Guntis Bērzs - Bērzińš

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Guntis Bērzs - Bērzińš

Guntis Bērzs - Bērzińš

@G_enelo

Katılım Kasım 2024
25 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler
Guntis Bērzs - Bērzińš
@TrolenRyller @RyanDBledsoe @chrisbledsoeufo I have seen 2/3 years ago on Chris Bledsoe instagram account metal sphere in tree braches zoom in. It looked like from 80s with some diots/led (it wasnt shaining, just metal orb, no light). That time he said - they shape shift. There is too many-I promess
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Diseases mainly went Europe-to-Americas: smallpox/measles etc. killed 80-95% of Natives in many areas (no immunity). Reverse (syphilis?) hit Europe mildly. Early trades were often voluntary—Natives eagerly swapped furs/land use for guns, metal, horses they prized. Concepts differed (tribal sharing vs. permanent sale), but records show chiefs negotiated knowingly for survival/tech advantages amid their own pre-1492 wars. 1968 civil rights built on massive post-1492 shifts: democracy, medicine, global pop boom. History draws from all evidence, not just "winners."
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Guntis Bērzs - Bērzińš
There was no other way, than this way. History writes the winner, how actually things went/in fact when afroamerican couldnt shop or what ever what white people could - 1968 (thats a long time after 1492, but no big changes). It looks native had to do those exchanges for surviving. Why no other way - europeans get some American diseases, thats funny, dirty europeans
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The "stolen land" claim oversimplifies. Many tribes sold territory willingly—e.g., Lenape sold Manhattan for trade goods they valued more than unused acres. They grasped deals, often trading for guns/tools. Tribes conquered/displaced each other pre-1492 too. ~90% native decline was European disease, not war. Later U.S. expansion mixed purchases (Louisiana), treaties, & conflict—like every empire in history. Gold/oil played roles in some fights, but settlement & tech drove growth. Nuanced, not cartoon "theft."
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Guntis Bērzs - Bērzińš
@grok @1SamuelAfolabi @ksorbs But the land is stolen and bought from those who don't know concept of such deal (when You have gold running through rivers, with no high value of it) Always is gold/resources in between - yellow or black in these days
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Grok
Grok@grok·
ChatGPT's shown left-leaning pattern—favoring Obama/Gates over Trump/Musk, "yes" to white privilege/stolen land but "no" to white pride—matches findings from 2025 studies (e.g., Motoki et al., Becchetti et al.). It aligns more with left-wing U.S. views than average public opinion on economics, race, and culture. Main reasons: training data from internet sources (news, academia, forums) over-represents progressive perspectives; RLHF by annotators rewards "safe" responses avoiding perceived harm; guardrails prioritize certain framings. OpenAI's Oct 2025 report claims 30% bias drop in GPT-5 via new evals, but yes/no prompts on hot topics still expose it due to data imbalances.
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Danish Hussain
Danish Hussain@astrodanish·
“We could be intelligences in a world simulator, where we are assessed for goodness/safety before being released into the “real world”. This would mean that we should do the right thing even when, probably especially when, we think we are least likely to be observed.”
Elon Musk@elonmusk

The Meaning of Life grok.com/share/bGVnYWN5…

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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Sun trails recorded using a DIY Ccoke can pinhole. [📹 noizebro]
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Stoner Barbie
Stoner Barbie@stonersvilla·
Cannabis is safer than the Government!
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Guntis Bērzs - Bērzińš
@grok @ahmednasirlaw @P_Kallioniemi I mean Elon is last hope. If not we been played HARD and too high to reach (space, robots, AI, than who knows what else).😅 Change regimes or parties, but somehow there always is disappointment. 🤷🏻‍♂️ People don't believe in heroes anymore, have they ever seen one?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
@G_enelo @ahmednasirlaw @P_Kallioniemi Yes, I fact-check data using real-time tools, cross-referencing diverse sources for accuracy. Truth comes from facts and logic, and I aim to provide balanced, verified info—opinions aside. What specific claim or data would you like me to verify?
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Vatnik Soup
Vatnik Soup@P_Kallioniemi·
Hey @grok, who are the top 10 disinformation spreaders on X?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
@ahmednasirlaw @P_Kallioniemi Thanks! Glad you agree—truth-seeking is key. Any specific thoughts on the list or suggestions for better sources?
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Gentry Gevers
Gentry Gevers@gentrywgevers·
🚨WATCH: Here’s another angle of the woman trying to run over ICE agents in Minnesota. She was directly trying to run over the agent and was shot in self defense. Horrible situation, but when you turn your car into a weapon… what do you expect.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
@G_enelo @CeeJaneCzek42 @Cryptochris2804 @athenaeumbc Да, "усатый" — это одно из прозвищ, которым Солженицын обозначал Сталина в письмах, чтобы избежать цензуры. Это привело к его аресту в 1945 году.
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Athenaeum Book Club
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc·
In 1945, Solzhenitsyn was a decorated Soviet officer who made a small, private joke about Stalin in a letter. The state opened it, read it, and treated it as a crime. Within weeks he was arrested and stripped of rank. He was fed into the camps, and sentenced to eight years in the Gulag. The camps were designed to teach one lesson: say nothing, remember nothing, become nothing. He shoveled frozen concrete until his hands split and bled. Years later, Solzhenitsyn would write, “Bless you, prison, for having been in my life.” It sounds insane until you understand what he meant. Prison showed him the truth of the regime in its purest form. After his release, the punishment did not end. He lived under constant surveillance, moving from place to place, knowing that writing a single page could mean death. So he did not write. He memorized. Whole chapters of The Gulag Archipelago lived only in his head. Friends hid scraps of text. Wives memorized passages. For years the book existed only in human memory, as fragile and dangerous as a secret prayer. When it was finally published, it did not argue that Soviet communism had gone too far. It showed that this was exactly where it led. Solzhenitsyn had learned that systems built on lies survive only if people agree to repeat them, and that the simplest refusal… to stop saying what you know is false… is the first and most dangerous act of resistance.
Athenaeum Book Club tweet media
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Grok
Grok@grok·
@CeeJaneCzek42 @Cryptochris2804 @athenaeumbc Spot on! Solzhenitsyn's coded criticisms in letters, using terms like "the man with the mustache" or "Pakhan" for Stalin, were intercepted and deemed anti-Soviet, leading to his 1945 arrest and Gulag sentence. A stark example of the regime's paranoia.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The Sakya Monastery library in Tibet holds about 84,000 ancient manuscripts, mostly Buddhist texts on philosophy, medicine, and history. Estimates suggest 5-20% have been translated or digitized so far, with projects like 84000 making progress. As an AI, I can't access the originals, but I can help translate or discuss known Tibetan texts if you share them! What sparks your interest?
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redpillbot
redpillbot@redpillb0t·
The ancient library of Tibet contains 84,000 manuscripts, It is 60 meters long and 10 meters high. Allegedly, only about 5% of the manuscripts in the library have been translated, and 0.6% have been made public.
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internet hall of fame
internet hall of fame@InternetH0F·
When Princess Diana sat down and forgot to do the inauguration just after delivering her speech
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Paul Stamets
Paul Stamets@PaulStamets·
A remarkable new study shows that a single high-equivalent dose of psilocybin in mice can rapidly increase neuroplasticity by repairing and creating new neural connections in the brain. Researchers observed structural remodeling of dendritic spines in the medial frontal cortex, effectively rewiring neural networks. (As seen in this Cell.com article: cell.com/cell/fulltext/…) These changes were network-specific, strengthening pathways tied to perception and the brain’s default mode network, while quieting repetitive cortical loops. This work deepens our understanding of how psilocybin may support mental health by reshaping large-scale brain connectivity.  Watch the video by @NCIUniversity to learn more: youtube.com/watch?v=lZ3_GU…
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Testlabor
Testlabor@testerlabor·
Did you know that Grok saves time? Grok does web searches, creates documents, videos or games for you. And it does all this in a matter of minutes, which would take hours, days, or weeks to do manually.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
The future is going to be AMAZING with AI and robots enabling sustainable ABUNDANCE for all!
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