Dr. Jamas

1.2K posts

Dr. Jamas

Dr. Jamas

@dr_jamas

Husband, parent, 9-fingered wood worker, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Utah Jazz, golf, Led Zeppelin, MST3K

Katılım Nisan 2014
246 Takip Edilen75 Takipçiler
Al Kohal
Al Kohal@AlKohal·
@ManaByte I consider myself a die hard star wars fan, I've been at the first screening of EVERY new Star Wars film since Phantom Menace, FFS I named my kid Lucas for obvious reasons but even I have to admit the movie isn't very good. It's not god awful but it's just boring and pointless.
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Jeremy
Jeremy@ManaByte·
It’s wild watching the trade press and certain corners of film Twitter cover The Mandalorian and Grogu this weekend. Audiences are showing up, families are loving it, and the vibe leaving the theater is pure classic Star Wars fun. Yet, if you read the trades or the critical breakdowns, you’d think the sky was falling because it isn't hitting $200 million on a modest, highly responsible budget. There’s a very specific reason Hollywood and critics are so invested in wanting this movie to fail, and it has nothing to do with the actual quality on screen. For the past several years, the narrative has been that "the theater experience is dying" and that streaming platforms ruined the prestige of cinema. The Mandalorian and Grogu represents the ultimate test case: taking a massively successful streaming show and turning it back into a theatrical feature film. If it succeeds, it completely upends the traditional Hollywood hierarchy. It proves that streaming can be an incredibly effective farm system for big-screen blockbusters, and that audiences will buy a ticket to see characters they’ve already watched at home if they love them enough. But traditional trades and critics don't want that to be the future. They want a clear, rigid line between television and movies. So, because the film is tracking for a solid, profitable Memorial Day weekend instead of breaking all-time historical records, they’re framing it as a "diminished galaxy." They are treating a win like a loss because a win for Mando and Grogu means admitting the industry's old playbook is officially outdated. At the end of the day, Din Djarin said it best: "I can bring you in warm, or I can bring you in cold." Right now, audiences are bringing this movie in warm, no matter how cold the trades try to play it.
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Brooke Johnson
Brooke Johnson@BrookeJohnsonVO·
Not only am I successfully beating cancer’s ass I ALSO GRADUATED CUM LAUDE WITH A STEM DEGREE THIS PAST WEEKEND!!!
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Jody Genessy
Jody Genessy@DJJazzyJody·
Feels great to get back to the temple after three years with my son Ethan and his fiancée! The Syracuse Temple is beautiful.
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Reservation Ridge Rider
Reservation Ridge Rider@RsrvtionRidge·
If Utahns haven’t connected the dots yet, Jason Chaffetz post is pretty revelatory. November 2025 Jason Chaffetz joins American Global Strategies, a DC consulting firm specializing in AI, defense, etc. Per Kevin OLearys comments he has been working on this for 5 months. Per Chaffetzs post he was the one to brought the opportunity to his “friend”. Put those 2 together and we see Chaffetz brought this to OLeary late 2025. May 2026 the plan is revealed to the public. There is major local opposition. May 15 American Global Strategies publishes an article about how it is an AI race between us and China, directly mirroring the narrative that OLeary has been pushing: americanglobalstrategies.com/ai-american-po… May 15 Chaffetz posts a long message about how this data center is great. Doesn’t disclose any financial interest. O’Leary immediately reposts it and says how great it is that the project is gaining local support. @jasoninthehouse would you like to clarify if you are being paid to consult on this project as a member of American Global Strategies? Because it seems pretty obvious you got paid to post that.
Jason Chaffetz@jasoninthehouse

Data Center in Box Elder County I am fully supportive of the data center project in Box Elder County. When I first learned of the project, I had some of the same questions you might have. I, too, worry about people, water, power, the health of the Great Salt Lake, and why it would be good for Utah. I had an opportunity to meet with the people bringing the project here and to get those questions addressed. I was impressed by their answers so I introduced them to my friend, Kevin O’Leary, who later decided to move forward with the project. I believe it is going to a be huge net positive for the State of Utah. Here’s what was shared with me and why I’m excited about it: Energy · This project is not taking anything out of the existing power grid. · The price Utahns pay for power should not go up because of this development. · More than a decade ago, a 42” pipeline from Wyoming called the Ruby Pipeline, with Natural Gas, was constructed. It’s already there - permitted and installed underground. Regulatory standards are already in place at the state and federal level. · The data center may even feed surplus power back into the grid and other renewable power sources may be deployed. Water · When the developers put the private land under contract, they agreed to paying a premium price, multiple times greater than market rate for the area. They were candid about the potential. The project uses the existing private water rights that were in use by the previous landowners. · It doesn’t need additional water beyond what already belongs to that property. · The water they’ll be using currently does not feed into the Great Salt Lake. · There might be a net increase of water going into the Great Salt Lake by using the water supply and flowing it down to the Great Salt Lake rather than being used for agriculture. · The water available to that property is currently low quality and brackish. · Water put into the Great Salt Lake would need to be higher quality and treated. Those are the concerns. But what is most exciting are the opportunities. Tax revenue · The 40,000 acres was generating roughly $250,000 annually in taxes for Box Elder County. · When fully implemented, it’s anticipated the county will receive more than $100 million annually in tax revenue from those 40,000 acres. Today the Box Elder total budget is less than $80 million. · The state, via sales tax, will receive hundreds of millions of dollars annually when fully developed. All Utahns benefit from that. This is all new revenue to the state. HAFB · The proximity of the data center makes Hill Air Force Base (HAFB) a more attractive asset for the Pentagon. · That accessibility may protect Hill from future BRAC closure threats. In a rapidly changing world, data centers in the USA are safer for Americans. Having them in Utah helps with jobs, viability long-term for Hill, and providing a national security asset. · The data center supports the mission of both HAFB and the Utah Test & Training Range (UTTR). · ”Top of Utah” is heavily dependent on Hill for a whole ecosystem of jobs and businesses. Keeping our economy vibrant in northern Utah is an imperative. That’s good for Utah jobs (thousands of new jobs in Top of Utah), our economy, and national defense. We have to be able to process data. This facility will do so with minimal disruption to the taxpayers who benefit from it. It’s off the beaten path in an area that is hard to make productive. It will also bring additional private sector companies and advanced manufacturing our state can not support because our current energy supplies are not big enough. It can be done cleanly, supporting our state with jobs, revenue, and making Utah a leading place to do business while supporting our quality of life.

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Jason Chaffetz
Jason Chaffetz@jasoninthehouse·
I run a consulting business focused on bringing together good projects in areas I am passionate about-- public policy, energy, space, etc. I am glad I was able to play a small role in bringing this project to Utah because of all the reasons I explained previously. There are no more dots for you to connect. I helped connect the Utahns developing this project with KO and was happy to do so. Go America, Go Utah! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
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A Soldier's Whisper
A Soldier's Whisper@SoldiersWhisper·
“My son is currently on the 31st MEU heading to the strait of Hormuz.” -J. We all wish this Marine to stay safe. #USMC #Military
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Matt Hopkins
Matt Hopkins@matthopkins_·
what a bizarre response to sincere frustrations from a religious minority about factual misrepresentations of their faith and its leader in an article in your news outlet. Trying to draw categorical similarities between Matt Fradd and the authors of The Book of Mormon musical is intellectual malpractice and completely disingenuous. No wonder you guys are struggling. Try pursuing some intellectual honesty instead of trying to justify the mistake you made by bringing Matt Fradd onto your payroll.
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Jared Cook
Jared Cook@disrespecfool·
@Friedmanomics Not an LDS member myself, but my money isn’t needed to fund that content. I’m very engaged with the LDS community, and though I’m not a believer myself, I think DW should be focusing their derogatory efforts on those making the world worse rather than those that make it better.
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Milton Friedman Quotes
Milton Friedman Quotes@Friedmanomics·
It is such a sad day for me to cancel my Daily Wire subscription, but I cannot continue to fund the anti-Mormon content that they create.
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Dr. Jamas
Dr. Jamas@dr_jamas·
@ShabbosK @BlackBlessedLDS I’m having a real hard time with this article. I love Ben and the Daily Wire but this article left me scratching my head. Why would any of you tear down another group’s faith who are part of the conservative movement?
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Shabbos Kestenbaum
Shabbos Kestenbaum@ShabbosK·
Disappointed to see yet another act of normalization of Mormon hate within the Conservative movement. Leaving aside the religious bigotry, the LDS Church is the *MOST* Republican-leaning religious group in America. We should be thanking them, not mocking them.
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Miles Commodore
Miles Commodore@miles_commodore·
Who’s your favorite in this picture?
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Mark Milner
Mark Milner@Mark_Milner69·
@ClayTravis Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert being in the top 10 makes me have very little hope for this country.
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Clay Travis
Clay Travis@ClayTravis·
I’m the 26th most influential news person in the country according to this survey of American voters. Overrated? Underrated? Still haven’t played anybody? Sign of clear SEC bias? Debate, discuss.
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Dr. Jamas
Dr. Jamas@dr_jamas·
@ClayTravis Jimmy Kimmel? Influential news person? Give me a break. If you get your news from Jimmy Kimmel you’ve got problems.
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Dr. Jamas
Dr. Jamas@dr_jamas·
@DataRepublican You are so kind and we LOVE having you in our community. We need to be united in defense of all that is wholesome and good. God bless you good sister!
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DataRepublican (small r)
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican·
Utah is facing some real challenges right now. I'm not a member of the LDS, and I don't pretend to be. I see myself more as a sojourner in the Biblical sense... someone not born into the culture, but someone who has come to appreciate it deeply. From the outside, it's hard not to recognize what the LDS community has built. It is American: strong families, faith-centered living that's increasingly rare. My approach to Utah is simple. I try to live by the spirit of Mark 9:38–40. We may come from different backgrounds, but we can still stand together in our shared commitment to Jesus Christ. That also means being mindful of influences and agendas that pull us away from that foundation. And that includes @mormonweg .
Tyler Bowyer@tylerbowyer

Utah better get a handle on this stuff

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Victor Glover
Victor Glover@AstroVicGlover·
Home, again! Mission complete. I hope we glorified God, humanity, our families and our terrific teams a @NASA and @csa_asc. Time to share the good news!
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Dr. Jamas
Dr. Jamas@dr_jamas·
@miles_commodore It’s too bad that we can’t. I thought humor was such a great way to break down barriers. There’s nothing better to bring people together than humor and a little self deprecation
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Miles Commodore
Miles Commodore@miles_commodore·
Joking about race can be very hard for some people and I get that. For me I grew up on Sanford and Son, All in the Family, and The Jeffersons so I don’t buy into the PC crap of today. If you can’t handle it, that’s a personal problem.
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tiredofthebs
tiredofthebs@theuninfluencor·
My grandson just said to me .. “ we need to put this flag outside , so everyone will know , who we are with !!” God Bless America !!
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Thrilla the Gorilla
Thrilla the Gorilla@ThrillaRilla369·
We can now conclude that the “timeout” generation didn’t work out as well as the “ass-whooping” generation.
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Miles Commodore
Miles Commodore@miles_commodore·
I have mentioned before that my cousin was the fabulous Eartha Kitt. I had the pleasure of meeting her at a family reunion in Virginia when I was just a small child. It’s an honor to be related to her.
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