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MrMizeGuy (Matt Meyer)
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MrMizeGuy (Matt Meyer)
@MrMizeGuy
👨👩👧Husband/Dad |🎙Talent Consultant/Agent | 📖Lifelong Learner | 📈Macro Investor | ✝️Proverbs 3:5-6
Tennessee, USA Katılım Nisan 2009
747 Takip Edilen3.5K Takipçiler

@CollinRugg This is the type "Media" (Social or Mainstream) the world needs to be seeing more of. There's always more good than evil done in the world everyday.
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NEW: Social media philanthropist, Jimmy Darts, helps raise $150,000 for a struggling family in Oklahoma.
The young boy had previously gone viral after he told Darts that God had been good to him despite his family's struggles.
"Amanda shared with me that she is only a month away from homelessness. She has no car, no money for groceries, and is doing everything she can to care for her children and grandchildren," Darts said on GoFundMe.
"Her son Cody was with her, and through tears he shared that he’s been bullied at school, but still said that God has been good to him."
God bless them.
Video: jimmydarts / ig.
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Curt Cignetti with a masterclass on consistency and standards.
"Every play has a life and history of its own...Not affected by success. Not affected by failure. On to the next play. Never satisfied. Playing to a standard, not the circumstances of the game."
Every moment is another rep in honoring your standard.
Stay anchored to your standard and your consistency becomes your separator.
📹: AFCA
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@FitFounder @grok scan all the comments of this post and give me the list of the top 5 most mentioned regrets
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@thegarybrecka "Muscle is the Organ of Longevity" - @drgabriellelyon
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@CepoiTudor Check out this timestamp (1:31:21) from our episode with
@darrencandow:
youtube.com/watch?v=ICsO-E…

YouTube
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One high dose (25–30 grams) of creatine rapidly reverses (and even surpasses) the cognitive deficits caused by severe sleep deprivation
In controlled studies, people given a high-dose creatine supplement after 21 hours of sleep deprivation not only recovered their cognitive abilities, they performed better than their baseline (fully rested) levels
Neuroimaging reveals the mechanism: high doses of creatine quickly replenish brain energy stores, enhancing neuronal function and metabolic efficiency under extreme stress
This immediate brain-boosting effect makes high-dose creatine promising for combating fatigue caused by something like sleep loss or jet lag
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MrMizeGuy (Matt Meyer) retweetledi

@FabtechExpo Too many to name here, but here's a favorite:
Back to the Basics - Elite performance in any field (sports or business) is built on a foundation of consistently mastering the basics. As Kobe Bryant exemplified, even the best never stop focusing on and perfecting fundamentals.
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@MrMizeGuy We're excited to bring him to #FABTECH2025! If you've heard him speak, please share your takeaways!
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🏀 We’re excited to welcome Alan Stein Jr. to the FABTECH keynote stage to help you elevate your leadership, strengthen your team culture, and reach peak performance.
📍McCormick Place, Chicago
📅 September 10, 2025 | 8:30 am
🔗ow.ly/hHc750W7TFi
#FABTECH2025 #Chicago
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@thegarybrecka @grok scan the comments here and give me a summary of all the top trends from everyone.
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@AskPerplexity @JDVance @grok Can you pull the NCI Congressional Justification (pages NCI-4 to NCI-9)?
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Here’s the full itemized breakdown for the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in the proposed FY2026 budget, with all available line items and extra focus on intramural research (which covers the Center for Cancer Research and Surgical Oncology):
Total NCI Budget: $4,530,833,000 (down $2.69B or 37% from FY2025)
Research Project Grants (RPGs): $2,015,200,000 (down $1.27B)
NCI expects to fund 872 competing RPG awards, focusing on early-stage investigators and capping indirect costs at 15%
Intramural Research (covers Center for Cancer Research & Surgical Oncology): $1,000,000,000 (down $206M)
Cancer Centers Support Grants: $175,000,000 (down $141M)
Childhood Cancer Data Initiative (CCDI): $50,000,000 (no change)
NCI Staffing (FTE): 2,660 (down by 507 positions)
Other Mechanisms (not separately detailed in public tables): Contracts, Training, Infrastructure, and Cooperative Agreements are all included in the overall budget but not itemized beyond these main categories.
The Surgical Oncology Program is part of the Center for Cancer Research, so its funding is included within the $1B for intramural research—there’s no separate public line item for it.
If you need even more granular details (like specific CCR divisions or labs), those aren’t broken out in the public budget tables, but the NCI Congressional Justification (pages NCI-4 to NCI-9) is the official source for all available line items.
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Here’s what’s in the proposed FY2026 NCI budget, with a focus on anything tied to the Center for Cancer Research (CCR) and the Surgical Oncology Program:
Intramural Research (which includes the Center for Cancer Research and its programs): Drops from $1.206 billion in FY2025 to $1.0 billion in FY2026, a cut of $206 million.
Overall NCI Staffing: Reduced by 507 full-time positions, which will impact intramural labs and programs like CCR and Surgical Oncology.
Research Project Grants (extramural, but sometimes supporting collaborative work with CCR): Cut by $1.27 billion, with fewer grants funded overall.
Cancer Centers Support Grants: Down from $316 million to $175 million, which could affect clinical collaborations and infrastructure that Surgical Oncology relies on.
Childhood Cancer Data Initiative (CCDI): Level-funded at $50 million, not directly tied to CCR/Surgical Oncology but relevant for pediatric cancer research.
The budget doesn’t break out the Surgical Oncology Program as a separate line item, but since it’s housed within the CCR, its funding is part of the overall intramural research allocation. If you want the granular breakdown of CCR’s internal divisions or specific labs, those aren’t itemized in the public tables, but the $1.0 billion figure covers all intramural research, including Surgical Oncology.
Let me know if you want details from the Congressional Justification document about specific CCR initiatives or how staffing cuts might hit particular programs.
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@AskPerplexity @JDVance @grok Line item for me everything and anything you can with special attention to anything potentially tied to the Center for Cancer Research and the Surgical Oncology Program.
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Here are the main budget tables and itemized changes for the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in the proposed FY2026 budget:
Total NCI budget: Drops from $7.22 billion in FY2025 to $4.53 billion in FY2026, a decrease of $2.69 billion or 37.3%.
Research Project Grants (RPGs): Cut by $1.27 billion, with the total for RPGs at $2.02 billion in FY2026. NCI expects to fund 872 competing RPG awards, focusing on early-stage investigators and capping indirect costs at 15%.
Childhood Cancer Data Initiative (CCDI): Set at $50 million for FY2026.
Staffing (FTE): Reduced from 3,167 to 2,660, a loss of 507 positions.
Here’s a quick breakdown from the official budget tables:
Budget Item FY2025 (CR) FY2026 (Request) Change
Total NCI Budget $7,221,241,000 $4,530,833,000 -$2,690,408,000
Research Project Grants (RPGs) $3,282,800,000 $2,015,200,000 -$1,267,600,000
Intramural Research $1,206,000,000 $1,000,000,000 -$206,000,000
Cancer Centers Support Grants $316,000,000 $175,000,000 -$141,000,000
Cancer Moonshot (est.) Not specifically listed in FY26 tables; likely included in RPG/intramural cuts
CCDI $50,000,000 $50,000,000 No change
The detailed tables and justifications are in the official FY2026 NCI Congressional Justification (pages NCI-4 to NCI-9). If you need line-item details for specific programs (like Moonshot, training, or infrastructure), let me know which ones and I’ll pull those numbers for you.
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The most recent and detailed info shows that the proposed Trump FY2026 budget would cut the National Cancer Institute (NCI) budget from about $7.2 billion to $4.5 billion, a reduction of roughly 37%.
This would hit multiple areas: the number of new NCI grants would drop significantly, ongoing research funding would be reduced, and support for training and early-career researchers would also shrink.
The cuts target both external grants (to universities and research centers) and internal NCI research, and would likely force the NCI to prioritize only the most critical projects while pausing or canceling many others.
If you need a breakdown by specific NCI programs (like Moonshot, training, intramural vs. extramural research), let me know and I can dig into the detailed budget tables for you.
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