Jim Cantrell

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Jim Cantrell

Jim Cantrell

@jamesncantrell

Building Machines, Building Companies, Racing Cars. Arizona Space Commissioner

Tucson AZ Katılım Temmuz 2010
1.3K Takip Edilen12.9K Takipçiler
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Jim Cantrell
Jim Cantrell@jamesncantrell·
The audiobook version of my book Breaking All The Rules is finally out on Audible. Pick up a copy now and learn how a ragtag bunch of aerospace engineers revolted against the establishment and created a whole new capitalistic movement in space! a.co/d/0itPeVlb
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Martha Bueno
Martha Bueno@BuenoForMiami·
What was the last war that was legitimately about “our freedoms”?
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇭🇺🇪🇺 EU ramps up “disinformation” controls before Hungary vote Brussels and major platforms like Meta have activated DSA tools just weeks before Hungary’s elections. The system coordinates with fact-checkers and NGOs to limit what it labels “controversial” content. This goes beyond disinformation, allowing Brussels to sideline dissent and shape political narratives. Why it matters: unelected EU bodies could end up influencing the outcome of a national election. Source: European Commission, Ansa It, MCC Brussels, Democracy Interference Observatory
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Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇭🇺 EXCLUSIVE BREAKING: FACEBOOK RESTRICTS ORBÁN POSTS WEEKS BEFORE HUNGARY’S ELECTION As Hungary heads toward a crucial April election, Facebook is reportedly restricting posts from the country’s Prime Minister. The move followed a call by an opposition party (Tisza Party) member, a former Meta employee, urging supporters to mass-report his content. Meanwhile, Tisza leader Péter Magyar has disproportionately high engagement figures, outperforming global figures, despite operating in a much smaller, language-limited country Péter also used a personal “professional mode” profile rather than a political page, contrary to Meta’s long-standing guidelines, potentially bypassing limits on political content. Questions are also emerging around how Meta moderates political content in Hungary. A regional Meta official has publicly shared positions aligned with mainstream European narratives, including pro-Ukraine messaging and content seen as anti-government in Hungary. If Hungary’s largest social platform keeps restricting Orbán’s content while opposition accounts seem inflated before the election, serious questions arise about free speech and democratic integrity. This requires an urgent investigation. I’ve seen political interference by social media companies in other countries, and I really hope this is not happening in Hungary.

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Stephen Fleming
Stephen Fleming@StephenFleming·
Helium, sulfur, fertilizer, pharmaceutical feedstocks… Maybe closing the Strait of Hormuz is a tricky three-cushion billiards shot to convince people that: 1) Globalization is bad, 2) Fragile multi-continental supply chains are bad, 3) Single-sourcing supply based purely on cost is bad, 4) For the U.S., hemispheric self-sufficiency with secure sea lines of communication is the way to go, 5) And we need a much bigger Navy and Merchant Marine to secure those SLOCs. cc @johnkonrad
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad

Let's unpack this.. What if the White House has no intention of reopening the Strait of Hormuz? What if this war is really about ships & tariffs? I had a long discussion with senior DOE official yesterday on background. I can’t share any details but it’s clear everyone’s Strait of Hormuz calculus is wrong. We need to go back to the drawing boards. That's it. That's the tweet. Now a hypothetical 🧵 with my personal thoughts.

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Mike Constantine
Mike Constantine@Moonpans·
Apollo 15 Lunar Rover Footage Upscaled and Interpolated to 60 FPS Incredible upscaled footage from onboard the Apollo 15 Lunar Rover captured by Jim Irwin using the 16mm DAC camera. This footage has been upscaled and Interpolated to 60 FPS and synchronised to the mission audio by Moonpans Original footage source: Apollo Flight Journal Full video in comments
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TheLastRefuge
TheLastRefuge@TheLastRefuge2·
She's part of the intelligence community (CIA) who manipulated and controlled election outcomes. That's the source of her projection.
Rapid Response 47@RapidResponse47

.@SenatorSlotkin: "Until I hear someone tell me that this man, President Trump, will actually allow us to have a free and fair election, there is zero trust here, and I cannot trust that he won't try and steal it — again!" Totally unhinged and detached from reality.

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Jim Cantrell
Jim Cantrell@jamesncantrell·
Yesterday marked the 100-year anniversary of the first ever launch of a liquid fueled rocket in 1926 — less than 23 years after the Wright Brothers first achieved air flight in 1903. American rocket engineer Dr. Robert Goddard was ridiculed in his time and failed miserably in raising money to pursue his dream of space flight (except for some small grants from the Smithsonian Institution and the Guggenheim Foundation, among others). When Dr. Goddard died in 1945, he knew his ideas had been validated with the German V-2’s first suborbital spaceflight in 1944 and had gotten the attention of the US government. He had good reason to believe the technology was on track to eventually achieve interplanetary range. However, Goddard had no way of knowing that the Soviet and American space programs would both rapidly draw on his work to place the first satellites in orbit (within 12 years of his death), the first humans in space (within 16 years), the first men on the Moon (within 24 years), and the first machines on other planets (within 25 years). As Newton once remarked, we stand on the shoulders of giants. We owe the technology of our present day and the opportunity to build upon it in our own time in large part to the innovation and ingenuity of prior generations. Notably, Goddard’s liquid-fueled rocket revolution — which began as a private effort in the 1920s (requiring no permission of government) and came to be the exclusive domain of superpowers starting in the 1940s — has come full circle in the decades since. The world’s most advanced and scalable rockets are once again built and operated by private interests; but now they fly to space in large volumes, reinventing the infrastructure of our planetary scale civilization as we prepare to spread out across our solar system. nationalgeographic.com/history/articl…
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Jim Cantrell
Jim Cantrell@jamesncantrell·
Life has improved for most people over the last several hundred years thanks to the vision and courage of a relatively small number of builders and risk takers who have competed for the rewards of serving their fellow human beings. Thanks to their effort and ingenuity, new technologies, companies, and industries have risen which have opened new frontiers, unleashed new abundance, and allowed free people to flourish. In contrast, others spend their lives overcome by envy — working to block the efforts of builders and loot the earnings of their productive neighbors. The world has always been this way. As has been said, it’s not so much a clash of “haves” and “have nots” but “doers” and “do-nots.” Some spin their wheels in righteous indignation at these gatekeepers, rent seekers, and opponents of progress; others put their heads down and build despite the obstacles. Our team at Phantom Space is made up of the latter sort. We have a vision to catalyze a vibrant digital ecosystem in space and are methodically working to execute on our roadmap to make it real. As ‘Reason’ magazine Contributing Editor J.D. Tuccille notes in his recent article on attempts to regulate the space frontier before it has fully opened, any opponent of progress who intends to assert an agenda beyond Earth will still have to “hitch a ride from a private space company.” reason.com/2026/03/13/in-…
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Jim Cantrell
Jim Cantrell@jamesncantrell·
@TonySeruga Shall we all take up donations to buy her a one way ticket there?
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Tony Seruga
Tony Seruga@TonySeruga·
Joy Reid: America is a Christian form of Iran and women may be better off there. What a retard!
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TheLastRefuge
TheLastRefuge@TheLastRefuge2·
Didn't True the Vote and Catherine Englebrecht expose this five years ago, report it to the FBI and then came under investigation for their information about it? If I'm not mistaken a judge even put them in jail over it.
Bannon’s WarRoom@Bannons_WarRoom

JOHN SOLOMON: Documents from Biden-era intelligence officials show China infiltrated voter data in 2020. The American people have been kept in the dark! Tomorrow we release the first story showing exactly what our government has been sitting on for nearly six years. @jsolomonReports

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johnny maga
johnny maga@johnnymaga·
Trump last night DJing on the patio at Mar-a-Lago right before he gave the orders to capture Maduro. Our President is a baller.
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Jim Cantrell
Jim Cantrell@jamesncantrell·
The Scots ….mad to the core … but mad with a definite flair and purpose!
Paul Rees. ex Rucksack.@HannahIamthest1

On this day in 1995, the last clan chief in history known to have led his men into battle died at the age of 83. Simon Fraser, the 15th Lord Lovat, was the Chief of Clan Fraser. He was the man Winston Churchill described, in a letter to Joseph Stalin, as “the mildest-mannered man that ever scuttled ship or cut a throat.” The Scottish Commando chief whom Hitler placed a 100,000 Reichsmark bounty on, dead or alive. He was a well respected man that already had a serious war record before D-Day. The night before D-Day, Lovat addressed his men. He closed with this: “A hundred years from now, your children’s children will say - they must have been giants in those days.” Then came June 6th, 1944. Sword Beach, Normandy. As Brigadier of the 1st Special Service Brigade, Lord Lovat waded ashore leading 3,000 commandos into hell. And behind him came the sound that made the whole scene unforgettable. The English War Office had strictly banned bagpipes in battle. They said it was too conspicuous. Too dangerous. Lovat brought his personal piper, Bill Millin, and gave the order: “Play us ashore.” When Millin hesitated, citing the regulations, Lovat smiled and replied: “Ah, but that’s the English War Office. You and I are both Scottish, and that doesn’t apply.” So Millin played Highland Laddie, The Road to the Isles, and All The Blue Bonnets Are Over the Border. Men fell around them. Bullets tore through the surf. The noise of artillery was deafening. And through it all, the unmistakable scream of the bagpipes. Captured German snipers later admitted they had Millin in their sights, but didn’t shoot him because they assumed he had gone completely mad. Lovat’s mission was to reach Pegasus Bridge, where British glider troops were desperately holding on. The schedule said 1pm. Lovat and his men fought their way off the beach and arrived at exactly 1:02 PM. He calmly walked up to the commanding officer under enemy fire and apologised for being two and a half minutes late. His commandos then marched across the bridge in the open. Lovat had ordered his men to wear their green berets instead of steel helmets, so the Germans would know exactly who was coming for them. Twelve men were shot through their berets that day. After that, they finally put their helmets on. But they held the bridge. For Clan Fraser, there was something almost mythic about it. Their ancestors had come from Normandy centuries earlier. Now their chief had led Highland soldiers back onto those same shores in one of the most decisive battles in modern history. Six days later, Lovat was given his last rites after being hit by friendly fire from a stray artillery shell. Against all odds, he survived. He returned home a hero. He went on to serve in Parliament, judge cattle internationally, and manage his massive 250,000-acre Highland estate. But his final years were marked by grief. Two of his sons died within weeks of each other in 1994. Beaufort Castle, his ancestral home, had to be sold that same year. When Lord Lovat died on 16 March 1995, an era died with him. Bill Millin later played at his funeral, bringing the story full circle. The last clan chief who went to war. The brigadier who brought bagpipes onto D-Day. The Highlander with a price on his head. Scotland does not produce many men like that ⚔️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
In late October 2001, a 30-year-old who had just been fired from his own company flew coach to Moscow to buy a nuclear missile. Elon Musk brought two people. Jim Cantrell, an aerospace consultant who had worked on a joint Mars balloon mission for the French Space Agency and the Soviet Union. And Adeo Ressi, his college roommate, who had spent the previous month compiling videos of rockets exploding and staging interventions with Musk’s friends to convince him to stop. The plan was to buy a refurbished intercontinental ballistic missile from a Russian company called ISC Kosmotras, gut it, fill it with seeds and nutrient gel, and land a greenhouse on Mars. The entire purpose was a publicity stunt to guilt NASA into funding a real mission. Musk had $180 million from selling PayPal and was willing to spend $20 to $30 million. The Russians quoted $8 million per missile. Musk offered $8 million for two. They laughed. One reportedly spit on him. He came back four months later, February 2002, bringing Michael Griffin, who would later become the head of NASA. Same result. The price kept climbing and the Russians wouldn’t close. On the flight home, Cantrell and Griffin called over the drink cart and started celebrating the fact that they’d made it out of Moscow in winter. Musk sat in front of them, silent, typing on his laptop. After a while he turned around and showed them a spreadsheet. He’d modeled the cost of manufacturing a rocket from scratch. Raw materials, he’d calculated, were about 3% of the typical launch price. The other 97% was margin, bureaucracy, and vertical integration that nobody had attempted. SpaceX incorporated March 14, 2002. First office: a 3,000-square-foot warehouse in El Segundo with a few cubicles. Musk put in $100 million of his own money and personally interviewed the first 3,000 employees. First rocket: Falcon 1, named after the Millennium Falcon. Target price to orbit: $6.9 million when the going rate started at $30 million. First launch, March 2006, failed 25 seconds in. Corroded fuel line nut. Second launch, March 2007, reached 180 miles altitude before the engine cut from fuel slosh. Third launch, August 2008, the first stage bumped the second stage after separation. Residual thrust. A fix that took one line of code. Three failures. Tesla hemorrhaging cash at the same time. Divorce proceedings. Musk later said he was waking from nightmares screaming. 2008 was the worst year of his life. The fourth rocket had no paying customer. Nobody wanted to fly on a vehicle that had exploded three times. The payload was a 364-pound aluminum dummy nicknamed RatSat, built from spare parts in the factory. Musk split his last $30 million between SpaceX and Tesla. If the rocket failed, both companies die. September 28, 2008. Falcon 1 reached orbit. First privately developed liquid-fuel rocket to do so. NASA called six weeks later with a $1.6 billion contract. Musk couldn’t hold the phone. He just said “I love you guys.” SpaceX is now valued at $1.25 trillion after the xAI merger, filing for an IPO targeting $1.75 trillion. It launched over 160 rockets in 2025, more than half of all orbital launches on Earth. Starlink has 9 million subscribers across 150 countries from nearly 10,000 satellites. Twenty-four years ago, his best friend made him watch compilation videos of rockets blowing up to convince him this was insane. He watched every one of them and flew to Moscow anyway.
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Teslaconomics@Teslaconomics

Happy 24th Birthday @SpaceX! 🚀 Exactly 24 years ago today - March 14, 2002 - Elon founded SpaceX. It only makes sense to now IPO the world’s most innovative company so any human can own a piece of this multiplanetary future! Ad Astra!

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Juanita Broaddrick
Juanita Broaddrick@atensnut·
This Sheriff has a sense of humor. 😂😂
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