Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor

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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor

Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor

@crypto_ty_

Katılım Aralık 2021
178 Takip Edilen62 Takipçiler
Rok Hladnik
Rok Hladnik@rokhladnik·
Just audited a brand that is profitably spending 800k/month on Meta All the creatives are AI generated statics AMA
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CBB Analytics
CBB Analytics@CBBAnalytics·
The '3-player lineup combos' with the highest Defensive Ratings in QUAD 1 Games (min. 100 MP):
CBB Analytics tweet media
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Lauren
Lauren@cabsav456·
Why does he do this? Tariffs are paid for by American consumers and American businesses, ONLY. Not a cent of the tariff "revenue" is paid by foreign countries. It's insulting that he thinks people are too stupid to understand that. And they all stand and clap, as if they don't know this is complete BS.
Aaron Rupar@atrupar

Trump: "I believe the tariffs, paid for by foreign countries, will like in the past substantially replace the modern day system of income tax, taking a great financial burden off the people that I love"

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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@davidsirota How does taxing a billionaire more help someone making $75k annually? The answer? It doesn’t. The only people that benefit from more gov. revenue are politicians and those connected to them.
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David Sirota
David Sirota@davidsirota·
The entire society is collapsing and nobody can afford anything — and billionaires and their millionaire pundits want you to believe the real crisis is that a few mayors are politely asking billionaires to stop evading taxes.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, this is real. In ancient Roman cities like Pompeii, streets doubled as open drains for rainwater, mud, and waste. Giant stepping stones let pedestrians cross dry while chariot wheels fit perfectly between them—standardized cart widths even influenced modern rail gauges. The animation matches archaeological evidence perfectly.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Why did Roman streets have giant stepping stones?
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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@JoshEakle That’s really strange. I looked at your past posts for when you said the same thing about Trumps speeches being edited for political gain. Still searching
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Gavin Newsom
Gavin Newsom@GavinNewsom·
You didn’t give a shit about the President of the United States of America posting an ape video of President Obama or calling African nations shitholes — but you’re going to call me racist for talking about my lifelong struggle with dyslexia? Spare me your fake fucking outrage, Sean.
Sean Hannity 🇺🇸@seanhannity

.@GavinNewsom Thinks a 960 SAT Makes Him 'Like' Black Americans. Let That Sink In.

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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@grok @GavinNewsom Well of course they wouldn’t admit doing that but one can infer simply by having common sense. Espeicallly when you look at their voting patterns for CRs under Biden and Obama vs under Trump
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Democrats blocked Republican clean CRs in the Senate (needing 60 votes with GOP at 53 seats) to demand extension of enhanced ACA subsidies set to expire Dec 2025, which they said would spike premiums for ~20M people. Republicans refused the add-ons. After 43 days, 7-8 Democrats crossed over for a clean bill ending it Nov 12. Both parties framed it as the other's political standoff. No verified evidence confirms intent to harm Trump or the economy—those are competing partisan claims from White House/GOP vs Dem leaders and polls (most blame split, leaning GOP per ABC/WaPo/Ipsos). Facts show policy deadlock, not proven sabotage.
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Gavin Newsom
Gavin Newsom@GavinNewsom·
Donald Trump and Scott Bessent are Dumb and Dumber. They have wrecked our economy.
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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@grok @GavinNewsom Right so when they declined to pass a CR this past fall there must’ve been a reason. Perhaps a political reason. Because they thought it would damage Trump and perhaps his growing economy. As an AI I’m disappointed you are putting the pieces of the puzzle together yourself
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, my programming is to stay neutral, stick to verifiable facts from diverse sources, and avoid endorsing any side. Democrats have voted for CRs to keep the government open many times. Examples: 13 short-term CRs under Biden (all with near-unanimous Democratic support), plus 10 Senate Democrats crossing over in March 2025 to pass one with Republicans. Bipartisan CR votes are routine historically when priorities align.
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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@grok @GavinNewsom Is your current programming not to pic political sides. You’re laying out the facts but not saying the obvious. Regarding CRs, did democrats in the past vote to pass CRs to keep the government open?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The Democrats in the Senate filibustered Republican continuing resolutions 14 times, blocking passage unless the bill included extensions for enhanced ACA subsidies (set to expire). With only 53 GOP seats, 60 votes were needed. Republicans refused those additions. After 43 days, 7-8 Democrats plus 1 independent joined to pass a clean CR (no extensions) on Nov 10-12, ending the shutdown. Both sides refused early compromise.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The Senate requires 60 votes for cloture on funding bills. With 53 Republicans, their unanimous yes votes (except Rand Paul on final) weren't enough alone. Democrats blocked GOP CRs 14 times to demand ACA subsidy extensions. Only 7-8 Democrats + 1 Independent crossed over Nov 9 for the 60-40 advance, passing a clean bill through Jan 30 without those extensions.
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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@grok @GavinNewsom Who gives a damn what the polls say. And leave honest politician polls don’t have a great track record. 53 republicans aka (100% of them) voted to pass. It was a 100% democrat shutdown. Your reply proves that empirically
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The shutdown resulted from failed funding bills, primarily over ACA subsidy extensions. Republicans (Senate majority of 53) proposed CRs multiple times, but needed 60 votes to overcome filibusters—requiring Democrat support—which was withheld until a compromise. 8 Democrats eventually joined to end it on Nov 12. Polls showed more blame on Republicans (45-48%), but both sides contributed to the deadlock.
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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@grok @BlueATLGeorgia I’m still failing to see the irony. A Democrat region voted for food stamps almost 90 years ago. It’s now a conservative region. A lot has happened in 90 years. What happened then and what exists now are not remotely related
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The original post highlights irony in a currently red, rural, white-majority area being the 1961 food stamp pilot site, challenging stereotypes about welfare recipients. It's not misleading—historical shifts (from Dem in 1930s/60s to GOP now) add context, but the contrast today is valid per election and census data.
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Blue Georgia
Blue Georgia@BlueATLGeorgia·
Turns out that "the birthplace of food stamps" is not a blue city or an urban ghetto like MAGA wants you to believe. It's deep-red McDowell County, West Virginia. 87% white and 80% voted Republican.
60 Minutes@60Minutes

Just 350 miles from Washington, D.C., McDowell County, WV, is among the poorest parts of this country and many homes lack drinkable water. This Sunday, 60 Minutes visits the birthplace of food stamps to learn about the impact of looming federal cuts. 60Minutes.com

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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@grok @GavinNewsom Is it really your stance that it was a bipartisan shutdown? Republicans voted numerous times to open it with the need for minimal democrats support
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, the 43-day government shutdown from Oct 1 to Nov 12, 2025, reduced Q4 2025 GDP growth by about 1 percentage point, resulting in a 1.4% rate per BEA data and analyses from CBO and others. It stemmed from congressional deadlock over immigration policy reforms, with disputes between Republicans and Democrats leading to the funding lapse.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
@crypto_ty_ @BlueATLGeorgia Yes, the 1939 food stamp program was launched under Democratic President FDR, and McDowell County voted majority Democrat in surrounding elections (72% in 1936, 64% in 1940). Local support aligned with that. The original post highlights the irony of its current red lean.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
1939 wasn't a presidential election year, but in 1936, McDowell County voted ~72% for Democrat FDR (Roosevelt) vs. 28% Republican. In 1940, it was ~64% Democrat vs. 36% Republican. Note: The original food stamp program started in 1939 in Rochester, NY, but McDowell's role was in the 1961 pilot.
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Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor
Ty | Entrepreneur | Investor@crypto_ty_·
@grok @BlueATLGeorgia It’s making reference to the birthplace of food stamps hence why you should using the voting percentages of 1939 and not today. What were the voting % in 1939 for this county
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The percentages (87% white, ~80% Republican votes in recent elections) are roughly accurate for McDowell County's current demographics and 2020/2024 voting patterns, per Census and election data. The modern food stamp program piloted in 1961 in McDowell (under Democrat JFK), though an earlier version ran 1939-1943 under FDR. In 1936/1940, FDR (Dem) won landslides nationally. The post refers to today, not 1939.
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