Alan Hostetter
508 posts

Alan Hostetter
@RunSilent2021
Former political prisoner. Eternal optimist. Currently on a never-ending spiritual journey. Great things are coming our way. 🙏🌞✝️☯️🕉️


🚨BOMBSHELL🚨 Former Capitol Police officer Shauni Kerkhoff failed a November FBI polygraph test when asked if she placed pipe bombs on Jan. 5, 2021, a court filing states.


Do you understand what just happened?👇 AI can now control your computer. The actual screen. The mouse. The keyboard. Your apps. Your files. Everything. One prompt and it works on its own. You don’t even need to be in the room. For $20 a month. Now think about what that actually means… Up until today AI was stuck inside a chat window. You asked it things. It answered. That was it. It couldn’t actually DO anything. That barrier just broke. AI can now act in the real world. On a real computer. Doing real work. This is the moment it went from assistant to replacement. And it’s not coming. It’s not “on the way.” It’s not “something to prepare for.” It’s live. Right now. Today. You can go turn it on. Everything they told you was a conspiracy theory is now a product you can subscribe to. AI replacing human labor isn’t a prediction anymore. It’s here. A year ago this wasn’t possible. Six months ago it wasn’t even close. Today it’s live and costs less than your phone bill. The great replacement isn’t a conspiracy anymore. Most people have no idea what’s coming…




🚨 NOW — MARKWAYNE MULLIN: "Some rules still apply to this body. For instance, dueling with 2 consenting adults is still there." SEN. RAND PAUL: "It's been illegal for 170 years! There's no precedent for legal dueling! Even then they fled the country!"



I think about this scene often. It’s from the movie A River Runs Through It. Turn up the volume and give this a listen before bed. You won’t regret it.

In 1975, developmental psychologist Dr. Edward Tronick sat a mother and her baby face to face and filmed what happened when the mother suddenly stopped responding. First the mother plays normally, smiling, talking, making eye contact. The baby mirrors everything, laughing, pointing, babbling back. Then the mother goes blank. No expression, no response, nothing. Within seconds the baby notices. She smiles harder. Points. Waves. Screeches. Uses every tool she has to get her mother back. When nothing works, she turns away, loses control of her posture, and collapses into herself with what Tronick described as “a withdrawn, hopeless facial expression.” The moment the mother re-engages, the baby recovers almost instantly. Three minutes of emotional absence from a parent did that to an infant. It became one of the most replicated findings in developmental psychology. This was 1975, before smartphones existed. Now look around any park, restaurant, or living room. How many babies are looking up at a parent who is scrolling instead of looking back?









