KING $HUGO

4.1K posts

KING $HUGO banner
KING $HUGO

KING $HUGO

@HUGO_XRP

50% of $HUGO founder profit will be donated to nonprofit for financial literacy. Hugo Stinnes, the inflation King of Europe, borrowed in fiat to buy hard assets

Houston, TX Katılım Mayıs 2020
4K Takip Edilen831 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
KING $HUGO
KING $HUGO@HUGO_XRP·
@okx Check out $HUGO on the #XRPL via @First_Ledger! 50% of profits 2 B donated to non-prof to promote financial literacy. Named for Hugo Stinnes, the inflation King of Europe, who taught us to get rich using worthless fiat to buy hard assets! firstledger.net/token/rMUjMPoq… BUY HUGO
English
50
12
29
2.3K
KING $HUGO retweetledi
Benny Johnson
Benny Johnson@bennyjohnson·
James O’Keefe Just Got Results. The Skid Row election fraudster O’Keefe Media caught on hidden camera in Los Angeles has now pleaded GUILTY. DOJ charges carry a penalty of: -5 years in prison -3 years of supervised release -$10,000 Fine Remember when the media claimed election fraud NEVER happens and mocked anyone who questioned the system? Turns out undercover journalism succeeded where the “fact-checkers” failed. ARRESTS. ACCOUNTABILITY. CONSEQUENCES. That’s how you restore trust in elections. Keep it up @JamesOKeefeIII and @OKeefeMedia!
English
119
1.8K
9.9K
151.5K
AdiiX
AdiiX@adiix_official·
SOMEONE JUST KILLED THE REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY A guy scanned an entire house with his phone. Uploaded it. Now anyone on Earth can walk through it in a browser tab. No app. No VR. No agent. No appointment. Click → you’re inside. Every room. Every angle. Every shadow. Photoreal. The numbers are insane: - Agent fee on a $500k home: $15,000 - Cost to make this scan: ~$200 - Time to “tour” 50 houses: one evening - File size: smaller than a TikTok The science is wild too: It’s called 3D Gaussian Splatting instead of polygons (how games render), it uses millions of tiny glowing “splats” of color and depth. AI reconstructs reality from your photos. The result loads on a phone and looks like you’re THERE. The grift opportunity is even wilder: Freelancers are already charging $300–$800 per scan for realtors, Airbnbs, venues, car dealers, museums. One person + one phone + one weekend = a business. Open source. Built on PlayCanvas. Free GitHub: github.com/playcanvas
Claude@claudeai

Claude for Excel, PowerPoint, and Word are now generally available, and Claude for Outlook is in public beta. As Claude moves between your Microsoft apps, it carries the full context of your conversation.

English
1.2K
3.1K
36.5K
9.7M
Mary Talley Bowden MD
Mary Talley Bowden MD@MaryBowdenMD·
I’ll be selling ivermectin for Texans only, no prescription needed…. - 12mg, 100 count, $85 - 18mg, 100 count, $110 Made in the USA. Stay tuned.
English
2K
3.4K
23.1K
502.6K
KING $HUGO retweetledi
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent@SecScottBessent·
Congress has spent the better part of half a decade trying to pass a framework to onshore the future of finance. It is time for @BankingGOP to hold a markup and send the CLARITY Act to President Trump’s desk. Senate time is precious, and now is the time to act.
English
753
3.7K
18.3K
2.3M
Uphold
Uphold@UpholdInc·
Ready for a real Good Friday? We’re giving away XRP to five lucky followers to kick off the long weekend. How to enter: ✔️ Follow @UpholdInc ✔️ Like this post ✔️ Leave a comment 5 winners will receive $100 in XRP each. Good luck! U.S. only. Terms apply. Ends in 24 hours.
English
3.9K
1.2K
5K
159.6K
KING $HUGO retweetledi
Brad Garlinghouse
Brad Garlinghouse@bgarlinghouse·
@el33th4xor Glad to know we’re living rent-free in your head…
English
768
1.1K
13.9K
517.4K
KING $HUGO retweetledi
U.S. Department of Commerce
U.S. Department of Commerce@CommerceGov·
Portsmouth, Ohio is becoming a driving force in America’s energy resurgence, made possible by President Trump’s trade and tariff policies.
English
77
143
670
41.6K
KING $HUGO retweetledi
Rabbi Brian Samuel
Rabbi Brian Samuel@rabbriansamuel·
I'm Jewish. After careful study of the scriptures, I am convinced that Jesus is the Messiah, son of the living God.
English
4.8K
8K
83.3K
2.4M
Daniel
Daniel@danielgothits·
I have openclaw sending lowball offers on Zillow all day just to make boomers start panicking lol
Daniel tweet media
English
2.4K
4.4K
89.8K
8.1M
Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
RE: Lawyerly Thoughts I have retired from the law and placed myself in “inactive status” in my two licensed jurisdictions. This finally gives me the freedom to share my unvarnished thoughts on the law and lawyers in a way I have been unable to do so before. I’m thinking of writing a series of lawyerly musings posts that I can later combine into a full length article. This is the first one. I believe I have a unique perspective on the law, having completed a successful military career before I stepped into law school. This meant that I was not wide-eyed and bushy-tailed in law school like most of my full time program (much younger) peers, and my earlier perspectives as a military decision maker made me cautious about some principles that I questioned as potentially being flawed or dangerous. So let’s talk about one: “EVERY CLIENT IS ENTITLED TO ZEALOUS LEGAL REPRESENTATION.” This is a bedrock concept of the practice of law, and one that lawyers are justifiably proud of as it is an essential component of equal justice under the law. But it has its flaws in the modern era. I remember one summer in law school I was an intern in a public defender’s office. One of our cases was a mass rapist who had been terrorizing women in local parks. This guy had blackish eyes that glowed with a sort of deep evil that seemed to come straight from the pits of Hell—it was like out of a horror film. He was as guilty as guilty could be, but we were trying to get him off on a claim of a bad search and seizure of some critical evidence. We were zealously representing a deranged rapist. The guy needed to be locked away for eternity, but we were trying to get him off. I know most lawyers are comfortable with that and consider it righteous, but for me it was the event that convinced me that I wanted nothing to do with criminal law. But that’s small potatoes to what I think is the bigger, profession-wide problem of “zealous representation.” Whether you are a litigator or a corporate lawyer (like I was), “zealous representation” means taking the facts at hand and interpreting them in the way most favorable to your client. I have found that “most favorable” means taking facts and pushing them in a client-favorable way right up to the edge of the line of lying, but not crossing it. You’re not lying, but are you really telling the objective truth? Over time that thought process of twisting facts away from what most reasonable laymen would consider as “true” changes a lawyer’s brain patterns. If you do this enough, you might stop being able to do anything else. Your brain changes, and not in a good way. I often found myself lapsing into this, but thankfully there remained a little portion of my brain that was still an Army colonel, and I think that little voice held me back. What ends up happening to too many lawyers is that every moment of their lives starts to consist of looking for angles to twist whatever facts are at hand into the manner most favorable to them. That’s a slippery slope. That’s why words like “oily” and “sleazy” are so popular when describing lawyers, and why jokes that involve lawyers at the bottom of the ocean as shark food are so popular. The problem is that as long as you never step right over the line into lying, none of this is against legal ethics. I’m not sure how to fix this exactly. Perhaps continuing legal education needs to focus on the limits of “zealous representation.” Or perhaps every lawyer needs to be on watch to not lose their soul. There are so many excellent lawyers that none of this applies to, but there are just as many who have no problem going into total sleaze-mode to win for their client. But then everything they do in life becomes sleaze-mode, and they harm themselves, their families and society as a result. It’s a large-scale problem. Think of this: “It depends of what the meaning of “is” is.” -Slick Willard
GIF
English
311
417
2.7K
56.4K
Desiree
Desiree@DesireeAmerica4·
WHATABURGER’S BIGGEST MISTAKE IS SONIC’S BIGGEST WIN ​Remember Byron, the teen who went viral after Whataburger fired him just for praying before his food reviews? He just pulled the ultimate comeback. Instead of taking easy internet money, he got a new job at Sonic. His new boss actually encourages his videos, and he’s using his fame to raise money for a local high school football team instead of himself. Now the internet is officially boycotting Whataburger to support his Sonic location. ​Did Whataburger take a massive L here?
English
616
4.9K
27.9K
532.6K
KING $HUGO retweetledi
The Drunk Republican
The Drunk Republican@DrunkRepub·
If a “Coexist” bumper sticker was a person
The Drunk Republican tweet media
English
340
1K
12.5K
2.5M
KING $HUGO
KING $HUGO@HUGO_XRP·
@Joel7Richardson Thanks for your reply. Appreciate everything you do. I’m trying to think about what it means for “his throne” to be in Elam, when his throne is in Jerusalem.
English
0
0
0
13
Joel Richardson
Joel Richardson@Joel7Richardson·
@HUGO_XRP One could say it is being fulfilled now partially, but I would see it as ultimately eschatological.
English
1
0
1
60
Joel Richardson
Joel Richardson@Joel7Richardson·
“Thus says the Lord of hosts, ‘Behold, I am going to break the bow of Elam The finest of their might." (Jeremiah 49:35) Elam was the southwestern province of Persia, or modern day Iran.
English
27
50
351
9K