Sun Steak Steel & Sats

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Sun Steak Steel & Sats

Sun Steak Steel & Sats

@SteakSun

Maximalist. Health & #Bitcoin. Freedom.

Geneva, Switzerland Katılım Nisan 2022
237 Takip Edilen107 Takipçiler
Sun Steak Steel & Sats retweetledi
Bitcoin for Freedom
Bitcoin for Freedom@BTC_for_Freedom·
There are no escapes from the system if you work for money the system can print.
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P. E. Sottas, PhD
P. E. Sottas, PhD@pesottas·
Current "human physiological limit". Close to perfect line. The slope of this line (0.358) is a fundamental constant in elite male runners. As incredible as it sounds, it makes the new marathon WR more human, it was somewhat "expected".
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Brady Holmer@Brady_H

In 1991, @DrMJoyner modeled that a marathon world record of 1:57:xx was possible in a hypothetical runner with a VO2 max of 84, a lactate threshold of 85% of VO2 max, and exceptional running economy. Of course... we were ~30 years prior to the advent of super shoes! But we just saw a WR that's about 2 minutes slower than that. Wondering if we have physiological data on Sawe? And if so, how that matches with this hypothetical runner proposed in the paper.

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Vivek Sen
Vivek Sen@Vivek4real_·
🇸🇻 EL SALVADOR IS NOW THE FIRST COUNTRY TO TEACH BITCOIN TO ALL STUDENTS AGED 7 AND ABOVE. THEY ARE ALL COMING 🔥
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P. E. Sottas, PhD
P. E. Sottas, PhD@pesottas·
Yes, DNA is art, not only in its iconic double helix, but also in the beauty of how it condenses, folds, opens and closes. Back in 1998, I published a few papers on DNA condensation with Prof. Jacques Dubochet, whose Nobel-winning work helped reveal that beauty. The real molecule was always far more elegant and dynamic than the simplified textbook picture. See e.g. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10512808/
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David Sinclair@davidasinclair

DNA is misrepresented! For 70 years, teachers, textbooks & even scientific institutions have perpetuated a myth How did one of the most gorgeous structures in the universe turn into ugly, twisted pasta? ...🧵

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The Bitcoin Conference
The Bitcoin Conference@TheBitcoinConf·
MICHAEL SAYLOR SAYS IT'S "IMPOSSIBLE TO BLOCKADE #BITCOIN" 💯
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Willem Middelkoop
Willem Middelkoop@wmiddelkoop·
Paper versus Physical The Saudi’s understand ..
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Adam Livingston
Adam Livingston@AdamBLiv·
HOW IS SAYLOR GONNA PAY THE DIVIDENDS? Strategy has 346,823,000 outstanding shares. Math: Annual dividend obligation: $1.237B MSTR price: $168.02 Shares needed: 7,362,219 shares Dilution: 7,362,219 / 346,823,000 = 2.12% So the answer is: Shares issued: ~7.36 million Basic-share dilution: ~2.12% 2% dilution to pay a YEAR of dividends... for STRC buying HUNDREDS of THOUSANDS of BITCOIN for the MSTR shareholders? STRC holders get the 11.5% yield. MSTR shareholders get AMPLIFIED BITCOIN w/ increasing Bitcoin per share. You think the MSTR shareholders DON'T WANT THIS DILUTION? The bears are absolutely cooked. Strategy will be the most valuable company in the world.
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Roberto Rios
Roberto Rios@peruvian_bull·
stablecoins are basically a backdoor to CBDCs. centralized. programmable. controllable. a central banker's wet dream.
Bitcoin Well@bitcoinwell

Jamie Dimon is on television praising "blockchain technology" and "permissioned ledgers." The chyron underneath is announcing JPMorgan's new stablecoin. Let me translate what's actually happening. A "permissioned blockchain" is a mathematical oxymoron. Satoshi didn't build the timechain so Jamie Dimon could make legacy banking slightly more efficient. A blockchain without proof of work and decentralized consensus isn't a technological breakthrough. It's an overpriced Excel spreadsheet on a server in Manhattan. When Dimon says "permissioned," he means JPMorgan holds the master key. They decide who runs a node. They decide whose transactions get processed. They decide whose wealth gets frozen. Same legacy friction. New buzzwords. The stablecoin is worse. A JPMorgan stablecoin is programmable fiat. Still backed by parabolic government debt. Still losing purchasing power to inflation every year. The only difference: they don't need to call a branch manager to freeze your account anymore. They execute a smart contract and lock your savings at the speed of light. They took the melting ice cube of fiat and added a digital surveillance layer. Then called it innovation. Here's what they actually understand: they can't control Bitcoin. So they're trying to extract the database architecture, strip out the decentralization, and sell you the cage with better branding. They don't get that the database is meaningless. The innovation is the proof of work. The innovation is a global ledger that requires no military, no central bank, and no CEO to enforce its rules. Wall Street has entered the bargaining phase. Don't bargain with them. Hold absolute scarcity.

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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In 1336 the English Parliament passed an act regulating what foods the various social classes were permitted to consume on different days of the week. Read that sentence again, because it is doing a lot of work. The act was one of a long series of sumptuary laws issued across medieval and early modern Europe. It specified that no man whose income fell below a certain threshold was permitted to be served more than two courses at a meal. It specified what kinds of meat could be eaten by whom on which days. It specified that fish was the appropriate food for the lower orders during Lent, and on Fridays, and on a long list of other holy days that totalled something like a hundred and fifty days a year. The official justification was moral. The actual justification was that meat was scarce, valuable, and the people in charge wanted to control who got it. Sumptuary laws of this kind appear across European history with remarkable consistency. Edward III. Edward IV. Henry VIII. Elizabeth I. The French monarchy did the same. The German principalities did. The Italian city-states did. In every case the structure was identical: the upper classes ate freely, the middle classes ate within limits, and the peasants were given a list of days on which animal flesh was prohibited that occupied roughly half the calendar year. The Catholic Church provided the moral framework. Fasting on Fridays. Fasting through Lent. Fasting on the vigils of feast days. Fasting on the Ember Days. The cumulative effect was that an obedient peasant in the fifteenth century was prohibited from eating meat for somewhere between a third and a half of the year, every year, for his entire life. The nobility, conveniently, were granted dispensations. The wealthy paid for indulgences. The monasteries that enforced the fasting rules in theory were, in practice, often the largest meat consumers in their districts, on the basis that the monks needed it for their work. Now look at what happens when you remove dietary protein from a labouring population for half the year, every year, for centuries. You get the medieval European peasant. Five foot three on average. Bone deformities consistent with chronic malnutrition. Life expectancy of about thirty if you survived infancy, which most children did not. A population that was, by every skeletal measure, smaller and weaker than the hunter-gatherers who had occupied the same land six thousand years earlier. The thing the church was calling spiritual discipline was a permanent state of nutritional restriction enforced on the people who did the actual work of feeding everyone else. The people enforcing the restriction were not subject to it. The arrangement was held in place by an institution that owned about a third of the cultivable land in Europe and was, not coincidentally, the largest single beneficiary of the system. When you read the modern recommendation that meat consumption should be limited to a few times a week, that beans and grains should make up the bulk of the diet, that animal protein should be replaced where possible with plant alternatives, ask yourself who is making the recommendation, what they themselves eat, and whether the structure of the recommendation looks at all familiar. The peasants had Lent. We have Meatless Mondays. The institutions issuing the rules are different. The arrangement is the same.
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