. To those detractors who have verbally abused or personally attacked my colleagues and me—perhaps out of naivete or ignorance—I will say this plainly: it’s time to check yourselves. Too many people have spoken out of turn, seemingly to score points rather than to engage thoughtfully with an evolving scientific story—one that has been evolving for quite some time. When the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses were released, that alone should have prompted serious reflection. At minimum, it should have raised questions. The subsequent silence from some of the loudest critics, after they believed they had “won” a round, is telling. Science deserves better than scorekeeping. It deserves intellectual honesty and the humility to update one’s position when new evidence emerges. At times over the last year, the lack of curiosity, sincerity, and intellectual honesty from people who I tried to give the benefit of the doubt has made me want to vomit. And trust me when I say, this isn’t a victory lap. This is a promise. We are now over a hurdle that I have been waiting for almost a year. And frankly, I am ready to run headfirst through brick walls with my colleagues and friends by my side — those whom I trust to pursue the hard questions and the honest answers — and do so indefinitely using the tools and resources at our disposal, even when, and especially when, the scales are improperly tilted against us. Lucky for us, the intellectual environment is expanding — the black box of academia beginning to crack open. So someone hand me a crowbar, because I’m committing myself fully and completely, over the coming years and decades, to prying it wide open. Not gently. Not quietly. But decisively. My final words of this verbose dissertation? LFG

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