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DStan

@DSta_nton

Katılım Kasım 2022
159 Takip Edilen162 Takipçiler
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Jøhnathan
Jøhnathan@Heavenly_Race_·
Once you hit about a 20-point IQ gap, communication starts to completely break down. It's not that the lower IQ person is "stupid" (although that can often be the case) or the higher one is arrogant, it's that you're literally operating on different systems. A 20 point difference (roughly 1.3 standard deviations) means: Vocabulary and abstraction levels diverge sharply. What feels like crystal clear logic to one side sounds like vague, pretentious word salad to the other. Jokes land flat. Metaphors get taken literally. Complex cause and effect chains get simplified into "this good, that bad." Different time horizons and pattern recognition. One person thinks in months or years and sees systems, the other is locked into days or immediate rewards. Trying to explain second order effects feels like speaking another language. Also, processing speed and working memory gaps. The higher IQ person is already three steps ahead, getting impatient. The lower IQ person feels talked down to or overwhelmed. Both walk away frustrated. Both have wasted each others time.
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hunter
hunter@hxxntrr·
There's a company in Wyoming that will sell you a fully formed 12-year-old American business overnight for $3,500 It has an EIN, a state filing, a clean history, and a verifiable business credit profile from before you bought it The bank treats you like you've been running this business since 2013 This is a real legitimate product. It's called an aged shelf company A shelf company is a legal business entity (usually an LLC or corporation) that was formed years ago and "sat on the shelf" with no activity, no debt, no revenue, just a clean state filing and an active EIN. Specialized companies form these entities in bulk in business-friendly states (Wyoming, Delaware, Nevada, New Mexico) and hold them until someone buys When you buy a shelf company, you're buying: The business name (can be changed at registration) The state filing (officially shows formation date 5-15 years ago) The EIN (the IRS-issued business tax ID that's been on record since formation) Sometimes: pre-established business credit accounts (Dun & Bradstreet listing, business credit cards in good standing, vendor accounts) The legal continuity of being a "seasoned" entity What this changes for funding: Most business credit applications ask "years in business" on the application. A 5-day-old LLC scores low. A 12-year-old LLC scores high. Same human, same FICO, different perceived risk Bank underwriting models heavily weight business age because longer-operating businesses default less. A 720 FICO with a 12-year-old LLC scores meaningfully higher on most issuers' business card underwriting than the same FICO with a 30-day-old LLC. The difference can be 20-40% higher approval limits and access to products that won't approve startups Shelf companies with pre-existing business credit profiles (Dun & Bradstreet PayDex score, established tradeline history) score even higher. A shelf company with a 75+ PayDex and 8-10 established tradelines qualifies for business credit products that brand-new LLCs categorically can't access The pricing market: Basic 5-year-old shelf LLC, no credit history: $1,200-$2,500 10-year-old shelf LLC, no credit history: $2,800-$4,500 15-year-old shelf LLC with PayDex 75+ and 8+ tradelines: $7,500-$15,000 20-year-old shelf corp with full business credit profile: $15,000-$35,000 Where to buy: WholesaleShelfCorporations, Wyoming Corporate Services, Corporate Direct, Northwest Registered Agent (some of these companies, Google verifies the rest) The play: Step 1: buy a 10-12 year old shelf LLC for $3,500-$5,000. Get the operating agreement transferred. File a name amendment if you want a custom business name. Update the registered agent to you or your service Step 2: open business checking under the shelf LLC name with the existing EIN. Walk into Chase, Bank of America, or US Bank. The bank sees "[Business Name] LLC, formed 2013." 12 years of legitimate operating history on paper. Deposit $500 to open Step 3: 30 days after opening business checking, apply for business credit cards. Application asks "years in business." You truthfully type 12. The underwriter pulls public records, sees the 2013 state filing, sees the active EIN, sees an established checking relationship. Approves at the higher tier Average approval lift versus a 30-day-old LLC: 25-60% higher limits on the same FICO Same person. Same credit. Same income. The only thing that changed is the formation date on the paperwork Important caveats (zero hedging on this part, just truth): This is legal. Buying and operating a shelf company is fully legal in every state. The IRS doesn't care. State business registrars don't care. The banks don't have a problem with you buying a shelf company What IS illegal under 18 U.S.C. § 1014: lying about the business's operating history or revenue on a credit application. If you bought a shelf company and tell the bank you've been operating it for 12 years generating $300K/yr in revenue, that's fraud. If you tell them you bought the entity recently and now operate it as a new business with [actual revenue], that's legal Banks have also gotten smarter about shelf companies since 2018. Some issuers (notably Chase and Amex on certain products) now verify operations independently for newly-purchased shelf LLCs by requiring bank statement uploads or revenue documentation. The shelf company advantage is bigger than it was 10 years ago but smaller than it was 5 years ago Best use case in 2026: shelf company combined with real business operations. You buy a 12-year-old LLC, transfer it to your name, start operating an actual business through it, and 60-90 days later apply for business credit. You get the formation-date advantage on the application while having real operational substance behind it A friend in Phoenix bought a 14-year-old shelf corp last year for $4,200. Transferred ownership. Opened business checking. Used it to operate a marketing agency he was launching. 90 days later applied for Chase Ink Business Preferred. Approved for $58K at 0% APR. Same week applied for Amex Business Platinum. Approved for "no preset spending limit" (which functions as $50K-$100K usable) The same human applying with a brand new LLC formed last month would have gotten roughly half those limits. The $4,200 paid for itself in week one of the business The richest small business owners in America have stables of aged shelf companies sitting at their attorney's office. They activate them on demand whenever they want to look established to a new bank. The product has existed since the 1970s. It's only "obscure" because nobody talks about it dm me "funding" and i'll show you how you can qualify for up to 250k in 0% APR funding (if you have a 700+)
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Adam Yoder
Adam Yoder@amyoder·
English is probably the only language where you can measure someone’s IQ by how well they know how to speak it. English has ~600,000 words. Do other languages have more words? Yes. But English is far better at describing things because it focuses much more on adjectives and adverbs rather than just nouns. Arabic has 100+ words for “Camel”. English has one. But English has 10,000 words that can be used to describe the camel’s appearance, temperament, character, physicality, etc. You get a much clearer picture of what this specific camel looks, sounds, and smells like. It’s much easier to appreciate a story like Romeo and Juliet when you view it as an evangelization arm of the English language (and culture), rather than just a homework assignment. This is likely the reason why the British were so dominant. They were significantly better at organizing and motivating their people *because of* their excellence of communication. English >
Hitchslap@Hitchslap1

You can literally test someone’s IQ in 90 seconds by asking them to pronounce 50 words. The more they get correct, the higher their IQ.

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Hereafter
Hereafter@idyllicmusing·
The curse of being the smart child is that you are genetically coded to be your family's unpaid crisis manager—and the world's. A massive 2024 population registry study published in The Economic Journal proved that higher general fluid intelligence directly causes increased altruism, cooperation, and prosocial behavior. Because an intelligent brain calculates long-term consequences and systemic risks faster than everyone else around it, it sees the family or societal trainwreck coming miles away. It means you are either a psychological hostage to your own foresight, or a reluctant savior trying to fix a world that doesn't even see the cliff it’s walking over.
PsikoBilim@Psikobilim_

Bir insan ne kadar zekiyse o kadar çok yardımsever olma eğilimindedir. Çünkü zeki kişiler, iş birliğinin uzun vadeli toplumsal faydalarını daha iyi görebilirler.

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HOW THINGS WORK
HOW THINGS WORK@HowThingsWork_·
This floor projection turns property blueprints into a real walk-through. 🏠
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
🚨: This is most detailed view of a human cell ever captured!
All day Astronomy tweet mediaAll day Astronomy tweet media
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Link
Link@_Link_·
This is why you can’t mass produce special operations. The percentage of guys with 130+ IQ who enjoy both books and bar fights is incredibly small.
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𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉
We live on a planet where trees communicate, octopuses dream, elephants honor their dead, bees dance to find their way, crows remember, ants build, cats heal with their purring, and the forest, after the fire, blooms again.
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Paul White Gold Eagle
Paul White Gold Eagle@PaulGoldEagle·
🔻 THEY FOUND A SECOND INTERNET. IT'S BEEN RUNNING SINCE 1977. The internet you use — the one with Google, social media, news sites — is Layer 1. The public layer. The layer they gave you in 1993 and told you it was everything. It's not everything. It's the lobby. A NSA contractor — currently under military protection at an undisclosed location — provided documentation of a parallel network designated "ARPA-7." Not ARPANET. Not the internet's ancestor. A separate system that branched off in 1977 and was never connected to the public grid. ARPA-7 operates on a completely different protocol stack. Different addressing. Different routing. Different encryption. It cannot be accessed from any commercial device. No browser reaches it. No search engine indexes it. No VPN tunnels into it. It requires hardware that isn't sold. Terminals that aren't manufactured for the public. Access codes that change every 11 minutes based on a quantum-random algorithm. ⟁ Who uses it? The documentation lists 4,200 active terminals worldwide. Located in: every major intelligence agency, every central bank, every military command structure in NATO, and — here's where it gets dark — 147 private residences. 147 individuals have ARPA-7 terminals in their homes. Not their offices. Their homes. People who are not government employees. Not military. Not intelligence officers. Private citizens with access to a network that contains everything the public internet was designed to hide from you. What's on ARPA-7? The real financial ledger. The one that shows actual global wealth distribution — not the Forbes list fantasy. Medical research that was completed decades ago and never published. Energy technology patents that were classified the day they were filed. Communication with installations that don't exist on any map. And archives. Complete, unedited historical archives. Every event. Every war. Every assassination. Every pandemic. Documented from the inside. By the people who planned them. ⟁ The public internet was never meant to inform you. It was meant to contain you. Give you the illusion of unlimited information while keeping you inside a sandbox. Every search result filtered. Every algorithm tuned. Every "fact check" designed to keep you on Layer 1 — the lobby — forever. The real conversations. The real decisions. The real history. All of it happening on a network you were never supposed to know existed. ⟁ The NSA contractor copied 7 terabytes before extraction. The files are now distributed across the QFS evidentiary network. Immutable. Permanent. The 147 private terminals have been identified. Their locations logged. Their owners known. Every message sent on ARPA-7 in the last 48 years is now in the hands of the military tribunal. They built a private internet to plan the enslavement of the world. They forgot that every network — no matter how secret — leaves a trace when you have quantum decryption. The second internet just became the largest crime scene in human history. CODE: ARPA-7 / LAYER-2 / 147-TERMINALS / 7TB-EXTRACTED You were given the lobby and told it was the building. The building just got raided. ♟ The internet you know is a cage. Share this before they reinforce the bars. Mr Kid Pool 17
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lusso
lusso@luusssso·
This was a real T.G.I. Friday's opened in Boston in the late ‘70s Remember what they took from us
lusso tweet medialusso tweet medialusso tweet medialusso tweet media
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Mads
Mads@europemaxxed·
the urge to quit everything and traverse the mountains of kazakhstan on horseback
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
When a human egg is fertilized, it releases an explosion of zinc fireworks visible under a microscope. Every single human life starts with a flash of light. The universe did the same thing 13 billion years ago, just bigger.
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Jasper Truth 🇺🇸 🇨🇦
Jasper Truth 🇺🇸 🇨🇦@Jasper_Truth·
DID YOU KNOW THAT THESE EVIL SERPENTS IN 1913 - THE ROCKEFELLERS BOUGHT EVERY HERBAL HOMEOPATHIC SCHOOL IN AMERICA THEN CLOSED THEM ALL BY 1925! Source: DarknessToLight
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Curious Minds
Curious Minds@CuriousMindsHub·
Data is cheap. Insight is expensive. Storytelling is priceless.
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Bronze Giant
Bronze Giant@RjNol·
There's a "conspiracy theory" that the Rockefeller Foundation, in the 1950s, was primarily responsible for the decision to change the musical tuning from 432 Hz to 440 Hz. I know that frequencies actively affect our bodies, and this example would be something similar, explaining it through cymatics to help you understand why the change occurred.
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MURUSI
MURUSI@nyirire·
It looked like a joke… until reality hit 👀
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Waken Minds 𓂀
Waken Minds 𓂀@wakenminds·
Whatever unfolded in this world in the past is beyond our imagination..
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DaVinci
DaVinci@BiancoDavinci·
Theory of relativity in a single picture
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