Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston

28K posts

Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston banner
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston

Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston

@Wiltster

Husband. Father. Ex-Marathoner. libertarian. Dukie. AфA. BMEng. Essayist. Praxeologist. Apostate. Heterodox. Bacon Enthusiast. Coffee Aficionado. @PanData19

...near the End of the Earth. Katılım Ağustos 2008
5.7K Takip Edilen5.9K Takipçiler
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston retweetledi
Magatte Wade
Magatte Wade@magattew·
Prices are the most important information system in any economy, and most people don't realize it.  When the price of something goes up, it's telling every producer "make more of this" and every consumer "use less of this."  No one has to coordinate it. No ministry issues an order. It just happens. When governments freeze prices to make things "affordable," they destroy that signal. And then they wonder why there are shortages.
English
31
138
491
15.7K
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston retweetledi
Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
Rothmus 🏴 tweet media
ZXX
18
325
1.4K
14.3K
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston retweetledi
Sowell Economics
Sowell Economics@sowelleconomics·
African leaders decided to embrace Marxist socialist ideals post liberation. That's why Africa remains poor. @magattew
English
132
680
2.3K
56.4K
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston retweetledi
Eric Alper 🎧
Eric Alper 🎧@ThatEricAlper·
Eric Alper 🎧 tweet media
ZXX
56
942
7.5K
118.6K
Ann Bauer
Ann Bauer@annbauerwriter·
@Wiltster Like the fact that my husband can find the bug in 10 million characters of code but he cannot ever find the mustard in our refrigerator? Like that?
English
5
0
31
719
Ann Bauer
Ann Bauer@annbauerwriter·
I've been thinking about this for a while I often meeting people who are charming, fluid & funny when they speak but write godawful boring, unreadable things. Less often, I meet people who are halting, inarticulate or dull in person but write beautifully. Can you explain?
English
111
8
190
23.7K
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston retweetledi
Clifton Duncan
Clifton Duncan@cliftonaduncan·
Allow me to educate you: One friend of mine got banished from Broadway in 2020 for not getting the jab. She is a 2x Tony Award nominee and they still won't welcome her back. Another was fired from a world-famous band after posting about a book by a controversial journalist. Another was cancelled by a major symphony orchestra in 2020. He's currently suing another symphony orchestra that's trying to blackball him. Two friends of mine had their long and distinguished careers destroyed for voicing gender critical views. One is in the US, the other is in the UK (yes, it's an international problem). I'm still on a list in NYC for condemning pandemic policy and identity politics. Many people have had their lives ruined over the past decade for nothing more than their mere existence being offensive to left-wing orthodoxy. They had thriving careers doing what they loved, with people they thought were friends. Then they thought one wrong thing and it was all over. "Cancel Culture" doesn't grab headlines the way it did 10 years ago. It's no longer shocking. We've even grown used to it. But the thing is, most of the people who get cancelled aren't rich, famous comedians. That's why people like this person can pretend it doesn't happen, successfully signaling to peers that she's still "safe" to associate with, all while remaining blissfully ignorant of the devastation wrought over the past decade...most of it inflicted by people exactly like her.
Joanna Robinson@jowrotethis

Tell me again about cancel culture being real.

English
224
1.3K
10.6K
856.5K
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston
This. 🎯 People who ridicule crying are clueless. They're also assholes. #CluelessAssholes
Steve Magness@stevemagness

If you’ve never cried after giving everything you had to something that mattered, you’ve probably never given everything you had to something that mattered. The UCONN women’s basketball team was undefeated, 38-0 for the season. But with a little over a minute left in their final four matchup against South Carolina, Kayleigh Heckel went up for a lay-up to cut the score to 9 and keep alive a tiny bit of hope. She missed. The camera zooms in on Heckel as she drops her head and tears began to flow. It was a harsh moment of realizing that the dream was over. In 2024, Keisei Tominaga was captured crying on the sidelines with a minute left when his Nebraska team lost to Texas A&M in the tournament. Back in 2006, Adam Morrison had a similar reaction with a few seconds left, after Gonzaga had blown a 17 point lead in the sweet sixteen. Will all due respect to Tom Hanks in A League of Their Own, there is crying in sport. A lot of it. And contrary to some of the talk on social media, it’s the opposite of weakness. It’s a clear signal of a genuine competitor. We cry because we care. Tears are proof of our investment. Psychologist Ad Vingerhoets at Tilburg University has spend decades studying crying. He found that humans are the only species that cries emotionally. And the primary reason we do it is it acts s a kind of communicative device. Tears signal to others that something matters deeply to us and we need support. It’s as if the tears are saying, “this thing matters to me more than I can say.” As a coach, I’ve seen the toughest of competitors, athletes who are among the best in the country or even the world, break down from time to time. It’s one of the beautiful things about sport. For many reasons, it’s one of the few areas where we let the guard down, show what we really feel, and express genuine emotion. Sometimes, that means tears of joy, other times a crushing bitter disappointment that we can’t quite process. This is especially true for men, who often try to be stoic, thanks to a combination of culture and biology. Yet, in the days before memes Morrison might as well have become one, as he “got murdered for it” and was “kind of shocked by how much negative feedback” he received. Heckel’s been met with a mixture of support and the sadly expected condemnation. Those people are clueless. From the sidelines, it may look like a weakness because you’ve never been in those moments. You’ve never given your all to something, risked greatness, and saw that dream get ripped away. When you step into the arena, you put it all on the line. And in sport, music, and performance arts, one of the few places that are the last bastions of reality. You can’t fake it, it’s all there to see, and there’s a clearly defined success or failure. You have to care deeply to even be in that spot in the first place. No one made it anywhere close to fulfilling their potential, let alone the pinnacle of their endeavor by not caring. That kind of nonchalance is reserved for the sideline. It’s the cool kid in high school who tries to convince others not trying is the cool thing to do. All so they can protect their ego and say, “I would have gotten an A, made the team, won the tournament, if I had tried…” Caring is cool. It’s also the only way you see how good you can be. Our brain has a kind of internal safety mechanism that prevents us from ever truly pushing to our limit. And for good reason. If a marathoner really ran out of glycogen or let their core body temperature keep rising, then serious illness or death awaits. Instead, we run a kind of inner calculation that says: is the juice worth the squeeze? Caring deeply is what allows us to push just a bit harder. It tells that safety mechanism, “Ya, we’re in a lot of discomfort right now, but this means a lot, so give us a little bit longer of a leash.” So if I ever saw someone crying after a tough race, I knew that was an athlete I wanted on my team. It meant they cared. It meant the moment meant so much to them, that they could no longer put on a face, or hold things back. It meant more to them than they could verbally communicate. We need more people with passion, who are willing to risk it all, to be have the emotions of the moment overwhelm them. It’s only by stepping into the arena and taking that risk that we find out how good we can be, and more importantly, who we are. The potential for tears is the price of admission. Morrison got murdered for crying in 2006. Tominaga said it should be celebrated in 2024. He was right. -Steve

English
0
0
2
94
Michael
Michael@GreyrhinocapLLC·
@Wiltster @dontejharvey If he can’t win with the two most talented rosters ever, when is he going to win? Why are yall happy with 30 wins when the teams are expected to win the chip
English
1
0
0
11
Donté J Harvey
Donté J Harvey@dontejharvey·
Duke fans that don’t overreact didn’t expect Scheyer to come in and hang banners in his first 10 years! BUT MAN has he exceeded expectations in his first 4 years! Didn’t even expect him to have the success that he has had more less win a Natty‼️This is spot on! (via: theoggenx/TT)
English
33
58
513
25K
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston retweetledi
ForAmerica
ForAmerica@ForAmerica·
ForAmerica tweet media
ZXX
1
110
827
9.4K
Mohini Shewale
Mohini Shewale@s_mohinii·
🚨 BREAKING: You can run Claude Code completely free now. No API bills. No rate limits. No data leaving your device. Just Claude Code running locally fast, private, and 100% yours. Here’s how to set up Claude Code on your own machine (free + fully private) For guide: Local AI Coding Setup: Free Claude-Like Agent (Ollama + VS Code) Like + Comment " Send" + Retweet Follow me @s_mohinii so that i can DM you
Mohini Shewale tweet media
English
615
389
1.2K
96.6K
ƤƖҲƖЄ
ƤƖҲƖЄ@Pixie1z·
What addiction is the hardest to quit?
ƤƖҲƖЄ tweet media
English
424
152
176
28.1K
Rick Heidrick
Rick Heidrick@rheidrick24·
Congrats on #7. UConn is on the verge of creating a dynasty, but has no business being in that position. Duke was clearly the better team. Painful stuff. Dan Hurley is making things that are incredibly difficult to do look incredibly easy to accomplish. Painful stuff.
English
39
6
268
13.9K
Wilton Random-Guy-from-the-Internet Alston retweetledi
Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
💯
Rothmus 🏴 tweet media
QME
177
2.7K
12.5K
96K