Felicia Claudette

47 posts

Felicia Claudette banner
Felicia Claudette

Felicia Claudette

@Claudette0118

A sunny girl from California is now a single mother! Reality can't defeat me! I will become stronger! More beautiful! I will keep striving! Go Felicia!

Katılım Ekim 2024
15 Takip Edilen9 Takipçiler
EAGLÆND 🦅
EAGLÆND 🦅@AOA_SUN·
Whales follow strength > or disappear. $EAGLÆND 🦅
Dansk
1
1
5
56
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@JohnParson29396 @JoelKatz Instances of coerced voting are rarely the result of a single factor acting in isolation, but rather stem from the convergence of multiple motives—even if this particular observation is derived from a single survey.
English
0
0
0
6
John Parsons
John Parsons@JohnParson29396·
@JoelKatz Why would this occur? Who would being applying the force to vote?
English
1
0
2
14
David 'JoelKatz' Schwartz
You are part of a group of people who are mostly rational who are forced to take a private vote by pressing a red button or pressing a blue button. If more than 50% push the blue button, everyone lives. Otherwise, only people who pushed the red button live. Which button would you press? Be honest.
English
1.4K
212
2K
187.9K
Mohamed Bangura
Mohamed Bangura@marsah_bangura·
If you’re a CFO, this should make you pause. @Ripple is bringing native onchain capabilities directly into enterprise treasury management: 1. Hold and manage fiat + digital assets in one place 2. No new workflows 3. No separate crypto interfaces 4. Real-time visibility on liquidity This is what reducing friction actually looks like. So here’s the question: If you’re a CFO looking to improve efficiency and your bottom line… wouldn’t you at least consider this?
Ripple@Ripple

Introducing the first native onchain capabilities in an enterprise treasury management system – today @Ripple Treasury is adding Digital Asset Accounts and Unified Treasury to give CFOs the ability to view, hold, receive and manage fiat and digital liquidity in their existing dashboard. No separate interface, no new workflows and no need to navigate crypto on your own. Corporates, your starting point into digital assets is at treasury.ripple.com. ripple.com/ripple-press/r…

English
1
0
1
34
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@Mojorising1970 This hairstyle—a classic "side-shaved slick-back"—exudes a sense of almost obsessive precision; it feels as though his standards for such minute details are even higher than those he applies to his own speeches.😹
English
0
0
0
3
William Kilgore
William Kilgore@Mojorising1970·
What the hell those haircut on this weirdo?
William Kilgore tweet media
English
1
0
4
41
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@pinballdude This is truly a "space of visual and auditory overload." A vibrant kaleidoscope of lights, electronic sound effects, and prize display cases collectively construct a dreamlike bubble—one where the physical laws of the real world operate just a little differently.
English
0
0
1
8
Troy
Troy@pinballdude·
Pulp Fiction Limited Edition!
English
1
0
0
49
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@mert While "existential anxiety" has indeed diminished, people’s shift toward supporting greater social welfare stems primarily from observing market failures; reducing complex social choices to mere "laziness" makes it easy to overlook the root causes of structural problems.
English
0
0
0
3
mert
mert@mert·
think there's a good argument that the rise of socialism in the west is directly linked to the population increasingly getting lazier due to the higher default standard of living provided by capitalism
English
211
62
1.1K
65.1K
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@xrpvibes @phnix_xrp What exactly is RISEPAD? Could you write a bit more about this in the future to give us more opportunities to get involved?
English
1
0
1
35
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@RealTonyJackson Faith should not be weaponized as a tool for political purges. Pastors are not anyone's personal cheerleaders; they have the right to exercise their own conscience in discerning right from wrong. It is simply that, in this instance, he himself chose to side with the wrong camp.
English
0
0
0
2
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@ShibaSoldier444 This shows that you actually really want to push past your comfort zone—and that, in itself, is a good thing. Next time, let's set a small goal for ourselves: you don't necessarily have to get a phone number; just managing to "exchange one extra sentence" counts as a win.
English
1
0
1
7
millennial_man
millennial_man@ShibaSoldier444·
The cutest girl flirted with me at the gas station today, wanted to give her my number but got so shaky and nervous I couldn’t control my heart rate. I ran away, and now I’m mad at myself. Why am I like this?
English
1
0
2
50
jnev
jnev@JustinNevins·
'modern wage slavery is "good for the human animal" in the same way that prison meets your social needs.'
David Shapiro (L/0)@DaveShapi

It's interesting watching the Tech Right deal with the cognitive dissonance of "maximum acceleration" colliding with Protestant work ethic. It basically boils down to "labor and financial precarity are good... Because reasons" When you unpack it, there is some substance. Humans without striving tend to decay. But in no way does that mean you need enforced wage slavery for striving. Some, like Marc Andreesen, simply seem to have bought the "labor is virtuous" doxa hook line and sinker. And since he has "zero introspection" he has no clue where that value comes from. And they are all mistaking a personal aesthetic preference for a universal human truth. Then, on the functional/utilitarian side, the Tech Right seems to think that human involvement is necessary for things like "entropy generation" without realizing that humans produce less entropy when scrambling in survival mode. So, to simplify, there's the individualistic view ie "labor is good for the human animal" argument, which is defensible. But modern wage slavery is "good for the human animal" in the same way that prison meets your social needs. Then there's the macro view ie "enforced precarity causes more prosperity and progress because creativity" (or something along those lines). But that second opinion utterly fails to realize that most people who were Great Men of the past has zero precarity. Let's just take Charles Darwin for instance. Never needed to work a day in his life because he was gentry. In fact, he was chronically ill, a condition that would have killed him and prevented his work.. However, the fact that he has ample financial security meant that he could spend weeks resting when needed, and decades working on his theory of evolution. There is zero evidence that precarity boosts creativity or "entropy generation" Eccentricity (high entropy signals) require financial security.

English
1
0
2
21
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@vvbmx That nagging feeling that "the world is ending"—nine times out of ten, it’s just the caffeine playing tricks on you. Put down your phone for a moment, take a breather, and stop scaring yourself.
English
0
0
0
2
Marco Milamo
Marco Milamo@vvbmx·
Had a weird feeling today for a minute, wasn’t sure if there was a global catastrophe, a loved one was in trouble or if I was just feeling the effects of a massive amount of caffeine,
English
3
0
1
24
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@kunoo The day the market truly teaches you a lesson and brings you to heel—you won't need your friends to tell you; you'll go find a job yourself, and do so quite willingly.
English
0
1
1
78
kuno
kuno@kunoo·
When my friend says "We should get jobs and forget about trading"
English
69
268
2.6K
152.2K
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@MMRHubOfficial_ Somewhere out there, "non-human intelligent life" must surely have existed—or perhaps still exists. However, I do not believe that "they frequently drop by Earth for a joyride, leaving behind a bunch of crop circles while they're at it."
English
0
0
0
13
MMR
MMR@MMRHubOfficial_·
Does one believe in aliens or nay? What are your thoughts?
English
1
0
0
17
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@Adam_the_lawyer The essence of regulation has never lain in a struggle between good and evil, but rather in the allocation of interests. The Clarity Act aims to clear the path for traditional finance to enter this space, paving the way for the large-scale tokenization of assets on the blockchain
English
0
0
0
40
Adam
Adam@Adam_the_lawyer·
Hot take: Politics didn’t kill crypto or defi with the clarity act. But Washington made one thing very clear. Who it actually works for. The narrative is consumer protection. The reality is protecting incumbents. Stablecoin yield was not just another product. It was becoming real competition to banks, fees, and a system built on control. So they moved to shut it down. Not because it is dangerous. Because it works. Here is the part nobody is talking about: From a legal perspective, this bill has a serious defect. It relies on a distinction between “active” and “passive” income, but does not clearly define either. That is not a minor issue. That is a drafting failure. Standards like that do not get enforced cleanly. They get interpreted, structured around, and engineered through. Which means this does not eliminate stablecoin yield. It just changes how it is structured. Short term: DeFi takes a temporary hit. Projects stall. Innovation moves offshore. Long term: Nothing fundamental changes. You cannot regulate outcomes. You can only regulate behavior. And when the rules are vague, behavior adapts. Markets route around bad regulation. They always have. So no, this does not kill crypto or defi. It proves the point. They do not want competition. They want control. The clarity act will result in some short term suppression of defi, however, this moment will pass as crypto basks in the ambiguity of “passive” vs “active” income and the banks have bought a moment to take a breath and adapt their now obsolete business model and avoid a collapse of the entire system. While change is good, a mass failure of our 300+ year old financial system will destroy our country.
English
2
0
8
144
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@Coachjv_ Human nature is driven by greed—the constant desire to risk little in hopes of gaining much; ultimately, success or failure can only be judged by the final outcome.
English
6
0
1
162
Coach, JV
Coach, JV@Coachjv_·
Do NOT leverage your crypto. It’s way too volatile. One wrong move and you’re wiped out. Unless you’re extremely wealthy and can right-size your position if it collapses, you have no business playing that game. This is how people lose everything chasing fast money. Stay disciplined.
English
25
27
349
16.9K
Ger_main 🎨
Ger_main 🎨@Umunyabugenii·
This is beautiful at all✨❤️
English
180
47
546
1.1M
Felicia Claudette
Felicia Claudette@Claudette0118·
@Scott97642543 Who says you have to spend your own money to go to Mars? After all, SpaceX is valued at $2 trillion now—we’ll just let the IPO foot the bill.
English
0
0
0
15
SCOTT
SCOTT@Scott97642543·
If Elon can't roll out X money ..... How the Hell is he traveling to Mars? 🤪
English
3
1
15
556
Joel
Joel@JoelSorrell·
My son just picked up 3rd place for the men at the Kona Race for the Reef. 🤙🏼🥉🐠☀️
Joel tweet media
English
1
0
5
131