Tyler Ross

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Tyler Ross

Tyler Ross

@Tykhiro

Present

Katılım Kasım 2021
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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@OtitoNosike He was really good in the sphere of psychology and was helpful to many due to his wisdom. As he grew in popularity he ventured out into things that were not his area of expertise and made himself look foolish. I love Dr. Peterson, but don’t like what he has become.
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Lukas Not Podolski
Lukas Not Podolski@OtitoNosike·
I have never understood, and still do not understand, why people loathe Jordan Peterson. For me, he is the most compelling philosopher of the 21st century. His ideas have reshaped how the modern man, particularly in the West, sees himself. And this is not even limited to the West. Any sensible young man can recognize the value in his thinking; lessons that, if practiced as he presents them, have the power to turn one’s life around.
The Knowledge Archivist@KnowledgeArchiv

"The ability to articulate is the most dangerous thing you can possess." —Jordan B. Peterson

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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@wil_da_beast630 The cognitive dissonance people engage in when they attempt to differentiate SS vs other welfare plans is hilarious. “Well one is buy in and the other isn’t” Like they aren’t coming from the same tax pool. “You get the money back you put in” - Tell that to Zoomers after 2035
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Wilfred Reilly
Wilfred Reilly@wil_da_beast630·
Me too, when I actually see specifically this. But, gotta ask: where does the idea that old people...or, errrrrr...white and ADOS women (!!!)...can't get welfare come from? The two biggest budget drains are Social Security and Medicare, not "Somali fraud" or "aid to Israel."
SaltyGoat@SaltyGoat17

Boils my fcking blood!!!

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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@bowtiedstocks @TheSpeculator0 It’s unrealistic to think he’d behave that way in every situation. His houses might not meet this criteria or groceries or whatever. He might just wanted to “hook her up.” Anyway, as I stated PR for capitalism is pretty low so I’d take it.
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BowTiedStocks
BowTiedStocks@bowtiedstocks·
@Tykhiro @TheSpeculator0 Bit of a contradiction when his whole image and persona is based on finding ‘value’ and exploiting the discrepancies
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Speculator
Speculator@TheSpeculator0·
Bill Ackman is one of the loudest anti-DEI people on twitter and here we learn he has been paying a girlboss lawyer a million per year to fill out forms
Bill Ackman@BillAckman

I am reaching out to the @X community for advice with the likely risk of sharing TMI. I have been sufficiently upset about the whole matter that I have lost sleep thinking about it and I am hoping that this post will enable me to get this matter off my chest. By way of background, I started a family office called TABLE about 15 years ago and hired a friend who had previously managed a family office, and years earlier, had been my personal accountant. She is someone that I trusted implicitly and consider to be a good person. The office started small, but over the last decade, the number of personnel and the cost of the office grew massively. The growth was entirely on the operational side as the investment team has remained tiny. While my investment portfolio grew substantially, the investments I had made were almost entirely passive and TABLE simply needed to account for them and meet capital calls as they came in. While TABLE purchased additional software and other systems that were supposed to improve productivity, the team kept increasing in size at a rapid rate, and the expenses continued to grow even faster. While I would periodically question the growing expenses and high staff turnover, I stayed uninvolved with the office other than a once-a-year meeting when I briefly reviewed the operations and the financials and determined bonus compensation for the President and the CFO. I spent no time with any of the other employees or the operations. The whole idea behind TABLE was that it would handle everything other than my day job so that I would have more time for my job and my family. Over the last six years, expenses ballooned even further, employee turnover accelerated, and I became concerned that all was not well at TABLE. It was time for me to take a look at what was going on. Nearly four years ago, I recruited my nephew who had recently graduated from Harvard and put him to work at Bremont, a British watchmaker, one of my only active personal investments to figure out the issues at the company and ultimately assist in executing a turnaround. He did a superb job. When he returned from the UK late last year after a few years at Bremont, I asked him to help me figure out what was going on with TABLE. When I explained to TABLE’s president what he would be doing, she became incredibly defensive, which naturally made me more concerned. My nephew went to work by first meeting with each employee to understand their roles at the company and to learn from them what ideas they had on how things could be improved. He got an earful. Our first step in helping to turn around TABLE was a reduction in force including the president and about a third of the team, retaining excellent talent that had been desperate for new leadership. Now here is where I need your advice. All but one of the employees who were terminated acted professionally and were gracious on the way out (excluding the president who had a notice period in her contract, is currently still being paid, and with whom I have not yet had a discussion). The highest compensated terminated employee other than the president, an in-house lawyer (let’s call her Ronda), told us that three months of severance was not enough and demanded two years’ severance despite having worked at the company for only two and one half years. When I learned of Ronda's request for severance, I offered to speak with her to understand what she was thinking, but she refused to do so. A few days ago, we received a threatening letter from a Silicon Valley law firm. In the letter, Ronda’s counsel suggests that her termination is part of longstanding issues of ‘harassment and gender discrimination’ – an interesting claim in light of the fact that Ronda was in charge of workplace compliance – and that her termination was due to: “unlawful, retaliatory, and harmful conduct directed towards her. Both [Ronda] and I [Ronda’s lawyer] have spoken with you about [Ronda’s] view of what a reasonable resolution would include given the circumstances. Thus far, TABLE has refused to provide any substantive response. This letter provides the last opportunity to reach a satisfactory agreement. If we cannot do so, [Ronda] will seek all appropriate relief in a court of competent jurisdiction.” The letter goes on to explain the basis for the “unsafe work environment” claim at TABLE: “In early 2026, Pershing Square’s founder Bill Ackman installed his nephew in an unidentified role at TABLE, Ackman’s family office. [His nephew]—whose only work experience had been for TABLE where he was seconded abroad for the last four years to a UK watch company held by Ackman—began appearing at TABLE’s offices and conducting interviews of employees without a clear explanation of his role or the purposes of these interviews. During this period, he made a series of inappropriate and genderbased [sic] comments to multiple employees that created an unsafe work environment. Among other things, [his nephew] made remarks about female employees’ ages (“Tell me you are nowhere near 40”), physical appearance (“Your body does not look like you have kids”), as well as intrusive questions about family planning and sexual orientation (“Who carried your son? Who will carry your next child?”). These incidents were reported to senior leadership at TABLE and Pershing Square. Rather than being addressed appropriately, the response from senior management reflected, at best, willful blindness to the inappropriateness of [his nephew]’s remarks and, at worst, tacit endorsement.” The above allegations about my nephew had previously been brought to my attention by TABLE’s president when they occurred. When I learned of them, I told the president that I would speak to him directly and encouraged her to arrange for him to get workplace sensitivity training. The president assured me that she would do so. When I spoke to my nephew, he explained what he actually had said and how his actual remarks had been received, not at all as alleged in the legal letter from Ronda’s counsel. I have also spoken to others at the lunch table who confirmed his description of the facts. In any case, he meant no harm, was simply trying to build rapport with other employees, and no one, as far as I understand, was offended. Ironically, Ronda claims in her legal letter that TABLE didn’t take HR compliance seriously, yet Ronda was in charge of HR compliance at TABLE and the person who gave my nephew his workplace sensitivity training after the alleged incidents. In any case, Ronda, as head of compliance, should have kept a record or raised an alarm if indeed there was pervasive harassment or other such problems at the company, and there is no evidence whatsoever that this is true. So why does Ronda believe she can get me to pay her nearly $2 million, i.e., two years of severance, nearly one year of severance for each of her years at the company? Well, here is where some more background would be helpful. Over the last two months, I have been consumed with a major family medical issue – one of my older daughters had a massive brain hemorrhage on February 5th and has since been making progress on her recovery – and I am in the midst of a major transaction for my company which I am executing from a hospital room office next to her . While the latter business matter is publicly known, the details of my daughter’s situation are only known to Ronda because of her role at our family office. Now, let’s get back to the subject at hand. Unfortunately, while New York and many other states have employment-at-will, there has emerged an industry of lawyers who make a living from bringing fake gender, race, LGBTQ and other discrimination employment claims in order to extract larger severance payments for terminated employees, and it needs to stop. The fake claim system succeeds because it costs little to have a lawyer send a threatening letter and nearly all of the lawyers in this field work on contingency so there is no or minimal cash cost to bring a claim. And inevitably, nearly 100% of these claims are settled because the public relations and legal costs of defending them exceed the dollar cost of the settlement. The claims are nearly always settled with a confidentiality agreement where the employee who asserts the fake claims remains anonymous and as a result, there is no reputational cost to bringing false claims. The consequences of this sleazy system (let’s call it ‘the System’) are the increased costs of doing business which is a tax on the economy and society. There are other more serious problems due to the System. Unfortunately, the existence of an industry of plaintiff firms and terminated employees willing to make these claims makes it riskier for companies to hire employees from a protected class, i.e., LGBTQ, seniors, women, people of color etc. because it is that much more reputationally damaging and expensive to be accused of racism, sexism, and/or intolerance for sexual diversity than for firing a white male as juries generally have less sympathy for white males. The System therefore increases the risk of discrimination rather than reducing it, and the people bringing these fake claims are thereby causing enormous harm to the other members of these protected classes. So what happened here? Ronda was vastly overpaid and overqualified for the job that she did at TABLE. She was paid $1.05 million plus benefits last year for her work which was largely comprised of filling out subscription agreements and overseeing an outside law firm on closing passive investments in funds and in private and venture stage companies, some compliance work, and managing the office move from one office to another. She had a very good gig as she was highly paid, only had to go into the office three days a week, and could work from anywhere during the summer. Once my nephew showed up and started to investigate what was going on, she likely concluded that there was a reasonable possibility she would be terminated, as her job was in the too-easy-and-to-good-to-be-true category. The problem was that she was not in a protected class due to her race, age or sexual identity so she had to construct the basis for a claim. While she is female and could in theory bring a gender-based discrimination claim, she reported to the president who is female and to whom she is very close, which makes it difficult for her to bring a harassment claim against her former boss. When my nephew complimented a TABLE employee at lunch about how young she looked – in response to saying she was going to her 40-year-old sister’s birthday party, he said ‘she must be your older sister’ – Ronda immediately reported it to our external HR lawyer. She thereby began building her case. The other problem for Ronda bringing a claim is that she was terminated alongside 30% of other TABLE employees as part of a restructuring so it is very difficult for her to say that she was targeted in her termination or was retaliated against. TABLE is now hiring an external fractional general counsel as that is all the company needs to process the relatively limited amount of legal work we do internally. In short, Ronda was eminently qualified and capable and did her job. She was just too much horsepower for what is largely an administrative legal role so she had to come up with something else to bring a claim. Now Ronda knew I was a good target and it was a good time to bring a claim against me. She also knew that I was under a lot of pressure because on March 4th when Ronda was terminated, my daughter had not yet emerged from consciousness, she was not yet breathing on her own, and my daughter and we were fighting for her life. I was and remain deeply engaged in her recovery while at the same time I was working on finishing the closing for the private placement round for my upcoming IPO. Ronda also knew that publicity about supposed gender discrimination and a “hostile and unsafe work environment” are not things that a CEO of a company about to go public wants to have released into the media. And she may have thought that the nearly $2 million she was asking for would be considered small in the context of the reputational damage a lawsuit could cause, regardless of the fact that two years of severance was an absurd amount for an employee who had only worked at TABLE for 30 months. She also likely considered that I wouldn’t want to embarrass my nephew by dragging him into the klieg lights when her claims emerged publicly. So, in summary, game theory would say that I would certainly settle this case, for why would I risk negative publicity at a time when I was preparing our company to go public and also risk embarrassing my nephew. Notably, she hired a Silicon Valley law firm, rather than a typical NY employment firm. This struck me as interesting as her husband works for one of the most prominent Silicon Valley venture firms whose CEO, I am sure, has no tolerance for these kinds of fake claims that sadly many venture-backed companies also have to deal with. I mention this as I suspect her husband likely has been working with her on the strategy for squeezing me as, in addition to being a computer scientist, he is a game theorist. My only advice for him is to understand more about your opponent before you launch your first move. All of the above said, gender, race, LGBTQ and other such discrimination is a real thing. Many people have been harmed and deserve compensation for this discrimination, and these companies and individuals should be punished for engaging in such behavior. Which brings me to the advice I am seeking from the X community. I am not planning to follow the typical path and settle this ‘claim.’ Rather, I am going to fight this nonsense to the end of the earth in the hope that it inspires other CEOs to do the same so we shut down this despicable behavior that is a large tax on society, employment, and the economy and contributes to workplace discrimination rather than reducing it. Do you agree or disagree that this is the right approach?

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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@drantbradley This could all be over if the NCAA would recognize them as employees, but they won’t because that requires a CBA. They wanna have their cake and eat it too.
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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@bowtiedstocks @TheSpeculator0 Because he can. They agreed to it and frankly good on him. It goes against the “billionaires won’t pay anyone” narrative for once. Did he over pay? Yes. Will it have any meaningful effect on his pockets? Nope
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BowTiedStocks
BowTiedStocks@bowtiedstocks·
@TheSpeculator0 Why on earth was he paying that much to someone to begin with for what he himself describes as a glorified admin job
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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@IamCJ_27 Bro has hits. That’s it. You don’t have to overthink it. Nobody turns Kayne on because they care about his views on economic policy. He’s made hits for 30 years. People will listen.
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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@EliasToufexis @ImKingGinger If that was actually the reason subscription prices went up people wouldn’t be nearly as upset. But following his argument, does he want me to be mad that my Netflix went up $20 a year so people can provide for their families? Bro really thought he cooked 😭
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Marcus Pittman
Marcus Pittman@ImKingGinger·
Unions are the worst thing to happen to Hollywood. Every time SAG-AFTRA or IATSE negotiates, they come away with higher day rates, bigger health and pension contributions, stricter overtime. I get why workers want that stuff. Better healthcare, more money. Sounds good right? But someone pays for it. You do. The subscriber. Union labor costs go up, production budgets go up, streamers raise prices. Netflix went from $7.99 to $22.99. Disney+ started at $6.99 and nearly tripled. The content didn’t get three times better. The labor costs went up. A massive chunk of that is union negotiations. I’ve been building LOOR for five years. I’ve sat in rooms with producers who literally cannot make what they want to make because the second you go union, your $500K budget becomes $2M. Same script. Same locations. Same shoot days. But now you need a union crew, union rates, union overtime, union pensions, union health fund, and paperwork that gets its own line item. What happens? The mid-budget film dies. The creative risks stop. Everything becomes franchise IP because that’s all that justifies the overhead. The union system doesn’t protect creativity. It kills it. It makes filmmaking so expensive that only massive corporations can play. The future of filmmaking is a punk rock garage band. Five people with cameras and AI tools. No permission. No $350/day minimums. No forced turnaround penalties. No trust fund you’ll never see because you didn’t hit enough hours. The best music ever made came from garages. Kids who couldn’t afford studios. People the industry said weren’t good enough. Same thing is happening in film right now. The tools exist. Cameras are cheap. AI fills gaps that used to need six crew members. Distribution is a URL. The free market is doing to Hollywood unions what Spotify did to record labels. Not overnight. But slowly, making them irrelevant because creators realized they don’t need the gatekeepers or the bureaucracy. I’m not saying union members are bad people. The system itself has become a cost disease that makes content worse and more expensive for everyone. The people who suffer most aren’t the A-list actors with residual checks. It’s independent filmmakers who can’t afford to start because the barrier to entry is artificially inflated by labor rules written for a completely different era. The future is non-union. The future is small teams. The future is creators who own what they make and don’t owe a percentage to an organization that doesn’t even know their name.
Marcus Pittman tweet media
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Michael Lukas
Michael Lukas@JoyfulSisyphean·
@ImKingGinger nah, we need more and stronger unions and labor laws in all parts of society to prevent leeches like you from stealing the labor of others
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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@vendro2000 @CoreyWriting A “good Y men’s” team consist of players who shoot 30% from the field, can run a pick and roll, and don’t travel every other possession.
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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@_realitychec He’s a 100% percent wrong. Nobody ever forces an artist to sign but they do and then always come back crying on the backend. It’s hard to feel bad for anybody who willingly signs a bad deal when we have decades of experiences from other people they could have learned from.
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C.H.E.C 🪶💰
C.H.E.C 🪶💰@_realitychec·
I don’t care what y’all say. Pooh Shiesty was not wrong. He wasn’t right, but he wasn’t wrong.
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Robbie Recall
Robbie Recall@robbierecall·
@CoreyWriting Women’s basketball is the purest X and Os version of the sport, and any coach will tell you that. If you like 1 on 1, it may not be for you. If you love the sport and the strategy behind it, it probably is. The casuals typically show themselves during this conversation.
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Brodie Bruce
Brodie Bruce@ChuckEWeiss·
@Tykhiro @CoreyWriting Most of the regulars at my local Y were good high school players. So, yes, they would destroy these girls.
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Tyler Ross
Tyler Ross@Tykhiro·
@bigredmatt1011 @CoreyWriting You know what would be worse than that? A bunch of middle aged guys playing pickup. There is no truth in the assertion that the average men’s rec game at the Y (or most places) is better than D1. It’s just asinine. I have issues with WBB, but that can’t slide.
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Matt W
Matt W@bigredmatt1011·
Both final four games were unwatchable. They were sloppy. The shooting and ball handling were bad. The product on the court was bad. Conversely, women’s college volleyball is great to watch. Heck, I’d rather watch the top teams in college softball. A player like Jordy Frahm at Nebraska is someone you could point a young girl toward and say, “be like her”, and not go wrong.
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