Zachary Ross

4.3K posts

Zachary Ross

Zachary Ross

@cravenbrain

monoclonal nobody

Katılım Mart 2010
229 Takip Edilen124 Takipçiler
Zachary Ross retweetledi
Shining Science
Shining Science@ShiningScience·
🚨 Scientists discovered unusual black fungi growing inside the remains of Reactor No. 4 at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, one of the most radioactive environments on Earth. These fungi include species like Cladosporium sphaerospermum, Cryptococcus neoformans, and Wangiella dermatitidis, all known for their high melanin content. What makes these fungi remarkable is their ability to perform a process called radiosynthesis. Similar to how plants use sunlight for energy through photosynthesis, these fungi appear to use ionizing radiation. Their melanin pigment interacts with radiation and converts it into chemical energy, allowing them to grow even in extremely radioactive conditions. This phenomenon was studied in multiple experiments, including research published in 2007 in the journal PLoS One (Study on radiotropic fungi behavior). The findings showed that radiation exposure actually enhanced fungal growth, suggesting that these organisms are not just resistant but may actively benefit from radiation. The discovery has gained attention from organizations like NASA. Experiments conducted aboard the International Space Station in 2019 demonstrated that Cladosporium sphaerospermum could reduce radiation levels, supporting its potential use as a natural radiation shield for astronauts. This could be valuable for long-duration missions, such as travel to Mars. In addition to space applications, these fungi are also being explored for bioremediation. Their ability to absorb and interact with radiation makes them promising candidates for cleaning up radioactive waste sites and contaminated environments. Overall, this discovery highlights a rare and fascinating adaptation of life, showing that some organisms can not only survive but thrive in conditions once thought completely uninhabitable.
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Nazem Alkudsi
Nazem Alkudsi@LongArcNews·
We published the full analysis. The transmission chain — from Hormuz to fertiliser feedstock to grain prices to sovereign fiscal stress — mapped end to end. This is not a 6-week disruption. It is an 18-month repricing of the global food system. Read it here: nazem.substack.com/p/the-underwri… x.com/LongArcNews/st…
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Michael Green
Michael Green@profplum99·
100% correct
Jesús Fernández-Villaverde@JesusFerna7026

Every time I post about falling fertility, someone replies: “Great for the planet.” I understand the intuition, but it gets the economics almost exactly backwards. To be clear: I am not arguing for explosive population growth. A gentle decline or stabilization would be my first choice. The problem is that we are not heading toward a gentle decline. We are heading toward a collapse. And a collapse changes everything. Environmental protection behaves like a luxury good. As countries become richer, citizens demand cleaner air, cleaner water, and stronger climate policy. Prosperity creates both the willingness and the fiscal capacity to pay for these goods. This is not a theoretical curiosity. The modern environmental movement was born in California in the 1960s, when the state was among the richest in the richest country on earth. That was no coincidence. You need to be prosperous before you start worrying about the spotted owl. A sustained fertility collapse works in the opposite direction. As populations age, pension and healthcare costs rise while the tax base shrinks. Governments under that kind of fiscal pressure protect mandatory spending first because that is what voters scream about (I am from Europe, and I can tell you this is the case with 100% certainty). Environmental investment, which is largely discretionary, is the easiest to postpone. And it will be postponed, particularly in middle- and low-income countries. Environmental policy is not a costless virtue. It requires administrative capacity, long planning horizons, and resources. Lots of resources. Decarbonization alone demands trillions in public and private investment over the coming decades. Where will that money come from if the working-age population is shrinking and the dependency ratio is exploding? If demographic collapse erodes prosperity and fiscal space, and the evidence strongly suggests it will, it will not increase environmental investment. It will make it harder to sustain. So, if you care about the environment, I am sorry, but what is happening with fertility right now is terrible news.

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Zachary Ross
Zachary Ross@cravenbrain·
@DarioAmodei You ought to cite Richard Brautigan, and maybe Adam Curtis too.
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Dario Amodei
Dario Amodei@DarioAmodei·
It's a companion to Machines of Loving Grace, an essay I wrote over a year ago, which focused on what powerful AI could achieve if we get it right: darioamodei.com/essay/machines…
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Dario Amodei
Dario Amodei@DarioAmodei·
The Adolescence of Technology: an essay on the risks posed by powerful AI to national security, economies and democracy—and how we can defend against them: darioamodei.com/essay/the-adol…
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🧬Craig Brockie
🧬Craig Brockie@CraigBrockie·
Scientists just cracked the multiple sclerosis code after decades of searching. Two specific gut bacteria are triggering the disease, and they've proven it using identical twins and mice. This changes everything we know about MS:
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BaseballHistoryNut
BaseballHistoryNut@nut_history·
After being thrown at, Lenny Randle drops the perfect bunt so he can absolutely destroy the pitcher
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Michael Green
Michael Green@profplum99·
@barryknapp I am not amazed. I have discovered over the years that first they mock you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, and then you win. My original research shows this to be true.
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Michael Green
Michael Green@profplum99·
“Away from the lifeboats, you heathens… there are gentlemen who need to disembark!”
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Alex Johnson
Alex Johnson@AlexH_Johnson·
Holy fuck.
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Nate Friedman
Nate Friedman@NateFriedman97·
I asked Curtis Sliwa "are you okay with losing and knowing you contributed to Mamdani's victory?" I did my best to relay the concerns of capitalist america and used @BillAckman's tweet as a reference "a vote for Curtis Sliwa is a vote for Zohran Mamdani" This was Sliwa's response.
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Adam Butler
Adam Butler@GestaltU·
Here’s a hard truth about modern society. We don’t practice Capitalism anymore. Rather, for the last 40 years we’ve been conducting a horrific experiment called “neoliberalism”. And we’re near the terminal point in that experiment, a stage I’ve been calling metastatic market fundamentalism. Capitalism is agents organizing to seek profit by serving the needs and wants of customers. Metastatic market fundamentalism treats citizens as feedstock for corporate profits. Social media is a canonical example. It’s established fact that Twitter, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram etc. algorithms, which are tuned to maximize advertising revenues via limbic activation, and produce political division and derangement, depression, and a host of other problems. But regulating against these algorithms might impair corporate profits, so America doesn’t regulate them. Because the system isn’t designed to protect the rights of Americans to not be exploited by corporations for profit. The system is to designed to protect corporations’ rights to extract maximum profit from citizens. This is pathological sociopathy at societal scale. I adore Capitalism. It’s a truly miraculous tool, but shouldn't be used to solve all problems. Take science: it is unequivocally the optimal way to seek empirical truth and model reality. But science can't address which questions are worth asking, or what priorities are most important to citizens under resource constraints. Similarly with Capitalism. It is an unparalleled engine for allocating resources and commercializing innovation, but it is a terrible arbiter of human values. When we ask the market to decide what constitutes a good life or a just society, it defaults to the only answer it knows: whatever is most profitable. That is the metastatic cancer. A functional society knows when to invoke science, or capitalism, or democracy, or the judicial process, or the deliberative bodies that define its public good. The central challenge of governance is to protect the sovereignty of each institutional sphere, ensuring that the logic of the marketplace does not set the curriculum for our schools, write the laws for our courts, or determine the mission of our hospitals. So here’s where we are: We built the most powerful resource allocation machine in history, then let it allocate us. We became the resource. The product. The feedstock. If you think I’m being dramatic, ask yourself - when did we last make a major policy decision that hurt corporate profits but helped actual humans? That silence you hear? That’s the cancer winning.
Adam Butler@GestaltU

Guys. Nobody is trying to radicalize us. There is no conspiracy here. Everything can be explained by the following observation: 🔥Radicalization is the most profitable business model on earth, practiced by the most profitable companies on earth.🔥 Look no further.

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Josh Crumb 🆔++
Josh Crumb 🆔++@JoshCrumb·
Always even. 中 10mm. 100mm. 1B. The tasks Abaxx was executing in April were difficult, time consuming, often frustrating, many things out of our timeline and control, with painful daily trading reports with a bunch of 0s on the score board 10 months in, cash getting tight. Then sometimes all starts snapping into to place…but we’ve always been making progress. Every week, every quarter. The pace and execution really hasn’t changed. Nothing has really changed since April. And the next 10 months will probably feel slower and more difficult than we’d like as well. We work on hard things, on valuable things, lots out of our control, but we never quit. Work on the biggest targets, hire the best people. Just execute and never quit. The hardest part is the patience (and sometimes looking at a near-meaningless stock chart that has never priced or reflected the potential we set for ourselves). #PlanYourMineMineYourPlan #29ers $ABXX
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Michael Harriot
Michael Harriot@michaelharriot·
Literally none of this is true. By now, it has become apparent that this man is much dumber than people initially thought, but here is why this specific act of ignorance is so common. A thread.
Elon Musk@elonmusk

Slavery was standard practice throughout Earth until it was almost entirely ended principally by Anglo-American forces in the 19th and 20th centuries. Slavery still exists in some parts of the world btw. I’m not suggesting Britain was purely angelic, but, nonetheless, this is true.

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Ben Hunt
Ben Hunt@EpsilonTheory·
Epstein case is now closed and sealed. "It is the determination of the Dept. of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation that no further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted." Once more, then never again. But it must be said. Burn. It. The. Fuck. Down.
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