David Lee YL
2.9K posts

David Lee YL
@David_Lee
Achieving meta based on 1st principles… ⏳




Very important spot for $TSLA 🚨 I’m still out of my position, and in last night’s video we broke down this exact resistance level and what needs to happen next. I want to see that level get swept and short-term structure break before I touch it again.


🇪🇺 No Gas, No Oil, No Problem: "The cheapest energy is the one you don't use." Ursula von der Leyen suggests going greener and renovating buildings to reduce energy requirements. She wants to respect consumer choice … so how about buying Russian gas so the industry will survive? How about this consumer choice? So that Europe survives as an industrial wealthy region?



The Strait of Hormuz is blockaded. Europe's plan? Ursula von der Leyen: "The cheapest energy is the one you don't use." Stay home, don't drive, don't use electricity. The EU has no plan and no military to change do anything. So they are stuck with "monitoring the situation"


Clip from our FSD 14.3 Manhattan run highlighting the impressive 20% faster reaction time. We could only see a plume of steam — the blocked lane ahead was completely hidden from our view and the Yellow Cab in front. Yet FSD detected the issue much earlier and began reacting smoothly and proactively. This update is bringing a noticeable improvement in early decision-making throughout the drive. Really impressive progress! If you missed the fill video - link is in the first comment.



I welcome the two-week ceasefire the US and Iran agreed last night. It brings much-needed de-escalation. I thank Pakistan for its mediation. Now it is crucial that negotiations for an enduring solution to this conflict continue. We will continue coordinating with our partners to this end.









Europe’s elites have cast airs for a long time about their supposed sophistication and erudition, a continent of great wisdom versus the wild, yahoo world of America. Europe truly is the font of immense knowledge, and is the foundation of US culture and thought. Anyone who ignores the history of Europe in America does so to their peril. But in my dealings with European diplomats and elites, I found some exceptional thinkers indeed, but overall I was struck how undeveloped and uninformed much of their thinking was in terms of history or ideas, and often even in technical knowledge of the issues at hand. As much as I sparred with my State Department colleagues, they were generally far better educated and informed than their European counterparts. This touches the essence of Europe’s misunderstanding of the U.S. borne of their haughtiness. We are a wild, unharnessed nation. But we are educated. We were largely universally literate in colonial times when majority of Europeans remained illiterate, a fact of which not only Europeans but most Americans are unaware. When ideas come to American shores, we lasso them, play with them, give them vast new dimensions and send them back to Europe. We are a nation born of both great historic knowledge from our European heritage but also Biblical knowledge, which is also a rich source of philosophical and historical insight. We truly do rest on the pillars of Rome, Jerusalem and Athens. And the haughtiness of European elites that closed their minds was contrast with the sense of humility that often is accompanied by a deep curiosity. Americans, precisely because they always felt they did not know enough, relentless tapped into curiosity to insatiably learn more and more. And if there is one thing that worries me about American culture more than anything else these days, it is not the breakdown in values or even knowledge. Those can be reacquired quickly by preservation of texts and learning. What worries me far more is the slow adoption, especially among the younger one gets, of a European sense of haughtiness, absoluteness and certainty. This closing of the mind is anchored to a sense of having figured it out rather than a constant humility and the deep curiosity and thirst for knowing more that came with it. Once rooted, that corrosive decline not in knowledge but attitude is hard to reverse.



