Sellers-Resource

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Sellers-Resource

Sellers-Resource

@SellersResource

American, civilian defender of the Constitution, #WeThePeople champion of freedom, musician, artist, builder

Roswell, GA Katılım Temmuz 2015
128 Takip Edilen135 Takipçiler
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Sellers-Resource
Sellers-Resource@SellersResource·
@ExxAlerts Truth. I fear those who would do whatever it takes to strip the last remaining place on earth defending freedom from total and complete tyranny. All of us should fear those whose mission is to eliminate freedom. Stand up and be counted. You are the Calvary 🫵
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Brian Cates - Political Columnist & Pundit
By January 2029, you will not recognize this country. When you stop and look back in January 2029, only then will many of you understand how bad it really was. What they did to us over the last century. And how the Trump team stopped it and reversed it. So we could be great America again.
Promethean Action@PrometheanActn

One year after Liberation Day, the numbers speak for themselves: 178,000 new jobs, trade deficit down 55%, and manufacturing roaring back to life.

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Ciencias Espaciales 🚀🛰️
Ultra camara lenta del despegue de la misión Artemis II
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Obsidian
Obsidian@obsdmd·
The Obsidian team is growing from three engineers to four engineers. Competitive SF salary. Fully remote, live anywhere. Apply below.
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C3
C3@C_3C_3·
New York: 133K NGOs handle $450 billion per year. California: 225K NGOs handle $610 billion per year. Over $1 trillion per year is moved within the NY and CA NGO ecosystem. The fraud is staggering. America is not in $39 trillion in debt. America is in $39 trillion in fraud.
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DataRepublican (small r)
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican·
It's quite literally a color revolution. The democracy playbook people like Norm Eisen or Gene Sharp don't like breaking it out into explicit stages because it implies that color revolutions aren't organic. So I had to assemble it from scratch using their own writings. Here are the steps, and they're trying to do Step 6:
DataRepublican (small r) tweet media
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Hugging Face
Hugging Face@huggingface·
Let's go!
Hugging Face tweet media
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Nick Sortor
Nick Sortor@nicksortor·
@DataRepublican @GatesMcgavick @PamBondi This is a long term plan being funded by traitors like Neville Singham to PERMANENTLY poison the jury pools, and stage a hostile takeover of the United States. It’s already happening. Which is why vioIent leftists are hardly EVER convicted in blue districts
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Sellers-Resource
Sellers-Resource@SellersResource·
@drawandstrike Saw the reporting yesterday with heavy minority Democrat coverage of Speaker Jeffries word-salad. Can't unsee it. And I used to accept these as realistic, well-intended debates. No more.
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Brian Cates - Political Columnist & Pundit
Fox NeoCon News thus far this morning: 1. Weak US President Donald Trump finally summoned up the nerve to fire Pam Bondi and 2. Trump prepares for ground invasion of Iran [citing the Washington Compost] Do with that what you will.
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James E. Thorne
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy·
Food for thought. While everyone is fixated on oil, almost no one is talking about what’s happening in natural gas. Over the past year, US natural gas prices have collapsed by more than 30%, easing costs for power generation, industry, and home heating. Yet mainstream media and Wall Street research have largely ignored this move, because it doesn’t show up at the gas pump, doesn’t fit the preferred “energy inflation” narrative, and flows through to consumers slowly via regulated utility bills rather than daily price signs on every corner. The result is a massive, under‑reported positive supply shock in a core input to the US economy that barely registers in the public conversation.
James E. Thorne tweet media
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OneTonScoutII
OneTonScoutII@OneTonScoutII·
@ShitzPoppinoff That’s for sure, that’s a nice organizer. I use a metal cabinet with approximately 2x8x 12 drawers and group them by size, but it’s a mix within the drawers. Gets expensive lately restocking, dang.
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Shitz Poppinoff
Shitz Poppinoff@ShitzPoppinoff·
Can't have too many drill bits
Shitz Poppinoff tweet media
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
RE: The True Evil of the Deep State Recent experience has taught me and many others that if someone wants to fight the status quo in American politics and government as a genuine conservative reformer, that person MUST be willing to expect relentless invasions of privacy, massive public slander and libel, threats of violence, the exposure of innocent friends and family to real threats and so many other disruptions: social, financial and emotional. This is no secret. This is why so many very capable men and women refuse to serve in government or politics. The Good Guys and Gals are good because they care about those in their circle and do not want them to see harm from things they had nothing to do with. But the Bad Guys and Gals—the ones who inhabit the Deep State, the ones for whom the endless cycle of government—NGO—law firm—ThinkTank—media—more government, rinse, wash repeat—is a full time career—they never really need to worry about any of this because the engines of harassment are inside that same Deep State they so eagerly join. In fact, for them those engines of harassment become engines of protection, as the Baddies are ensconced in the safety of the institutional entropy that surrounds them like a baby in the womb. This is why we keep losing to the Deep State—we can never muster enough of the right people because the right people put their friends and family first. So what does it take for a Good Guy or Gal to step up to the plate as a true conservative reformer and enter the arena of government or politics? Right now I see only three categories of people who can do this: 1. The truly brave with truly brave families and friends. 2. Those who can’t be touched because they are so far beyond the rest of us in terms of resources: Donald Trump, Elon, e.g. 3. Others who have little to lose. They don’t have families, or they are already poor, or they are old enough and well established enough, with grown kids and some level of financial independence, that the risk is lower for them (i.e.—retired people). This is a REALLY REALLY BAD phenomenon. Our system encourages the worst Americans to govern the rest of us and the best Americans to stay home to protect their friends and families. How do we get smart, capable, well-meaning, good-intentioned, YOUNG, conservative men and women to step up in the primes of their lives when they know there is an excellent chance everything they are striving to build will be wrecked before they can build it? How? (Remember, Charlie’s assassination was about sending a warning to the rest of us.) I don’t know the answer.
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Sellers-Resource
Sellers-Resource@SellersResource·
@Gaurab It would be interesting to use the heat as a downstream energy source as part of the cooling system
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Gaurab Chakrabarti
It would take hurricane-force airflow above 90 decibels to air-cool a single NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 rack. The thermodynamic ceiling is 40 kW. That rack draws 120. Water absorbs 3,300 times more heat per unit volume than air. A V100 in 2017 drew 300 watts. An H100 in 2022 drew 700. A B200 in 2024 draws 1,200. GPU power quadrupled in seven years. Cooling infrastructure did not. CDU lead times went from 8 weeks to over 20. Vertiv invested $50 million in a single Ohio factory for liquid cooling. It will not be operational until 2027. CoolIT and Munters are sold out of high-capacity units. Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta have power contracts signed, land secured, and GPUs on order. They cannot turn the racks on. The entire AI supply chain is waiting on pipe fittings.
Gaurab Chakrabarti tweet media
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James E. Thorne
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy·
Food for thought. Trump, Hormuz and the End of the Free Ride For half a century, Western strategists have known that the Strait of Hormuz is the acute point where energy, sea power and political will intersect. That knowledge is not in dispute. What is new in this war with Iran is that the United States, under Donald Trump, has chosen not to rush to “solve” the problem. In Hegelian terms, he is refusing an easy synthesis in order to force the underlying contradiction to the surface. The old thesis was simple: the US guarantees open sea lanes in the Gulf, and everyone else structures their economies and politics around that free insurance. Europe and the UK embraced ambitious green policies, ran down hard‑power capabilities and lectured Washington on multilateral virtue, secure in the assumption that American carriers would always appear off Hormuz. The political class behaved as if the American security guarantee were a law of nature, not a contingent choice. Their conduct today is closer to Chamberlain than Churchill: temporising, issuing statements, hoping the storm will pass without a fundamental reordering of their responsibilities. Trump’s antithesis is to withhold the automatic guarantee at the moment of maximum stress. Militarily, the US can break Iran’s residual ability to contest the Strait; that is not the binding constraint. The point is to delay that act. By allowing a closure or semi‑closure to bite, Trump ensures that the immediate pain is concentrated in exactly the jurisdictions that have most conspicuously free‑ridden on US power: the EU and the UK. Their industries, consumers and energy‑transition assumptions are exposed. In that context, his reported blunt message to European and British leaders, you need the oil out of the Strait more than we do; why don’t you go and take it? Is not a throwaway line. It is the verbalisation of the antithesis. It openly reverses the traditional presumption that America will carry the burden while its allies emote from the sidelines. In this dialectic, the prize is not simply the reopening of a chokepoint. The prize is a reordered system in which the United States effectively arbitrages and controls the global flow of oil. A world in which US‑aligned production in the Americas plus a discretionary capability to secure,or not secure, Hormuz places Washington at the centre of the hydrocarbon chessboard. For that strategic end, a rapid restoration of the old status quo would be counterproductive. A quick, surgical “fix” of Hormuz would short‑circuit the dialectic. If Trump rapidly crushed Iran’s remaining coastal capabilities, swept the mines and escorted tankers back through the Strait, Europe and the UK would heave a sigh of relief and return to business as usual: underfunded militaries, maximalist green posturing and performative disdain for US power, all underwritten by that same power. The contradiction between their dependence and their posture would remain latent. By declining to supply the synthesis on demand, and by explicitly telling London and Brussels to “go and take it” themselves, Trump forces a reckoning. European and British leaders must confront the fact that their energy systems, their industrial bases and their geopolitical sermons all rest on an American hard‑power foundation they neither finance nor politically respect. The longer the contradiction is allowed to unfold, the stronger the eventual synthesis can be: a new order in which access to secure flows, Hormuz, Venezuela and beyond, is explicitly conditional on real contributions, not assumed as a right. In that sense, the delay in “taking” the Strait, and the challenge issued to US allies to do it themselves, is not indecision. It is the negative moment Hegel insisted was necessary for history to move. Only by withholding the old guarantee, and by saying so out loud to those who depended on it, can Trump hope to end the free ride.
James E. Thorne tweet media
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Prince Canuma
Prince Canuma@Prince_Canuma·
mlx-vlm v0.4.3 is here 🚀 Day-0 support: 🔥 Gemma 4 (vision, audio, MoE) by @GoogleDeepMind 🦅 Falcon-OCR + Falcon Perception by @TIIuae 🪨 Granite Vision 4.0 by @IBMResearch New models: 🎯 SAM 3.1 with Object Multiplex by @facebook 🔍 RF-DETR detection & segmentation by @roboflow Infra: ⚡ TurboQuant (KV cache compression) 🖥️ CUDA support for vision models (Sam and RF-DETR) Get started today: > uv pip install -U mlx-vlm Leave us a star ⭐️ github.com/Blaizzy/mlx-vlm
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0xSero
0xSero@0xSero·
Here is my proposal for Open Weight labs: I know you stand to benefit from close-sourcing your work. I know our nation has been ungrateful to you. Instead of closing shop, could you commit to publishing current gen weights whenever you release the next gen? You will get my undying loyalty I will simp for you till my last breath. Like, comment, retweet to get them to see it.
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William Shatner
William Shatner@WilliamShatner·
My Daughter came over to tell me her daughter heard that I had brain cancer. 🙄 She took this photo and sent it to me to upload to prove I'm not ill. The people who are ill are those that are spreading these ridiculous stories. I'm fit as a fiddle. You don't have to worry.
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Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 BREAKING: The National Capital Planning Commission just gave FINAL, FULL APPROVAL to President Trump's White House ballroom, after a judge halted construction Full-steam ahead! The judge will LOSE in court and Trump is going to complete this with $0 taxpayer funds Trump RIPPED the organization suing him earlier this week, saying the ballroom is ahead of schedule and under budget
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Brian Hart
Brian Hart@BrianTHart·
This is a truly incredible shot, especially given that the NASA live feed chose to show video of the cheering crowd right at the exact moment of solid rocket booster separation…
Brian Hart tweet media
Brian ☀️🌏🌘@balail

Artemis ii

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LeeLoo
LeeLoo@Loo_Atreides·
@SellersResource Voter roll purges (Ohio process upheld in Husted v. A. Philip Randolph Institute, 2018)
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Sellers-Resource
Sellers-Resource@SellersResource·
@Loo_Atreides Can you cite a specific policy which suppresses a legal US citizen from voting? Be specific please
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LeeLoo
LeeLoo@Loo_Atreides·
@SellersResource policies that make it harder for eligible voters to vote, even if their legality depends on the specific case and court rulings.
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