ForeignOrchid

9.9K posts

ForeignOrchid

ForeignOrchid

@foreignorchid

Family, Friends, and Curry is life. Web developer ( mostly Rails ) by trade.

Japan Katılım Eylül 2016
205 Takip Edilen54 Takipçiler
ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@PotatoMcWhiskey This is like saying the right ought to work with Fuentes. They're racist twats with barely 2 brain cells between them. If you need those folks to hold power, then you are not fit to govern.
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@politicalmath We might finally enjoy being caustic about the English and Germans together! :)
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PoIiMath
PoIiMath@politicalmath·
I'm glad to see US / Japan relations improve because of twitter memes Next stop is US / France. We have a lot in common. If we stopped being caustic jerks to each other for a little while, I think we would really enjoy being friendly jerks to each other x.com/magills_/statu…
Magills@magills_

The X timeline right now

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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@constans @razibkhan It's not as stark as with the others but the US is ahead of several places. In the G7 it seems only 2 have more. I think we need more but I think a lot of that has to do with domestic licensing, accreditation and costs than anything else.
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@neontaster Perhaps he means it as a compliment. Cousin marriages are desirable for some.
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Noam Blum
Noam Blum@neontaster·
Calling Jews inbred is the real philosemitism!
Noam Blum tweet media
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Jesse Singal
Jesse Singal@jessesingal·
Zionists planted Coleman Hughes in our media
Jesse Singal tweet media
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@lymanstoneky Perhaps this is a good thing. Knowing how big of a quagmire even this operation has been might discourage future acts and reorient US military spending to better innovations given our experience.
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@lymanstoneky I am really curious what modern warfare will look like and if the use of low-cost, mass manufactured drones, inevitably leads to a calculus change wherein civilian infrastructure ( drone component factories + shipping ) become more likely targets.
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@lymanstoneky Also, it is likely that as Autonomous cars become the strong/vast majority that congestion will alleviate as cars are more easily able to move in coordination. Similarly, it might help resolve the space constraints of parking minimums thus enabling "walkable" cities.
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Lyman Stone 石來民 🦬🦬🦬
I dislike the idea of a self driving car tax. Just apply congestion pricing generally!
Ben Southwood@bswud

We need a tax on self-driving cars. Beneath eight states of the American Great Plains lies the Ogallala Aquifer, one of the largest bodies of groundwater on Earth. For centuries, extraction was constrained by the modest capacities of wind and hand power. At that rate, this 'fossil water' resource was effectively limitless. Farmers could draw as much as they wanted without ever running it down. worksinprogress.co/issue/escaping… But in 1949 Colorado Farmer Frank Zybach invented centre-pivot irrigation. Combined with electricity and the centrifugal pump, farmers could now draw thousands of gallons per well per minute, enough to irrigate 40 acres at a time. Since then, the aquifer has gone down 10%, losing a Lake Erie's worth of water. It is down 50% in the dry parts, where it recharges just 0.02 inches per year. Without intervention, modern pumps will bring about the total end of irrigated farming in the arid parts of the Great Plains in 20-30 years. This is what I call the Ogallala Trap. Technological change can create a new tragedy of the commons. The telegraph enabled the destruction of the passenger pigeon; sonar, radar, and diesel enabled the industrial trawling that devastated the North Sea cod in a decade; chlorofluorocarbons came close to destroying the ozone layer. Self-driving cars are about to do the same thing to roads. When you can sleep, work, or drink with friends in a moving vehicle, you will take many more journeys by car. Roads, which are free at the point of use almost everywhere, will grind to a halt. People who have to go to the office or the hospital will be stuck sharing the road with people having beers, working remotely, and taking naps. There is a fix, but it depends on acting now, before autonomous vehicles go mainstream. Voters balk at being charged more for something they already depend on. The tax needs to come in as soon as possible. Waymos are already in dozens of cities and do millions of journeys per month. We have very little time left. If we want to save our roads from omnigridlock, we must introduce road pricing for autonomous vehicles.

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ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@dvassallo So you are saying its a shitty place to be for other reasons and this is just another minor hole in the boat? I'm not sure thats a winning message.
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Daniel Vassallo
Daniel Vassallo@dvassallo·
I don’t believe anyone is moving out of WA because of the millionaire tax: 1. The tax is almost certainly unconstitutional and will be struck down by the court 2. The governor hasn’t even signed it yet 3. Can be repealed by citizen initiative and voters have already voted against income tax 10 times, most recently in 2010 4. Even if it passes, it only takes effect in 2028 5. California, as almost every other state, has an even higher millionaire tax and it seems like plenty of millionaires stay there If you’re wealthy, why would you uproot your life and family on something that will very likely not happen and if it happens you have 2 years to react?
Caleb Hammer@sircalebhammer

Just after Washington State voted to approve a 9.9% "millionaire tax" on personal income over $1 million, Jeff Bezos, Howard Schultz, and tons fled. The impacts will be ENORMOUS. I gathered the facts, stories, and data and made this mini documentary: youtu.be/9Vg0-7c0J3g

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AG
AG@AGHamilton29·
The growing normalization of government-assisted suicides in places like Canada and Spain is horrific. There were 15,500 MAID suicides in Canada in 2023. That means a Canadian was nearly 3X more likely to die via a MAID suicide than an American from a gunshot that year.
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vittorio
vittorio@IterIntellectus·
ok so the rosie story was even more insane than it looked > be the australian tech guy who made a cancer vaccine for his dog > first try: genetic algorithms to design a new drug from scratch > works in simulation but would take years to test > second try: screen 1 million existing compounds against the mutation > two weeks of computation. find a perfect match > it's patented > patent holder says no to compassionate use > what_did_you_expect.jpg > spend two weeks just being with the dog > 2am idea: what if i just make a vaccine > chatgpt for pipeline, gemini for construct, grok for validation > 300 gigabytes of raw sequencing data to half a page of vaccine construct > university ethics approval would take until mid-2026 > dog doesn't have that long > panik > canine cancer expert connects him to a lab in queensland with existing approval > drive 14 hours to get there > inject > three weeks later the tumors swell. immune system swarming > six weeks later shrinking > two months later legs returning to normal > one mass doesn't respond > sequence it again > different cancer. the vaccine worked. the body grew a new tumor he's now building a company so every dog owner can do this he had the technology the whole time. he spent 18 months fighting for permission to use it
vittorio tweet media
Paul S. Conyngham@paul_conyngham

x.com/i/article/2036…

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ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
GitHub just living the dream right now
ThePrimeagen tweet media
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@mattyglesias I think it's more advice that young women should set an expectation for early marriage and family formation and screen out non matching men. That should alter the dynamics dating for men given women are normally in the lead. But of course there is a collective action problem.
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Matthew Yglesias
Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesias·
I’m curious about the woman-centric framing of all this social con messaging, is it the case that lots of twentysomething women are receiving marriage proposals from eligible men and turning them down? What’s the leverage point here?
Matthew Yglesias tweet media
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@The_Davos_Man Being an American he probably has a ton of student loan debt too. So not only is he fucked for the prison sentence he is fucked because the interest never stops accruing. But let's be honest, the twat probably has rich parents who coddled him.
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Kraut
Kraut@The_Davos_Man·
You're 20 years old, you are American, you learned to be fluent in a foreign language, you are a student abroad, and you decided to burn down a factory and now face 20 years in prison. What a spectacularly stupid way to ruin your life.
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ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@HannahDCox In what way? Is this rested in the Hormuz or in a sense that the regime at the end is still going to be the IRGC? Or is your conclusion based on some other factor?
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Hannah Cox
Hannah Cox@HannahDCox·
If your media isn’t telling you just how badly we are losing this conflict you need to get out of your echo chamber. This war shouldn’t have happened for a myriad of reasons, but most importantly it shouldn’t have happened because leadership had zero plan to win it.
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

I don't think people realize just how extraordinary what we're witnessing with Iran is. I was arguing with a dear journalist friend of mine yesterday who was telling me that Iran was winning, yes, but only on the strategic level, not tactically. The type of thing a skinny kid getting stuffed in lockers in highschool tells himself to make himself feel better: "These people will BEG to work for me in ten years. Everyone knows jocks peak in highschool. They'll literally beg." 😏 I think that's precisely wrong, and that's what makes the Iran war different. As of now, Iran is in fact holding its own tactically too. Think about other U.S. wars of aggression these past few decades. Take Vietnam, Afghanistan, Libya, Iraq, Serbia, etc. (the list is unfortunately very long). The pattern was roughly always the same with an immense power differential between aggressor and victim. These wars were, by and large, imperial: the empire attempting to crush a much weaker people whose only realistic recourse was guerrilla resistance. And that is when they actually had the will to resist: some - like Libya - barely even bothered, just resigning themselves to their fate (despite being, at the time, the richest country in Africa). As spectators of these wars, if you had any moral sense, the dominant emotion was a kind of helpless disgust: you were watching a giant stomp through someone else's house. Sure, the U.S. actually lost many - if not most - of these wars, famously replacing the Taliban with the Taliban or being expelled with their tail between their legs from Vietnam, but the power differential was no less real for it. It's just that power doesn't always guarantee victory: sometimes the giant can't kill everyone, and eventually tires of trying. But the “victories” won this way were always pyrrhic at best: the people endured, yes, but what they were left with was a country in ashes that takes decades to rebuild. Meanwhile, in the grand scheme of things, the giant walked away with little more than a bruised ego. Iran is - remarkably - proving to be an entirely different beast: when others were merely surviving a giant, Iran appears to be able to compete with one. What just happened over the past 48 hours is the best illustration of this. You had the President of the United States issue a formal ultimatum: reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours or we "obliterate" your power grid. Iran's response was essentially: we dare you, if you do this we'll make all your Gulf allies uninhabitable within a week. And, as we saw, Trump backed down: pretexting non-existent "VERY GOOD AND PRODUCTIVE CONVERSATIONS" with Iran, he said his ultimatum no-longer applied (or, rather, became 5 days). Adding he now envisaged the Strait of Hormuz being “jointly controlled by me and the Ayatollah.” To the amusement of Iran’s diplomacy (x.com/IraninSA/statu…). That, folks, is a textbook tactical victory. It is, remarkably, Iran demonstrating in this instance that it had escalation dominance over the United States of America. That is, the ability to credibly threaten consequences so severe that the US - for perhaps the first time since the Cold War - found it preferable to stand down. That's no skinny kid being locked in a locker dreaming of revenge fantasies. That's the kid grabbing the bully's wrist mid-shove and watching his face change. And it's not the only tactical victory in this war so far. Take the episode over the Israeli attack on Iran's South Pars gas facility. Iran had warned that if that happened U.S. allies in the region - including Israel - would face a symmetrical response. And they delivered: famously devastating Qatar's Ras Laffan facility - which produced roughly 20% of global LNG supply - and leading, according to Qatar themselves, to a $20 billion loss of annual revenue for the next 5 years (oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-…). Not only that but they also managed to hit Israel's Haifa refinery (aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/19…), one of the country's most strategic and protected sites. The result was Trump distancing himself from the South Pars attack, saying that Israel had "violently lashed out" unilaterally and that "NO MORE ATTACKS WILL BE MADE BY ISRAEL pertaining to this extremely important and valuable South Pars Field." Israel then said it wouldn't strike Iran energy sites anymore (bloomberg.com/news/articles/…). From where I stand, that's another tactical victory. It is, at least, Iran demonstrating that is can fight back **symmetrically** against the U.S. and its allies. Not through asymmetric resistance with IEDs hidden in the roadside or traps hidden in the jungle, but eye for eye, and against some of the most heavily protected sites on the U.S.'s side. That's qualitatively different from any other adversaries the U.S. has directly fought in recent wars. There's plenty more, such as the pretty relevant fact that Iran has gained control of the single most strategic energy chokepoint on earth and the U.S. is finding it impossible to break that control. To the point where Trump has been reduced to publicly begging China - of all countries - for help, which given Trump's ego mustn't have been easy to do. Only to be told no. By China. And by everyone else he asked. This is the topic of my latest article: how this is, in fact, the first genuine "multipolar war." First, in the narrow sense: because Iran is revealing itself to be a genuine pole of power - not a superpower, but an actor that cannot be submitted, which is all multipolarity is. And second, because the war itself is accelerating multipolarity everywhere else: the U.S. has never been more isolated, never looked weaker and its security guarantees have never been more hollow. In my article I lay out the full scoreboard - military, economic, political - and explain why this war has already changed the world, regardless of how it ends. Enjoy the read here: open.substack.com/pub/arnaudbert…

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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@yashar Most folks don't know what the JCPOA did. They will vaguely know a talking point about limiting nuclear development and then go "my guy negotiated it so it must be great!" Thus, when seeing a reasonable set of demands, conclude that this must be substantially similar.
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Yashar Ali 🐘
Yashar Ali 🐘@yashar·
No, he actually did not. Why are so many people getting the terms of the JCPOA wrong? It’s like some sort of psychosis. And I’m referring to the tweet everyone has been quote tweeting.
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@bendreyfuss The bed is like that to discourage the degenerates from fucking non-stop for 2 month. Sorry "artists".
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@billybinion Also, didn't she try to give away her assets to her kids to try to make herself judgement proof in a potential civil trial?
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Billy Binion
Billy Binion@billybinion·
Something else that’s flown under the radar: The family agrees Mary Lau should avoid prison. One of their few requests was that her license be permanently revoked. Seems like a reasonable ask after her driving killed four people. nytimes.com/2026/03/19/us/…
Billy Binion tweet media
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ForeignOrchid
ForeignOrchid@foreignorchid·
@ggreenwald Does a paramilitary group in Colombia have the right to attack Panama w/o risk? Does the Colombian government not have an obligation to stop such a paramilitary group lest the world recognize an end to defacto and then dejour sovereignty? Does Panama not have a right to respond?
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