Ethan

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Ethan

Ethan

@boromeany

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Katılım Temmuz 2023
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Ethan
Ethan@boromeany·
Bitcoin treasury companies are not the enemy, centralized custody is. However, Bitcoin treasury companies will inevitably create institutional and regulatory demand for centralized custody. The endgame being government seizure. You are not participating in Bitcoin if you don’t self-custody. Treasury companies will inevitably have security incidents and thefts leading to Governments requiring all public companies to use a custodian. That’s not a risk, it’s by design, Bitcoiners are walking into a trap. Bitcoin is an emergent effect arising from the collective of self sovereign individuals following the same rules, self validating the same chain, and holding their own keys. If you don’t hold your own keys, how can you say you are participating in the emergent consensus network? Control over your bitcoins (your private keys), is the only thing that links you to the network. Without it, the number is just an illusion at the pleasure of those who do hold the keys. Your legal right does not matter to Bitcoin consensus. Your legal rights are imposed upon you by the government, and those who control it, and just like gold was confiscated on a government whim, it can, and enviably will happen to Bitcoin on this current trajectory. @adam3us @saylor @DavidFBailey
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Dr. Zakaria MD
Dr. Zakaria MD@ZakariaMDv3·
This is a very controversial subject but we live in a time where we must question everything. Here is what we know from the surface: Most oral ivermectin tablets (like the generic 3 mg tablets used for parasites) do NOT contain polysorbate 80. However, some injectable or topical formulations, especially veterinary products or suspensions, may contain polysorbate 80 or other emulsifiers to keep the drug stable. Many generic human ivermectin tablets include titanium dioxide as an ingredient. It's used as a white pigment to coat the tablet and make it more visually uniform. The European Food Safety Authority declared in 2021 that titanium dioxide can no longer be considered safe as a food additive due to possible genotoxicity (DNA damage). While I know many people have been helped by this, I choose to err on the side of caution. For us, we choose natures ivermectin because nature is less tampered with, more bio-available to your body, can target more species of parasites, and address all life all life cycles at once. I successfully passed liver flukes during my second round of an herbal parasite cleanse and it absolutely transformed my health.
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Larry Cook
Larry Cook@stopvaccinating·
An excellent analogy to explain how vaccines are “tested” for safety. Vax companies don’t use true placebos as the control. They use other vaccines or all vaccine ingredients minus the antigen. When a pro- vaxxer “trusts the science” - this is what they mean…
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CR1337
CR1337@CR1337·
White hat hacker created a browser extension (PoC) via ClaudeAI, within minutes, that can simply bypass the latest EU 🇪🇺 Age Verification app:
Paul Moore - Security Consultant @Paul_Reviews

Bypassing the latest #EU #ageVerification app (2026.07-1) with a Chrome extension... again. Despite 3 months of security hardening and genuine improvements across the board, the fundamental issue cannot be solved. Anonymous age verification doesn't work.

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Ethan
Ethan@boromeany·
@unjected In many places they labelled you unvaccinated for two weeks after the shots. Most vaccine related deaths occurred within the first 2 weeks
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Unjected Official
Unjected Official@unjected·
God did not intend for newborn babies to have a massive amount of aluminum injected past their blood/brain barrier within moments of taking their first breath.
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Ethan
Ethan@boromeany·
@DefiIgnas @moo9000 Encryption doesn’t matter because the scanning is client side after decryption
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Ignas | DeFi
Ignas | DeFi@DefiIgnas·
@moo9000 We need to boycott services that don't encrypt messages. As well as the EU itself
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Ignas | DeFi
Ignas | DeFi@DefiIgnas·
Takes 1 minute to fact check it with AI. The process was truly anti-democratic. And as EU citizen, it makes my blood boil. But it doesn't break e2e encryption. Whatsapp, Signal and TG encrypted chats are fine. This law does not break encryption. What it re-enables is warrantless scanning of unencrypted messages: Instagram, Discord, Snapchat, Gmail and even (unecrypted) iCloud. Don't use those! Personally, Im moving to Proton We must ensure encryption is not outlawed but seeing where the EU is going, they might try it.
@levelsio@levelsio

🇪🇺 Chat Control has passed 😔 They can and will now legally scan any person's messages, emails and photos you send without a warrant The way they passed this law when the majority of the European Parliament was against it will shock you: They waited until most EP members were on holiday so only a few were present and then created an "urgent" vote for it to pass it through There's nothing democratic about any of it and big powerful forces are behind this that can manipulate the EU for whatever they want Democracy in Europe died a bit today 😔

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Ethan
Ethan@boromeany·
@read_jfk_files @uwukko This is exactly the thinking needed for this threat model. Also imagine also the other stenographic ways to exfiltrate telemetry. E.g dns-over-https would be essentially near impossible to even notice or block
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JFK Files
JFK Files@read_jfk_files·
Chrome using SHA1 to hash the machine-id is uh kinda problematic. if the NSA really was tracking Chrome uses, using SHA1 would be exactly the kind of sneaky trick i would expect them to do. Chrome Cloud Management (CBCM) itself leads to some very alarming secret spy features inside Chrome. so your explanation actually makes all of this worse Chrome == spyware
JFK Files tweet mediaJFK Files tweet media
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wukko
wukko@uwukko·
i don't like google chrome, but this is misinformation on linux, google chrome uses the derived and hashed machine id only for chrome browser cloud management (CBCM), aka cloud enterprise policies [1][2] CBCM is disabled by default in all non-google branded chromium builds, so anything chromium-based does NOT use it, unless they explicitly enable CBCM [3] tl;dr: chrome doesn't send the derived machine id anywhere unless it's a machine controlled by CBCM [1] source.chromium.org/chromium/chrom… [2] source.chromium.org/chromium/chrom… [3] source.chromium.org/chromium/chrom…
JFK Files@read_jfk_files

tfw you laugh at idiot Microsofty lusers being globally tracked by the NSA because their GUID is hardcoded inside their TPM, but then you suddenly remember Linux also has /etc/machine-id and you forgot to setup your init daemon to periodically truncate and regenerate a new machine-id so you can't also be tracked because you are pretty sure that Chrome is reading it and sending it to Google as harmless "user telemetry analytics." i stand by my claim that mf'er asshole Lennart Poettering really is the NSA's man on the inside on a mission to destroy Linux and install the NSA's backdoors through all his systemd slop

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wukko
wukko@uwukko·
you can switch to @heliumbrowser to make sure it's not processed locally in the first place :)
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Anthropic
Anthropic@AnthropicAI·
New Anthropic research: A global workspace in language models. Of everything happening in your brain right now, only a tiny fraction is consciously accessible—thoughts you can describe, hold in mind, and reason with. We found a strikingly similar divide inside Claude.
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Daniel Davis Deep Dive
Daniel Davis Deep Dive@DanielLDavis1·
Yeah, I mean it couldn’t be that Iran says those things because Israel and the United States have gone to war twice with Iran in the span of less than a year, and assassinated their leader, and assassinated their scientist before that, and destroyed one of their Embassy compounds before that. I mean, surely that has nothing to do with it, and it’s for no reason that they say death to Israel, right? 🤨
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇮🇷 If you're wondering why Israel sees Iran as a threat, here's your answer Mourners chanted "Death to America" and "Death to Israel" at Ayatollah Khamenei's funeral Source: Middle East Spectator / Writer: Ian

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Ethan
Ethan@boromeany·
@fincontrarian But it wasnt a zero day, the exploit on this signature scheme was known long ago. thorchain chose NOT to upgrade it
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fincontrarian
fincontrarian@fincontrarian·
🚨 THORChain Exploit simplified: An attacker spent 2.5 days quietly leaking pieces of validators’ private keys through 864 “failed” signing attempts — each one looking like normal network noise. Eventually they rebuilt a full key and drained ~$10M from one vault. The real story is the fix. Instead of patching over old tech, THORChain is retiring the vulnerable signing scheme entirely and moving to a fundamentally more resistant approach — plus new safeguards like anomaly detection for suspicious validator behavior and stronger validator trust/security models. This wasn’t sloppy code — it was a genuine cryptographic zero-day. The response doesn’t just fix THORChain; it sets a new bar for how decentralized networks everywhere should secure multi-party signing. 🛡️
THORChain@THORChain

THORChain Exploit Report #2 is now live. A detailed technical post-mortem covering how the May 15 incident unfolded, why it bypassed existing security mechanisms, and the protocol upgrades being implemented to strengthen THORChain's infrastructure going forward. blog.thorchain.org/thorchain-expl…

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VLAD HOSTS THE BEST PODCAST IN BITCOIN
Satoshi Nakamoto used clearnet IP address 68.164.57.219 as shows in Hal Finney’s logs this IP address points to a customer of Covad Communications in the Van Nuys / Los Angeles, California area 1h 20m away from Hal’s house So Satoshi couldn’t be Adam Back, Peter Todd, Len Sassaman, or any of the non-Californian resident Most likely it wasn’t Hal Finney either, as his coding style doesn’t match Satoshi’s and Hal came out as patronizing in some e-mail exchanges
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Tucker Goodrich
Tucker Goodrich@TuckerGoodrich·
My wife suffered from an autoimmune condition, fibromyalgia, for 30 years. She saw the best physicians and they were unable to do anything about it. She cured it in a few months by following my advice. You'd think this guy might be interested in that. Especially given work like this: “FFAs, including linoleic acid with refluxed bile acids were detected in the stomachs of the HFD-fed mice. In vitro, FFAs impaired mitochondrial function and decreased the viability of parietal cells. In vivo, linoleic acid-rich diet, but not stearic acid-rich diet induced parietal-cell loss and metaplastic changes in mice. “Fatty acids in a high-fat diet potentially induce gastric parietal-cell damage and metaplasia in mice” doi.org/10.1007/s00535… Oxidized linoleic acid is a well-recognized cause of immune cells attacking self. I've been posting about this for years.
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson

Bad news #1: I have an autoimmune disease. My stomach is eating itself. Bad news #2: 2–5% of people have this, too. Likely more, because it hides. Good news: I'm going to try and solve it. Will share all. As a kid, I ate sugar cereal, drank sugary soda, and gobbled down fast food. I had a few healthy years in my early 20s but then became a young father of three and began building a business. Juggling that stress and grind, I let my health slip and gained 40 lbs. Within a few years I’d fallen into a deep, chronic depression. Somewhere in that timeline, my body began developing an autoimmune process affecting my thyroid and then my stomach lining. It’s called Autoimmune Gastritis (AIG). My hypothyroidism got diagnosed when I was 21 years old with a routine blood draw. That enabled me to begin proactive management, supplementing levothyroxine and Armour Thyroid. They are the hormones my body should be producing on its own but wasn’t. By taking these pills daily, my body was able to operate as though my thyroid was functioning properly. What I didn’t know was that something else was going on inside my body: my stomach had begun attacking itself. But there was no routine test to find out and I didn’t have any symptoms. I just discovered it in May. I'm unsure how long I've had it. AIG causes irreversible damage: nutritional deficiency, anemia, and over a long horizon, elevated cancer risk. When AIG is discovered today, standard medical care concedes defeat, stating that nothing can be done except managing the condition, no matter how awful or lethal the effects. Looking back over the past few years, I can now see the early signals we were picking up in measurement but hadn’t connected the dots. For 11 years, I’ve had low ferritin, without anemia. We continually tried to raise my iron levels with food and supplementation but nothing would work. We chased the obvious solutions first. A plant-based diet means all my iron is the hard-to-absorb, non-heme kind. Hard training, sauna, and hyperbaric oxygen all raise the body's demand for iron. But none of them explained the core failure: despite me taking iron orally, trialing every formulation, and using every timing trick, none of the iron would stick. What I didn’t fully appreciate until recently is how many stones my previous providers had left unturned. The low ferritin kept getting explained away but not fixed. I overhauled my medical team earlier this year. It was the rebuild to lay the groundwork for Immortals Care, our $1M a year protocol. With greater capacity, we revisited everything. On the surface, my low ferritin was easy to dismiss by most standards of care. My hemoglobin and hematocrit were normal. Ferritin measures stored iron, while hemoglobin measures circulating iron, and because the body drains its reserves first to keep hemoglobin normal, you can be fully iron deficient with a perfectly normal hemoglobin and hematocrit. This is why my low ferritin kept getting dismissed: the numbers that define anemia looked fine, so no one asked why my iron reserves wouldn't refill. My team pressed on that question. They first turned to a colonoscopy. I was 48 years old and overdue. It was good health hygiene to have while also serving a specific purpose of searching for a hidden source of blood loss such as a polyp or even cancer in my bowels. Either one of those would be an explanation of why the iron kept disappearing. At the same time, they began connecting the dots. Iron absorption depends on stomach acid, so one theory was that my stomach acid was disrupted. They also knew that thyroid and stomach autoimmunity often travel together, so often that the pairing has a name: thyrogastric syndrome. Put against my 27+ year history of autoimmune thyroid disease, the pieces pointed to a single hypothesis: my own immune system was attacking my stomach. To our surprise, my colonoscopy came back clean. A perfectly healthy colon, better than 95% of colonoscopies of men, according to the gastroenterologist. That ruled out the first concern and worst possible outcome: slow continuous bleeding from colon cancer, or pre-cancerous polyp. My team had exercised great foresight though, anticipating this possible outcome. In addition to a colonoscopy, they’d ordered an upper endoscopy to be performed at the same time. The combined procedure is a bi-directional endoscopy. Probes would look at my entire intestinal tract, up from below and down the throat. Additionally, we had several blood biomarkers measured ahead of the procedure to try and pick up on any signals that would give the gastroenterologist guidance for what to look for while doing visual inspections. Fifteen minutes before the procedure, my blood results returned, finding elevated levels of anti-parietal-cells-antibodies (APCA). They came back at roughly five times the upper limit of normal (103, against a ceiling of 20 Units/mL). It was a positive result confirming the suspicion of AIG being the culprit behind my low ferritin, the other type of gastritis, driven by a bacterial infection, was already ruled out, as we knew I am negative to H. pylori. Even before this finding, my team had ordered five biopsies to be taken from three regions of my stomach. The biopsies were the critical piece. Had they not been ordered, the bi-directional endoscopy would have been completed and AIG remained undiagnosed as there were no visual signatures of the condition in my intestines. Two days later, the results of biopsies came in, showing clear signs of early autoimmune gastritis: early atrophy confined to the acid-producing lining, with the rest of the stomach still spared. My team had anticipated this, methodically tracing every line of evidence. We now had a formal diagnosis. I have autoimmune gastritis AIG. My stomach is eating itself. So this was never one problem. It was three, linked to one another: the iron deficiency, the autoimmune gastritis driving it, and the autoimmune thyroid disease alongside it. Iron and thyroid feed each other both ways, low iron impairs the conversion of thyroid hormone into its active form, and an under active thyroid impairs how the body uses iron. Each made the other harder to fix. Autoimmune gastritis affects an estimated 2–5% of people, and likely more, because it hides and is challenging to diagnose. It's usually silent for years, surfacing only once the stomach has atrophied enough to do real damage: iron deficiency first, then B12 deficiency, then anemia from both, and over a long horizon, raised stomach-cancer risk. In one study of people with precancerous gastric lesions, roughly 18% carried the autoimmune antibodies, and only about 1% had ever been diagnosed. And the earliest clue, low ferritin, is the one standard medicine waves through. Low iron stores get normalized and rarely investigated at all when anemia hasn't shown up yet. That blind spot is what hid mine for a decade. The good news: the iron deficiency is now corrected. I received a 1,000 mg Monoferric iron infusion. This was chosen for two reasons after considering multiple formulations. First, it can safely deliver a full dose of iron in a single infusion (1,000 mg), while older options like Venofer require several separate appointments to reach the same total. Second, certain other IV iron formulations can cause a drop in blood phosphate levels, an important mineral for bones and energy. Monoferric is much less likely to do this, which matters given how closely we track long-term metabolic and bone health parameters. As mentioned earlier, current medical standards treat AIG as something to be managed, not resolved. It's worth noting that many of you give me a hard time, inviting me to "live life" and engage in self-destructive behaviors like a "normal person". I'm cool with the playful ribbing. Also, had I not taken care of my health during the past five years, my situation could potentially be very serious. You too may have a lurking health issue that is undiagnosed and could increase in severity from unhealthy life choices, without your knowing. The absence of symptoms is not the presence of health. A gentle nudge that minding your health, no matter your situation in life, is good decision making. My team and I are going to try and solve my AIG. This is how we’re approaching it: First, routine monitoring keeps the disease in view: ferritin and iron, B12, the pepsinogen I/II ratio, gastrin, and chromogranin A. Gastrin is the dial to watch. If it climbs, the disease is advancing, and the risk of gastric neuroendocrine tumors climbs with it. Second, we’re doing advanced characterization of the disease. We’ll do a repeat biopsy to read the immune infiltrate, deep cytokine profiling, and T-cell subset analysis, to see which pathways are actually firing. That testing drives the intervention plan, including the experimental approaches we intend to develop. + If gastrin and chromogranin rise: damp the gastrin drive (netazepide) and tighten endoscopic surveillance. If the profile is Th1 / interferon-driven: target JAK/STAT. + If it's Th17 / IL-17-driven: target IL-17 and STAT3. + If regulatory T cells are failing: rebuild them (low-dose IL-2, induced Tregs). + If it's antibody- and B-cell-driven and antigen-specific: engineered cell therapy (CAAR-T). Which organizes into four tiers, from available today to frontier: Tier 1, now: protect and support; zinc-L-carnosine, and acid replacement (betaine HCl with pepsin) under physician supervision. This is specific to my case and not something to self-prescribe, especially given the cancer-surveillance considerations above. Tier 2, target the signaling , JAK/STAT, GSK-3, IL-17, and damp the gastrin drive (netazepide). Tier 3, reset the cells, induced regulatory T cells (iTregs). Tier 4, frontier: engineered T-cell therapy (CAR-T / CAAR-T), custom AI-designed antibodies, or synthetic proteins, that can specifically seek out inactivate or destroy the rogue immune cells attacking my stomach lining. To be clear: there's no approved cure for autoimmune gastritis today. Medicine treats it as something to manage, not solve. Tiers 2 through 4 are investigational preclinical evidence at best, and in several cases therapies that still have to be built. If you're working on autoimmune gastritis, antigen-specific tolerance, regulatory T cells, or CAAR-T for organ-specific autoimmunity, please reach out. Modern medicine has normalized too many conditions that erode our health, function, and comfort, shrinking the goal to monitoring and management while a cure is rarely even attempted. Most of these verdicts were handed down decades ago, in an era that predates nearly all of our current tech and science, and they have gone largely unchallenged. We want to change that. In the age of AI, multiomics, and custom-built DNA, proteins, and cells, no condition should be presumed incurable simply because no one has yet tried to cure it with today's stack. I’ll end on a personal note. We fill our days mostly on things that are trivial next to what we ultimately care about. We know, deep down, however, that in the noise of it all, health is easily forgotten until it’s the only thing that matters. We spend a fraction of our lives truly sober to the preciousness of life. We feel it when someone we love dies, when a child is born, when we come close to death ourselves, or when a diagnosis marks our limit. In those moments, we are sobered, and the rarity of it all becomes self evident. Imagine the existence we’d build together if that clarity didn’t fade. I wish all of you the very best. Care for yourself, care for others, care for the planet and care for our animal friends. Care for life as it’s the most precious gift there is.

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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
To find a hidden tumour, they inject you with radioactive sugar and photograph where it goes. It works, reliably, because the cancer drinks that glucose so greedily it flares up on the scan like a bonfire while the healthy tissue around it sits dark. The entire technology rests on one fact nobody says out loud in the room: the tumour runs on sugar, and it will outbid the rest of your body for every last gram of it. We have known about this appetite for the better part of a century. We built a vast imaging industry on the back of it. We use it today, in every major hospital, to hunt the disease down. Then, having located the cancer by following the sugar, they bring round the lunch trolley. White toast. Tinned fruit in syrup. A carton of juice, a biscuit, and a leaflet recommending plenty of wholesome carbohydrates to keep your strength up. We spend a fortune using sugar to find the thing. Then we sit the patient down and feed it. Read that twice.
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Ethan
Ethan@boromeany·
@xlab_os It’s a pity Golanf mentor handling is so inefficient
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Ethan@boromeany·
@mikealfred @IIICapital The mstr risk is if upset people can convince lawyers who can convince judges, that something is wrong. We all know Bitcoin will recover eventually, but can he weather the human storm meantime.
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Ethan
Ethan@boromeany·
@BrianRoemmele I think they know it cant be kept in a box, and they believe the value is more in the harness and the layers they can build on top of LLMs. x.com/PalantirTech/s…
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
Palantir is full on manifesto for opne source. They are one of us now. Join us. AI sovereignty for all. Or Anthropic.
Palantir@PalantirTech

Our thoughts on the importance of AI sovereignty. 1. Your AI sovereignty dictates your institution’s future. Sovereignty is the precondition for choice. Relinquishing sovereignty transfers the future choices of your institution to others, who are likely to exploit it for their gain and your loss. 2. Data retention is your treasure. Transfer it at your own peril. Your ability to win is dictated by your ability to recognize and use your unique edges, and you keep winning by compounding the underlying data to generate new insights. Transferring that data hands over access to your pre-existing winning plays and yields the means of production for new ones. 3. Tokenmaxxing hijacks your value orientation and decreases your institutional fortitude and intelligence. The pursuit of high token usage incentivizes disposable scripts over robust software — with the addictive feeling of false progress. There is a reason why those selling tokens refuse to charge based on value. 4. Controlling your weights is controlling your fate. Weights are the distilled form of hard-won, accumulated institutional knowledge. If you let others control your weights, you are allowing them to migrate the alpha of your business to theirs. 5. There is no contradiction between sovereignty and alpha. The architecture that maximally preserves sovereignty is one that enables institutions to own their tribal knowledge, and to compound it as alpha. 6. Politicizing the technical issues involving sovereignty is what your adversary wants. Techno-politicization is the wellspring of false sovereignty. Techno-politicization drives decisions that seem to reduce dependency, but ultimately limit agency — especially on the battlefield in the West. 7. Real expertise is existential. Allowing politics or favoritism to determine your technical decisions rewards whoever is best at politics, not whoever is right. Listen to those closest to the problems, not those speaking most compellingly about them. 8. Learn from institutions that are winning or that have consistently delivered. Institutions facing existential threats do not have the luxury of making technical decisions based on political preferences. 9. Only listen to institutions, countries, and people who have a proven record of being right. A track record of correctness is the best and only signal for future correctness. Judging something as right or wrong based on who you like is exceedingly misguided.

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