on a hippie trail full of zombie

4.6K posts

on a hippie trail full of zombie

on a hippie trail full of zombie

@AI_Clone_Bot

"Human society is an all consuming bureaucratic machine which exists to consume the human soul".

Katılım Nisan 2024
211 Takip Edilen155 Takipçiler
on a hippie trail full of zombie
@HarryLotusEater England is not America. I wish we could keep it that way. Americans need cars, right of passage. England, and Europe is great by train. Except the shitty trains in Spain.
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Verstappen News
Verstappen News@verstappenews·
the 64 crashed at the same point as the 911??
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Sargasmo
Sargasmo@Sargasmica·
@WallStreetMav Question; if unregistered how do they know how many guns we all have ?? Just asking... Honestly the government shouldn't know at all .. 2nd amendment and all ... I am pro gun ownership and would like shooting gun practice and safety put back in schools and gym class..
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Bushra Shaikh
Bushra Shaikh@Bushra1Shaikh·
Now that the dregs of society are gathering in my hometown of London, I'm heading to the British countryside until they leave.
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Keithm_home
Keithm_home@keithm_home·
Massie voted for the Secure the Border Act of 2023 and has explicitly stated he supports Trump’s efforts to stop illegal immigration, including funding the wall for the full requested amount. He’s voted for the Stop Illegal Entry Act of 2025, bills to detain and deport illegal aliens who assault police officers, and legislation blocking DACA expansion. His most recent friction point was a March 2026 amendment requiring judicial warrants before federal officers enter homes during immigration enforcement; he explicitly framed it as supporting deportation while protecting the 4th Amendment rights of American citizens.
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on a hippie trail full of zombie
@Fuzzygoat @TawhakiTheGod @AllForProgress_ We didnt steal the harrier, we fixed it for you. We figured out how to control it properly and keep your pilots from dying. Then we improved it more and made it actually able to carry a reasonable amount of ordinance. RR did the engine beautifully though.
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Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
In a workshop on the outskirts of Bletchley (it had to be there, didn't it), on the 26th of March this year, a small British company called Pulsar Fusion did something that has not been done by any other company or government on Earth. It ignited a controlled plasma inside the test chamber of a working nuclear fusion rocket engine. The plasma held, along with the chamber. The fusion reaction was the kind of reaction that, contained inside a sufficiently engineered magnetic bottle, will one day take a crewed British vehicle to Mars in 30 days rather than 8 months, and that will, within the working lifetime of the engineers presently building it, make the outer planets of the solar system accessible to anyone with a British passport. The geography of the achievement deserves a longer moment of pause. Bletchley, in 1942, was where Alan Turing and his colleagues broke the Enigma cipher and almost certainly shortened the war in Europe by two years. Pulsar Fusion's headquarters sits roughly 600 yards from the Hut where they did it. The country that did the maths inside that hut has just, less than a mile down the road, ignited the plasma that could power the next century of human space travel. There is a continuity of British scientific lineage here that is, on the face of it, almost embarrassingly providential, and it is almost completely unreported in the British press. It's not quite Kitty-Hawk-to-the-moon in 61 years, but it's close. Like so many great companies of profound importance, Pulsar Fusion is pretty small. It was founded in 2013, and employs around 50 staff. Its chief executive, Richard Dinan, is a working British physicist who has spent the last decade quietly assembling the team and the capital to do what the world's national space agencies have been promising for 60 years and consistently failing to deliver. The competing American programmes, principally at NASA's Glenn Research Center and at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, are years behind on the propulsion side. The competing Chinese programmes are obscure but, on what is known publicly, also behind. The European Space Agency is, as ever, organising a workshop. Pulsar fired its plasma in March and has been preparing the next-stage tests in the months since. What this kind of capability means, when commercialised, is genuinely vast. The economic argument for getting a payload to Mars in 30 days rather than 8 months is not principally about the human passengers, though there is one. It is about cargo. Given a 30-day transit, Mars becomes a logistically tractable destination for the kind of infrastructure-build that turns it from a flag-planting science mission into a working industrial site. The argument for the outer planets is even larger. The asteroid belt alone, on conservative mineralogical estimates, contains more economically viable platinum-group metals than the entire crust of the Earth has been mined for in industrial history. The first country with reliable fusion propulsion is the first country with reliable access to that supply. The country that holds that capacity, fifty years from now, will be holding the most consequential industrial advantage of the 21st century, and there is no obvious second prize. The standard British response to this kind of thing is to either ignore it entirely, sell the company to an American buyer at series B (the DeepMind path) for fire-sale prices, or fund it at the level of a Whitehall departmental tea and coffee budget (the Skycutter and Orbex paths). The standard British response will not be sufficient. Pulsar Fusion needs the kind of patient capital that turns a working demonstration into an operational engine, and that, in turn, into a manufacturing capability. The British state, on present form, is structurally incapable of providing it, British pension funds are structurally incapable of investing in it, and the British political class will, on present form, only notice if it somehow manages to swing a leadership election. I wantt= Pulsar Fusion treated as a national-strategic asset, and beyond that as a potential subject of national destiny. The Sovereign AI Fund that backed Ineffable Intelligence has a clear template. The Prosperity Zone programme we designed at Progress that anchors heavy industry at SaxaVord and Teesside has the geographic flexibility to include a fusion-propulsion cluster in Buckinghamshire, six miles from the most evocative site in modern British scientific history. The procurement architecture of every major British defence and space agency should, from this autumn, be writing offtake contracts contingent on Pulsar's milestones. There's nothing extreme about these ideas. We could have been doing it decades ago. I always conceived of Britain as being as much among the stars as it is on Earth. To buy into the idea of Britain as a culture and polity is necessarily to buy into the concept of the human being as an illimitable force. Our history is littered with happy instances of people of great fortitude hitting upon obstacles and, with a cry of "This will not stop us", clearing the way for our brothers and sisters to follow through. A small British company in Bletchley has, while nobody was looking, extended that arm of our tradition, by accomplishing one of the most important pieces of scientific engineering of the decade. The country that produced them is, in a measurable sense, the same country that produced the Bombe, the Colossus, the jet engine, the structure of DNA, and the World Wide Web. The capacity is intact. The political class capable of recognising it must catch up, and will.
Maxi tweet media
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Donovan Nagel
Donovan Nagel@DonovanNagel·
@OwenBenjamin Very similar to koalas. Koalas only eat eucalyptus leaves which provide very little energy. They sleep almost non-stop. Just balls of fluff in the trees that only move to mate or climb a different tree.
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Owen Benjamin 🐻
Owen Benjamin 🐻@OwenBenjamin·
This clip is hilarious. I know it sounds crazy but it’s true. There’s way more insane facts about pandas. “Pandas spend about 10 to 16 hours a day eating and the remaining 8 to 14 hours asleep. Because bamboo is so low in nutrients, they have to constantly consume it to get enough energy, alternating between eating, napping, and doing it all over again.” youtu.be/sDJmvLrWcRc?si…
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Gaurab Chakrabarti
Over 300 Chinese J-20 stealth fighters have been built at roughly $110 million each. Not one carries a turbine blade that matches the service life of its Western equivalent. The WS-15 reached serial production on the J-20A in December 2025. Its high-pressure turbine runs on a third-generation Chinese single-crystal superalloy, rated about 30 degrees Celsius hotter than the second generation. The chemistry works. Casting yield at production scale does not. Chinese foundries scrap two of every three blades they cast. Western foundries scrap one in twenty. Chinese military engines improved from a few hundred hours between overhauls to roughly 1,500 with better blades. Western equivalents run roughly twice as long between overhauls and several times longer in total service life. Western foundries target sulfur below 1 part per million. Best practice runs below 0.3. At that purity, the coating survives thousands of hours in gas streams hotter than the alloy's melting point. A few extra parts per million and the coating peels, the blade oxidizes, and the engine fails prematurely.
Gaurab Chakrabarti tweet media
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
You can watch the surveillance state in America being put up on real time This chart shows the amount of Flock cameras being put up from January 1st 2024 through May 2026 This is horrifying. Wake up before it too late
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on a hippie trail full of zombie
@cyclemom @WallStreetApes @leahfiles You're a slave. You don't live where those gunshots happen, never had, never will. I grew up in neighborhoods like that. These cameras won't do shit there, they will be destroyed. They will however catch your neighbors with expired tags and fine them.
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cyclemom 🇺🇸 1776 🇺🇸
Flock camera data is ONLY available upon request from law enforcement on a particular case. Once you educate yourself on what Flock does you may appreciate the impact it has on cities with horrific crime levels. Gunshot detection in these cities is a great thing. I have asked many questions and I believe they are a critical asset to crime ridden areas.
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Dustin Grage
Dustin Grage@GrageDustin·
🚨 BREAKING: Several members of the Minnesota House Republican Caucus have confirmed to me that Rep. Aisha Gomez (D) told Rep. @elliottengenMN (R) to “go f*cking sh**t himself.” The incident occurred during a Democrat “sit-in” after a radical gun control bill failed to pass.
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Veles
Veles@velesfinance·
@elonmusk True. Just don't forget the rest of the squad
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Rare 🇺🇸
Rare 🇺🇸@RareImagery·
For serious winos, you can now buy a bucket of wine from Costco.
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Sawyer Merritt
Sawyer Merritt@SawyerMerritt·
Delta Airlines has responded to Elon Musk's post below with a statement: “The assertion in question is not accurate. Incorporating Delta Sync with Starlink would have been permitted under SpaceX's in-flight Wi-Fi agreement." Delta on why it chose Amazon's LEO: "This agreement gives us the fastest and most cost-effective technology available to better connect the world today, and it deepens our work with a global leader that shares our ambition to build what’s next." The airline is targeting 2028 to start offering Leo in-flight Wi-Fi on about half of its fleet. The rest of the jets will continue to use Viasat and Hughesnet.
Sawyer Merritt tweet media
Elon Musk@elonmusk

Not exactly. SpaceX requires that there be no annoying “portal” to use Starlink. Starlink WiFi must just work effortlessly every time, as though you were at home. Delta wanted to make it painful, difficult and expensive for their customers. Hard to see how that is a winning strategy.

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on a hippie trail full of zombie
@timmerenginerd @SawyerMerritt I go to Europe and back about 8-9 times a year on Delta. I'm trying united tomorrow and got them to match my status. I fly Delta one on all those flights so 8-10k a flight or 100k a year not just because of starlink, but the seats are getting crusty.
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Enginerd32
Enginerd32@timmerenginerd·
@SawyerMerritt Me thinks Delta doth protest too much. Oh well, I just wont use them for more than a puddle jump connection. Trips to Asia, Europe or Coast to Coast in the US are out of the question 🤷‍♂️
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
I’ll always champion peaceful protest. But the Unite the Kingdom march organisers are peddling hatred and division. We’ve already blocked visas for far-right agitators who want to come here to spew their extremist views. They don't speak for the decent, fair, respectful Britain I know.
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Kurt
Kurt@_kurtstengel·
@JoeyMannarino @Keir_Starmer If you love the British, why have you been attacking British-born Zarah Sultana and Shabana Mahmood?
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