Michael Sorrell

35.4K posts

Michael Sorrell banner
Michael Sorrell

Michael Sorrell

@michaelsorrell

Prez of @paulquinn1872. WE over Me + Four Ls of Quinnite Leadership #NationBuilding, New Urban College Model, & Reality Based Education. #stilljustwarmingup

Quinnite Nation Katılım Haziran 2009
3.8K Takip Edilen13.3K Takipçiler
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
James Purchin
James Purchin@JamesPurchin·
At High Point, Flynn Clayman runs his staff differently. Instead of assistants doing a little bit of everything, he assigns coordinators: One owns offense. One owns defense. One owns special teams. Not traditional. But intentional. Because when everyone is responsible for everything… no one truly grows. Clayman learned this from his mentors. When he was trusted to run the offense, it accelerated his development. So now, he does the same for his staff. Yes, you give up some control. But you gain clarity, ownership, and better coaching. Assistants aren’t just helping anymore. They’re leading. And when coaches grow, the team grows. Build a staff where people can specialize, own their role, and thrive, not just survive. Are you asking your people to do everything… or putting them in positions to be great at something?
English
18
119
1.1K
232.1K
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
Watcher.Guru
Watcher.Guru@WatcherGuru·
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 Fed Chair Jerome Powell warns US national debt is growing "substantially" faster than the economy and says it's not sustainable. "It will not end well if we don't do something fairly soon."
English
2.3K
7.1K
24.3K
1.8M
William Payne
William Payne@TweetsbyCoachP·
Coaches that I planned to meet in Indy… We’ve had a very unexpected death in the immediate family and I will not be in attendance. My sincere apologies.
English
20
0
47
19.8K
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
StockMarket.News
StockMarket.News@_Investinq·
The man running America’s military tried to get rich off the war he was planning. Pete Hegseth is the US Secretary of Defense, the person who helped launch airstrikes against Iran. In February, weeks before those bombs fell, his broker at Morgan Stanley called BlackRock. The ask is a multimillion-dollar investment in BlackRock’s Defense Industrials Active ETF, a fund that holds Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, RTX, and Palantir. Essentially on defense stocks that go up when America goes to war. Hegseth was one of its loudest architects publicly demanding no ceasefire timeline and announcing the largest strike packages in the conflict. He had information no ordinary investor could have. The broker flagged the investment request inside BlackRock and the deal never closed not because anyone stopped it on ethics grounds, but because the fund wasn’t yet available on Morgan Stanley’s platform. The only thing that prevented the trade was a paperwork problem. This is not the first time, he has done this. Hegseth sold 23 stocks worth up to $550,000 just nine days before Trump’s liberation day tariff announcement in April 2025 and stocks that cratered shortly after. The pattern is clear, a cabinet official making financial moves timed to government decisions only he knew were coming.
StockMarket.News tweet media
English
22
131
281
21.8K
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
Sam Stein
Sam Stein@samstein·
The New York Times takes an architectural look at the coming White House ballroom and finds there is a lot of ornamental stairs to no where and faux windows with bathroom stalls behind them
Sam Stein tweet media
English
2.6K
3.3K
22.3K
6.7M
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
ProPublica
ProPublica@propublica·
The FDA won’t tell Americans where their generic drugs are made, so ProPublica did it instead. Use information from your prescription label to locate the factory and see if the plant has a history of inspection violations. projects.propublica.org/rx-inspector/?…
English
19
1.3K
2.5K
54.6K
Michael Sorrell
Michael Sorrell@michaelsorrell·
Beautiful story.
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07

He drives a school bus in Dallas, Texas. But the kids on his route call him something else — Dad. Every morning before the sun is fully up, Curtis Jenkins pulls his yellow school bus to the curb and waits. Not just to pick up kids. To see them. For seven years, Curtis noticed things other people missed. The little girl who folded her paper lunch bag perfectly every day but left it on the bus — because there was nothing inside. The boy whose shoes were too small. The kids who got on quiet, eyes down, carrying weight no child should have to carry alone. So Curtis did something simple. He made his bus a community. He gave every child a job — a greeter, an assistant, a "police officer" keeping order in the aisles. Every morning he'd call out, "We're going to care about each other and love everybody, right?" And 50 small voices would answer back. But it didn't stop there. Over the years, Curtis spent thousands of dollars of his own money — money he saved by skipping his own Christmas gifts with his wife — on birthday cards, bikes, backpacks, turkeys at Thanksgiving, and 70 hand-wrapped Christmas presents. He didn't buy random gifts. He asked each child what they wanted. Then he went and got exactly that. No donation page. No announcement. No cameras. When the story finally got out and people questioned how a bus driver could afford it, Curtis just smiled. "It doesn't take money. It takes discipline." But here's the part that will stay with you. When a reporter asked the kids what they loved most about Curtis — not one of them mentioned the gifts. A fifth grader named Ethan, whose parents had divorced when he was four, looked up and said quietly: "He's the father that I always wanted. In some ways, I wish my dad could have been like that." Curtis heard it. Didn't flinch. Just nodded. "That's the paycheck right there," he said later. "If I can get that, you can keep the money." He wasn't looking for a medal. He wasn't going viral on purpose. He was just a man who decided, every single morning, that his bus would be the safest place those kids walked into all day. Sometimes the person who changes a child's life forever isn't a teacher or a coach or a counselor. Sometimes it's the person behind the wheel of a yellow bus at 7 a.m. — who chose to show up, and chose to care, when nobody was asking him to. Tag someone who needs to read this today. 💛

English
0
0
5
436
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
ProPublica
ProPublica@propublica·
New: Under AG Pam Bondi, the DOJ has dropped 23,000 criminal cases — including hundreds of investigations into terrorism, white-collar crime and drugs — while prosecuting 32,000 new immigration cases in just the first six months of Trump’s second term. propub.li/4m4Vzmf
English
125
3.3K
4.7K
477.6K
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
Scott Dworkin
Scott Dworkin@funder·
A federal judge just ruled that videos of DOGE staffers must stay up — and they are devastating. Under oath, they couldn't define DEI. They admitted they never reduced the deficit. And they wiped out $100 million in humanities grants — including a Holocaust documentary — using ChatGPT. The regime tried to bury this. It didn't work. dworkinsubstack.com/p/shut-it-down…
Scott Dworkin tweet media
English
3.2K
26.8K
86.3K
3.4M
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
Shashank Joshi
Shashank Joshi@shashj·
Absolutely remarkable. "Iran is now earning nearly twice as much from oil sales each day as it did before American and Israeli bombs started falling on February 28th. It may be pummelled on the battlefield, but the regime is winning the energy war." economist.com/finance-and-ec…
English
236
3.2K
7.6K
1.3M
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
P a u l ◉
P a u l ◉@SkylineReport·
🚨 BREAKING: Florida Scraps School Vaccine Rules — Disease Cases Now Spiking Florida has eliminated all school vaccine mandates — and public health experts say the fallout is already underway. * Measles cases up 340% since January [1] * Vaccination rates dropping across school districts [2] * Doctors warn schools are becoming “incubators” for preventable diseases [3] Hospitals are now reporting clusters of measles, whooping cough, and COVID among unvaccinated kids. “This is something we haven’t seen in decades,” one pediatric specialist said. Meanwhile, Florida’s tourism economy is turning local outbreaks into a national export problem, with visitors potentially carrying infections back across the U.S. [4] Even more alarming: some areas have childhood vaccination rates below 70%, raising concerns about diseases like polio re-emerging. Public health officials are now warning this could spiral fast if trends continue. Translation: Remove safeguards → drop vaccination → diseases come roaring back. Not complicated. Just dangerous. References [1] CBS News (2026) — "Florida surgeon general moves to end school vaccine requirements" cbsnews.com/news/florida-s… [2] Reuters (Sept. 3, 2025) — "Florida plans to end all state vaccine mandates, including schools" reuters.com/business/healt… [3] ABC News (2026) — "Florida moving to end vaccine mandates, experts warn of disease spread" abcnews.com/Health/florida… [4] TIME (2026) — "Florida’s vaccine policy shift raises national outbreak concerns" time.com/7314268/florid…
English
466
2.3K
3.5K
316.9K
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
Richard Deitsch
Richard Deitsch@richarddeitsch·
The cover of SPORTS ILLUSTRATED (@SInow), 60 years ago this week. An iconic cover for an iconic moment in U.S. sports history.
Richard Deitsch tweet media
English
11
83
250
20.8K
Michael Sorrell
Michael Sorrell@michaelsorrell·
What if destroying everything was always the plan?
English
0
0
7
231
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
Sukh Sroay
Sukh Sroay@sukh_saroy·
🚨Breaking: Princeton researchers just ran the numbers on where AI is actually heading. The results should make every founder, investor, and policymaker stop what they are doing. Training OpenAI's next-gen model consumes an estimated 11 billion kWh of electricity. That is enough to power every home in New York City for a full year. More than the annual output of a nuclear reactor. For one model. One training run. And that is before a single user asks a single question. Every time someone uses a reasoning model like o1 or DeepSeek-R1, it costs 33 Wh of energy per query. A standard GPT-4 query costs 0.42 Wh. That is a 79x energy multiplier. Per query. At billions of queries per day. Now here is what nobody is saying out loud. The industry's answer to this is Stargate. A $500 billion compute campus. 5 gigawatts of power. Enough to run 5 million homes. Owned by the same four companies that already control the technology. They are building a new kind of utility. Except you do not elect its board. Meanwhile the models consuming all that energy still cannot reliably reason outside of math and code. Everywhere else they pattern-match. They hallucinate. They confabulate confidence. Princeton's argument is that this is not a scaling problem. It is a structural one. More parameters have not fixed it. More data has not fixed it. The architecture itself is the ceiling. Their alternative: stop chasing one god-model and build thousands of small specialists instead. Each one trained on curated domain data. Each one grounded in verified knowledge. Each one small enough to run on your phone. The energy comparison is not close. A cloud query to a reasoning model uses 33 Wh and 20 milliliters of water. The same query on a local specialist model uses 0.001 Wh. Zero water. That is 10,000 times more efficient. AlphaFold did not beat biologists by knowing everything. It won by going impossibly deep in one domain. A 14 billion parameter model trained on medical knowledge graphs just outperformed GPT-5.2 on complex clinical reasoning. Depth beats breadth when the domain is defined. The question nobody building these systems wants to answer: If the only path to general AI requires the energy output of a small nation, controlled by a handful of companies, running on hardware most of the world cannot access — is that actually intelligence? Or is it just the most expensive pattern matcher ever built?
Sukh Sroay tweet media
English
95
354
895
79.7K
Michael Sorrell retweetledi
David Axelrod
David Axelrod@davidaxelrod·
Long after @realDonaldTrump is gone, this and future generations will be paying a terrible price for his war on science and discovery. That, and not his name on buildings or ballrooms or currency, will be a big part of his legacy, and the cost of it in terms of lives and safety and lost discovery will be profound. nytimes.com/2026/03/25/cli…
English
237
816
2.6K
94.9K