Bryton Killian
2.2K posts


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Euskara
Bryton Killian retweetledi

I just had the craziest experience at the airport.
We are about to board a flight to Atlanta when the pilot from the incoming plane walks out of the jetway. Guy is probably late 50s, salt and pepper hair, military look. The kind of pilot you instantly feel good about seeing on your flight.
Pilot walks over to the counter, gets on the PA system, and starts addressing everyone. “Folks, I’ve been doing this a long time. Flying one of these jets is easy. The hard part is looking at 130 people and telling them their flight is going to be delayed.”
Audible groans throughout the boarding gate. Most people here are flying to Atlanta as a layover before another flight. 130 people just had their day become a complete mess.
The pilot goes on. “I get it, trust me. But here’s the deal: During our landing, we had a small mechanical issue. I’m not your pilot for the next leg, but I don’t feel confident the jet’s safe to fly until we have a mechanical team look it over, and I don’t feel comfortable asking the next pilots to fly you guys until we get confirmation.”
He points at the agents next to him behind the counter: “Now, none of this is the agents’ fault. Please be kind to them. I’m the one who made this decision, not them, so any inconvenience you experience is my fault. Just please know that I don’t do this lightly, and I’m only doing it because I believe it’s in the best interests of everyone’s safety.”
Now this is where the story gets crazy. The pilot puts the microphone down, grabs his suitcase, and all the people in the gate…
Start clapping.
I’m not joking, everyone starts clapping for the guy. 130 people who just had their travel plans ruined give an ovation to the guy who made the decision and delivered the message.
All because he addressed them with decency and transparency, took ownership of the decision, made it clear that it was necessary, and explained why it was in everyone’s best interest.
It’s honestly one of the best examples of strong communication—of strong leadership, for that matter—that I’ve seen in a long time.
@Delta, whoever your Atlanta to Wichita pilot was this morning, he’s one of the good ones. Please tell him the delayed passengers of flight 1637 appreciate what he did.

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Bryton Killian retweetledi
Bryton Killian retweetledi

In 2011, a neuroscientist at MIT named Dr. Li-Huei Tsai made a discovery that should have been on the front page of every newspaper on Earth.
She exposed mice with advanced Alzheimer's disease to a flickering light pulsing at exactly 40 Hz — forty flashes per second. Nothing else. No drugs. No surgery. Just light at a specific frequency.
Within one hour, the amyloid-beta plaques in their brains — the protein deposits that define Alzheimer's — began to dissolve. Not slow. Not gradually. Within sixty minutes.
After seven days of daily 40 Hz exposure, plaque levels dropped by 50%. The mice regained memory function. Their neurons began firing in synchrony again. The brain's immune cells — microglia — activated and started clearing the toxic buildup like a cleaning crew that had been asleep for years.
The study was published in Nature. The most prestigious scientific journal on the planet. Peer-reviewed. Replicated. Confirmed.
That was 2016. It is now 2026.
40 million people worldwide have Alzheimer's. The pharmaceutical industry generates $13 billion per year from Alzheimer's drugs that do not reverse the disease. Not one of them. They slow it. Maybe. Temporarily. At $26,000 per year per patient.
A 40 Hz light costs less than a dollar to produce.
Dr. Tsai is still at MIT. Her research continues. Phase III human trials are underway. But you will not see this on the evening news. You will not hear your doctor mention it. You will not find it in any pharmacy.
Because a frequency that costs nothing cannot sustain a $13 billion industry.
The light is 40 Hz. The frequency is real. The science is published. And 40 million people are still waiting for permission to use it.
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Bryton Killian retweetledi

🚨holy shit.. the CIA just used a tool called "Ghost Murmur" to find an American pilot hiding in a mountain crevice in Iran.. by detecting his heartbeat..
not his phone.. not a tracker.. not a radio signal.. his heartbeat..
Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works built it.. the same classified division that built the SR-71 Blackbird.. the stealth bomber.. the U-2 spy plane.. every secret aircraft America has ever denied existed until they didn't..
it uses quantum magnetometry to pick up the electromagnetic pulse your heart makes every time it beats.. then AI filters out everything else..
the pilot.. callsign "Dude 44 Bravo" was wounded.. alone for two days.. hiding in a crack in a mountain.. while Iranian forces searched for him on foot..
and America found him from the sky.. by listening to his chest..
here's the part that should rewrite everything you think about privacy and power.. this was Ghost Murmur's FIRST operational use.. meaning it's been sitting in a vault.. tested.. ready.. waiting for a moment important enough to reveal it..
they didn't show you this to impress you.. they showed you this because the next person they use it on won't be a rescue
Polymarket@Polymarket
JUST IN: CIA reportedly used secret new tool “Ghost Murmur” to locate the downed U.S. airman in Iran, capable of detecting a human heartbeat from long range.
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Bryton Killian retweetledi

@brometheus1983 @kamikazecash @bluewmist No way. Been attempting to destroy one of my pairs now for 5 almost 6 years and I can’t do it. Some pilling and slightly thinner but they’re insanely durable
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Bryton Killian retweetledi
Bryton Killian retweetledi
Bryton Killian retweetledi

Wake up, babe, new drone-based nightmare fuel just dropped.
Samuel Cardillo@CardilloSamuel
direct kinetic impact. a flying sword. 450km/h. updated video showing exactly that. we're also working on the explosive variant. only for authorized partners. dms are open.
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Bryton Killian retweetledi

In the old days there was a thing called the Nintendo Power Line which was a 1-900 number you dialed from your phone that charged you $1.50/minute to get video game advice from a bonafide registered licensed autist to help you with whatever you needed. AI can't begin to compete.
Autism Capital 🧩@AutismCapital
We joked that with the new Xbox CEO it would now be the Copilot Box and lo and behold, it’s became the Copilot Box.
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Bryton Killian retweetledi

@AB84 Birth control. lol both kids were conceived first time after pausing the pill. Shit works.
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Bryton Killian retweetledi
Bryton Killian retweetledi
Bryton Killian retweetledi

The Afroman Trial.
-Cops raid Afromans house for bullshit reasons.
-Steal money, break his door, fuck his house up.
-No criminality found whatsoever, no charges at all pressed on Afroman.
-Afroman spends the next 3 years making songs that make fun of all the officers involved by name, even using footage of the raid from his own CCTV cameras.
-Songs had titles like "Randy Walters is a son of a bitch" and "Lick Em Low Lisa" accusing one of the officers of being a lesbian and sleeping with the other officers wives.
-During the raid one officer looked like he was about to eat some lemon pound cake sitting on Afromans counter, Afroman made a whole album calling the officer fat.
-The cops get mad and file a lawsuit for defamation.
-Afroman turns up to court in a whole American flag suit.
-Officers performatively mald and cry while listening to the songs really trying to oversell how badly the songs upset them.
-One officer was suing because Afroman made a whole song about him saying he was fucking the officers wife. When the officer was asked if Afroman was really fucking his wife, he said "I don't know". Nuking his own case and establishing that there is a non-zero chance that Afroman might actually be fucking his wife.
-As his only witness for the trial, Afroman brought a deputies EX FUCKING WIFE.
-The jury ruled completely in favour of Afroman.
This entire thing has been a great win for free speech and absolutely fucking hilarious.

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@whostarscope @Spoon_town Second the magpul Glock mags. How can pmags be so good but the Glock mags are hot garbage ?
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@Spoon_town I keep all my mags loaded because if i need them i have bullets and if i dont need them nothing happens. If the spring fails (it wont) (unless its a magpull glock mag) then i guess i die and its not my problem anymore
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How someone answers this question will tell you if anything else they have to say about guns is worth listening to.
Military Support@MilitaryCooI
Do you keep your mags loaded or unloaded?
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Bryton Killian retweetledi
















