Thomas Umstattd Jr.

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Thomas Umstattd Jr.

Thomas Umstattd Jr.

@ThomasUmstattd

Christ Follower, in love with @MargUmstattd, Father of 4, Host of Novel Marketing and the Christian Publishing Show, CEO of @AuthorMedia.

Austin, TX Katılım Eylül 2008
443 Takip Edilen2.2K Takipçiler
Thomas Umstattd Jr.
Thomas Umstattd Jr.@ThomasUmstattd·
I told my wife today was “power and bridge day” in Iran. My 7 year old overheard and asked what that meant. I explained how President Trump was going to blow up the bad buy’s bridges and power plants today. She responded simply “ I hope he doesn’t go one bridge too far.” As a dad this was a proud moment. She remembered the story of Operation Market Garden!
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Hans Mahncke
Hans Mahncke@HansMahncke·
The story behind the New York Times’ 1903 claim that human flight was between one and ten million years away is even worse than it looks. Once you understand the backstory, you realize that the New York Times story is not really about flight at all but about how elites and credentialed “experts” mistake their own failures for the boundaries of possibility. The New York Times did not dismiss the possibility of powered flight at random. There was a very specific reason behind it. At the time, America’s most prominent scientific authority, Smithsonian Secretary Samuel Langley, had been showered with large amounts of taxpayer funding to build an aircraft, the Langley Aerodrome. Despite all the money, institutional backing, and elite prestige, Langley and his team could not get it to fly, culminating in a series of very public failures, the last on December 8, 1903. So when the New York Times declared that flight was millions of years away, what it was really saying was that if the most credentialed and well-funded “experts” cannot do it, then it cannot be done. A mere nine days later, the elites’ proclamation of impossibility lay in ruins. Two totally unknown bicycle mechanics from Ohio achieved the first powered flight using improvised parts, a few hundred dollars of their own money, and sheer persistence. The story of flight is, at its core, a story of the triumph of American individualism over elite credentialism. The fact that it was the New York Times that inadvertently delivered the proof is the most fitting conclusion imaginable.
Aaron Ng@localghost

"Man won't fly for a million years" – NYT 1903

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Alexander Macris
Alexander Macris@archon·
April 2000: I started a dotcom August 2007: I bought a house October 2019: I launched an ecommerce company with product manufactured in Wuhan, China February 2026: I started consulting for an oil company I am genuinely sorry, it's all been my fault (all of the above is true btw)
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Giga Based Dad
Giga Based Dad@GigaBasedDad·
🔥
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Brady Shearer
Brady Shearer@BradyShearer·
A church switched from giving branded mugs to first-time visitors to donating meals to a local rescue mission in their name. Their connect card completion rate went from roughly 15% to almost 95% (@refugechurchlc on IG). The gift changed from "here's our logo" to "we did something meaningful on your behalf." Turns out their community responded to generosity, rather than merchandise.
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Tuki
Tuki@TukiFromKL·
🚨 do you understand what New York City just accidentally admitted.. NYC spent $81,705 per homeless person last year.. the median American household earned $81,228.. the government spent MORE to keep someone homeless than most families earned to keep themselves housed.. that $81,705 isn't going to the homeless person.. it's going to the system around them.. shelters, administrators, case managers, contracts, overhead.. the industry that manages homelessness.. not the end of it.. if NYC gave every homeless person that money directly.. they could afford nearly 2 years of rent.. most of them wouldn't be homeless anymore.. instead the money goes to the system.. the system keeps running.. the homelessness stays.. and every year they ask for more funding to manage the problem that the funding was supposed to solve.. the homeless are worth $81,705 a year to the system.. they're worth nothing to it solved..
unusual_whales@unusual_whales

New York City spent $81,705 spent per homeless person last year. Meanwhile, the household median income was at $81,228, per Newsweek.

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Devon Eriksen
Devon Eriksen@Devon_Eriksen_·
Okay, time to explain guns to our new friends. Every day, when I leave the house, I attach a holstered handgun to my belt, under my shirt or coat. I would no more leave the house without a gun than I would walk around outdoors without shoes. Is it because I "need" a gun? No. I live in rural Tennessee, which is state in the American south. It's very safe here. The dangerous parts of America are big cities where the local government is leftist, and they shelter illegal migrant from the third world, and won't send violent criminals to prison. Places like Chicago and New York City. Yet, any time I leave the house, I put on a gun, knowing that I will probably never have to use it, and if I do, it will probably be on an aggressive stray dog, not a human. So why do I do it? Why do many other people who live around me do it? Why do we do this so much that carrying a gun is considered totally normal? If someone spotted it, it would not even arouse a comment, much less any fear. In fact, it is legal to carry a gun openly here, without covering it up. Covering it up is just considered polite. So.... why? Well, try thinking of an English nobleman, during the reign of Elizabeth the First. When he dressed to go ride to court, he would hang a slender fencing sword, called a rapier or smallsword, from his belt. He didn't expect to be attacked. He didn't even expect to fight a duel. And if he was challenged to a duel, he wouldn't need his sword right then. He would meet his challenger later at an agreed-upon place and time. No, he wore his sword because it was an expression of who he was. He was a gentleman, a person of status, with the legal privilege of carrying a sword. By carrying a sword, he asserted his rights and prerogatives as a nobleman. In Japan, you had the same sort of thing happening. The samurai, members of the bushi class, wore the two swords not because they expected to be attacked at any moment, but because the two swords were an essential part of who he was. So, in these two cases, weapons were carried by noblemen as an assertion of status. They had the right to do so, and they did so in order to assert, exercise, and retain the right. Americans carry guns because every American citizen is a nobleman. When we fought the British for our independence, that war began on April 19th, 1775, when British troops, fearing American rebelliousness, marched out from Boston to confiscate guns from people living in the surrounding countryside. Our ancestors did not submit to this. We shot them instead, and they fled back to Boston with their tails between their legs, to cower under the cover of the guns from the warship HMS Sommerset. Thus began several years of war. And when we won that war, we made a country where no government, and no man, would ever be allowed to disarm the people. No agent of the government may say to us, "I may have a gun, and you may not." Because to say that is to say "I am a nobleman, and you are a peasant. I am a master, and you are a slave." We are not peasants here. We are all noblemen. That is the most basic principle of what it means to be an American. I can be impoverished, so I can to be so poor that I live in a van down by the river. But however reduced my circumstances, as an American, I still have the rights and freedoms of a nobleman, of a daimyo, because that is the basic founding idea of the nation we forged on that day. If you come to America to visit, if you walk among us, you will pass many people carrying guns. You will not notice this. You will not see them. You will witness no violence. Everything will be normal. But the guns will be there. Because that is who we are. We don't carry guns to be violent. We don't wish to be rude, or to intimidate people. We keep our guns covered up. But they are the deepest, most essential part of what it means to be American.
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Nancy Pearcey
Nancy Pearcey@NancyRPearcey·
An atheist ponders the intellectual benefits of religion: The change came when trangender ideology emerged: "I have never seen anything like it. In amazement, I watched scores of people I respected add pronouns in their emails, flags to their bios, and repeat circular mantras like “trans women are women”. The same people who laughed at religious credulity accepted the idea of a “gender” fully and without question, and worse–they suppressed all open discussion. Overnight, the same people who campaigned against blasphemy laws enacted their own version without a hint of irony. I watched long-standing figures in the movement be cast down for this crime of doubt; first by insane radicals on social media, but as the disease progressed, also by the most prominent organizations we had. In other words, movement atheism had betrayed nearly every value it claimed to stand for. I think of all the kind and generous people I had met there (including the heads of FFRF), and my heart breaks to see their fall. There are many, I’m sure, who are bowing only because the pressure to do so is enormous, and I can sympathize with this and wouldn’t wish a woke mob on anyone. I myself stayed silent far longer than I should have. But while I have compassion for the bullied, I am astonished at the zealotry of the believers, who are legion. Most humiliating of all is the fact that atheists appear to be more likely than the religious to hold this particular unscientific dogma–a malfeasance heightened by the direct contradiction it poses to (alleged) core principles of reason and science. It is because of this I now seriously ponder what I could not have imagined myself considering just a few years ago: the intellectual value of faith. I wonder if I have greatly overestimated human reason. In the past, I had mostly thought about the “ceiling” that faith created–the ways in which religion hindered progress, scientific achievement and understanding. But now I think much more about the “floor” it creates, too. Perhaps without certain myths granting the power of the sacred to some fundamental truths (like the fact that there are two sexes), we would drift away from reality altogether. Maybe that is what is happening now. I could not have imagined it could be so. I was wrong." --Sarah Haider
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Zackary Russell
Zackary Russell@ztrussell·
The “idiot genius rocket bus” discourse is incredible. And yes “reckless but skilled” perfectly describes the American spirit. We love braving the frontier *because* it’s dangerous. I hesitate to describe Japanese culture with only two words but my best attempt is “careful perfection.” Japan takes everything and makes it 10x or 100x better. They pride themselves on focused attention to detail. In the Big Five personality test (OCEAN) they probably have a Conscientiousness score that’s off the charts. It’s why I only buy Japanese cars and Japanese cameras, and use them way beyond when most such products get replaced. It’s why there are no trash cans anywhere you walk in Tokyo but there’s also no trash laying around the streets. It’s why my waiter made an elaborate apology after accidentally bringing me sparkling wine instead of sparkling water, even though it was actually my poor language skills that caused the mistake. It’s why people wear backpacks on their chest so they won’t bump into you. It’s why you feel safe and expect excellent service everywhere you go. These are admittedly surface level observations from a few brief trips I’ve taken there. And there’s so much more under the surface. But as a person who aspires to excellence with detail I am always humbled by what I find there.
クレア@kureakurea01

「アメリカ人はバカだけど天才」という日本語は、本来なら翻訳された瞬間に炎上してもおかしくない言葉だった。けれど実際に起きたのは逆で、向こう側から返ってきたのは怒りではなく、それ、かなり本質を突いてるという妙に誇らしげな共感だった。 ここが面白い。 彼らはバカを、知性の欠如としてではなく、無鉄砲さ、実験精神、常識外れを恐れない気質として読んだ。 つまり侮辱ではなく、「失敗を恐れず、時に愚かに見えるほど大きく賭ける国民性」への命名として受け取った。 ロケットを積んだスクールバスみたいに、発想そのものは狂っているのに、そこに本気で技術を注ぎ込んでしまう。 この「無茶」と「実力」が同居している感じは、たしかにアメリカという国の魅力そのものなのだと思う🇺🇸✨ しかも今回さらに興味深いのは、そこに日米の相互理解が生まれていること。 昔なら誤訳やニュアンスのズレで終わったはずのものが、今は翻訳を越えてわかる、その感じで繋がっていく。 国家と国家の話は重たくても、文化とユーモアは一瞬で国境を飛び越える🇯🇵✨🇺🇸 たぶん今のネットで起きている小さな奇跡はこれだ。 完璧な英語でも、正しい外交辞令でもなく、「ちょっと失礼なくらい正直なひと言」が、いちばん本質的な敬意になることがある。 そこで、イーロン・マスクの「Accurate 😂」が響く理由は、あれが単なる相槌じゃないからだ。 ただ「面白いね」と笑ったのではなく、その雑なくくり、でも妙に本質を射てるという、アメリカ的自己認識に公認を与えた。 アメリカはしばしば、合理の国だと思われている。 けれど実際に世界を驚かせてきた場面の多くは、最初から合理的だったわけじゃない。 「そんなの無茶だろ」 「バカみたいだろ」 という発想を、技術と資本と執念で現実に変えてしまう。そこにあるのは、秩序だった賢さではなく、半分は無鉄砲で、半分は天才的な突破力だ。 だから「idiots but also geniuses」という言葉は侮辱ではなく、アメリカ人からすると失敗や無茶まで含めた自画像として読めてしまう。 イーロンの「Accurate」は、その感覚を一語で認証した。 しかも笑いながら。 ここが重要で、あの一言には 「それ、こっちでは悪口ではなく神話の説明です」 という含みがある。 さらに面白いのは、この一言で元ポストの意味が変わったことだ。 本来なら異文化の雑な表現として炎上し得たものが、イーロンの承認によって一気に相互理解のジョークへと変質した。 権威のある翻訳者が現れたというより、文化の当事者が「いや、それで合ってる」と笑って頷いた感じだ。 ロケットバスみたいな発明は、その象徴そのものだ。 発想はどうかしている。 でも、それを本当にやる。 しかも、やるだけで終わらず、人に語らせ、動画にし、ミームにし、国民性の神話にまで変える。 アメリカの強さは、技術力だけじゃない。 無茶を無茶のまま終わらせず、物語に変える力だ。 イーロンの「Accurate 😂」は短い。 でもあの短さの中に、アメリカが自分たちをどう見ているか、そしてなぜ世界がその国に呆れながら惹かれてしまうのかが全部入っている。

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Tweet is the Work 🌷
Tweet is the Work 🌷@NoblestCalling·
When the kids are playing in the street we put out orange cones to encourage cars to watch and slow down. Today a car with "save gaza kids" written on the back window blew through the neighborhood and ran over one of the cones. Never seen a better real world example of this.
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Trad West
Trad West@trad_west_·
Why is doing one with literally Satan a pentagram and a phrase in latin asking the devil to take their souls okay but a Christian Saint isn't?
Trad West tweet mediaTrad West tweet media
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Samantha Smith
Samantha Smith@SamanthaTaghoy·
This is an absolute scandal. Serbian football team Crvena Zvezda has been fined €95,500 after fans choreographed a motif of Jesus Christ! UEFA fined them for "displaying a message not fit for a sporting event and bringing the reputation of football and UEFA itself into disrepute". The image was a traditional Orthodox tifo of Jesus Christ or Saint Simeone the Myrrh-flowing, while the text underneath read: “May our faith lead you to victory". UEFA has stopped games for Ramadan and openly promoted BLM and LGBT campaigns during tournaments. But Christianity is ‘inappropriate’?! What an utter disgrace.
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GondorianSupremacist
GondorianSupremacist@vikingjudoka·
Agreed. Going forward, I think we’re seeing positive trends in movies like Project Hail Mary, the masterful writing and heroic spirit in One Piece, and even WotC’s recent maneuvers that hint at a needed change in direction. It feels like the good, the heroic, and a healthy respect for the past, legacy, tradition, and inherited ideals are being embraced again.
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Thomas Umstattd Jr.
Thomas Umstattd Jr.@ThomasUmstattd·
@archon Hail Mary has moral clarity, and it seems to be doing fine at the box office.
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Thomas Umstattd Jr.
Thomas Umstattd Jr.@ThomasUmstattd·
Hmm
10Δ@_10delta_

3 weeks ago I argued the US goal in Iran is to seize the global oil spigot. Venezuela in January -> Iran in February. Neutralize every supply channel outside the dollar system within 90 days. Achieve a compliant successor government and complete energy dominance. The oil thesis was the obvious layer. However, when you zoom out & view the last four years as a single sequence rather than isolated geopolitical events, the architecture of the grander US plan becomes visible. 1st was Europe, which laid the groundwork. The Ukraine conflict provided the justification for sanctions that collapsed Russian pipeline gas from 150 billion cubic meters to 40. Then Nordstream was destroyed, which rewired the entire European energy system permanently. The US went from supplying 28% of Europe's LNG in 2021 to 58% by 2025, exporting a record 111 million MTs, the 1st country in history to break 100 MT. Europe was transformed from a customer with options into a captive market now purchasing its survival in USD. 2nd was Syria. The fall of Assad severed the critical node connecting China's Belt & Road Initiative to the Mediterranean. The trilateral railway linking Iran, Iraq & Syria, designed to bypass Western maritime chokepoints, was completely destroyed. This isolated Iran geographically & cleared the path for what came next. 3rd was Venezuela. In January the US effectively took control of the world's largest heavy crude reserves. The US Gulf Coast has the most advanced refining complex on earth, specifically built for heavy sour crude. Phillips 66, Valero & the rest are now positioned to process hundreds of thousands of barrels of Venezuelan crude daily. The US captured a massive strategic reserve & solidified its position as the dominant exporter of refined petroleum products, an industry worth $110 billion in 2025 alone. Venezuela & Iran were the two major oil supply channels that existed outside the dollar system. Both produce heavy crude sold primarily to China & evaded US financial supervision. Both now being neutralized within 90 days, which leads us to.. 4th is Iran & the Middle East energy shock. Israel struck Iran's South Pars gas field, the world's largest natural gas reservoir. Iran retaliated against Qatar's Ras Laffan, the single largest LNG facility on earth, responsible for a fifth of global supply. QatarEnergy's own assessment is that 17% of export capacity is gone and recovery will take up to 5 years. The Strait of Hormuz is closed. European gas prices spiked 70%. Asian spot prices doubled. The only remaining scaled supplier? The United States. If Iran falls & a successor government is installed that the US controls or influences (the Delcy model described weeks ago) then roughly 40 to 45 million barrels per day of global production out of 103 million is effectively under US control. OPEC becomes irrelevant because the US coalition is now the marginal producer. Now add the gas dimension & it goes beyond oil. This war is solidifying the petrodollar system as it evolves into a hybrid petro/LNG-dollar. The old system was built on Saudi crude priced in USD. The new system is built on American crude plus American gas from the Gulf Coast, with no alternative supplier of comparable scale. The dependency is deeper because LNG infrastructure requires long term contracts & regasification terminals that lock buyers into supply relationships for decades. Europe & the Pacific allies (Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, etc.) cannot pivot away as there is nowhere left to pivot to. They're now locked into the US energy system. The market confirms this. DXY went from 96 to 101. Gold down ~20% from its January all time high. Bitcoin down 20% on the year. Brent above $100. European & Asian institutions are liquidating precious metals and crypto to buy dollars because they need dollars to buy the only remaining scaled energy supply. The world is selling its gold to buy American energy in American currency. The dollar is now being weaponized through energy dependency. The structural repricing is happening regardless of how the conflict resolves. But the US grand strategy goes deeper.. Artificial intelligence is a physical industry. It runs on power and chips. Data centers require massive uninterrupted baseload electricity, primarily provided by natural gas. Semiconductor fabrication requires helium & rare earths. By choking the Strait of Hormuz & crippling Middle Eastern LNG & helium production, the US is systematically degrading China's ability to power its data centers & fabricate semiconductors at scale. The US is energy self sufficient, especially with newly captured Venezuelan reserves & expanding Gulf Coast capacity running on domestic gas. On the other hand, China is import dependent & every joule it imports effectively now transits chokepoints the US Navy controls.. Iran was the Belt & Road's overland energy bypass, the corridor that allowed China to mitigate the Malacca Trap. With Iran neutralized that corridor is severed. China faces a world where its compute infrastructure competes for scraps on a depleted global LNG market, while American data centers run at full capacity on domestic energy. Russia is next in the sequence. A post-war Iran reopening under US influence competes directly with Russia for the same refineries in China & India at lower cost. Iran's production costs are lower. Russia loses its last structural advantage in heavy crude & its economic lifeline. Additionally, under the Iran war cover, Ukraine has been opportunistically destroying Russian energy infrastructure & all signs point towards Russia being at the end of the line. The message from Washington becomes very simple: we dismantled two regimes in three months, your economy is about to get crushed, sign the Ukraine deal. Then Trump sits down with Xi holding every card. Complete energy dominance. The hybrid petro/LNG-dollar fortified, Iran cleared, Russia cornered, & China facing the Malacca Trap fully closed with no remaining energy bypass. Israel & the GCC are absorbing the kinetic cost of a conflict whose primary beneficiary, counter to the mainstream narrative, is actually America (First). Qatar offline for 5 years reprices the entire global gas market in favor of US exporters for the remainder of the decade. The Gulf states face years of rebuilding. Europe faces its 2nd energy crisis in four years. Sure, the average American might face temporary moderate inflation & higher gas prices. But if you are the architect of the US empire & you view the rise of China & Chinese ASI as an existential winner takes all scenario, the collateral damage is acceptable cost. Whoever controls the energy corridors controls the monetary system. Whoever controls the monetary system & the energy supply simultaneously controls the compute infrastructure that determines which civilization builds ASI first. The US is seizing all 3.

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