ProgRok 🐝🪷🇺🇸

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ProgRok 🐝🪷🇺🇸

ProgRok 🐝🪷🇺🇸

@ProgRok

Treehuggin' DirtWorshipper. NorCal. #GenX #ProudDem Kamala 🐝💛 #WidespreadPanic #Lodge49

Katılım Şubat 2009
2.8K Takip Edilen808 Takipçiler
MAGA Cult Slayer🦅🇺🇸
“There’s multiple chats. I was in these chats.” Mehdi is seriously missing the big picture here. It’s not just that they are coordinating messages. They’re coordinating the timing, which leads to psychological control of nearly everything that you believe.
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blue dog geosh
blue dog geosh@bluedoggeosh·
I’d rather vote for the AIPAC candidate than the DSA one. At least one of those is a pro america organization and it isn’t the DSA.
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Dire Straits 🎸
Dire Straits 🎸@DireStraits77·
Mark Knopfler 🎼Boom, Like That 🎶 (Album: Shangri-La 2004) I′m going to San Bernardino, ring-a-ding-ding Milkshake mixers, that's my thing, now These guys bought a heap of my stuff And I gotta see a good thing sure enough, now Oh my name′s not Kroc, that's Kroc with a K Like crocodile, but not spelt that way, now It's dog eat dog, rat eat rat Kroc style, boom like that Folks line up all down the street Now I am seeing this girl devour her meat, now And then I get it, wham as clear as day My pulse begins to hammer then I hear a voice say These boys have got this down Oughtta be one of these in every town These boys have got the touch It′s clean as a whistle and it don′t cost much Wham bam, don't wait long Shake, fries, patty, you′re gone And how about that friendly name Heck, every little thing oughtta stay the same Oh my name's not Kroc, that′s Kroc with a K Like crocodile, but not spelt that way, now It's dog eat dog, rat eat rat Dog eat dog, rat eat rat Oh it′s dog eat dog, rat eat rat Kroc style, boom like that You gentlemen ought to expand You're gonna need a helping hand, now So gentlemen, well, what about me? We'll make a little business history, now Oh my name′s not Kroc, can call me Ray Like crocodile, but not spelt that way, now It′s dog eat dog, rat eat rat Kroc style, boom like that Well, we build it up, and I buy him out But, man, they made me grind it out, now They open up a new place, flippin' meat So I do, too, right across the street I got the name, I need the town They sell ′em in the end, and it all shuts down Sometimes you gotta be an S.O.B. You wanna make a dream reality Competition sent 'em south They′re gonna drown, put a hose in their mouth Do not pass go, go straight to hell I smell that meat hook smell Oh my name's not Kroc, that′s Kroc with a K Like crocodile, but not spelt that way, now Oh it's dog eat dog, rat eat rat Dog eat dog, rat eat rat, now Oh, It's dog eat dog, rat eat rat Kroc style, boom like that
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The Sopranos Club
The Sopranos Club@TheSopranosClub·
I think Ricky Gervais was on that Gabagool and Orange Juice as well. @rickygervais prefers “without pulp”
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Business Nerd
Business Nerd@Business_Nerd_·
Mike Cesario, co-founder and CEO of Liquid Death, on the moment that planted the seed for a billion-dollar water brand: It started at the Warp Tour. A friend put Mike on the backstage list, and that's where he noticed something strange. "We saw these, you know, stacks of what looked like, you know, Monster. These guys are drinking it and it turns out like, oh, it's actually not Monster, it's water. Because these guys don't actually want to drink these energy drinks." The artists were pouring water into energy drink cans to fulfil their sponsorship obligations on stage. Drinking what they actually wanted, while still appearing to promote the brand paying them. Mike's first reaction wasn't admiration. It was unease. "I remember thinking that that was kind of messed up. I'm like, man, that's so sort of sneaky." But he also understood why it was happening: "At that time, it was really only energy drinks who were throwing money at these guys. So, they kind of had to take it." That's when the real insight landed. It wasn't about the artists, but about an entire category gap in consumer products: "At the same time, it started making me think about why aren't there more healthy products that still have funny, cool, irreverent branding? Because most of the funniest, memorable, irreverent branding marketing is all for junk food. Bud Light, Doritos, Snickers, Doritos, Red Bull." The funny brands sold junk. The healthy brands were boring. Nobody was building irreverent marketing around something good for you. "That, I think, planted the early seed of probably what ultimately ended up becoming Liquid Death."
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scary lawyerguy
scary lawyerguy@scarylawyerguy·
Sorry folks, Joe Biden wore orthopedic shoes so the media had no choice but to boot his ass to the curb so this could happen ... 🙃
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Manu Raju
Manu Raju@mkraju·
AOC says she’s undecided on her next steps: “I look at what's happening in the country and I make my decisions from there, but no, I don't have anything set in stone for sure.”
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Terry Moran 🇺🇸
Terry Moran 🇺🇸@TerryMoran·
An excellent analysis of the global collapse in birth rates. One factor seems to me to be hugely important. Having kids is an act of faith. Many, many people have lost faith—in themselves, in each other, in God, in a sense that life itself is meaningful and blessed.
Jesús Fernández-Villaverde@JesusFerna7026

Smartphones are not the explanation for the recent decline in fertility. Instead, they are an accelerator of deeper forces already at work. Let’s start with the facts. Fertility is falling almost everywhere: in rich, middle-income, and poor countries; in secular and religious countries; and in countries with high and low levels of gender equality. The decline accelerated around 2014. So, no country-specific explanation will work unless you are willing to believe that 200 distinct country-specific explanations arrived at roughly the same time. Smartphones look like the obvious candidate: the first iPhone was released in 2007, and global adoption has been astonishingly fast. Economists understand the first major decline in fertility in advanced economies, from 6 or 7 children per woman throughout most of human history to about 1.8, that occurred between the early 1800s and roughly 1970, well before smartphones. The main drivers were a sharp fall in child mortality (effective fertility was rarely above 3 and often close to 2) and the shift from a low-skill, rural agrarian economy to a high-skill, urban industrial one. We have quantitative models that fit these facts well. Country-specific factors mattered too, of course. Proximity to low-fertility neighbors accelerated Hungary’s decline, while fragmented landowning structures accelerated France’s. But these were second-order mechanisms. This is also why most economists long considered Paul Ehrlich’s doom scenarios implausible. We forecast that fertility in middle- and low-income economies would follow the same path as in the rich, probably faster, because reductions in child mortality reached India or Africa at lower income levels (medical technology is nearly universal, and most gains come from handwashing and cheap antibiotics, not Mayo Clinic-level care). Much of what we see in Africa or parts of Latin America today is still that old story. But in the 1980s, a new pattern appeared. Japan and Italy fell below 1.8, the level we had thought was the new floor. By 1990, Japan was at 1.54 and Italy at 1.36. This second fertility decline began in Japan and Italy earlier than elsewhere, driven by country-specific factors, but the underlying dynamics were widespread: secularization, an education arms race, expensive housing, the dissolution of old social networks, and the shift to a service economy in which women’s bargaining power within the household is higher. The U.S. lagged because secularization came later, suburban housing remained relatively cheap, and African American fertility was still high. U.S. demographic patterns are exceptional and skew how academics (most of whom are in the U.S.) and the New York Times see the world. My best guess is that, without smartphones, Italy’s 2025 fertility rate would be about 1.24 rather than 1.14. I doubt anyone will document an effect larger than 0.1-0.2. Italy was at 1.19 in 1995, not far from today’s 1.14. The TFR is cyclical due to tempo effects, so I do not read too much into the rise between 1995 and 2007 or the decline from 1.27 in 2019 to 1.14 today. The direct effect of smartphones is not zero, but it is not, by itself, that large. Where social media, in general, and smartphones, in particular, matter is in the diffusion of social norms. What would have taken 25 years now happens in 10. Social media are not the cause of fertility decline; modernity is. But they are a very fast accelerator. That is why social media are a major part of the story behind Guatemala (yes, Guatemala) going from 3.8 children per woman in 2005 to 1.9 in 2025. Without them, Guatemala would also have reached 1.9, just 20 years later. Modernity, in its current form, is incompatible with replacement-level fertility. By modernity, I do not mean capitalism: fertility fell earlier and faster in socialist economies than in market economies. Socialist Hungary fell below replacement in 1960, and socialist Czechoslovakia in 1966 (both experienced small, short-lived baby booms in the mid-1970s). By modernity, I mean a society organized around rational, large-scale systems and formalized knowledge. Countries will not converge to the same fertility rate. East Asia is likely stuck near 1, possibly below, given its unbalanced gender norms and toxic education systems. Latin America faces the same gender problem plus weak growth prospects, so I expect something around 1.2. Northern Europe has more egalitarian family structures and might hold near 1.5. The very religious societies are probably the only ones that will sustain 1.8. All of this could change with AI or changes in population composition. We will see. But on the current evidence, deep sub-replacement fertility is the “new new normal.” Unless we reorganize our societies, better learn to handle it as best we can.

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Inglourious Capital
Inglourious Capital@inglouriouscap·
In SF this weekend and needed to buy a dress shirt. There are absolutely no stores here to buy anything? Where the hell do people buy clothes.
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UFC
UFC@ufc·
THE PLACE TO BE 📍 Celebrity appearances, meet-and-greets featuring fan-favorite UFC athletes, live music, and the #UFCWhiteHouse Ceremonial Weigh-in & the UFC Freedom 250 Watch Party. Last chance to request tickets to the UFC Freedom 250 Fan Fest ➡️: UFC.ac/49RCD5m
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Terry Lee Watkins Jr. 王瑞民💜💙
I love Harris. I like Buttigieg. I don't hate Newsom. I'm annoyed by but do not hate AOC (unless she starts acting up again) Everyone else is in between. After November we will all be at each others throats. I wish you good luck so long as you're not a Bernie acolyte.
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NickFrank40
NickFrank40@NickyFrank30·
Very intrigued by my 27 year old Ecuadorian neighbor who went from blaring Bad Bunny from his souped up Civic in his driveway last summer to this summer blaring… Duran Duran?
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