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Luke
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Luke
@behaviouralucas
Behind every word, there's behaviour. | Science Based Psychology
Do not click ⇒ Katılım Ekim 2021
190 Takip Edilen4.6K Takipçiler

@Stormi_luv No one. And no one will. At that time ai got to learn that
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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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Luke retweetledi

You probably aren't interested in actually engaging on this, but fuck it.
1. His work reinforces the dominance hierarchies that lead to the social stratification that has made the elites untouchable and unaccountable.
2. His "clean your room" philosophy essentially encourages people to be disengaged from society until they bring their own lives into order. Yet, he has engaged with society despite several notable personal issues that he has not resolved. In other words, he does not practice what he preaches.
3. He acknowledges the profundity of Nietzsche's statement that "God is Dead," but then attempts to lazily philosophically side-step the supposed problem of nihilism by simply trying to undo God's death. When asked if he believes in God directly, he will not provide a straight answer, because what he believes in is not God, but rather the social value of belief in God. This is nothing more than the intellectual retardation of humanity.
4. He speaks in verbose generalities to obscure simple meanings and practices a philosophy of, "if you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit." Great communicators take big complicated ideas and distill them to their essence. Peterson does the opposite. He takes small simple ideas and inflates them into pompous labyrinths of ponderous pedagoguery.
5. He is essentially a second-rate self-help guru masquerading as a philosopher.
That all being said, if you can derive some positive message from him, that's great. If he helps you clean your room or stand up straight or whatever, that's great. But when things progress from, "here's an interesting academic that has some worth considering to say" to "here's this great philosopher who has profoundly important things to say" then I start to take issue.
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Luke retweetledi

BREAKING 🚨: This is extremely illegal. This is Matthew Gallagher, who created 800+ Facebook accounts posing as fake doctors to advertise on Facebook, and went on to build a GLP-1 telehealth company with just $20,000, AI, and only one full-time teammate, his brother. The New York Times fabricated their AI startup story.
It generated 401M USD in 2025 and could reach 1.8B USD in 2026. Medvi received FDA Warning Letter #721455 in February 2026 for misbranding violations. Its clinician network, OpenLoop, suffered a data breach in January 2026 that exposed 1.6 million patient records.
Futurism reported that they used AI-generated deepfake before-and-after photos in their marketing. A class action lawsuit was filed in Delaware in November 2025. They are also running 800+ fake doctor accounts on Facebook to sell compounded GLP-1s.

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Luke retweetledi

Someone below already said regrets are usually from things you don't end up doing.
I held on to that motto for some time until I was reminded that abstaining from a poor choice is a choice per se.
The advice should never be not to choose.
Every choice is one in itself. There's always an upside & downside.
Evaluate your choices, but don't overthink. Attempt to regret nothing.
No. Restrain yourself from actions by impulse. Exercising restraint is more benefitial than reinforcing uncontrollable choices.
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Luke retweetledi
Luke retweetledi

@thedankoe Information overload induces a false sensation of the curse of knowledge - that explains how so many people think the next guy is dumber than himself
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Luke retweetledi
Luke retweetledi

@0x_Discover good ad but also some lost thousands doing the same thing
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I lost my job yesterday
Rent was due
No backup plan
Then I remembered I still had Claude
Asked it:
“Analyze every top Polymarket wallet from the last 90 days and build me something”
$25 → $4,237 in one night
It ingested 10,000 wallets
Cross-referenced win rates, sizing patterns
Market selection identified 7 traders whose edge wasn’t luck
Then it built an autonomous AI agent
Not a script — not an if-then bot
An agent that reads live news feeds
Maps them to open markets
Runs probabilistic inference on crowd mispricing
Detects cross-market arbitrage between correlated outcomes
Sizes positions using Kelly Criterion derived from the wallet patterns it studied
I deployed it at 11:47PM
Closed the laptop
Woke up to a notification
$25 → $4,237
94 trades while I slept
Never asked me anything
Never paused
Never second-guessed
That’s the entire game
Information asymmetry at machine speed
Wall Street pays $2M/year for this
I paid $20/month for Claude
Copy it here:t.me/KreoPolyBot?st…
Discover@0x_Discover
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@EvanLuthra Everyone needs a way out like this at this point.
Desperation is hitting fast in today's conjecture.
Uncertainty is peaking and some may not get it, but those who do, need it.
Whether it is to solve anxiety from lack of results or purpose or to reach financial safety.
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THIS IS CRAZYY!!!!🤯
A guy just built a $1.8 billion company with two employees. Him and his brother. Using AI.
Matthew Gallagher started Medvi from his house in Los Angeles. Spent $20,000 and two months. AI wrote the code. AI made the website. AI made the ads. AI handled customer service.
First month. 300 customers. Second month. 1,000 more. First full year. $401 million in sales. This year on track for $1.8 billion.
His only hire? His younger brother. That's the entire company.
The New York Times verified the numbers. $65 million profit last year. More than $3 million coming in every single day.
Now compare this. Hims & Hers sells weight loss drugs online. 2,442 employees. $2.4 billion revenue. 5.5% profit margin. This guy is doing nearly the same with two people and triple the margins.
He grew up living in motels and cars. Taught himself to code on a laptop his uncle gave him. Sold samurai swords on eBay as a teenager. Didn't finish college. Moved to LA to become an actor.
Now he's running the fastest growing company nobody has heard of.
When his website broke during a hike he had to sprint home because there was nobody else to fix it. Lost 200 customers in one hour. That's the reality of a two person company doing $1.8 billion.
A VC told him don't raise money. He listened. Zero outside funding. He owns 100% of it.
Two brothers. $20,000. A laptop. And every AI tool they could get their hands on. That's all it took.


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Everyone wants a way out.
Telling people how to solve their life through a sprint of hard work and organization is selling more than water even though you may not just take action.
Mark Manson, Dan Koe are selling it perfectly.
It works inside our heads because they write very, very well.
Do you find these guides enough?
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