Baris Gül

1.1K posts

Baris Gül banner
Baris Gül

Baris Gül

@Barry81g

curious individual

Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg Katılım Eylül 2018
1K Takip Edilen97 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Baris Gül
Baris Gül@Barry81g·
@BridgeUSA_ Listen with the intend to understand what the person is trying to tell you. Don’t focus just on the exact meaning of the spoken word. Try to imagine the bigger/whole image based on their expression. Not everyone is able to express themselves perfectly.
English
4
1
11
0
Baris Gül retweetledi
Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt
Journalism is not a crime. We must urgently realise that all the safeguards and protections established in the past decades are being crushed by abuse of power and lawlessness. Like every contagion, this decay can and must be stopped. #FreeAhmed
All In with Chris Hayes@allinwithchris

“This is the most clear-cut example of criminalizing journalism and speech. It is outrageous,” says Chris Hayes on Kuwaiti-American journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin’s ongoing detention in Kuwait after sharing a publicly available, verified video. youtube.com/watch?v=HseCjE…

English
36
1.4K
3.4K
42.9K
Baris Gül retweetledi
The Beautiful Truth
The Beautiful Truth@tbt_magazine·
What if uncertainty was a doorway, not an obstacle? On 6 May we'll be speaking to @sbkaufman, psychologist & author of 'Rise Above', on how leaders can transcend uncertainty and write the future – for themselves and their organisations. Free to join: luma.com/un4jycbl
The Beautiful Truth tweet media
English
0
1
3
1.5K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Julian Joswig MdB
Julian Joswig MdB@JoswigJulian·
Ich kann diesen Gastbeitrag von Katherina Reiche in der FAZ nicht unkommentiert lassen. Denn es ist genau dieser mit Phrasen vollgestopfte PR-Beratersprech, den niemand braucht: höflich im Ton, aber gefährlich im Inhalt. Warum? Ein paar Beispiele ⬇️
Julian Joswig MdB tweet media
Deutsch
151
723
2.1K
76.3K
Scott Barry Kaufman ⛵
Scott Barry Kaufman ⛵@sbkaufman·
Wow!
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

You have your mother's cells in your brain right now. If she ever carried you, yours are in hers. Scientists looked at the brains of 59 women after they died, ages 32 to 101. In 63% of them, they found their sons' DNA scattered across different brain regions. The cells had traveled from the womb, through the blood, past the wall that normally keeps foreign material out of the brain, and settled in. The oldest woman still carrying her son's cells in her brain was 94. In mice, those cells became functional brain cells. The transfer starts as early as 7 weeks into pregnancy. Your cells slip through the placenta into your mother's body. Hers slips into yours. One study found a mother still had her son's cells in her blood 27 years after giving birth. After delivery, between 50 and 75% of women carry their child's cells. During pregnancy, up to 6% of a woman's blood DNA comes from the baby. When a mother's heart gets damaged during or after pregnancy, the baby's cells travel to the injury, latch on, and turn into beating heart cells, blood vessel lining, and muscle. Heart failure tied to pregnancy has a 50% spontaneous recovery rate, better than every other kind. The Mount Sinai team behind the research thinks the baby's cells are fixing the mother's heart from the inside. The cancer data caught me off guard. A study compared healthy women to women with breast cancer. 85% of the healthy group still carried their children's cells. Only 64% of the breast cancer group did. That works out to about 4x lower odds of getting breast cancer if you kept those cells. The working theory is that they patrol the body and catch cancer cells before they grow. A 2022 study found that in developing mouse brains, a mother's cells controlled the brain's immune cells, preventing them from cutting too many connections between brain cells. Your mom's cells helped wire your brain before you were born. And it stacks across generations. A woman can carry cells from her kids, from her own mother, and even from pregnancies her mother had before her. Three generations of cells from different people, living inside one body.

QST
1
0
7
5.2K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
You have your mother's cells in your brain right now. If she ever carried you, yours are in hers. Scientists looked at the brains of 59 women after they died, ages 32 to 101. In 63% of them, they found their sons' DNA scattered across different brain regions. The cells had traveled from the womb, through the blood, past the wall that normally keeps foreign material out of the brain, and settled in. The oldest woman still carrying her son's cells in her brain was 94. In mice, those cells became functional brain cells. The transfer starts as early as 7 weeks into pregnancy. Your cells slip through the placenta into your mother's body. Hers slips into yours. One study found a mother still had her son's cells in her blood 27 years after giving birth. After delivery, between 50 and 75% of women carry their child's cells. During pregnancy, up to 6% of a woman's blood DNA comes from the baby. When a mother's heart gets damaged during or after pregnancy, the baby's cells travel to the injury, latch on, and turn into beating heart cells, blood vessel lining, and muscle. Heart failure tied to pregnancy has a 50% spontaneous recovery rate, better than every other kind. The Mount Sinai team behind the research thinks the baby's cells are fixing the mother's heart from the inside. The cancer data caught me off guard. A study compared healthy women to women with breast cancer. 85% of the healthy group still carried their children's cells. Only 64% of the breast cancer group did. That works out to about 4x lower odds of getting breast cancer if you kept those cells. The working theory is that they patrol the body and catch cancer cells before they grow. A 2022 study found that in developing mouse brains, a mother's cells controlled the brain's immune cells, preventing them from cutting too many connections between brain cells. Your mom's cells helped wire your brain before you were born. And it stacks across generations. A woman can carry cells from her kids, from her own mother, and even from pregnancies her mother had before her. Three generations of cells from different people, living inside one body.
All day Astronomy@forallcurious

🚨: Your mother is always with you, even if she is no longer in this world: science confirms it. Part of her continues living inside you at the cellular level, a real phenomenon known as microchimerism.

English
297
3.7K
17.1K
2M
Baris Gül
Baris Gül@Barry81g·
(…) Thus, it seemed that support for redistribution is driven not by envy, but by the belief that the rich often don’t deserve their advantage. This is what we tested and found across four studies.” (…)
PsyPost.org@PsyPost

A new study published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin suggests that public support for wealth redistribution is driven by beliefs about fairness rather than jealousy. It provides evidence that the "politics of envy" narrative is… dlvr.it/TRfGZX

English
0
0
0
7
Baris Gül retweetledi
Nainsi Dwivedi
Nainsi Dwivedi@NainsiDwiv50980·
All Paid Courses (Free for First 4500 People) 𝗣𝗮𝗶𝗱 𝗖𝗼𝘂𝗿𝘀𝗲 𝗙𝗥𝗘𝗘 (PART - 1) 1. Artificial Intelligence 2. Machine Learning 3. Prompt Engineering 4. Claude,Chatgpt,Grok 5. Data Analytics 6. AWS Certified 7. Data Science 8. BIG DATA 9. Python 10. Ethical Hacking (72 Hours only ) To get- 1. Follow me to get DM 2. Like + RT 3. Reply " All "
Nainsi Dwivedi tweet media
English
34
22
52
2.8K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
Publishing this in newspapers across Europe. This boycott is just getting started.
Rutger Bregman tweet media
English
215
3.3K
11.2K
311K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
This is a huge opportunity for Europe. Welcome Anthropic with open arms. Roll out the red carpet. Visa for all employees. Europe already controls the AI hardware bottleneck through ASML. Add the world's leading AI safety lab and you have the foundations of an AI superpower.
Polymarket@Polymarket

BREAKING: Anthropic CEO formally refuses to comply with the Department of War's demands. 44% chance they're banned from the supply chain. poly.market/6kkVEei

English
462
1.5K
10.9K
726.6K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
This is the most important thing happening in the world right now. The administration wants killer drones + mass surveillance of Americans. Anthropic refuses to build it. While most tech companies fall in line, they are prepared to pay the price for their principles.
The Associated Press@AP

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gives Anthropic a Friday deadline to open its AI technology for unrestricted military use or risk losing contract, source tells AP. apnews.com/article/anthro…

English
273
5.1K
19.9K
804.7K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
I increasingly think the Democrats need an insurgent economic populist to take over, the way Trump took over the Republican party. Here's a possible candidate: Erica Payne, CEO of @PatrioticMills. I've rarely seen someone fight for working people with this much fire and authenticity. Put a social media team like Mamdani's around her and I'd be VERY curious to see what would happen. This is her recently at the IMF.
English
155
804
3K
138.4K
Baris Gül retweetledi
PsyPost.org
PsyPost.org@PsyPost·
A new framework suggests motivation is more than just effort. Distinct chemical signals create specific "moods" that determine whether the brain records broad concepts or specific details, fundamentally reshaping how we understand learning. dlvr.it/TQXrHm
English
1
15
44
2.2K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
Rome didn’t fall overnight. It rotted in public first. Tell me this all doesn’t sound too familiar…
English
73
774
2.2K
70.6K
Baris Gül retweetledi
Baris Gül retweetledi
Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
Many are laughing at how clownish this administration feels, but historians of fascism aren’t laughing, some are packing their bags. Crackdowns on universities. Pressure on judges. Tactics straight out of Hungary and Poland, now showing up here.
English
129
682
2.5K
89.3K