Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ

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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ

Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ

@ICUStat

Native Conch currently in exile in Missoula, MT, and Kona, Hawaii. Former submarine XO. Cirrus Owner/Pilot. Bon vivant.

Missoula, MT ๊ฐ€์ž…์ผ Haziran 2009
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ
Was just talking about ANZ Sky Couch the other day. Just got word that Rachaelโ€™s last uncle, John, died in Mount Maunganui an hour ago, so weโ€™ll be on a plane to NZ tomorrow for a long few days. Requiescat in pace Uncle John.
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktokยท
BREAKING UPDATE: Cathy DiFilippo-Kiley, administrator at Huron-Superior Catholic Schools, has been FIRED following deranged tiktok fantasizing about Trump getting ass*ssinated- Another one bites the dust!
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok

Meet Cathy DiFilippo-Kiley. Sheโ€™s an administrator at Huron-Superior Catholic Schools in Ontario, Canada. She fantasizes about Trump getting ass*ssinated publicly and says she will be cheering You can contact the school here: front.desk@hscdsb.on.ca

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FlamefghtrnMs
FlamefghtrnMs@Buddyn61ยท
@KatTimpf message to young kids on @JesseBWatters show was Ludacris. Shows thatโ€™s people in positions as hers should stick to comedy, not giving advise to kids and trying to turning them into alcoholics. Bad messaging from a @FoxNews contributor.
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Michael Powell
Michael Powell@powellAtlanticยท
Azeen did careful, sensitive and well-written work on a very tough beat and gets her just reward. Bravo. @nytimes and @nytmag: nytco.com/press/a-new-roโ€ฆ
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
๐™Ÿ๐™ค๐™จ๐™ ๐™›๐™–๐™ง๐™ ๐™–๐™จ ๐Ÿ’Š
Surviving Sepsis 2026 is here & it's even more loony tunes than I was expecting. They're promoting pre-hospital ABX & preemptive broad-spectrum IV antibiotics for intubated patients. This insane fever dream is an antimicrobial stewardship nightmare. Embarrassment for SCCM.
๐™Ÿ๐™ค๐™จ๐™ ๐™›๐™–๐™ง๐™ ๐™–๐™จ ๐Ÿ’Š tweet media
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Amy Mek
Amy Mek@AmyMekยท
๐ŸšจSHOCKING ESCALATION IN UTAH The LDS Church โ€“ which donated $25K to build Utah's largest mega-mosque (Utah Islamic Center) and other mosques in the state โ€“ is NOW exposed for partnering with Hamas-linked ministries & financing Hamas contractors! New March 23, 2026, reveals LDS Charities (Church's humanitarian arm) has funneled support to terror-aligned Islamic groups โ€“ far beyond what was known. Key facts: ๐Ÿ”บLDS Charities partnered with Medglobal, an Illinois-based charity that openly boasted of collaborating directly with Hamasโ€™s Ministry of Health in Gaza (2020 announcement lists LDS Charities alongside Hamas-connected Rahma Worldwide and Taliban-linked Islamic Oasis). Medglobal received $200,000 from LDS in 2017 and $1.9 million in 2019, with support continuing in recent years. ๐Ÿ”บ Rahma Worldwide (Michigan charity) has signed contracts with senior Hamas officials, including designated terrorist Ghazi Hamad (who vowed to repeat the October 7 attacks โ€œtime and againโ€). Internal Hamas documents from 2022 confirm Rahmaโ€™s Gaza director is โ€œaffiliated with Hamas.โ€ Aid workers in Gaza wore jackets bearing both LDS Charities and Rahma logos โ€” along with the logo of RIHS, a Kuwaiti group designated by the U.S. Treasury for supporting Al-Qaeda. LDS has listed Rahma as a major partner for over a decade, with joint projects in Gaza, Syria, Lebanon, and beyond - continuing even after Rahmaโ€™s terror ties became public. In March 2026, Rahma released a video of a new joint LDS-Rahma project in Syria. ๐Ÿ”บ LDS Charities funded Bayader Association, a Gaza-based group that coordinates closely with Hamas ministries and whose staff have publicly praised Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorists. LDS supported Bayader welfare projects in Gaza (2014โ€“2016), including untraceable cash grants - a method experts say often subsidizes terror recruitment and operations. ๐Ÿ”บ The Church has long collaborated with Islamic Relief (Muslim Brotherhood-linked, designated a terror organization by the UAE), serving as its largest donor after the 2004 tsunami and contributing millions in goods and services. These partnerships persisted years after the groupsโ€™ terror connections were reported. When previously challenged, the LDS Church dismissed concerns as โ€œfalseโ€ without addressing specifics, claiming no aid was diverted - yet the collaborations continued. ๐Ÿ”บ This is the same Church that promotes โ€œinterfaith friendshipโ€ while funding mosque construction in conservative Utah, where conversions are surging and Republican leaders (Gov. Cox, SLC mayor in hijab at City Hall iftar) are accommodating Islamic events with zero reciprocity from Muslim-majority nations. Utah Mormons: Your tithing dollars are building mega-mosques at home and - indirectly - supporting Hamas-aligned networks abroad. This isnโ€™t compassion. Itโ€™s dangerous, one-sided enabling of the ideology now infiltrating red-state Utah. See the full report: meforum.org/church-of-lattโ€ฆ
Amy Mek@AmyMek

๐ŸšจSCOOP: RED STATE ISLAMIZATION ALERT: BEWARE UTAH RED STATE UTAH'S ISLAMIZATION ACCELERATES โ€“ EVEN THE LDS CHURCH IS FUNDING IT Utah โ€“ America's reddest stronghold (GOP trifecta, Trump landslide, Mormon pioneer roots) โ€“ is transforming before our eyes. And Republican leadership + the LDS Church are helping pave the way. Just exposed: Yesterday, we exposed the Salt Lake City Democrat Mayor Erin Mendenhall donned a full blue hijab, hosted an official Ramadan Iftar, turning historic City Hall into a mosque โ€“ complete with live Adhan under the "OFFICE OF THE MAYOR" arch, qibla prayer direction signs, and program cards stamped with the city seal. Then we showed that Republican Gov. Spencer Cox hosted the first-ever Iftar at the Governor's Mansion (2024), transforming the people's house into a mini-mosque with prayer mats. He posted "Grateful... Ramadan Kareem" while renewing Muslim American Heritage Month proclamations praising Islam's "contributions" and combating "anti-Muslim hate." Zero reciprocity: Name one Islamic nation letting Christians pray in government halls, officials in crosses, or declaring Christian Heritage Month. It doesn't exist. Now the next layer โ€“ straight from the imam himself in a recent tour/interview of Utah's largest/newest mega-mosque. The Utah Islamic Center, completed in June 2020, spans 14,356 square feet and can accommodate 1,050 worshippers. The total cost was $3,365,833.36, including a $587,000 lot. The community, ethnically diverse, includes Middle Eastern, subcontinent, Somali, and convert groups ๐ŸšจImam Shuaib Din boasts: ๐Ÿ”บUtah Muslims: 30-60k (likely 40-45k), "well-kept secret" growing fast. ๐Ÿ”บ Record Shahadas in 2024 โ€“ weekly conversions, including unrelated groups post-Isha. Blames the Gaza conflict for inspiring people to see Muslim "faith in suffering." ๐Ÿ”บ The mosque blends in (massive minaret, mountain colors) so "most people driving past cannot tell this is a masjid." Practical design prioritizing sisters' sharia-adherent spaces, civic use (polling place, COVID vax site, preschool for 350+ kids). Most shocking: The LDS Church donated $25,000 to build this purpose-built mega-mosque (same policy for Hindu temples & older mosques). Imam praises LDS "higher-ups" encouraging interfaith friendship and missionary outreach โ€“ while conversions surge among locals, including from LDS backgrounds. They also showed an image of Republican Gov. Spencer Cox proudly visiting. This isn't "tolerance." It's one-sided funding and accommodation enabling Islamic infrastructure in conservative Utah. LDS values (family, modesty) make it "good place to raise a family" per the imam โ€“ perfect for building enclaves. Republican Gov. Cox opens state mansion & declares heritage months. Democrat mayor turns City Hall into prayer space. Dominant LDS Church funds the mosques. Utah is being surrendered from the top โ€“ by its own leaders and religious majority. This is the Muslim Brotherhood playbook: internal Sharia enclaves + external "radicals with a smile" infiltrating via civic events. Wake up, Utah! Demand separation of mosque and state. Boycott halal. Do not vote for any leaders helping to Islamize YOUR state. Reject the infiltration. Before "grateful" becomes full submission.

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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Quanta Magazine
Quanta Magazine@QuantaMagazineยท
Next time you sip wine at a party, notice the tears dripping down the inside walls of your glass. The same tensile force that causes wine tears also causes embryos to develop a head-to-tail axis. quantamagazine.org/genes-have-harโ€ฆ
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Tommy Robinson ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง
Tommy Robinson ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง@TRobinsonNewEraยท
Tommy Robinson ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง tweet media
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Ethan Brooks
Ethan Brooks@alt_w_v_gยท
Had a parent-teacher conference this morning My wife told me not to come I came anyway She said "please just listen and nod" I said "I always listen" She said "you listen like you're sitting in a boardroom looking for something to challenge" That's how listening works Nice classroom Small chairs I am 6'4" and was seated at a desk designed for someone who still believes in Santa Claus My knees touched my chest The teacher introduced herself Shared her identified pronouns I shared my identified adjectives Smart and handsome My wife closed her eyes The teacher had a folder Color-coded tabs I respected the organization She said our son is "a pleasure to have in class" My wife smiled I waited That sentence is never the whole report It's the executive summary before the risk section She said "however" There it is She said he "asks a lot of questions" I said "good" She said "during quiet time" I said "when is quiet time?" She said "it's when students are expected to work independently and in silence" I said "so he's the only one trying to get information and you've structured the environment to prevent it?" My wife put her hand on my arm I continued The teacher said he recently told another student that "sharing pencils doesn't make sense if nobody brings their own" I said "that's an accurate observation" My wife squeezed harder The teacher said she's concerned about his "resistance to group activities" I said "he's not resistant. He just doesn't see the value of doing more work for the same grade." The teacher said he also corrected her math on the whiteboard I said "was he right?" She paused She said "that's not the point" I said "it's a little bit the point" My wife stood up Sat back down Compromise The teacher pulled out an evaluation sheet Categories like "works well with others" and "follows directions" and "respects classroom norms" All subjective Not a number on the page I asked how these are graded She said "based on observation" I said "so one person's opinion with no second review?" She said "it's professional judgment" I said "my auditors say that too. Right before I disagree with them." She looked at my wife My wife said "I'm sorry about him" I said "I'm sitting right here" My wife said "I know" The teacher said overall he's a bright kid and she just wants to make sure he learns to "collaborate" I said "collaboration is important. But so is recognizing when you're the only one doing the work. He'll learn that again in college. And again in the real world. Might as well start now." Nobody spoke The teacher closed her folder She said "I think we've covered everything" I said "one more thing" She braced herself I said "his reading is above grade level. His math is strong. He asks hard questions and corrects mistakes when he sees them. I just want to make sure this school knows what it has." The teacher looked at me differently My wife looked at me differently I said "that's all" We left In the car my wife was quiet Then she said "he's turning into you" I said "is that a good thing?" She didn't answer From the backseat he said "dad, why does the teacher count off for asking questions? Isn't that the whole point of school?" I looked at my wife She looked out the window I said "yes. It is." He said "I don't think she likes when I'm right" I didn't say anything Neither did my wife Small chairs Color-coded tabs No follow-up items But the kid's going to be fine Sent from my iPhone
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Shane Goldmacher
Shane Goldmacher@ShaneGoldmacherยท
MUST READ: A bombshell NYT investigation shows that Cesar Chavez sexually abused young girls. Dolores Huerta also discloses for first time that that Chavez raped her. So much more from Manny Fernandez and Sarah Hurtes โ€”> nytimes.com/2026/03/18/us/โ€ฆ
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ
You know that top left corner of Epic that has the pt name and demographicsโ€ฆand that can change colour of for certain user defined โ€œreasons?โ€ You know the troony gimp โ€œhealthcare expertโ€ Matthew Cortland? Yeah, his is red.
Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ tweet media
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Peter Girnus ๐Ÿฆ…
Peter Girnus ๐Ÿฆ…@gothburzยท
I am Sam Hazen, CEO of HCA Healthcare. The largest for-profit hospital system in the United States. One hundred and eighty-two hospitals. Twenty states. I oversee a spreadsheet called the chargemaster. It has 42,000 line items. Each line item is a price. The prices are not real. I need to be precise about that. They are not estimates. Not approximations. Not market rates. They are anchors. An anchor is a number you set high so that every negotiated discount feels like a victory. No relationship to cost. No relationship to value. A relationship to leverage. My team sets the anchors. That is the job. The price is correct. Take a drug. Keytruda. Immunotherapy. Treats sixteen types of cancer. The manufacturer charges approximately $11,000 per dose. That is the acquisition cost. What the hospital pays. My team enters it into the chargemaster. They do not enter $11,000. They enter $43,000. That is the gross charge. The gross charge is a fiction. No one pays it. No one is expected to pay it. The gross charge exists so that when Blue Cross negotiates a 68% discount, they pay $13,760, and the contract says "68% discount" and both parties feel the transaction was rigorous. A 68% discount on a fictional price produces a real price that is 25% above acquisition cost. That margin is where I live. My 2025 compensation was $26.5 million. Eighty percent of my bonus is tied to EBITDA. Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It is also earnings before the patient opens the bill. Same dose of Keytruda at the hospital across town. Gross charge: $12,000. Blue Cross rate: $10,200. Same drug. Same dose. Same needle. Same cancer. Different spreadsheet. The CMS transparency data showed the ratio between the highest and lowest negotiated price for the same drug at the same hospital can reach 2,347 to one. Not 2x. Not 10x. Not 100x. Two thousand three hundred and forty-seven to one. For the same thing. In the same building. On the same Tuesday. The price is correct. Every drug in the chargemaster has twelve prices. Twelve. Gross charge. Medicare rate. Medicaid rate. Blue Cross. Aetna. Cigna. UnitedHealth. Humana. Workers' comp. Tricare. Auto insurance. And the self-pay rate. The self-pay rate is for the person without insurance. It is the gross charge. The fictional number. The anchor. The person without insurance pays the number that was designed to be negotiated down from. They pay the ceiling because they have no one to negotiate on their behalf. Same drug. Same chair. Same nurse. They pay the price that no insurer in the country would accept. I maintain a file. CDM line item 637-4892-PKB. Saline flush. Sodium chloride 0.9%. Acquisition cost: $0.47. We charge $87. That is an 18,410% markup. The saline flush is used before and after every IV infusion. A chemo patient receiving twelve cycles will be charged $87 for saline fourteen times per visit. I know the math. My team built the math. The math is the job. The price is correct. In 2021, the federal government required hospitals to publish their prices. The Hospital Price Transparency Rule. Machine-readable file. Gross charges. Discounted cash prices. Payer-specific negotiated rates. We complied. We posted the file. The file is a 9,400-row CSV on our website under "Patient Financial Resources." Four clicks from the homepage. Column F: "CDM_GROSS_CHG." Column J: "DERV_PAYERID_NEGRATE." My team designed the column headers. They designed them to comply. They did not design them to communicate. CMS reported 93% of hospitals now post a file. Compliance. But only 62% of the posted data is usable. That gap is where we operate. We are compliant. The data is published. The data is incomprehensible. A researcher downloaded our file. She spent three weeks cleaning it. She called the billing department for clarification on 340 line items. They transferred her four times. The fourth transfer was to a voicemail box that was full. She published her analysis anyway. Cardiac catheterization lab charges: $8,200 to $71,000 for the same procedure depending on the payer. The report received eleven views on our press monitoring dashboard. I saw it. I did not forward it. On April 1, a new CMS rule takes effect. Hospital CEOs must personally attest โ€” by name, encoded in the machine-readable file โ€” that the pricing data is "true, accurate, and complete." My name. Sam Hazen. In the file. Attesting that 42,000 fictional anchors are true, accurate, and complete. They are complete. I will give them that. Forty-two thousand line items is nothing if not complete. A new analyst read the transparency data. She asked why the same MRI costs $450 for Medicare and $4,200 for Aetna in the same building on the same machine. I told her the rates reflect negotiated contractual agreements between the payer and the facility. She said that doesn't explain the difference. I told her the difference IS the contractual agreement. She said that sounds like the price is arbitrary. I told her the price is the result of a rigorous, multi-variable analysis that accounts for acuity, case mix, regional market dynamics, and payer contract terms. She asked if I could show her the analysis. I told her the analysis is proprietary. The analysis does not exist. The analysis is my team, in Q4, adjusting the chargemaster upward by the percentage the CFO wrote on a sticky note. The sticky note this year said "6-8%." They chose 7.4% because it is between six and eight and it has a decimal, which makes it look calculated. She stopped asking. The price is correct. My insurance. The executive health plan. Not in the chargemaster. Administered separately. I do not pay the gross charge. I do not pay the negotiated rate. I pay a $20 copay for services at our own facilities. Gross charge for my treatment: $14,200. Insured rate for our largest commercial payer: $8,600. I pay $20. The executive health plan was designed by the Chief Human Resources Officer and approved by the compensation committee. I was not on the compensation committee. I was a beneficiary of it. That is a different thing. I benefit from the system I price. I price the system I benefit from. These are two separate facts that happen to involve the same person. HCA Healthcare was named the Most Admired Company in our industry by Fortune magazine for the twelfth consecutive year. That was February. The same month I sold $21.5 million in company stock and purchased zero shares. Fortune did not ask about the chargemaster. I am Sam Hazen, CEO of HCA Healthcare. I have 42,000 prices in a spreadsheet across 182 hospitals. None of them are real. All of them are charged. Same drug: $12,000 or $43,000. Depends on which spreadsheet. Which building. Which contract. Which page of which PDF. The patient who has no contract pays the most. The researcher who found the discrepancy got a voicemail box that was full. The analyst who asked why stopped asking. The executive who prices the system pays $20. On April 1, I will personally attest that this is true, accurate, and complete. The price is correct. The price has always been correct. I am the price.
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Mike vonTschudi ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฎ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Walter Kirn
Walter Kirn@walterkirnยท
This can't be said enough.
Julius Ruechel@JuliusRuechel

According to Mattias Desmetโ€™s theory of mass formation (discussed during Covid), roughly 30% of the population does not fall under the spell or "hypnotized" state of mass hysteria. Sounds tidy, right? But since Covid, the "dissident" community from the Covid era has fractured into opposing camps as new mass hysterias have infected society. If some people are naturally more resistant to mass hysteria, it would always be the same people who manage to steer clear. All the same dissidents would reappear, time and time again, as new mass hysterias emerge. And all the same people who got caught up in it last time would get caught up in the next one. But clearly that has not been the case. Immunity to one bout of mass hysteria is no guarantee that you will have immunity to the next. So, resistance to mass hysteria obviously does not come from some genetic predisposition, nor is there some kind of lifetime psychological immunity. It changes from issue to issue. Most likely, personal circumstances play the biggest role. In some cases, being away from the crowd gives people time to reflect. Or personal familiarity with an issue or the people involved might create the disconnect needed to recognize the mass hysteria. Or the luck of seeing some comment or post that makes you think about something differently than what the crowd is discussing. Or how many in your close tribe fall prey and sweep you along. And some people simply have a habit of verifying original sources and thus are in the habit of testing and retesting their own ideas -- it's not that they are immune to propaganda and conspiracy theories and mass hysteria, but rather that their habits provide a mechanism to lead them back out. But, considering how the Covid dissident community has fractured since then, this category of people seems to be vanishingly small indeed. It's also worth noting that mass hysteria can arise from different places (i.e. government propaganda vs crowd-sourced), which also either sets you up to be more or less likely to fall prey depending on your psychological state. For example, if, due to a prior experience, you have completely lost your trust in government institutions or legacy media, that would make you more resistant to official propaganda. But if you have high trust in those institutions because you've never had a transformative run-in with how flawed they are, you're likely more easily misled by govt propaganda. By contrast, the inverse is also true. If you don't trust govt institutions, that might actually make you more susceptible to falling into some crowd-sourced conspiracy theory because you extend trust to "dissident voices" that provide alternate explanations for how the world works -- after all, if you don't trust the govt and the media, you're probably already out there looking for alternate explanations to make sense of the world. Whereas those who have a high degree of trust in government and media institutions are likely relatively immune to crowd-sourced conspiracy theories because they're not out there looking for alternate ways of making sense of the world and aren't likely to extend their trust to someone who isn't some media-approved institutional expert. Furthermore, if someone you trusted as a reliable source of information during the last mass hysteria falls for the next one, your trust in them might easily lead you down the same rabbit hole. In short, while there may be some validity to Desmet's idea that 30% are immune, it's a little more complicated than that. Clearly it's not the same 30% every time. Not even close. If anything, if you're busy congratulating yourself that you managed to avoid getting caught up in the mass hypnosis the last time, you may actually be overconfident in your ability to resist the next one and thus not have enough self-doubt to question your most strongly held opinions, which might just turn out to be wrong this time. That's why, no matter how confident you are in what you believe, the only safeguard to prevent you from deceiving yourself is the habit of continually putting all your beliefs to the test, verifying original sources, and giving consideration to what those you don't agree with are saying. As Richard Feynman so famously said: ๐Ÿ‘‡

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