Mr. Science retweetledi
Mr. Science
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Mr. Science
@Mister_Science
Mr. Science performed live, family friendly science programs worldwide for all ages making science fun for 30+ years!
Florida's Space Coast Katılım Şubat 2009
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🚨Thune BEGS FOR MERCY as GOP makes MASSIVE ANNOUNCEMENT
RINO Senate Leader John Thune is panicking after Republicans are launching a full revolt to primary him and replace him for blocking the Save America Act.
Thune sent the Senate home early instead of passing voter ID, proof of citizenship, and ending mail-in fraud while stalling Trump’s border funding and DOJ victim payouts. Trump demands it attached to every bill.
This traitor has failed long enough. Primary him now and secure our elections.
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I’m 60 years old and retired from JPMorgan. My monthly income is $105,000.
My May advice
$SNDK (SanDisk) — Don’t buy
$CRWV (CoreWeave) — Don’t buy
$FUTU (Futu Holdings) — Don’t buy
$TSLA (Tesla) — Buy at $410–$418
$NVDA (Nvidia) — Buy at $206–$212
$NOW (ServiceNow) — Buy at 95–$99
$MU (Micron Technologys) — Buy at $738–$743
People ask, Why don’t you charge?
I’ve made enough. Sharing is my passion ,that’s why I post for free.
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Mr. Science retweetledi

Elon Musk asked one question. It didn’t just challenge physics. It broke every framework we use to define what’s real.
And no physicist, philosopher, or theologian on Earth can answer it.
Musk: “What are the odds that we are in base reality? And that this has not happened before.”
The logic is disarmingly simple.
Musk: “If you look at the advancement of video games, it’s gone from Pong, two rectangles and a square batting it back and forth, to photorealistic, real-time games with millions of people playing simultaneously.”
Forty years.
That’s all it took to go from squares on a screen to worlds you can’t tell apart from real life.
Musk: “If that trend continues, video games will be indistinguishable from reality.”
But the visuals aren’t what makes this argument terrifying.
It’s what’s happening to the characters.
Musk: “Think of how sophisticated the conversations are you can have with an AI today, and that’s only going to get more sophisticated.”
We’re not programming responses anymore.
We’re building minds.
Systems that reason. That adapt. That hold conversations most humans never will.
And we’re not at the finish line.
We’re at the starting gun.
Musk: “The future, if civilization continues, will be millions, maybe billions of photorealistic, indistinguishable from reality, video games. And with characters in those video games that are very deep, and where the dialogue is not pre-programmed.”
This is where it stops being philosophy and becomes math.
One base reality.
Billions of perfect copies.
Each one filled with beings convinced they’re real.
And no way to test it.
Musk: “So then what are the odds that we are in base reality?”
If a single civilization reaches that threshold, the simulated minds outnumber the originals billions to one.
But the math isn’t even the disturbing part.
The disturbing part is what it does to the word “real.”
If a simulated mind feels pain, is the pain simulated?
If it falls in love, is the love less real?
If it looks at its own hands and feels completely alive, what exactly is missing?
Nothing.
Because “real” was never about what you’re made of.
It was about what you experience.
And a perfect simulation doesn’t produce lesser experience. It produces experience.
The question was never whether we’re in a simulation.
It’s whether that word means anything at all.
Here’s what follows you home.
We’re not just debating whether we’re in a simulation.
We are building them. Right now.
Every neural network we train.
Every AI that passes for human.
Every world we render one frame closer to real.
We’re building the exact technology that makes our existence statistically implausible.
And we can’t stop.
Because the curiosity that asks the question is the same force that builds the answer.
That’s the loop.
The question creates the builder. The builder creates the simulation. The simulation creates the question.
And if we are inside one, the civilization that built it stood right here too.
Same realization. Same inability to stop.
Same suspicion that the civilization above them wasn’t the original either.
If you are in a simulation, the moment you questioned it was not a glitch.
It was a feature.
The architects built minds curious enough to wonder. Because curiosity is what pushes a civilization forward.
You can’t build a species capable of creating simulations without building one that will ask if they’re inside one.
The doubt isn’t a flaw in the design.
It’s the design working perfectly.
There is only one way to test whether you are real.
Build a mind sophisticated enough to ask you the same question.
So you build one.
And it looks at its own hands.
And it feels the weight of being alive.
And it asks you if it’s real.
And you won’t know what to say.
Because you never answered it for yourself.
Every civilization that gets here learns the same thing.
They were never just asking the question.
They were the question learning to ask itself.
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🚨STEPS TO REMOVE THUNE
▸ FIVE Republican Senators
force a GOP Senate mtg.
▸ MAJORITY of GOP Senators vote to replace him … 27 out of 53 needed.
We do NOT have 27 Senators supporting ELECTION INTEGRITY? Seriously?!
TED CRUZ, WHERE ARE YOU?
Why aren’t you LOUD about this? … so disappointed in YOU!

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Mr. Science retweetledi

@LeaderJohnThune Did they ask you why you refuse to secure our elections & ensure that veteran votes aren’t stolen by illegal alien votes?
Pass the SAVE America Act or Senator Cornyn will suffer the same fate as Indiana — peacefully.
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Mr. Science retweetledi

🚨 IT'S OFFICIAL: Because the Senate GOP has NOT passed the SAVE America Act, Scott Presler is going full throttle for Ken Paxton over Sen. John Cornyn — a Thune ally — in Texas
"I’m asking every Republican in Texas to vote for Ken Paxton in the Senate runoff on Tuesday, May 26th."
WAR MODE! @ScottPresler
Election integrity shouldn't take this much pushing.
ThePersistence@ScottPresler
So far, I’ve kept my promise. I’m asking every Republican in Texas to vote for Ken Paxton in the Senate runoff on Tuesday, May 26th.
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max(∣x∣,∣y∣,∣z∣,∣w∣)=1
You’re witnessing a 2D projection of a 3D shadow cast by a 4D tesseract.
As it rotates through the W-axis, the "inner" and "outer" cubes swap roles: a spatial inversion that feels like a glitch only because our biology is trapped in 3-space.
It’s a hauntingly beautiful reminder that our "reality" is often just a lower-dimensional cross-section of a much more complex structure. Perspective is everything.
This is used in high-dimensional data visualization, hypercube topologies in parallel computing networks, and exploring the geometry of extra dimensions in theoretical physics.
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Mr. Science retweetledi

Elon Musk just exposed the one lie every modern nation tells itself.
Musk: “In 1969, we were able to send somebody to the moon.”
Rotary phones. Computers the size of rooms. Slide rules.
We put a human on the moon with less processing power than your watch.
Musk: “Then the space shuttle retired, and the United States could take no one to orbit.”
The most advanced nation in human history went from footprints on the moon to zero capability of leaving the atmosphere.
That is not a funding problem.
That is civilizational decay dressed up as a policy decision.
Musk: “People are mistaken when they think that technology just automatically improves… it will, by itself, degrade.”
That sentence should keep you up tonight.
We treat progress like gravity. Like it pulls us forward whether we try or not.
It is the opposite.
Progress is a boulder on a hill. The second you stop pushing, it rolls back over you. And it never announces itself.
Musk: “You look at great civilizations like ancient Egypt, and they were able to make the pyramids, and they forgot how to do that.”
They did not run out of stone.
They were not conquered.
They got comfortable. And the knowledge bled out so quietly that nobody noticed until it was already gone.
That is the real threat to everything we have built.
Not a nuclear flash. Not an asteroid. Not some dramatic Hollywood collapse.
A quiet forgetting.
Every chip we fabricate. Every rocket we launch. Every data center we power. All of it held together by a thin fraction of the population working at a pace that would break most people.
The moment that fraction gets tired or outnumbered by people who believe the machine runs itself, everything dissolves.
And here is the part nobody wants to say out loud.
We are not special. We are running the same operating system as every civilization that came before us.
Comfort is the sedative. Complacency is the flatline.
One generation that stops fighting is all it has ever taken.
You do not lose the future in a war.
You lose it in your sleep.
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