Terroriff
2.8K posts


1/ The @nytimes just published one of the most serious sets of allegations imaginable against Israel – claims of systematic sexual violence, including a bizarre story about carrots and trained rape dogs. We checked the sources. What we found is journalistic malpractice. 🧵

People talk, listen, watch, think, and collaborate at the same time, in real time. We've designed an AI that works with people the same way. We share our approach, early results, and a quick look at our model in action. thinkingmachines.ai/blog/interacti…



In explaining his decision to leave Ole Miss for LSU, Lane Kiffin seems willing to invoke Ole Miss's struggle to distance itself from symbols like the Confederate flag, Colonel Rebel, and the nickname "Ole Miss" itself. When he was coaching there, Kiffin says, top recruits would tell him, “‘Hey, coach, we really like you. But my grandparents aren’t letting me move to Oxford, Mississippi.’ That doesn’t come up when you say Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Parents were sitting here this weekend saying the campus’s diversity feels so great: ‘It feels like there’s no segregation’” vanityfair.com/news/story/lan…




3 weeks on Reta. Down 10 pounds. Lifts only going up. Minimal sides (so far). This shit is the real deal.










You should get comfortable with cosmopolitan chauvinism, because the rurals that rely on your urban area’s tax dollars to survive are comfortable thinking they should get to decide if your children can get vaccinated at city clinics or if your neighborhood gets public transit.



college tuition in America has increased by ~1,249.85% since 1980 x.com/wrowclif/statu…




I get a bunch of tweets (or dunks) from Abundance Grifters, constantly auditioning for funding from developers or investors, who assert—often by pointing to a city or two in Texas—that deregulation is the key to making housing more affordable. Yet this recent San Francisco Fed study, released in February 2026, contradicts the abundance thesis. Because the study is a bit technical, I thought I’d break it down for you. 🧵


Figure IX shows that San Francisco's and Houston’s home quantity growth are almost exactly what one would expect given growth in population. “The key point is that with multiple margins of housing demand, unit supply curves may look very different depending on the composition of demand and **irrespective** of a city’s regulatory environment.”










