Mike Kimel

7.5K posts

Mike Kimel

Mike Kimel

@MikeKimel

1. Many things are true which I really wish were not. 2. When life hands you marmels, make marmelade.

Pasco County Katılım Mart 2010
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Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
I had Gemini graph the annualized growth in real GDP per capita by decade and it appears below. To add a bit of context, if we had maintained the same growth rate as in the mid-1960s all the way to today, real GDP per capita would be about twice as high as it is actually is. Put a different way: we’d be twice as rich. The miracle of compounding cuts both ways. It’s worth noting: 1. Tax rates went from 90% to 70% in 64 and dropped below 50% in 82. 2. The Immigration Act was in 65. 3. A bunch of Civil Rights laws were passed in the 60s. 4. By almost every measure, more Americans are educated now than at any time in the past. 5. The cost of transporting goods and people, or of communicating across distances, has fallen dramatically over time. Since about the 1960s we’ve fired just about every silver bullet each political party was touting. And by a really odd coincidence, that’s when the economy peaked in the post war era and started shrinking. Now it’s possible these silver bullets worked. But that means if we hadn’t fired them, the economy would have collapsed by even more, and it isn’t clear why that would be the case. Nobody looks at 1965 and says “that’s the point where we rescued the economy from oblivion. Alternatively, one or more of those silver bullets aren’t silver bullets at all. In fact, they’re actually a tremendous drag on growth so bad they are overwhelming the positive effects of everything else we’ve done. That doesn’t make those ideas bad. Some things are worth doing even if they have a net cost. Furthermore,a good idea can have poor outcomes if it’s badly executed, and could turn out to be a silver bullet if done right. In any case, it’s worth figuring out what we screwed up and why the economy is 50% smaller than if we had maintained our mid-1960s trajectory because the compounding, positive and negative, will continue.
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@jonkessler20 We lost in Vietnam & Afghanistan because of a combination of: a) US is unwilling to go scorched earth b) in aggregate the populace on the ground didn’t like us any better than they liked the other side I support a) so we need to ensure we don’t engage if b) isn’t true.
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jon kessler
jon kessler@jonkessler20·
Taiwan literally voted in a legislative majority for the Anschluss Party. Americans can't want it more than the Taiwanese.
Hobbes the Cat@Bannedforself

@jonkessler20 Taiwan passed a defense budget that removed funding for made in Taiwan drones, in the hundreds of thousands of units. So, I think America has to think about this. If Taiwan won't defend itself, then should we?

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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@TerraAustralisF @Rothmus I asked Gemini. It estimated that 20% to 30% of enslaved Europeans were galley slaves, 40% to 50% were put to public works construction, and 15% to 20% were put to concubinage or domestic work. Basically most were male and they weren’t in positions where they could reproduce.
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Orion
Orion@TerraAustralisF·
@Rothmus How come it doesn’t appear in genetic tests? Like a Moroccan with Irish ancestry showing up? It’s a thing?
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Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
More white Europeans were enslaved in Africa than Black Africans were enslaved in America between the 1500s and 1800s. But they never taught us that in school.
Rothmus 🏴 tweet media
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@Steve_Sailer @avrilbradley23 The Great Triangulator fixated on issues the public deemed salient. Like most Presidential candidates his message started out crafted toward what won the nomination but as his target market expanded his attention drifted to the deficit problem.
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Steve Sailer
Steve Sailer@Steve_Sailer·
@avrilbradley23 And Clinton turned out to be good for the stock market and the balanced budget, even though he wasn't particularly planning to be when he ran in 1992.
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Steve Sailer
Steve Sailer@Steve_Sailer·
New on SteveSailer . Net -- Why Did California Turn So Progressive? The paradox: California voters started becoming more progressive after 1969 in order to keep things the same. Link in replies:
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Steve Sailer
Steve Sailer@Steve_Sailer·
@avrilbradley23 @HenryMorgan3721 In contrast, my San Fernando Valley, built mostly after WWII has laissez-faire sidewalks and streetlights: Whatever developers felt like. So one block has wide sidewalks and powerful streetlights and the next block you are forced to walk in the poorly lit street.
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Steve Sailer
Steve Sailer@Steve_Sailer·
My relatives grew up in weirdly interesting suburbs. my father was born in Oak Park, IL, which comes up in any serious discussion of how white flight was halted there. Then he lived in Altadena, CA, which burned down last year, 10,000 homes gone. And then there's Arcadia...
ABC News@ABC

NEW: Eileen Wang, the mayor of Arcadia, California, has been charged with acting as an illegal foreign agent for China, the Justice Department announced on Monday. Wang agreed to plead guilty, the Justice Department said. abcnews.link/IntbpBy

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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@clement_molin The US got involved in WWI though for the most part it didn’t involve us. Once American troops arrived in France they were seen as enthusiastic amateurs & there was friction with French leadership. Perhaps that goes some way to explaining American disinterest in 1938-1940.
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Clément Molin
Clément Molin@clement_molin·
Many people are still often saying "France 🇫🇷 surrender", which is completly ridiculous. Here is the real version of what happened and why France lost the 6 weeks campaign : 🔹From 1919 to 1939, France was abandonned. It helped central Europe to survive against communists and while Germany was not respecting Versailles Treaty, it was abandonned by the allies (UK, US) 🔹When Hitler entered Rhenania and invaded Austria and Czecoslovakia, no one said anything, France was alone and an intervention was impossible due to internal pacifism. 🔹In 1939, France could have done much better against nazi Germany, especially when it invaded Poland and Norway, that's right 🔹In May 1940, Germany had 2 times more population than France and a way bigger industrial capacity. German military strategy was also younger and better. 🔹However, in May 1940, France was the lone country effectively fighting Germans and Italians in Europe : the french army fought but lacked crucial air power, tanks organisation, communication and movement. 🔹In Dunkirk, the french army fought firmly to allow all the british troops to flee to the UK. Part of the french army was captured to save the british. The UK then refused to send more planes and troops to France. They did help a lot and managed to liberate Western Europe later with other allies 🔹At the same time, the Italian army started attacking the french Alps but got crushed and lost 2 300 men against 37 for France. 🔹What was the Soviet Union doing at the time ? It was an ally of Nazi Germany, it was invading Finland, occupying eastern Poland, Bessarabia and Baltic countries, while supplying Hitler with all the goods he needed. 🔹What were the US doing ? Nothing, they refused to step in the conflict and help their old allies, they waited until 1941-1942 to really step in the conflict. 🔹What were the other european countries doing ? Most were quickly occupied (faster than France), others chose to ally with Hitler and some remained neutral. There were absolut mistakes in the french decision making and war preparation, while the french soldiers did fight a lot, losing 58 000 soldiers, but repeating "French surrender" is simply ridiculous when you know a bit about history. The truth is (americans and others) are saying this for France (and not Poland, Denmark, Yugoslavia, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg...) because they hate the fact France decided to be politically independant from the US after the war, not because it is the reality, and that's a shame...
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Odera Nwaigbo
Odera Nwaigbo@NwaigboOdera·
@odoreida Thank you, although I won't be reclaiming the hours of lost sleep any time soon..
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Odera Nwaigbo
Odera Nwaigbo@NwaigboOdera·
My son was born yesterday and I can only say I have an immense appreciation for our midwife and the staff on the natal wards. He would not have survived without them. My respect for humanity has gone up by an order of magnitude.
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@BrettErickson28 @AmitSegal Iraq declared war against Israel in 1948 & the two countries have never agreed to a ceasefire or armistice with each other. Put another way, they have been at war since 1948.
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Amit Segal
Amit Segal@AmitSegal·
Israel established a secret military base in the Iraqi desert to assist in airstrikes on Iran, and even attacked Iraqi forces that nearly exposed the base. It was used by special forces and served as a logistical hub for the Air Force (Wall Street Journal).
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@S___Elliott @klhoughton These days the 2 parties can be characterized as: 1. One that doesn’t realize you can help the predators or you can help the victims but you can’t help both so it helps the predators 2. One that thinks helping the predators is the point Which is which depends on the issue.
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@CliffSymonds @travelingflying Bin Laden stated his reasons for attacking the US. Among the grievances that his apologists in the West ignore are the need to reconquer Spain & the fact that the US was a secular society with liberal values. He also specifically called on Americans to convert to Islam.
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chuckiepowpow
chuckiepowpow@CliffSymonds·
I like hitch but that was a different time The US is saying don’t take our ppl as slaves although the US had slaves. He kinda fell off his rocker about Islam after 911. A lot of ppl did. Bin Laden stated his reasons for 911. You can either believe what he said or you can despise billions ppl based on their faith?
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Taya Bass
Taya Bass@travelingflying·
Christopher Hitchens: ”In 1786, when the United States was barely a country, it was having its sailors taken as slaves by the Barbary states, the states of the Ottoman Empire and North Africa. Tripoli, shores of Tripoli. Ships stopped, its crews carried off into slavery. We estimate 1.5 million European and American slaves taken between 1750 and 1815. Jefferson and Adams went to their ambassador in London and said, why do you do this to us? The United States has never had a quarrel with the Muslim world of any kind. We weren't in the crusades. We weren't at war with Spain. Why do you do this to our people and our ships? Why do you plunder and enslave our people? The ambassador said very plainly, Mr. Abdul Rahman said, because the Quran gives us permission to do so, because you are infidels, and that's our answer. Jefferson said, well, in that case, I will send a navy which will crush your state, which he did. Islamic fundamentalism is not created by American democracy. It's a lie to say so. It's a masochistic lie, and it excuses those who are the real criminals, and blames us for the attacks made upon us.”
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@boocoin1 @robertdunlap947 1. I’m no Democrat 2. His promise to replace it with something terrific didn’t include a “if the Democrats let me” clause 3. I don’t recall him ever proposing anything anyone, even his supporters, said was terrific 4. He’s President now. Why not do it now?
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booman1
booman1@boocoin1·
@MikeKimel @robertdunlap947 I love it everything he does. The Democrats fight him on. They fought him on trying to fix the reflecting pull. They fought them on the ballroom. They fought him when he tried to fix healthcare then they point a finger say see you couldn’t do it. They failed to tell you why
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Bobby D🎙
Bobby D🎙@robertdunlap947·
Do you know what the difference between a businessman and a politician is🤔? The businessman saves you $298,500,000 and does the job in weeks instead of THREE YEARS🫨! That is EXACTLY why DC hates DJT😡. It’s because an outsider, with real world experience, CAN ACTUALLY FIX 🇺🇸
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@grok @jdpoc @grok so results are almost the diametric opposite of what the poster claimed?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
**No, those figures aren't accurate.** CST data for 2025 shows 177 antisemitic incidents targeting UK synagogues (buildings, staff, congregants), plus 50 more against people heading to/from them—totaling ~227 synagogue-related cases, far above ~10. A major terrorist attack also hit one in Manchester. Mosque attack data is less centralized (no equivalent to CST), but reports logged ~27 verified attacks on mosques from July-Oct 2025 alone—not ~300 for the year. For context: UK has ~450 synagogues and ~1,900–2,200 mosques/prayer spaces.
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John O'Connell
John O'Connell@jdpoc·
There have been ~10 attacks on UK Synagogues in the last 12 months. There have been ~300 attacks on UK Mosques in the last 12 months. Why is the former a problem ... but the latter isn't?
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@McCrackenHQ @ChrisMartzWX Theoretically anything gasoline powered can run on batteries but right now theory is not reality. A commercial airliner carrying 280 passengers running on batteries would be too heavy to take off. Logging equipment in dense forests can’t be recharged where there’s no grid.
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The No Spin Daily.
The No Spin Daily.@NoSpin_Official·
@ChrisMartzWX Really? Name something that does run on gas that could not be battery powered You can try but as an engineer/physicist and journalist. I'll bet hard coin you are dead wrong if you even try. So you feeling lucky with your false statement?
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Chris Martz
Chris Martz@ChrisMartzWX·
People said that we would run out of oil in the 1970s. That didn’t happen. We are going to be burning oil for a long, long time. Nobody really knows how much oil there is left. Not everything runs on bAtTeRiEs.
saber@SAEberwein

@ChrisMartzWX sure but we won’t be burning fossil fuels forever, the transition to electric is inevitable

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Mike Kimel retweetledi
Eliezer Yudkowsky
Eliezer Yudkowsky@allTheYud·
If we want to avoid sea level rise caused by global warming, we need some way of using up water that doesn't just return it to the water cycle. The only known way of destroying water permanently is datacenters
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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@JewishWarrior13 @jonkessler20 For decades Saudi Arabia & Kuwait let a lot of petrodollars flow to hardline Islamist causes including terrorism against the West. Only after their Frankenstein targeted them too (2003ish) did they clamp down. Trump is being as callous toward them as they’ve been toward the West.
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Raylan Givens
Raylan Givens@JewishWarrior13·
⭕ MUAT READ: This is an incredible insight into what is happening with Gulf states and their anger with Trump's obsession with getting a deal with Iran.
Aimen Dean@AimenDean

Having spoken to a senior Saudi official about the NBC article regarding Project Freedom, I honestly think the article completely misunderstood what actually happened because it was written almost entirely from a US perspective rather than from a GCC perspective. First of all, contrary to the impression being created, the GCC were NOT blindsided by Project Freedom. They knew about it beforehand. Roughly half a day before. The airspace was opened. The facilities were available. Nobody objected. There was broad support for the idea because, at least publicly, Project Freedom was supposed to be a limited humanitarian-security operation aimed at relieving the 22,000 sailors trapped around Hormuz and allowing shipping lanes to breathe again. Nobody in the GCC had a problem with that. But here is the issue .. and this is the part the NBC article completely misses. If you are asking GCC countries to participate in such an operation, then you need to be upfront about the rules of engagement from day one! You cannot say:
“Please open your skies and bases, expose your energy infrastructure” …only for everyone to discover afterwards that the actual American policy was apparently: “Oh by the way, if Iran attacks you with ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and drones in several waves, we still won’t retaliate because Donald Trump is busy chasing The Deal.” And this is exactly what shocked the Saudis. Not the Iranian attack itself. The UAE/GCC expected retaliation.. This is Iran. Nobody in the Gulf is naïve about that anymore. The shock came from the American reaction afterwards. You had attacks against Emirati infrastructure. Fujairah was targeted. Multiple waves involving drones, ballistic missiles, cruise missiles. And Washington’s response was basically:
“Meh. Minor incident. Let’s not escalate.” Minor incident?! For the GCC that was madness. Because what Riyadh, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi suddenly realized was that Trump’s obsession with preserving “The Deal” had apparently reached the point where Gulf energy infrastructure was now considered acceptable collateral damage in the pursuit of his precious negotiations. Everything became:
The deal.
The deal.
The beautiful deal.
The greatest deal.
The mother of all deals. The ultimate “Art of the deal” Or perhaps, more accurately:
The ultimate fart of the deal. Because from the Gulf perspective, this stopped looking like strategy and started looking like desperate political vanity mixed with deadly wishful thinking. Had the GCC been told beforehand:
“Listen, whatever Iran does to you during Project Freedom, America will not retaliate because we do not want to endanger negotiations…” …they would have almost certainly refused participation from the start. The problem was not Project Freedom itself. The problem was discovering midway through the operation that the GCC countries were apparently expected to sit there quietly as punching bags while Washington played negotiation theatrics with Tehran. So the Saudis and Kuwaitis pulled plug! Because the GCC know something US usually forgets: Iran plays the long game. You can freeze enrichment.
Pause enrichment.
Delay enrichment.
Sign ten agreements.
Twenty agreements.
Forty agreements. But if the infrastructure remains…
If the centrifuges remain…
If the IRGC remains…
If the proxy network remains… then eventually the game resumes. There will be another distraction.
Another pandemic.
Another financial crisis.
Another war somewhere else.
Another paralysis in Washington. And while the world is distracted, enrichment quietly resumes again. Ironically, much of Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpile expanded during the pandemic years precisely because global attention was elsewhere. Judging by the reaction to the UAE attacks, the Saudis and Kuwaitis concluded that Trump’s version of deterrence had become: “Please absorb the missiles quietly because I’m trying to write the sequel to “The Fart of the Deal.”

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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@jonkessler20 Correction: “Whether Trump is truly chasing a deal or lining up the second phase of the attack is something not even Trump knows…”
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jon kessler
jon kessler@jonkessler20·
Whether Trump is truly chasing a deal or lining up the second phase of the attack is something only Trump knows, but the current narrative is that Trump is chasing a deal. Of course, when Khamenei was hit, the narrative was that Trump was desperate for a deal, so who knows?
jon kessler tweet media
Aimen Dean@AimenDean

Having spoken to a senior Saudi official about the NBC article regarding Project Freedom, I honestly think the article completely misunderstood what actually happened because it was written almost entirely from a US perspective rather than from a GCC perspective. First of all, contrary to the impression being created, the GCC were NOT blindsided by Project Freedom. They knew about it beforehand. Roughly half a day before. The airspace was opened. The facilities were available. Nobody objected. There was broad support for the idea because, at least publicly, Project Freedom was supposed to be a limited humanitarian-security operation aimed at relieving the 22,000 sailors trapped around Hormuz and allowing shipping lanes to breathe again. Nobody in the GCC had a problem with that. But here is the issue .. and this is the part the NBC article completely misses. If you are asking GCC countries to participate in such an operation, then you need to be upfront about the rules of engagement from day one! You cannot say:
“Please open your skies and bases, expose your energy infrastructure” …only for everyone to discover afterwards that the actual American policy was apparently: “Oh by the way, if Iran attacks you with ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and drones in several waves, we still won’t retaliate because Donald Trump is busy chasing The Deal.” And this is exactly what shocked the Saudis. Not the Iranian attack itself. The UAE/GCC expected retaliation.. This is Iran. Nobody in the Gulf is naïve about that anymore. The shock came from the American reaction afterwards. You had attacks against Emirati infrastructure. Fujairah was targeted. Multiple waves involving drones, ballistic missiles, cruise missiles. And Washington’s response was basically:
“Meh. Minor incident. Let’s not escalate.” Minor incident?! For the GCC that was madness. Because what Riyadh, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi suddenly realized was that Trump’s obsession with preserving “The Deal” had apparently reached the point where Gulf energy infrastructure was now considered acceptable collateral damage in the pursuit of his precious negotiations. Everything became:
The deal.
The deal.
The beautiful deal.
The greatest deal.
The mother of all deals. The ultimate “Art of the deal” Or perhaps, more accurately:
The ultimate fart of the deal. Because from the Gulf perspective, this stopped looking like strategy and started looking like desperate political vanity mixed with deadly wishful thinking. Had the GCC been told beforehand:
“Listen, whatever Iran does to you during Project Freedom, America will not retaliate because we do not want to endanger negotiations…” …they would have almost certainly refused participation from the start. The problem was not Project Freedom itself. The problem was discovering midway through the operation that the GCC countries were apparently expected to sit there quietly as punching bags while Washington played negotiation theatrics with Tehran. So the Saudis and Kuwaitis pulled plug! Because the GCC know something US usually forgets: Iran plays the long game. You can freeze enrichment.
Pause enrichment.
Delay enrichment.
Sign ten agreements.
Twenty agreements.
Forty agreements. But if the infrastructure remains…
If the centrifuges remain…
If the IRGC remains…
If the proxy network remains… then eventually the game resumes. There will be another distraction.
Another pandemic.
Another financial crisis.
Another war somewhere else.
Another paralysis in Washington. And while the world is distracted, enrichment quietly resumes again. Ironically, much of Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpile expanded during the pandemic years precisely because global attention was elsewhere. Judging by the reaction to the UAE attacks, the Saudis and Kuwaitis concluded that Trump’s version of deterrence had become: “Please absorb the missiles quietly because I’m trying to write the sequel to “The Fart of the Deal.”

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mrgc
mrgc@mrgc41637186182·
@Mankosmash @memeticsisyphus Let me tell you about a small empire that grew in a similar fashion. While it expanded significantly, its capital remained secure, shielded by the Italian mountains, a strategic position that proved vital to its success
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memetic_sisyphus
memetic_sisyphus@memeticsisyphus·
It’s a silly AI post, but I do like that there’s a large percentage of people that think civilization and technology work like a strategy game. You play for a while and you unlock enough science points for neon lights! One only has to look at the countries that have been around for thousands of years that are still considered “developing” as opposed to the countries founded say… 250 years ago which are highly advanced.
Alex Patrascu@maxescu

A vision of a modern Tenochtitlan in 2026, in a timeline where the Aztec Empire repelled Spanish conquest and modernized on its own terms. Enjoy:

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Mike Kimel
Mike Kimel@MikeKimel·
@odoreida “There’s a time to think, and a time to act. And this, gentlemen, is no time to think.” - Sheriff Bud Boomer, Canadian Bacon
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