Goodness
125 posts


@_VoiceofAmerica I have seen his father. He has the look of both
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@ScenarioOfElon Elon Musk buying X , I think is what started the ball rolling for free speech in the whole world , X showed people that we have a choice as an individual
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@future_vision_x @bujanqan Good health.
With good health, you can work, build wealth, enjoy your home, drive your car, and actually live to appreciate it all.
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@muskosophy @susan46z Pain is a gateway for light to enter. Elon Musk is peak signal.
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@future_vision_x @donefathercxm What is a fan based on. The way they dress or how much money each has or the one who accomplishes more by working to make lives better for all.
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@ScenarioOfElon What is a fan based on. The way they dress or how much money each has or the one who accomplishes more by working to make lives better for all.
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👀 Massive fan battle question… Elon Musk vs Donald Trump 🚀🔥
Be honest… who has the STRONGER global fan following right now? 😮🌍
A) Elon Musk 🚀 (Tech & future crowd)
B) Donald Trump 🇺🇸 (Political power base)
C) Both are equally massive 👀
D) Depends on the situation 😎
👇 No bias… just real opinion 🔥


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@teslacarsonly @Mrreevemusk110 maybe the new model Y? anyway a superdynamic car🇺🇸♥️🚗
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@elonmusk @Elonmusk_xx_i Yes, by all means, let’s take this shitshow into the galaxy SMDH
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Mostly true. What matters is securing the long-term future of consciousness, both on Earth and other heavenly bodies.
We cannot just focus on Earth, because there are irreducible external (eg massive meteor) and internal (eg global nuclear war) cataclysmic risks.
The Moon is faster to make self-growing, but is more susceptible to problems on Earth. Mars will take longer to make self-growing, because it is so hard to reach, but is more secure from Earth disasters for that same reason.
Both the Moon and Mars should have self-growing civilizations. Making this happen is the prime directive of SpaceX.
Jaynit@jaynitx
Former SpaceX astronaut Garrett Reisman reveals the single prism Elon Musk runs every major decision through "He measures pretty much every major decision by whether or not it brings the day when we have a self-sustainable colony on Mars sooner or later" "That's the prism by which he makes every single decision he makes" "He's got an idea and he'll keep pushing, and he gives us aggressive timelines that we have to work to" "We work really hard to try to meet them. It's hard when you're doing stuff that's this complicated to predict exactly how long it's going to take" "We end up falling a little bit behind, but we do our best"
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Elon Musk just proved that the body is optional.
A quadriplegic sat motionless in a chair and played a video game using nothing but thought.
No hands. No voice. No movement whatsoever.
Just a decision firing across a chip the size of a coin.
Musk: “You just lie there and think, and you can move the mouse cursor around the screen and click things.”
Download software. Browse the web. Navigate a screen with the same effort you use to remember your mother’s name.
Without lifting a finger.
Because he can’t.
And now he doesn’t have to.
That isn’t a product demo.
That is a quadriplegic man doing with silence what you do with your entire body.
And this is the version with a thousand electrodes.
Musk: “I think ultimately you need something which has probably a hundred thousand or a million electrodes.”
A thousand gave us telepathy.
A million gives us something that doesn’t have a name yet.
Musk is honest about how far this still has to go.
He’s not overselling it.
He’s underselling it.
Because the part that should keep you up tonight isn’t what Neuralink still has to build.
It’s that the line between human thought and machine action already disappeared.
And the world just kept scrolling.
Musk: “Our human brain has a lot of constraints. We only have about maybe 10 watts of higher brain function.”
Ten watts.
That’s less than the light inside your refrigerator.
Every empire ever built. Every symphony ever written. Every theory that bent the arc of history.
Ten watts of wet biological circuitry.
Musk: “It’s not bad for a bunch of monkeys.”
He’s not joking.
He’s framing the question nobody wants to sit with.
If ten watts of constrained primate hardware produced Shakespeare and general relativity and nuclear fission, what happens when the constraint disappears?
Not when the brain gets faster.
When the wall between thinking something and doing something no longer exists.
The entire history of human tools has been one long negotiation with the same problem.
You think something. Then you spend hours, years, lifetimes turning that thought into reality.
Your hands. Your voice. Your body.
Fire shortened the distance. Language shortened it more. Writing. The printing press. Electricity. Code.
Every invention ever built was a cruder, slower translation layer between the mind and the world.
Neuralink isn’t another layer.
It’s the elimination of translation itself.
Diamandis: “It’s a matter of when, not if.”
Musk didn’t push back.
He just kept discussing electrode counts like an engineer reviewing specs on a vehicle that already left the ground.
That calm is the tell.
The philosophical event already happened.
A thought left a human skull, entered a machine, and executed a command in the physical world.
No hand touched anything.
No mouth spoke.
A man thought the word “move” and the screen obeyed.
Every tool before this was a prosthetic for intention.
This is intention, naked, arriving without a body.
The oldest question in philosophy was never about what we can build.
It was about where the mind ends and the world begins.
Neuralink just made that question obsolete.
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