John's Brain 🤔

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John's Brain 🤔

John's Brain 🤔

@JuansBrain

Entrepreneurship is our best hope.

USA Katılım Ekim 2014
201 Takip Edilen380 Takipçiler
Alpha
Alpha@AlAlphaResearch·
@JuansBrain Yes, that’s right. She is Japan’s first female prime minister, and while she faces criticism, her decisiveness and drive make her a true badass.😉
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Alpha@AlAlphaResearch·
🚨Japanese 🇯🇵PM Takaichi has confirmed she is arranging summit meetings with both the U.S. and Iran amid escalating Middle East tensions. Japan is quietly stepping into a diplomatic role that most Western nations have stepped back from. 🇯🇵
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Anthony Pompliano 🌪
Anthony Pompliano 🌪@APompliano·
Markets are going to rip higher when the Iran war is ended. Every investor is simply holding their breath until that moment.
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
Rubio: If Europe won’t allow us to use the bases we man and fund for their defense when we need them we ought to close them down and remove our troops from Europe. If they get attacked by Russia we can discuss whether or not we have the time to help.
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Melissa Chen
Melissa Chen@MsMelChen·
The last few months should show you that the world is actually divided into: cultures of action vs. cultures of decline It is a civilizational divergence between those who dream and dare to do things, and those who are paralyzed by process and seek to manage decline. This is why the US now finds itself on the side of the UAE and Saudi Arabia. The Gulf states have grown increasingly resentful of a risk-averse Europe that has failed to take decisive action to aid the US-led efforts against Iran. That action was minimal by the way. All the US wanted was access to bases and airspace. Yet, Europeans said no. The GCC have all turned vast deserts into gleaming modern metropolises in mere decades, and have confronted Islamist extremism with an uncompromising resolve that stands in stark contrast to Europe's tepid approach. (I'd put El Salvador in the same bucket. @nayibbukele declared war on gangs and adopted the anti-San Francisco approach toward drugs, homelessness and crime) Donald Trump belongs to this lineage of doers far more than to the sclerotic salons of Brussels. He does not apologize for wanting to win or to build. Someone once said here on X that Trump was "spiritually Arab" and tbh, I totally see it. Trump and the American spirit he channels, embodies the modern ethos best summed up by the phrase: YOU CAN JUST DO THINGS Plant the flag. Drill the well. Launch the rocket. Fight. Put the bad guys away. Some Europeans recognize this and remember what it was like when they JUST DID THINGS. Remember that viral clip of Alex Jones going off on Magellan who circumnavigated the globe and then got killed by natives? "THAT'S WILL! THAT'S DESTINY!" Maybe it's post-imperial guilt. Maybe it's just pure demoralization. I WANT to believe Europeans can reclaim that attitude again.
Tim Soret@timsoret

As a European, I apologize to Americans for all the idiocy coming from our side. You save your pilots no matter the cost. You send humans to the moon. You fight authoritarianism head-on. It's truly inspiring. We're on the wrong side of the moral equation.

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John's Brain 🤔
John's Brain 🤔@JuansBrain·
@ajplus Why do you continue to support IRGC+Hezbollah narratives even after the IRGC bombs Qatar (repeatedly)? You're state-funded, no?
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AJ+
AJ+@ajplus·
This 100-year-old woman in Lebanon is refusing to be forcibly displaced and leave her home amid intensified Israeli attacks.
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John's Brain 🤔
John's Brain 🤔@JuansBrain·
In the mid-2010s I built a nonprofit specifically designed to identify and cultivate these in-system changemakers, and to help them scale their idea within the blobmonolith. The ultimate goal was talent retention: to give energized, talented teachers a pathway to staying in the profession longer than they otherwise would have by creating, by building. To no one's surprise we failed, as most participants hit impossible obstacles. It's hard to breathe where there's little oxygen.
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Michael Strong
Michael Strong@flowidealism·
When brilliant teachers emerge, they disappear. Jaime Escalante created one of the finest AP calculus programs in the country. He could not scale it. Marva Collins founded an exceptional school. She could not replicate her excellence across ten other schools. The question is not why these teachers are geniuses. The question is why we have no system to transmit their genius. If Escalante had been a martial arts master, he would have founded a school. His best students would open branches displaying their lineage. Over generations, a coherent tradition would spread. This happens in martial arts, music, dance, and craft traditions. It does not happen in education. I call this absence The Missing Institution. In the absence of government monopoly, we would have seen the spontaneous creation of hundreds of pedagogical lineages, each designed to transmit the artistry of a master teacher. Instead, teacher training is controlled by education professors who publish research papers, not by virtuoso teachers who practice their craft daily. Montessori and Waldorf escaped the system. They created their own teacher training lineages outside government control. KIPP Academies created an internal leadership program. Hi Tech High licensed its own teachers. The moment schools escape government domination, they spontaneously create The Missing Institution. For underprivileged children, this absence is catastrophic. They need schools that transmit cultural capital through immersion in a living tradition.
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Alpha
Alpha@AlAlphaResearch·
A research team led by Google Quantum AI dropped a paper on March 30. Pretty alarming stuff, link below 🔗 The quantum resources needed to break Bitcoin’s cryptography have come down 20 times from previous estimates. More specifically, a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could theoretically crack a Bitcoin $BTC transaction in under nine minutes. Bitcoin’s confirmation time is about ten minutes. That one minute margin is what researchers are calling the window for a live attack. Elon Musk @elonmusk responded on X with a joke about recovering forgotten wallet passwords, which is funny, but the underlying paper is not. Google has set 2029 as its own deadline for migrating infrastructure to post quantum cryptography. Around 6.8 million BTC, roughly one third of the total supply, sit in addresses with exposed public keys that would be particularly vulnerable. That’s hundreds of billions of dollars in potential exposure. What I keep thinking about though is that the same threat creating all this panic is also generating a massive demand signal that most people aren’t really talking about yet. Every financial system, government network, defense communication layer, and blockchain has to migrate to quantum resistant cryptography before Q-Day. And that doesn’t just happen on its own, it needs the actual #quantum infrastructure to get there. That’s where $INFQ Infleqtion @infleqtion is genuinely worth paying attention to, and there’s a specific reason why. This company is building on the side that uses quantum to defend, not the side that quantum threatens. Neutral atom quantum computing and sensing, listed on the NYSE in February 2026. Quantum clocks and sensors are already commercially deployed. Computing roadmap targets 30 logical qubits by end of 2026, 100 by 2028. Citi’s US Director of Research sat down with the CEO for a dedicated podcast episode, which honestly tells you something about where the smart money is starting to look. 2029 is not that far away, and I’d rather be watching the companies building the infrastructure than waiting around to see what gets broken first. 🔗 arxiv.org/abs/2603.28846
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Eyal Yakoby
Eyal Yakoby@EYakoby·
BREAKING: The Iranian regime.
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Igor Sushko
Igor Sushko@igorsushko·
💥 Ukrainian housewife kitchen drones eliminated 33,988 Russian fascists in March 2026. (96.1%) Artillery and other methods were responsible for another 1,363. (3.9%) Total: 35,351 Russian casualties in 31 days.
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
WAIT A SECOND CHINA JUST MADE TOMACCO REAL
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Niko McCarty.@NikoMcCarty

Nearly 200 years after nicotine was first chemically isolated, we’ve finally figured out its complete biosynthesis pathway. Doing so required an insane effort and many years of work. The authors — a Chinese group — ended up crossing 643 lines of tobacco plants to find a single mutant incapable of making nicotine. They next backcrossed and inbred that plant to figure out the specific mutations, in various genes, and map the enzymes responsible. Nicotine is made from two “ring-shaped” molecules fused together. One ring has five carbons (the “pyrrolidine ring”) and the second has six carbons (the “pyridine ring.”) Scientists already knew quite a bit about how these rings get made, but not every step, and not how tthey join together to make nicotine. The pyrrolidine ring starts when ornithine, an amino acid that is not used to make proteins, gets its carbon dioxide clipped off by an enzyme, called ornithine decarboxylase, to make putrescine. This putrescine then has a methyl group attached to it, and gets oxidized. At this point, the molecule is a chain with four carbon atoms; one end has an amine, and the other a methylated amine. The amine end gets cut off and replaced with a reactive aldehyde; the chain folds into a loop; and the methylated amine “attacks” electrons on the aldehyde to form the ring. To make the pyridine ring, plant cells first take aspartate (the amino acid) and oxidize it. The resulting molecule is then transformed into nicotinic acid mononucleotide, which is just vitamin B3 with a sugar and phosphate attached. This paper is the first to report that NAMN hydrolase clips off the sugar and phosphate to release pure vitamin B3; also called niacin or nicotinic acid. (The names are slightly confusing.) The paper’s major contribution, though, is in figuring out how the two rings get fused together. The nicotinic acid is unstable, so an enzyme quickly attaches a sugar to it. Another enzyme, called A622, then strips off a CO2 group, making the molecule reactive again. And finally, that reactive intermediate “attacks” the five-membered pyrrolidine ring to join the two halves together. Other enzymes strip off the remaining sugar to make nicotine. (This whole pathway is shown in the image below.) All of this happens on the surface of plant vacuoles. Many of the chemical intermediates are toxic, so they need to be sequestered and converted quickly. And as soon as the final nicotine gets made, a transporter pumps it into the vacuole, where it is stored away. It’s actually difficult to wrap my head around the amount of work packed into this paper, so I’ll just give some quick bullet points: 1. They grew 643 inbred plant lines, which were made by crossing together 26 different parent tobacco plants. They extracted metabolites from all of them. 2. They did a bunch of single-cell RNA sequencing on the tobacco roots to figure out which cells actually express the nicotine biosynthesis genes. 3. “Stumbled” upon a mutant plant which was not able to make nicotine, and then sequenced its entire genome. They also crossed back this plant and inbred it for two generations to find the mutation responsible; a single C-to-T swap. This experiment alone must have taken at least two years of work. 4. Fed plants with isotopically “heavy” nicotinic acid and then tracked its movements through metabolic pathways. 5. Collected at least 630 mass spectrometry spectra. 6. RECONSTITUTED THE ENTIRE PATHWAY IN FOUR DIFFERENT SPECIES: YEAST, TOMATO, EGGPLANTS, AND PEAS (!!!!!!!!) 7. And a lot more… Anyway, insane paper. China has been putting out incredible plant biology papers for the last several years.

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mon
mon@moninvestor·
My gameplan for my short-term portfolio is to get more right than wrong. 1. Find a strong stock you've been watching. 2. Wait for the right price - don't chase, don't rush. 3. Before you buy, decide your two numbers: > where you'll take profit > where you'll cut the loss 4. Make sure your reward is at least 2x your risk, if not, skip the trade. 5. Stick to the plan no matter what. Repeat this and let the math do the work. The secret isn't picking perfect stocks. It's making good decisions on every single trade, buying at the right price, keeping losses small, and letting winners run. Do that consistently and you come out ahead. As an example, let’s say you want to buy SOFI stock at $20. You’ve been watching it for a while and have a clear setup. You define the trade before entering: You decide: > I'll buy at $20. > I'll sell if it goes up to $30 → that's $10 profit. > I'll get out if it drops to $15 → that's $5 loss. That gives you a 2:1 risk-reward. You are risking $5 to potentially make $10. Note that you will not win every trade. Accept your losses and move on. Most beginners expect to win every trade. That’s not how this works. Even the best traders lose 40–50% of the time and still make money. What matters is not your win rate. It’s how much you make when you’re right versus how much you lose when you’re wrong. If your winners are bigger than your losers and you stay consistent, you can be wrong often and still come out ahead.
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John's Brain 🤔
John's Brain 🤔@JuansBrain·
Aside from pandering, why would any company want to expand its workforce in Seattle or anywhere in Washington State given the anti-business trendlines? There are additional forces at work in these two cases, but show me the blue chip company itching to move in. And it's going to get much worse.
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Travis Couture
Travis Couture@TravisSCouture·
More layoffs. The exodus continues.
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Loay Alshareef لؤي الشريف
🚨In less than 2 minutes, Secretary Rubio explains why Epic Fury had to happen. There was an imminent danger posed by the Mullah regime, unlike what some non-Middle Eastern leftist analysts think. Great speech @SecRubio
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Tut C🅰️pital
Tut C🅰️pital@kingtutcap·
You know shits bad when nobody’s posting their next asymmetric 10x multibagger
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Joy Gjersvold, Troublemaker
Joy Gjersvold, Troublemaker@ArtiSt4AMERICA·
Are you at all familiar with any of the private school impacts with the new "school choice" in Texas? First, if curriculum vendors intend to accept the state money, they are required to register with the state. The state, not the private schools or homeschools will make these decisions. Another thing that is happening is several private schools, seeing a way to make up for lost revenue, are *requiring* families who receive a discount for multiple students to apply for the government cheese. These parents don't want their children connected by government strings. Also happening, private schools are reporting all student data, not just the data of the students using the vouchers. That's a privacy issue. Finally, vouchers in TX (and FL) are funding Islamic private schools--taxpayers are now funding anti-American private schools. The new "school choice" system in Texas not only created an enormous tax burden in the billions and created more government. It created a system where the government can now have a say in curriculum, enrollment, and the state is collecting massive amounts of data on children. What the government funds, it runs. "School choice" is part of the UN globalist plan to control every aspect of education--even private and homeschool. They don't hide it. Below is a link to their content on controlling "non-state actors" in education. While it's pure evil, I do give credit. It was brilliant strategy to get the right to buy in on "school choice." People believe it's good because R. unesco.org/gem-report/en/…
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Homeschool Life LLC | Jonathan Prescott
Vouchers, i.e. school choice, do not promote a “free market” in education because the monopoly is still the State. It is ludicrous to think that the State offering a choice between two of its products is somehow competition. In reality, it is precisely the illusion of choice.
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