Mars Dispatch

1.7K posts

Mars Dispatch banner
Mars Dispatch

Mars Dispatch

@MarsDispatch

recovering hedonist

Katılım Kasım 2023
1.3K Takip Edilen289 Takipçiler
Mars Dispatch
Mars Dispatch@MarsDispatch·
@Duderichy Going rate for a smart employee is $100 million per year now
English
0
0
3
49
Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman@BillAckman·
In summary, in light of the inability to add a new name to the ballot and the low probability of success of a write-in campaign, the only candidates with a credible chance to beat @ZohranKMamdani are Cuomo and Adams. I met yesterday with @NYCMayor Eric Adams and @andrewcuomo to discuss the upcoming election, and I spent an hour or so with each of them. In short, my takeaway is that Adams can win the upcoming election and that the Governor should step aside to maximize Adams’ probability of success. I say this while having a high regard for Andrew Cuomo and his contributions to New York State. But it was abundantly clear in his body language, his subdued energy and his proposals to beat Mamdani, that he is not up for the fight. In comparison, Mayor Adams is ready to go to battle, guns blazing with enormous energy and clarity on why Mamdani and his socialist/communist (‘We must seize the means of production) and anti-NYPD policies would be catastrophic for NYC. Adams is a great campaigner who can lead the grass roots effort needed to defeat Mamdani, and as mayor, he has a great platform to tell his story. Eric’s first term has not been without flaws. In particular, he relied too much on friends of Adams to staff his administration; however, when one looks at his record in totality, he has had a strong first term. Importantly, Adams has committed to hire the best and brightest to staff his campaign and administration, and many super talented NYers have already reached out to help. Mamdani and his policies are inspiring many of our most talented citizens with relevant experience to join Eric’s team. New York City residents’ top concerns are public safety, affordability, quality of life and the local economy. In all of these areas, Mayor Adams has had impressive accomplishments.   Public Safety—Under the leadership of the Mayor and Police Commissioner Tisch, major crime is down by double digit percentages this year. Shootings are down to their lowest level in recorded City history, and murders are down to record lows we haven’t seen since the 1960s. Subway crime is also down by double-digit percentages this year.   Jobs and the Local Economy—After the City lost a million jobs at the outset of COVID, the Adams Administration has achieved record job growth to the highest level of jobs in City history, with more than 4.86 million New Yorkers employed in NYC today. NYC now has a record number of small businesses—more than 183,000—with 20 percent of those opening during this administration. The local economy and tax base are strong, and both will continue to grow unless Mamdani is elected.   Affordability—The Adams Administration has taken significant step with rezonings and its “City of Yes” legislation, to set the stage for the development of more than 130,000 units of affordable housing. Adams has the confidence of the NYC real estate community which will help drive development and investment. The Adams Administration reduced the income tax burden on working class New Yorkers, 429,600 of whom had their city income taxes eliminated, and another 152,500 whose taxes were reduced. The Mayor has protected the child care voucher system to help working families meet their child care needs, filling the more than $300 million child care gap left in this year’s state budget and investing in a new 2-K pilot program.   Quality of Life—This past Spring, Adams established a 1,500-cop unit to focus on “Quality of Life” crimes, and with excellent results, it has been expanded citywide. The latest budget has increased funding for cultural institutions, libraries, and cultural programs, and provided more funding and personnel to keep streets, vacant lots, and parks clean.  Importantly, Adams is also always authentically himself—his smile is real unlike the other guy’s—and in my experience, the more authentic candidate always wins. I will have more to share on Adams, the election, and on how you can help in a follow up post soon.
Bill Ackman@BillAckman

I awoke this morning gravely concerned about New York City. I thought “What has NYC become that an avowed socialist who has supported defunding the police, whose solution to lowering food prices is city-owned supermarkets, who doesn’t understand that freezing rents will only reduce the supply of housing, who has no experience managing an organization -- let alone a city with a $100+ billion budget and a $2 trillion economy -- and who believes chants for ‘Globalizing the Intifada’ are acceptable, wins the Democratic Primary. After speaking to those who supported @ZohranKMamdani, I believe that he won the primary largely not due to his policies, but rather because he is a superb politician who ran a remarkable and inspiring campaign. He is intelligent and articulate. He is young and charming, and he successfully played down incriminating @X posts and statements from his past, pitching a joyful campaign of unity. And he won because the competition was very weak. His best competitor sat back and did not run a real campaign, relying on name recognition, early favorable polling and keeping a low profile to make it through. Not a strategy that I have ever seen work, but so be it. The Democratic primary voter is clearly tired of the Democratic politics of the past and its aging and over-the-hill leadership – Who isn’t? [As a case in point, how embarrassing is it to watch aging Dems fall in line with their tweets of support for Mamdani, as they desperately try to defend their seats from the far left?] And therefore, without any real competition, Zohran and his attractive personal qualities and campaign skills magically make him the candidate of the future. The problem, however, is that his policies would be disastrous for NYC. Socialism has no place in the economic capital of our country. The ability for NYC to offer services for the poor and needy, let alone the average New Yorker, is entirely dependent on NYC being a business-friendly environment and a place where wealthy residents are willing to spend 183 days and assume the associated tax burden. Unfortunately, both have already started making arrangements for the exits. Mamdani is right that much about NYC is broken. The City has gotten much less safe while the cost of living here has become increasingly unattainable for many. We pay more for less. Unfortunately, his headline campaign promises of frozen rents and cheaper food from city-owned markets, among others, are certain to fail. A mayor who disrespects the NYPD and has called for their defunding will get less effective policing, and Bratton’s ‘broken window theory’ will operate in reverse. A mayor who condones hate speech will incentivize more hate speech and violence. Words matter, and yes, they can inspire people to kill as we have recently tragically seen in our country and around the world. New York City under Mamdani is about to become much more dangerous and economically unviable. Unlike our Federal government, NYC cannot print money, and this Federal Government won’t bail NYC out if things go bad. In fact, Mamdani would be a windfall for the Republican Party as NY becomes another failed major city run by Democrats alongside Seattle, Chicago, LA, and SF et al as Senator Fetterman so eloquently stated today, "I'd describe it as Christmas in July for the GOP." So why did I become optimistic later this morning? The answer is that NYC has woken up in the last 24 hours. The substantial majority of NYC residents understand that socialism is a failed system, that rent freezes will destroy our housing base and shrink the affordable housing supply while killing new construction, and that an anti-capitalist Mayor will destroy jobs and cause businesses and wealthy taxpayers that have enabled NYC to balance the budget to move elsewhere. If 100 or so of the highest taxpayers in my industry chose to spend 183 days elsewhere, it could reduce NY state and city tax revenues by ~$5-10 billion or more, and that’s just my industry. Think Ken Griffin leaving Chicago for Miami on steroids. The good news is that there are other charismatic, intelligent, articulate, handsome, charming, young yet more experienced and, importantly, more centrist politicians who are New York residents eligible for office. There are also extremely talented members of the NY business community who could be superb mayors, Bloomberg being the reference standard from the past. And the setup is extremely attractive for a run for mayor. There are only 132 days until the election, which means the commitment of time to run is de minimis. This will be the most closely watched mayoral election in NYC in decades, perhaps ever, which, particularly in the social media and podcast era creates the opportunity for a new candidate to garner immediate name recognition, enormous media interest, and the visibility needed to get elected. Importantly, there are hundreds of million of dollars of capital available to back a competitor to Mamdani that can be put together overnight (believe me, I am in the text strings and the WhatsApp groups) so that a great alternative candidate won’t spend any time raising funds. So, if the right candidate would raise his or her hand tomorrow, the funds will pour in. I am sure that Mike Bloomberg will share his how-to-win-the-mayoralty IP and deliver his entire election apparatus and system to the aspiring candidate so that the candidate can focus all of his or her energy on the campaign. One unfortunate fact, as far as I understand, is that the candidate will have to be a write-in as I believe that none of the current candidates established a nominating committee if they were to withdraw, which means that no one can take their spot on the ballot. This is such an important election, however, that I believe the write-in requirement could actually turn into an important call to action that brings people in throngs to the polls. It therefore won’t be the game stopper it would normally be in a typical election. As a result, the risk/reward of running for mayor over the next 132 days is extremely compelling as the cost in time and energy is small, and the upside is enormous. If the candidate does not win, there is no harm, no foul, because the perceived probability of beating the Democratic nominee in a NYC mayoral election is extremely small. Therefore, there is no reputational risk to losing this election, and the corresponding reputational benefits are extraordinary whether one wins or loses. If the candidate wins, this is obviously a huge home run for the City and the candidate, but it is also an opportunity to save the Democratic Party from itself, grabbing the wheel just before the party goes even further off the cliff. The new mayor would be a national superhero for the City, for the Party, and for the country. For the aspiring politician, there is no better way to get name recognition, build relationships with long-term donors, and to showcase oneself than to run for mayor over the next 132 days. This election is already global front page news. For the aspiring young candidate, the amount of publicity and the massive followers to be gained are of incalculable long-term value whether they win or lose, and whatever they choose to do in the future, business, politics or otherwise. And there is a defensive reason for a politician to run. For the more centrist Democrat politician, a Mamdani win is very bad for your next election. As the Party veers further to the left, the Party’s backing for your future candidacy deteriorates substantially as Mamdani and AOC take control of the Party. In my experience, opportunities with minimal downside that don’t require huge investments of time while offering massive upside get filled. If you were ever thinking about running for office, or running for a higher office than you currently hold, this is likely the best opportunity that you are going to have. All of the above is not just theory, as I have a superb candidate who I believe can win who meets all of the criteria, but if I were to say his name or even reach out to him, it would have a negative effect on his candidacy, as I am a supporter of President Trump, and that alone taints anyone I would recommend for many and perhaps most NYC Democratic Party members. So rather than my making suggestions, I welcome yours. Who is your best centrist candidate who could go toe-to-toe with Mamdani on the campaign trail and on the debate stage? Let’s crowdsource the names and then do a poll. If someone is ready to raise their hand, I will take care of the fundraising. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the right candidate. More importantly, it is an opportunity to save our City and be a superhero. Life is short and you must dare to be great. The time is now.

English
1.9K
1.9K
13.6K
3.3M
Mars Dispatch retweetledi
Naval
Naval@naval·
Stay healthy, get wealthy, seek truth, give love, and create beauty.
English
773
5.6K
36.8K
1.9M
Paul
Paul@WomanDefiner·
Is there a reliable way to intercept ICBM's in theory or is that a straight impossibility?
English
123
2
388
31K
Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
could try: “thank you for offering me this neurotoxin. I’ll pass bc it shrinks brain hippocampal grey matter volume and accelerates white-matter loss; impairs neurogenesis and elevates neuro-inflammatory markers. It fragments REM and slow-wave sleep, making me depressed, grumpy and slow. But please don’t let that interfere with your enjoyment.”
English
241
217
5K
221.3K
Matthew Berman
Matthew Berman@MatthewBerman·
What's a non-douchey way of telling people you don't drink when offered? (assuming "no, thank you" is followed up with questions)
English
1.5K
26
2.8K
1.1M
Mars Dispatch
Mars Dispatch@MarsDispatch·
@JDHaltigan I made the observation that men supported him more than women No need to slander women over this
English
0
0
2
51
J.D. Haltigan, PhD 🏒👨‍💻
Lobaczewski made the observation that women are disproportionately drawn to & hoodwinked by psychopaths. Lesson here for young female, starry-eyed, mindless support for Mamdani.
English
14
19
150
4.9K
Cyan Banister
Cyan Banister@cyantist·
The right person is you @BillAckman
Bill Ackman@BillAckman

I awoke this morning gravely concerned about New York City. I thought “What has NYC become that an avowed socialist who has supported defunding the police, whose solution to lowering food prices is city-owned supermarkets, who doesn’t understand that freezing rents will only reduce the supply of housing, who has no experience managing an organization -- let alone a city with a $100+ billion budget and a $2 trillion economy -- and who believes chants for ‘Globalizing the Intifada’ are acceptable, wins the Democratic Primary. After speaking to those who supported @ZohranKMamdani, I believe that he won the primary largely not due to his policies, but rather because he is a superb politician who ran a remarkable and inspiring campaign. He is intelligent and articulate. He is young and charming, and he successfully played down incriminating @X posts and statements from his past, pitching a joyful campaign of unity. And he won because the competition was very weak. His best competitor sat back and did not run a real campaign, relying on name recognition, early favorable polling and keeping a low profile to make it through. Not a strategy that I have ever seen work, but so be it. The Democratic primary voter is clearly tired of the Democratic politics of the past and its aging and over-the-hill leadership – Who isn’t? [As a case in point, how embarrassing is it to watch aging Dems fall in line with their tweets of support for Mamdani, as they desperately try to defend their seats from the far left?] And therefore, without any real competition, Zohran and his attractive personal qualities and campaign skills magically make him the candidate of the future. The problem, however, is that his policies would be disastrous for NYC. Socialism has no place in the economic capital of our country. The ability for NYC to offer services for the poor and needy, let alone the average New Yorker, is entirely dependent on NYC being a business-friendly environment and a place where wealthy residents are willing to spend 183 days and assume the associated tax burden. Unfortunately, both have already started making arrangements for the exits. Mamdani is right that much about NYC is broken. The City has gotten much less safe while the cost of living here has become increasingly unattainable for many. We pay more for less. Unfortunately, his headline campaign promises of frozen rents and cheaper food from city-owned markets, among others, are certain to fail. A mayor who disrespects the NYPD and has called for their defunding will get less effective policing, and Bratton’s ‘broken window theory’ will operate in reverse. A mayor who condones hate speech will incentivize more hate speech and violence. Words matter, and yes, they can inspire people to kill as we have recently tragically seen in our country and around the world. New York City under Mamdani is about to become much more dangerous and economically unviable. Unlike our Federal government, NYC cannot print money, and this Federal Government won’t bail NYC out if things go bad. In fact, Mamdani would be a windfall for the Republican Party as NY becomes another failed major city run by Democrats alongside Seattle, Chicago, LA, and SF et al as Senator Fetterman so eloquently stated today, "I'd describe it as Christmas in July for the GOP." So why did I become optimistic later this morning? The answer is that NYC has woken up in the last 24 hours. The substantial majority of NYC residents understand that socialism is a failed system, that rent freezes will destroy our housing base and shrink the affordable housing supply while killing new construction, and that an anti-capitalist Mayor will destroy jobs and cause businesses and wealthy taxpayers that have enabled NYC to balance the budget to move elsewhere. If 100 or so of the highest taxpayers in my industry chose to spend 183 days elsewhere, it could reduce NY state and city tax revenues by ~$5-10 billion or more, and that’s just my industry. Think Ken Griffin leaving Chicago for Miami on steroids. The good news is that there are other charismatic, intelligent, articulate, handsome, charming, young yet more experienced and, importantly, more centrist politicians who are New York residents eligible for office. There are also extremely talented members of the NY business community who could be superb mayors, Bloomberg being the reference standard from the past. And the setup is extremely attractive for a run for mayor. There are only 132 days until the election, which means the commitment of time to run is de minimis. This will be the most closely watched mayoral election in NYC in decades, perhaps ever, which, particularly in the social media and podcast era creates the opportunity for a new candidate to garner immediate name recognition, enormous media interest, and the visibility needed to get elected. Importantly, there are hundreds of million of dollars of capital available to back a competitor to Mamdani that can be put together overnight (believe me, I am in the text strings and the WhatsApp groups) so that a great alternative candidate won’t spend any time raising funds. So, if the right candidate would raise his or her hand tomorrow, the funds will pour in. I am sure that Mike Bloomberg will share his how-to-win-the-mayoralty IP and deliver his entire election apparatus and system to the aspiring candidate so that the candidate can focus all of his or her energy on the campaign. One unfortunate fact, as far as I understand, is that the candidate will have to be a write-in as I believe that none of the current candidates established a nominating committee if they were to withdraw, which means that no one can take their spot on the ballot. This is such an important election, however, that I believe the write-in requirement could actually turn into an important call to action that brings people in throngs to the polls. It therefore won’t be the game stopper it would normally be in a typical election. As a result, the risk/reward of running for mayor over the next 132 days is extremely compelling as the cost in time and energy is small, and the upside is enormous. If the candidate does not win, there is no harm, no foul, because the perceived probability of beating the Democratic nominee in a NYC mayoral election is extremely small. Therefore, there is no reputational risk to losing this election, and the corresponding reputational benefits are extraordinary whether one wins or loses. If the candidate wins, this is obviously a huge home run for the City and the candidate, but it is also an opportunity to save the Democratic Party from itself, grabbing the wheel just before the party goes even further off the cliff. The new mayor would be a national superhero for the City, for the Party, and for the country. For the aspiring politician, there is no better way to get name recognition, build relationships with long-term donors, and to showcase oneself than to run for mayor over the next 132 days. This election is already global front page news. For the aspiring young candidate, the amount of publicity and the massive followers to be gained are of incalculable long-term value whether they win or lose, and whatever they choose to do in the future, business, politics or otherwise. And there is a defensive reason for a politician to run. For the more centrist Democrat politician, a Mamdani win is very bad for your next election. As the Party veers further to the left, the Party’s backing for your future candidacy deteriorates substantially as Mamdani and AOC take control of the Party. In my experience, opportunities with minimal downside that don’t require huge investments of time while offering massive upside get filled. If you were ever thinking about running for office, or running for a higher office than you currently hold, this is likely the best opportunity that you are going to have. All of the above is not just theory, as I have a superb candidate who I believe can win who meets all of the criteria, but if I were to say his name or even reach out to him, it would have a negative effect on his candidacy, as I am a supporter of President Trump, and that alone taints anyone I would recommend for many and perhaps most NYC Democratic Party members. So rather than my making suggestions, I welcome yours. Who is your best centrist candidate who could go toe-to-toe with Mamdani on the campaign trail and on the debate stage? Let’s crowdsource the names and then do a poll. If someone is ready to raise their hand, I will take care of the fundraising. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the right candidate. More importantly, it is an opportunity to save our City and be a superhero. Life is short and you must dare to be great. The time is now.

English
16
6
222
21.2K
Paul
Paul@WomanDefiner·
If you want to increase birthrates you need to build a society around it. Our society is diseased. It doesn't matter what group comes here by Generation 3 they stop having kids. This isn't new. So either we are being poisoned by chemicals or our society and social functions are poison. If you want a society of growth you have to rebalance how we look at the world right now.
English
38
44
790
14.3K
𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯
𝖓𝖎𝖓𝖊 🕯@atlanticesque·
̶I̶'̶m̶ ̶H̶y̶s̶t̶e̶r̶i̶c̶ ̶f̶o̶r̶ ̶E̶r̶i̶c̶ ̶I̶'̶m̶ ̶C̶h̶o̶l̶e̶r̶i̶c̶ ̶f̶o̶r̶ ̶E̶r̶i̶c̶ ̶D̶a̶d̶-̶g̶u̶m̶ ̶I̶'̶m̶ ̶f̶o̶r̶ ̶A̶d̶a̶m̶s̶ ̶I̶'̶m̶ ̶a̶ ̶m̶a̶d̶m̶a̶n̶ ̶f̶o̶r̶ ̶A̶d̶a̶m̶s̶ ̶I̶'̶m̶ ̶w̶i̶t̶h̶ ̶h̶i̶m̶ ̶B̶i̶g̶ ̶E̶ ̶f̶o̶r̶ ̶N̶Y̶C̶ This is hard
29
2
284
10.9K
The Rabbit Hole
The Rabbit Hole@TheRabbitHole·
Bodycams have been a PR disaster for the BLM movement and police brutality narrative
The Rabbit Hole tweet media
English
134
517
10K
182.9K
Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman@BillAckman·
I have a great idea on NYC. I will share it as soon as I can. I was a bit depressed when I woke up this morning, but I am now optimistic.
English
2.3K
1.6K
27K
3.3M
peepeepoopoo
peepeepoopoo@DeepDishEnjoyer·
omg they're gonna run hillary clinton
peepeepoopoo tweet media
English
108
45
2.9K
492.2K
Daniel
Daniel@growing_daniel·
Guys I think it's very important we all vote for Eric Adams. For my financial future it is very very, very important
English
20
8
883
32.9K
Mamdani Watch
Mamdani Watch@MamdaniWatch·
Eric Adams: ✅ Support the police ✅ Fighting for our workers ✅ Fight Antisemitism ✅ Sanitize New York City and keep our streets clean and safe. Zohran Mamdani:
Mamdani Watch tweet media
English
190
483
3.3K
144.6K