The Angry Labrador

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The Angry Labrador

The Angry Labrador

@WileyT20

Thinking, Morality, Logic, Humor, Engineering, Technology, Flying, Wisdom, Culture, Mountains, Forests, Water… hold on… somebody left the gate open.

Katılım Haziran 2021
574 Takip Edilen224 Takipçiler
The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@jonfavs "We’re going to murder those lousy Hun bastards by the bushel-f***ing-basket. War is a bloody, killing business. You’ve got to spill their blood, or they will spill yours. Rip them up the belly. Shoot them in the guts." Was George Patton a deranged lunatic, or just effective?
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Jon Favreau
Jon Favreau@jonfavs·
Our president is a deranged lunatic and should clearly be removed from office. He’s only there because of Republican Members of Congress.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@AlexBerenson @realDonaldTrump "We’re going to murder those lousy Hun bastards by the bushel-f***ing-basket. War is a bloody, killing business. You’ve got to spill their blood, or they will spill yours. Rip them up the belly. Shoot them in the guts." Perhaps you prefer Patton?
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Alex Berenson
Alex Berenson@AlexBerenson·
The old man is out of control The President of the United States is unwell, and we need to stop pretending otherwise I said it about Biden, I’m not going to be afraid to say it about @realDonaldTrump
Alex Berenson tweet media
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@FmrRepMTG It’s disappointing to learn that a sliver of what was considered the conservative base is insane.
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Former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene🇺🇸
On Easter morning, this is what President Trump posted. Everyone in his administration that claims to be a Christian needs to fall on their knees and beg forgiveness from God and stop worshipping the President and intervene in Trump’s madness. I know all of you and him and he has gone insane, and all of you are complicit. I’m not defending Iran but let’s be honest about all of this. The Strait is closed because the US and Israel started the unprovoked war against Iran based on the same nuclear lies they’ve been telling for decades, that any moment Iran would develop a nuclear weapon. You know who has nuclear weapons? Israel. They are more than capable of defending themselves without the US having to fight their wars, kill innocent people and children, and pay for it. Trump threatening to bomb power plants and bridges hurts the Iranian people, the very people Trump claimed he was freeing. On Easter, of all days, we as Christians should be reminded that the son of God died and rose from the grave so that we can be forgiven once and for all of our sins. Jesus commanded us to love one another and forgive one another. Even our enemies. Our President is not a Christian and his words and actions should not be supported by Christians. Christians in the administration should be pursuing peace. Urging the President to make peace. Not escalating war that is hurting people. This NOT what we promised the American people when they overwhelmingly voted in 2024, I know, I was there more than most. This is not making America great again, this is evil.
Former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene🇺🇸 tweet media
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
THE FIRST VACUUM TUBE INTEGRATED CITCUT WAS INVENTED TO BEAT UNFAIR TAXES. The 1926 German Radio Tax: How One Clever Tube Beat the Bureaucrats (And Why Governments Will Repeat the Mistake with Robots) ~ In 1926, the German government had a brilliant idea for raising revenue from the exciting new world of radio broadcasting: tax the radios themselves. Not by their price, size, or even their power consumption. No. They taxed them by the number of vacuum tubes (or, more precisely, by the number of valveholders or sockets they contained). The more tubes your receiver had, the higher the Rundfunksteuer (radio tax) you paid. It was a classic case of early 20th century bureaucracy trying to squeeze money out of technology it barely understood. Enter Loewe Audion GmbH, a German radio manufacturer. They were not about to let a silly per tube tax kill their business. In 1926, they introduced the Loewe 3NF. A single glass envelope that packed three triode vacuum tubes, plus two fixed capacitors and four fixed resistors, all sealed inside one unit. It was essentially a complete radio receiver circuit in one tube. A full featured three stage radio now only needed one socket, so it was taxed as a humble single tube set. The 3NF let Loewe undercut competitors dramatically, and roughly one million of these ingenious devices were produced. It was, quite literally, one of the worlds first integrated circuits. Decades before the silicon chip. But born not from Moores Law, but from tax evasion. When one filament eventually burned out (as tubes did back then), the whole expensive assembly had to be replaced, but Loewe even offered a repair service. Innovation driven by government overreach? Sounds familiar. Governments Never Learn Fast forward a century. Radio tubes are long gone, replaced by transistors, microchips, and now AI powered robots and autonomous systems. Yet the bureaucratic impulse remains exactly the same: when something new and productive emerges, tax it by counting its parts in the most literal, outdated way possible. Imagine the future headlines: New EU Robot Tax Bill: Levy Based on Number of Actuators, Sensors, or AI Cores or how large the parameters. Or an American proposal: Tax robots per motor or per teraflop of compute. Policymakers, desperate for revenue as automation displaces traditional jobs, will inevitably reach for the same blunt instrument Germany used in 1926. They will ignore value created, economic output, or societal benefit, and instead fixate on something countable and physical. Just like counting glowing glass envelopes in a wooden radio cabinet. The 3NF proved that clever engineers will always find a workaround. Companies will design single actuator humanoid robots that somehow perform like multi limbed ones, or cloud based AI systems that minimize on device taxable hardware. Innovation will be diverted into tax dodging contortions rather than genuine progress. Meanwhile, the tax collectors will be left scratching their heads, just as they were when the first 3NF equipped Loewe radios flooded the market. History does not repeat, but it rhymes. In 1926, the German state tried to meter the future with 19th century logic and got outmaneuvered by a single brilliant tube. A hundred years later, when robots roam factories, homes, and streets, the same shortsightedness will return. Because governments, like bad comedians, only have one joke. The Loewe 3NF was not just a radio part. It was a warning: tax the technology stupidly, and the technology will tax you right back.
Brian Roemmele tweet media
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
Imagine if Steve Jobs were building AI? The Steve Job that has the ability to see the SaaS model, the rent model, the OS model and the App model ended. We know what he would have done by what he had done. He would have moved on from the failed models and built new ones.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
Needlessly highfalutin, but worth a read…
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.

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Ryan S. Walters
Ryan S. Walters@ryanswalters73·
It’s so simple, only a complete moron, or TDS leftist, could possibly misunderstand it. A simple understanding of language, punctuation, and sentence structure helps too. Senator Jacob Howard of Michigan introduced the 14th amendment and said this: "This amendment which I have offered, is simply declaratory of what I regard as the law of the land already, that every person born within the limits of the United States, and subject to their jurisdiction, is by virtue of natural law and national law a citizen of the United States. This will not, of course, include persons born in the United States who are foreigners, aliens, who belong to the families of ambassadors or foreign ministers accredited to the Government of the United States, but will include every other class of persons."
Ryan S. Walters tweet media
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The Babylon Bee
The Babylon Bee@TheBabylonBee·
Real Man Therapy: Therapeutic Solutions For Men That Really Work
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Mollie
Mollie@MZHemingway·
I attended today's oral argument and while I'm not sure how it will go, it seemed to me the justices engaged seriously with Sauer's arguments. I'd be surprised if they said the 14th Amendment or Kim Wong Ark support today's radical birthright citizenship regime.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@TbrdDog @brithume 1) The USA gave Iran the opportunity to make a rational choice after the experience. They didn’t. 2) He has, just as have other Presidents have, for the last 47 years. But, it’s also obvious to anyone paying attention. For global security, Iran cannot have nuclear capability.
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Ted Highpower, PE
Ted Highpower, PE@TbrdDog·
@brithume Two questions: (1) What has changed since the bombing of the nuclear facilities last year? (2) Why hasn’t the president been able to succinctly make this case?
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Brit Hume
Brit Hume@brithume·
This account has a silly name, but often posts serious and informative takes. Here the author explains why attacking Iran's conventional military is also an attack on its nuclear weapons program. And Marco Rubio adds some clarity as well.
Gummi@gummibear737

Iran was trying to use the North Korean model to get a nuke: create sufficient conventional deterrence so you won’t be challenged in acquiring one (it’s called the Seoul Hostage Problem). This has been explained over and over since day one. Everyone claiming shifting goalposts or no imminent threat has been lying. The reason North Korea was allowed to get nukes is because Seoul (and its 10 million inhabitants) is within artillery and rocket range of North Korea. During the 1994 nuclear crisis, the Clinton administration seriously considered airstrikes on North Korea’s Yongbyon reactor but backed off precisely because of the artillery threat to Seoul. Iran was trying to accomplish the same by stockpiling missiles and drones which would have had the same deterrent effect. The proof is what Iran has been doing in the past month: attacking all its neighbors in order to pressure the US to stop attacking it Beyond this, they were building medium-range ballistic missiles that could reach Paris and London, meaning all of Europe could be held hostage as they built a nuclear bomb. The reason Iran has not built a nuclear weapon until now is not because it couldn’t, but because it knew it would be attacked and denied this capability. So by allowing them to continue developing this conventional deterrence, you would be allowing Iran to get a nuclear weapon. And unlike North Korea, Iran is led by an eschatological death cult Reagan saw nuclear mutually assured destruction (MAD) as both morally bankrupt (because of the innocent-body-count problem) and dangerously fragile because it assumed flawless rationality between adversaries…this means it only takes one irrational actor to destroy the world. Working backwards from the conclusion that Iran’s Islamist regime must never have a nuclear weapon, it was necessary for the US to attack Iran to deny it the conventional capacity to hold the entire eastern hemisphere hostage. Every European leader knows this and behind the scenes praises the US for this action. But they are cowards, held hostage by their own internal Muslim populations, and so adopt these ridiculous public positions. This was never about Israel. And if your argument is that Iran should be allowed to get a nuclear weapon then you are a fool and a traitor to western civilization…you’re a useful idiot

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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@elonmusk Careful…. The Left will force inter-platform compatibility if your customers are this happy. See Tim Apple.
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Saffron Sniper
Saffron Sniper@Saffron_Sniper1·
A reporter once asked a 92-year-old Japanese man: “Do Japanese people still hate Americans because of the nuclear attacks?” You must listen to this old man’s reply: That reply reveals the mindset that rebuilt Japan after the nuclear attacks.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@KurtSupeCPA Good advice, but it’s a wash if you’re already retired and in the highest tax bracket… unless you feel tax rates will rise in the future.
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Kurt Supe, CPA & Retirement Planner
Client retires at 64. Has a pension. Doesn't need his $3.8M IRA. "I'll just let it grow." At 75, the IRS disagrees. Required Minimum Distribution: $143,000. He doesn't want it. Doesn't need it. But he has no choice. That $143K gets added to his pension income. Pushes him into a higher bracket. Increases his Medicare premiums by $4,000/year. Makes 85% of his Social Security taxable. Between retirement and age 75 there is a window. Eleven years to do Roth conversions. Eleven years to reduce the account. Eleven years to get ahead of this. Most people don't know the window exists until it closes.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@Cernovich @SecRubio "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." I’d like to think the USA is still where the world will find the “good men”.
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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
@SecRubio What other countries will be putting boots on the ground?
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Secretary Marco Rubio
Secretary Marco Rubio@SecRubio·
Our mission is clear. Iran will never obtain a nuclear weapon. In my meeting with the G7 foreign ministers, I reiterated that we must meet this moment with maximum partner contributions.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@ggreenwald Saying really stupid stuff on X is incentivized. This one’s going to make you rich, Glenn.
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SnowDrift_
SnowDrift_@skithedream_·
The mythical Black Wall track in Switzerland!! ️⛷️🇨🇭 A 103.6% slope, one of the steepest slopes in the world. 😈
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Joe Whistleblower
Joe Whistleblower@JoeWhistleX·
@Cernovich On the record. Yes. Boots on the ground without a wpr should result in impeachment, removal and criminal charges.
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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
Democrats are doing everything they can to avoid having to vote on a war powers resolution. Everyone should go on record. Democrats and Republicans.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@Cernovich In November it was Trump vs Harris. This poll is Trump vs the Ideal Candidate. In 2028, neither of these choices will be available.
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The Angry Labrador
The Angry Labrador@WileyT20·
@Cernovich These type of polls compare a known entity to an ideal alternative. The hypothetical ideal usually wins.
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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
If you go back to election day, Charlie Kirk was concerned with male voter turnout. Trump / JD Vance did the podcasts to reach male voters. Go to any gym pro page on Instagram. Almost all of them have soured on Trump. Vet bros have, too.
(((Harry Enten)))@ForecasterEnten

Trump won in 2024 because of men. They are abandoning him right now. He won men by 13 pt in 2024, but his net approval is now -7 pt with them. Men under 45: Trump won by 5 pt in 2024. Now he's 19 pt underwater with them. On cost living, he's now 30 pt underwater with men!

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