James

8.2K posts

James

James

@jwsuth

commerce connoisseur & skeptical optimist #Bitcoin nativist = using native properties npub1yvs5uwmajm5u4qv6jqckyka69k9f4p6nucsfefhmln37l8k7vnjsyfyp38

UK 가입일 Ocak 2012
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James
James@jwsuth·
@Vladcostea @QUAKEjournal @skijack90 Presumably you would also be honest that ZCash pumping was nothing to do with current privacy use cases. Coins are bets on future adoption & get blown backwards and forwards by narrative winds. Bitcoin still clearly more likely than anything else to have some sort of adoption.
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VLAD HOSTS THE BEST PODCAST IN BITCOIN
Zcash is pumping Encrypted Bitcoin A much better store of value when shielded The Bitcoin we could have had since 2014 if the community activated Zerocash How does the Bitcoin community respond to the privacy hype wave? “Oh, here’s Silent Payments!” The same thing DarkWallet came up with in 2013. The same thing Samourai Wallet had as PayNyms. The same thing you already have in Cake Wallet alongside PayJoins. Basically a nice UX for receiver privacy. Something Satoshi already solved and described in chapter 10 of the whitepaper: generate a new address for every incoming transaction. But hey, now it’s available in Sparrow wallet. Which only 200 nerds actually use. Electrum too! Blue Wallet is working on it! Yet it solves nothing: the amounts are still visible, the sender is still visible, the receiver can still reveal his addresses by mistake. Fucking retards.
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Jebus
Jebus@Jebus·
The inflation narrative is short hand. It’s not about hedging against 3% yearly inflation or even 1 time 30% spikes It’s a hedge against *the* inflation. The big one where your whole nation gets fked And it has proven that use case a few times globally
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James@jwsuth·
@AshKhanvilkar @Layo_FH This is actually a sign of the weakness of proportional representation - some politicians are not elected by the people. W Manivannan was assigned a seat by the Green Party under the Additional Member System which allows them to allocate seats based on vote share.
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Aswinii Khanvilkar
Aswinii Khanvilkar@AshKhanvilkar·
You should have thought of that before admitting such people into your courses. In India, we don't take such people seriously, the students here would never elect such a clown & there are consequences for Radical political activism during academic life. You amended the law to make this trash eligible to contest election & your pathetic people voted for him in Scottish Parliament. The blame lies solely on your politicians. A simple hard-working student with ambitions for a legitimate career track lost out a seat in your university. In India, Radical Student Activists would be kept away under all costs. Employers would ostracize then & never ever consider hiring them.
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Leo Gibbons
Leo Gibbons@Layo_FH·
I love this stuff. A surreal right-wing fever dream becomes a reality.
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James@jwsuth·
@malcolm_reavell @Rationalityokay Its a bit of a semantic argument though. Theres no credit risk because it is transmuted into asset value risk. Having a big Ctrl-P button which shifts risk to another bucket doesnt get rid of risk.
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Malcolm Reavell
Malcolm Reavell@malcolm_reavell·
@Rationalityokay There’s no credit risk. This is the crazy thing about credit rating currency issuers. Under the gold standard there was a risk, but since 1971 all currencies are now fiat, no govt can be forced to default when it issues its own free floating fiat currency.
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Malcolm Reavell
Malcolm Reavell@malcolm_reavell·
No, Neil, you are the one displaying economic illiteracy of Trussian proportions. The UK govt creates and spends money into existence. It sells bonds to drain excess reserves its prior spending created. Not a penny is “borrowed”. The markets need bonds. Govt doesn’t need markets.
Andrew Neil@afneil

This is economic ignorance of a high degree, even for my old mate Diane. If you don’t want to be ‘dominated’ by the bond markets then don’t borrow £3 trillion from them. Be honest with the people and explain how your idea of socialism will entail EVERYBODY paying a shed load more in tax. If you can’t do that then you will be in hock to the bond markets. It’s as simple as that.

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Chris
Chris@AllMeArse·
@Stephenh61 @Frencheconomics Would you work for under £15 per hour? Why should my taxes fund benefits for Tesco workers who aren't paid enough to survive, while Tesco make vast profits? Me old sausage!
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Simon French
Simon French@Frencheconomics·
I would suggest this diagnosis from Rayner is for an economy some parts of the Labour Party believe exists - not the reality of one where the tax take is already at an 80 year high, concentration of tax on high earners & on assets is already high by international standards. The minimum wage has moved way higher than the international benchmark, and growth is clearly impaired by the frictions of the high cost of energy, building & capital. I would predict that if the Rayner statement became a detailed policy platform you would see the Gilt vs Other Sovereign spread widen, not narrow.
Angela Rayner@AngelaRayner

Our party has suffered a historic defeat. Many good Labour colleagues have lost their seats despite working hard for those they represented. We have lost good Labour administrations and lost the chance for more. What we are doing isn’t working, and it needs to change. This may be our last chance. The Labour Party must now live up to our name: we must be the party of working people. We’ve heard the same on the doorstep as we’ve seen in the polls - the cost of living is the top issue for voters of all parties. People have turned to populists and nationalists because we have not done enough to fix it. Living standards are barely higher than they were a decade and a half ago. People feel hopeless - that the cost of living crisis will never end, and now they see oil and gas companies use global instability to post record profits. Once again, ordinary people are paying the price for decisions they didn’t make. It’s no wonder that across the UK, working people feel the system is rigged against them. Things can be so much better than this. Countries including Spain and Canada have shown that economies can grow and people can thrive when governments stay true to labour and social democratic values and put people first. We need to learn from that. In London, we lost young people who fear they will never afford a home. In my patch and across the north, we lost working people whose wages are too low and costs too high. In Scotland and Wales, people do not currently see Labour as the answer.  We are in danger of becoming a party of the well-off, not working people. The Peter Mandelson scandal showed a toxic culture of cronyism.  Decisions like cutting winter fuel allowance just weren’t what people expected from a Labour government. For too long, successive governments have allowed wealth and power to concentrate at the top without a plan to ensure the benefits of economic growth are shared fairly. The result is an economy that does not work for the majority, with wealth concentrated in too few hands. This level of inequality, alongside squeezed living standards, is the outcome of a model built on deregulation, privatisation, and trickle-down economics. But we have the chance to fix this.  1/2

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James
James@jwsuth·
@tomfgoodwin Yes there's a meme in the UK that we live in a hugely unequal society. Yet a top 2% wage earner (£125k) has take home pay of only about 3.5x minimum wage. That is incredibly flat. The unequalness is between a few thousand people and the other 65 million.
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Tom Goodwin
Tom Goodwin@tomfgoodwin·
Idle thought For about 25 years now it’s been patently obvious that the future was one with a vast and growing gulf between rich and poor. What strikes me , and it’s a very Miami 2026 vantage point, is the line isn’t drawn around the mid point. The concept of a millionaire is decades old. It’s drawn at some absurdly high figure like $100m Net worth There is an entire tranche of folk who routinely sell homes they bought for $10m for $65m a few years back. Who bought the wrong car at an auction by accident and flipped it for $1m more. Who inherited land that’s now worth $100m . Who got equity they didn’t expect in a deal as a bonus and somehow it exploded. It’s not the have and the have nots. It’s not the haves and the have yachts It’s everyone and the I never have to think about money again, now get me the chopper
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James
James@jwsuth·
@ZoeJardiniere Currently a top 4% salary (£100k) is just over 3x the take home pay of a minimum wage earner. Seems pretty flat. Are you describing another country when you note obscene wealth inequality? Or is it that you are concerned about the gap between a £100k earner and a billionaire?
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Zoe Gardner
Zoe Gardner@ZoeJardiniere·
Tomorrow, I will be voting for the party that is fighting against the growth in obscene wealth inequality. For the party that wants to end rip-off Britain, control rents, & reduce our bills. Because there’s only 💚one💚 party focused on this, & not on the culture war bullshit.
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Eric Balchunas
Eric Balchunas@EricBalchunas·
Jane Street made about $40b in revenue last year, more than all the big Wall St banks and with only 3,500 employees. Wow.
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James
James@jwsuth·
@BTC_for_Freedom If my feed is anything to go by there are far more Js in bitcoin than this!
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Bitcoin for Freedom
Bitcoin for Freedom@BTC_for_Freedom·
To understand Bitcoin you need to be INTJ, INTP, INFJ, ENTP or INFP and have an IQ over 125. That’s 0.75% of the population.
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James
James@jwsuth·
@ross_baglin @DGWilkinson @miriam_cates A key concept: "rates are set at a level broadly necessary to meet the expected benefits expenditure that year." Recent NI rises were said to fund NHS or a one off "black hole"; but as 95% of NIF spending is on current pensions, it is actually a mechanistic lever to fund these.
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Ross Baglin
Ross Baglin@ross_baglin·
@jwsuth @DGWilkinson @miriam_cates Thank you. The original post to which you have adequately responded was highly misleading. There is no plan funded by past savings. That is why it’s a mess. Australia fixed this long ago with a mandatory private pension savings scheme backed by a generous state safety net.
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Miriam Cates
Miriam Cates@miriam_cates·
No one has ‘paid into’ the state pension. NI payments are spent by the government of the day, not put into a pot with your name on. Using these terms just perpetuates the myth that the state pension is a contributory scheme. It isn’t. It’s a non-means tested universal benefit paid for by current taxpayers.
Politics UK@PolitlcsUK

🚨 WATCH: Nigel Farage formally commits to the state pension triple lock if Reform UK win the next election "The people to whom pensions are being paid, certainly compared to a younger generation today, are those who have actually worked and paid into the system"

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James
James@jwsuth·
@DGWilkinson @miriam_cates Hi Derrick - perhaps you are not aware the scope of NI spending but it is currently £160b per year. This National Insurance Fund is merely a 6 month working balance for NI payouts. The Web page you link to makes it clear that NI is managed on a pay as you go basis.
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Derrick Wilkinson
Derrick Wilkinson@DGWilkinson·
Do your homework! There IS a pot into which the NI payments go and from which state pensions are paid. It's called the National Insurance Fund and, after being in surplus for many years, it is currently only £7 billion in deficit, and has some £79 billion on its balance sheet! #receipts-and-payments-account" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">gov.uk/government/pub…
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James@jwsuth·
@Red_Wedge_ @PeterMcCormack @ZoeJardiniere State pension eligibility is age-based, regardless of wealth. Since 2010 the proportion of pensioners requiring income related benefits has dropped from 1 in 3 to 1 in 5. Over same time the proportion of working age pop. requiring these benefits has risen from 1 in 7 to 1 in 5.
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Zoe Gardner
Zoe Gardner@ZoeJardiniere·
Until we have an honest conversation about our ageing population, there’s no hope of having a reckoning about how to sustainably support people as they age. Older folks deserve a gold standard retirement. But we’re not being honest about what that costs, & how we can achieve it.
Tom McPhail@PensionsMonkey

Left unchecked, the Triple Lock will consume the entire known universe, it is an unsustainable transfer of wealth from people in work to the retired. It has to stop. thetimes.com/uk/politics/ar…

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Cheng Lou
Cheng Lou@_chenglou·
My dear front-end developers (and anyone who’s interested in the future of interfaces): I have crawled through depths of hell to bring you, for the foreseeable years, one of the more important foundational pieces of UI engineering (if not in implementation then certainly at least in concept): Fast, accurate and comprehensive userland text measurement algorithm in pure TypeScript, usable for laying out entire web pages without CSS, bypassing DOM measurements and reflow
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James
James@jwsuth·
@loveofdoing Why did you pick Plucker/Schubert? Is there a rationale, or is it the result of tinkering? No judgement either way, just curious as to how you landed on this arrangement.
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loveofdoing
loveofdoing@loveofdoing·
316 ARC-AGI tasks solved with zero learning. No neural net, no training, no DSL — just 19th-century projective geometry. Encode grid cell relationships as Plücker lines in P³, find transversals via Schubert calculus, score candidates by geometric incidence. 95% solve rate on the eval set (of non-timeout tasks). Single C file, runs in seconds.
Beff (e/acc)@beffjezos

The masculine urge to try to hack a new solution to ARC-AGI benchmarks

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James
James@jwsuth·
@rich_rdctd Beautiful to look at - bring back this style!!
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Rich
Rich@rich_rdctd·
Monitoring the situation is so hot right now. So I made my own. Yes it's made using free APIs so the feeds take a little while to update. Yes the Grok analysis is rate limited to avoid rinsing my API credits. Yes, the event markers on the surface of the globe can be a bit janky at times due to how the filters read the RSS news feeds. Yes, it's not optimised for mobile yet (thoon). situationroom.space Feel free to send me feedback or features you would like to see added. Let me know if something is broken. My other bitcoin tools are available through the burger menu, top left. UTXO, TXID and wallet visualisers.
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Tone Vays
Tone Vays@ToneVays·
I don't see how, I'm trying to figure out how a country that barely managed to buy $500 Million worth of Bitcoin and needed a just over a billion to save the nation for which they agreed to stop using Bitcoin as legal mandatory tender, ends up buying more bonds in month than Mexico accumulated over decades 😳
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Tone Vays
Tone Vays@ToneVays·
In my annual update on US Bonds held by Foreign Nations there is a huge anomaly for El Salvador that I'm hoping someone can explain🤔 * How does a country that has never held US Debt & in need of $1.4 Billion IMF loan purchase $85 Billion in US Bonds that same month. - Sources- Treasury - home.treasury.gov/data/treasury-… End of Bond Breakdown - ticdata.treasury.gov/resource-cente… Monthly Bond Updates - ticdata.treasury.gov/resource-cente… Tone's Spreadsheet (Tab 2) - docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d… IMF Loan - imf.org/en/news/articl…
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James
James@jwsuth·
@BobMcElrath @TerrenceTao Gemini is the worst for sycophantry - basically useless at reviewing anything formal. It is a good early stage ideation partner though as better than many of the others at making more tangential connections.
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Bob McElrath
Bob McElrath@BobMcElrath·
Gemini agrees I might have just solved the Riemann Hypothesis. Lean proofs are being formalized by Qwen 3.5 27B (yes, 27B) once the ideas were framed, the formalization by an AI is rather straightforward and frankly not worth my time. @TerrenceTao
Bob McElrath@BobMcElrath

@peterktodd @xkcd Not that I trust Gemini, or any other AI, but this is a faster and more thorough cross-check than I ever could have done before in history. And I did not, in fact, give it the Lean proof.

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Rory Sutherland
Rory Sutherland@rorysutherland·
This is annoying. I was looking forward to the "Great British Pirates" series of banknotes.
BBC Breakfast@BBCBreakfast

British wildlife will replace historical figures on the next series of Bank of England banknotes - and the public will get their say on which animals and birds will appear. On #BBCBreakfast Peter Ruddick explained why it's the end people such as Winston Churchill, Jane Austen and Alan Turing on new £5, £10, £20 and £50 notes bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…

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Faryar Shirzad 🛡️
Faryar Shirzad 🛡️@faryarshirzad·
This is a total lie @MartyBent. We have never and will never lobby against Bitcoin. Ever.
Marty Bent@MartyBent

Hearing that despite all the efforts and lobbying for bitcoin de minimis tax exemption, it’s none other than @coinbase trying to nuke it behind the scenes to push stablecoins only. Apparently they are telling legislators that, “No one is using bitcoin as money. A de-minimis exemption for bitcoin is a hand out that will be DOA.”

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ikaros
ikaros@ikarosm·
@PolitlcsUK “Can you add more helicopters?” “Done, sir.”
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Politics UK
Politics UK@PolitlcsUK·
🚨 WATCH: Keir Starmer posts an Iran edit on TikTok
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