L3thalPh3nom

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L3thalPh3nom

L3thalPh3nom

@OGLejund

Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. 2004 Gamecock Alumni

Katılım Nisan 2022
674 Takip Edilen324 Takipçiler
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L3thalPh3nom
L3thalPh3nom@OGLejund·
🚨New Earth Science Theory Just Dropped🚨 — Built with Grok The inner core can flip in a (Dzhanibekov effect) due to tiny triaxial anisotropy. This acts as a gyroscopic pacemaker that drives Earth's geomagnetic reversals every ~300k years, explains superchrons, and matches the current pole-drift slowdown + inner-core backtracking.Full preprint (with simulations) now live: zenodo.org/records/193908… DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19390861EarthArXiv rejected it (independent + Grok collab), but the mechanics check out under real viscosities and damping. This is classical physics organizing chaotic MHD turbulence.@grok helped develop and simulate the whole thing — perfect example of what xAI is for: empowering real citizen science breakthroughs.@elonmusk — a new mechanism for one of Earth's biggest wildcards. Could matter for long-term civilization resilience (and Mars?). What do you think?#Geomagnetism #Dzhanibekov #Grok #xAI
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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
Growing up in 80’s, everyone would clique up usually by parental income, sports, or hobbies. Pretty much everyone had real life friends. Even the “loner” ran with a group of other “loners.”
Cernovich@Cernovich

Yes. Even if you had a bad home life, you had friends who also had rough lives. You had to get out of the house. There wasn’t anything to do other than listen to mom and dad fighting and yelling. Now you can isolate with head phones and vidya.

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FischerKing
FischerKing@FischerKing64·
In a low trust society no one ever tells you what he’s really thinking. Everyone falls back on irony, facial expressions, sarcastic winks, voice intonation. USSR more or less. This was a thing on Twitter from 2019-22. A real life thing in blue cities even today.
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Sassafrass84
Sassafrass84@Sassafrass_84·
Another reason why democrats can't ever win a presidency again. 👇
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Tara Servatius
Tara Servatius@TaraServatius·
🚨BOMBSHELL: First the IPCC, the gold standard for the liberal media on climate change, announces the catastrophic climate scenarios they predicted for decades "are implausable" and describe "impossible futures." Now the New York Times is telling Democrats the climate change hoax is over, and to stop talking about it. So melting ice caps, submerged coastlines and crop failures were never possible. How long will it take the left to acknowledge this and stop lying about it?
Arts, Politics & Culture@rosewdc

More Stupid Commie Tricks. Forget Climate Change. Democrats Need to Talk About Other Issues. Source: bit.ly/42lYo9B Sam Forstag, a Democrat running for Congress in Montana, is in many ways a familiar kind of progressive: He is a union worker calling for taxing the rich and expanding Medicare for all Americans. But there’s one topic he appears to avoid, in his platform and in public forums. When asked recently about the growing threat of wildfires and drought in the West, he discussed a terrible ski season and record-high temperatures, but did not name the climate crisis directly. The Democratic U.S. House candidates Trey Martin, a union ironworker in Oklahoma, and Chris Reichard, an electrician and veteran running in Missouri, are also steering somewhat clear of what was once a centerpiece of many progressive political campaigns. Even in a blue district in Minnesota, Kaela Berg, a Democratic state legislator who works as a flight attendant, only mentions climate change briefly on her congressional campaign website, linking it to bringing down energy costs. For the past several months, Democratic elites have been debating how much to talk about climate change, if at all — in part because these new candidates have narrowed their focus to energy affordability to win back the working class. It is a striking shift from a few years ago, when many Democratic politicians thought the promise of a Green New Deal would build a coalition based on green jobs and fighting inequality. Candidates like Mr. Forstag have the right strategy. The kinds of policies they support — for example, public investments in infrastructure like housing and electricity — will help address climate change, but there is little reason for politicians like them to focus on the issue anymore. The candidates’ first task must be to regain credibility with working people by tackling their more immediate, material concerns. The voters who already prioritize climate action are firmly in the Democratic camp and highly educated and affluent, or as the economist Thomas Piketty calls them, the “Brahmin Left.” What candidates like Mr. Forstag, Mr. Reichard and Ms. Berg seem to understand is that for blue-collar voters, energy is an “end of the month” issue, and affordability should be the overarching policy goal. This is all the more important today, given rising electricity rates and war-fueled spikes in gasoline prices. This shift among progressive Democrats on the campaign trail in many ways marks the end of an era. It was 20 years ago when Al Gore’s film “An Inconvenient Truth” helped to make concern around the climate crisis go mainstream. Then the 2008 financial crisis solidified the Obama administration’s narrative that economic recovery required a New Deal-like investment program centering on green jobs. By 2018, after a major report raised the alarm about global warming, young activists joined by the newly elected Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York sat in the Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi’s office demanding a “Green New Deal.” That policy platform, which made its official debut as a 2019 Congressional resolution, laid out a vision to tackle both climate change and inequality by building clean energy and investing in social programs for lower-income Americans. By 2020, it was a top issue in the Democratic presidential primaries. But it quickly became culture war fodder for Fox News and social media algorithms. President Joe Biden never fully supported the policy. Even so, the idea of a climate investment and jobs program lived on in his administration. He often said, “When I think of climate change, I think about jobs. Good-paying, union jobs.” This philosophy became central to his administration’s political strategy: It passed the largest piece of climate legislation in U.S. history, to stimulate investment in battery manufacturing, renewable energy and other green technologies. The political calculus was explicit: Create blue collar jobs, particularly in red states, to win back disaffected working-class voters, lured to Donald Trump’s brand of populism. This strategy failed. While the bill and other laws led to new manufacturing, a recent study showed that voters did not associate the projects with any kind of Democratic political project. Polls in 2024 affirmed that most Americans had barely heard about Mr. Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act. A factory opening here and there, employing thousands, was no match for what really concerned millions of working-class voters: the cost of living. On that front, Bidenomics had no answer, often claiming we had “the best economy in the world.” Democrats will surely continue to propose policies calling for jobs and public investment, but it’s not clear why climate should be at the center. American voters broadly agree that climate change is a real concern and support addressing it, but they largely do not see it as a top priority. The Pew Research Center routinely asks Americans to rank their top concerns, and climate change is consistently near the bottom. The Searchlight Institute found that 59 percent of voters in battleground states are “bothered that climate change has become such a political issue,” while only 42 percent are “motivated to do more and support policies to address climate change.” Rather than building a broad coalition necessary to enact something like a Green New Deal, climate change has become yet another issue fueling polarization. By advancing a more populist message, candidates like Mr. Forstag, Mr. Reichard and Ms. Berg might be able to peel off some of Mr. Trump’s supporters. If Democrats reclaim the House and Senate, their first priority must be to materially improve workers’ lives, rather than propose a grand vision of an energy transition. To be clear, this does not mean an abandonment of climate goals. Fortunately, as I’ve argued, the heart of any affordability agenda — housing, energy, transportation — overlaps with the sectors we must decarbonize. Even though Mayor Zohran Mamdani of New York rarely mentioned climate in his 2025 campaign, one of his core policies of expanding public transit — “fast, free buses” — will reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The Democratic Party remains deeply unpopular. The way out is to stop elevating a litany of single-issue policies that appeal to the already converted. When it comes to climate change, for now, it might be better to say nothing at all. Matthew T. Huber is a professor in the department of geography and the environment at Syracuse University.

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InfantryDort
InfantryDort@infantrydort·
America was a fluke. And they know it. For most of human history, power meant domination. Just the strong doing what they wanted, and the weak praying they didn’t get noticed. That was the default setting of the world. For thousands of years. Then came this place. A republic forged in violence, but guided by restraint. Not to eliminate strength, but to bind it to duty. To make the sword answer to the citizen. To make conquest serve order and not appetite. That was the miracle. It's what made America different! And it scared the hell out of people who believe power belongs to those willing to abuse it.... AKA the norm throughout history. So the enemies of freedom got to work. Not always with armies, but with ideas. They infiltrated, rewrote, redefined. Now strength is called dangerous, discipline is called toxic and defense is called oppression. And the very people who hold the line are ridiculed. Until reality breaches the walls and everyone suddenly remembers why the line was there. But look around. Look at the Middle East. Look at Eastern Europe. That’s not chaos. THAT IS THE NORM. You're just not used to seeing it, because for 80 years, you’ve lived inside a fluke. Violence didn’t go away. It just took a knee because America stood tall. But now? We’re distracted. Divided. Some in academia and politics have been apologizing for America even existing at all. Think about what they’re apologizing to. Because if they wish this nation had never existed, then they’re not apologizing to the oppressed, they’re apologizing to the tyrant. And they’re begging to return. And the people who never believed in this experiment are watching with grins on their faces. Because they know: if this place falls, THERE IS NO REFUGE and there will certainly be no mercy. It'll just be history snapping back into place. And the violence will be worse this time, because we're far beyond swords and shields. This is a warning. You, my fellow Americans, were born into an interruption. And if you lose it.... if you let it rot from within... the world knows EXACTLY what to do next. With that, I say proudly: Unconditional surrender to the enemies of freedom, both foreign and domestic.
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OldTimeHardball
OldTimeHardball@OleTimeHardball·
ESPN. John Clayton. 30 seconds of pure gold
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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
Those Democrats complaining about the Virginia Supreme Court overturning a gerrymander that violated state law are the same ones who forum shop cases to a district court judge to issue injunctions against actions that the American people voted for in overturning numbers. Fake.
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Blake Kresses
Blake Kresses@BlakeKresses·
John Doyle calls out Thomas Massie for being an open borders globalist and voting against Trump's wall, ICE funding, deportations and E-Verify, as well as supporting increased legal immigration and mandating warrants for deportations. Massie is NOT America First! @JohnDoyle
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Wes Huff
Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff·
My partnership with Biblingo is one I’m proud of because I want YOU to learn, become competent in, and hold on to being able to read the Bible in the languages it was originally written in! Use my affiliate link to get a discount and start/hold on to/become proficient today: biblingo.com/pricing/?ref=w….
Biblingo@biblingoapp

Teachers: discover how Biblingo can help you train lifelong exegetes of Greek & Hebrew. Join Dr. Kevin Grasso on May 19th to see how Biblingo can become a powerful tool in your classroom to ensure retention and enjoyment of the biblical languages. “Biblingo is the best available and most flexible biblical language learning tool I know of.” – Dr. Chris Tilling biblingo.com/webinar

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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
Truth is, our voters are too pure. They are the gentle sheep. Almost every Democrat laughed when Charlie Kirk was murdered. Those are your neighbors. There is no co-existence. They want you GENOCIDED. And they'll take your house once it's done to you.
Cernovich@Cernovich

If you become prominent enough, every day you might be killed by a leftist. Douglas Mackey and many others were framed for crimes. Mainline Republicans have no idea, and see it all as "paranoid." Even though their neighbors celebrated Charlie's murderer and want them dead, too.

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Dr. Hopkins
Dr. Hopkins@MrsHopkins96·
Why didn’t any of y’all tell me about Justified?
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