Jann Breslin

796 posts

Jann Breslin

Jann Breslin

@jannz77

Katılım Kasım 2009
238 Takip Edilen245 Takipçiler
Mary Talley Bowden MD
Mary Talley Bowden MD@MaryBowdenMD·
4 years later and the body is still producing antibodies at 10x the normal rate? The data is clear, but the explanation is missing. It’s time for some honest answers.
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Jann Breslin
Jann Breslin@jannz77·
Thank you for sharing your “ insiders” experience . I hope your describing this journey of HOW and WHY you were able to see the truth / facts more accurately will inspire other medical professionals to reconsider their thinking on their vaccine position and their COVID response. I’m fairly certain you are not alone with how you were trained to accept what we were all being told… you’re just brave and honest to share your experience. Hope it inspires others to do the same.
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Katy Talento
Katy Talento@KatyTalento·
@delbigtree You’re my hero, Del, thank YOU for your work that opened my eyes, one step at a time.
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msv
msv@memeAverse99·
@jannz77 @MaryBowdenMD Look up Michael Campbell's utube channel - he has extensive reporting on why spike attacks randomly, over extended period and is able to reproduce or cause turbo cancers. This technology is a complex bioweapon system !
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Lori Mills
Lori Mills@LoriMills4CA42·
Vote differently California
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SourceAnonymous
SourceAnonymous@mooniep62·
@HarmeetKDhillon Love this. Newer to fair isle. Thanks for the tip. Currently knitting a poncho with gorgeous merino wool…
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Harmeet K. Dhillon
Harmeet K. Dhillon@HarmeetKDhillon·
How I handle rapid color changes and reduce bulk in fair isle/stranded knitting. I wet-splice the ends together after tearing an inch or less short of one of the two plies. Then wrap the ends around and double them back and friction-felt the loose ends in a Russian join. Voilà!
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Shanna Carroll
Shanna Carroll@ShannaCarroll80·
They should be held accountable and brought to justice. My daughter was 17. She had been selected for a school trip from July 9 to July 22, where the vaccine was mandatory. She was the only one in our family who received it, despite our pleas not to. She was vaccinated on June 7 and again on June 28, 2022. She left for her trip, and on July 18, she texted me that she felt unwell. We immediately drove from Michigan to New York to bring her home. We arrived the next day, which happened to be our three-year-old’s birthday. We celebrated with cake and ice cream, and Aubrynn and I shared some soup before she went to bed. The following morning, I took her to urgent care. We waited for hours, and she managed to sit up and ask, “Did they call me yet?” Before we knew it, she collapsed from cardiac arrest. She was airlifted to Children’s Hospital, placed on an ECMO machine, and treated with Remdesivir. Her limbs began turning black from lack of blood flow, infections spread, and her kidneys failed. On August 6, the doctors informed us that nothing more could be done and that we needed to turn off the machines. We had to let her go
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John Kennedy
John Kennedy@SenJohnKennedy·
My reaction to the news about Dr. Fauci and his minions? We’re going to have to get some new conspiracy theories, because all the old ones turned out to be true.
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Learn Something
Learn Something@cooltechtipz·
A dog quickly learns to ring a bell for treats by copying its owner.
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Jann Breslin
Jann Breslin@jannz77·
@bungarsargon @Timcast Thank you for exposing this … I don’t think anyone has ever questioned HOW and WHAT data are collected…. and then used as “ supporting evidence “.
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Batya Ungar-Sargon
Batya Ungar-Sargon@bungarsargon·
No, both sides aren't equally responsible for political violence. The media loves sharing graphs and "data" showing the Right is more violent than the Left, but the organizations producing that data are cooking the books so they can smear the Right with the Left's crimes.
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Katie Pavlich
Katie Pavlich@KatiePavlich·
A few weeks ago, I spoke with @neuralink patient Brad Smith. Now meet Alex Conley @Bcidesign, who is getting his life back thanks to his brain implant. Absolutely remarkable! He wants to meet you @elonmusk 🚀
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Joe Rogan Podcast News
Joe Rogan Podcast News@joeroganhq·
Dr. Kelly Victory: "What we were taught about vaccines simply isn’t the case. You need to look at the timeline of polio… cases had clearly dropped to very, very low."
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Patrick Bet-David
Patrick Bet-David@patrickbetdavid·
Good times last night at the Daddy daughter dance. 🕺🏾 💃
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Jason R. Williams, MD, DABR
Jason R. Williams, MD, DABR@jasonwilliamsmd·
A patient with stage four cancer doesn't have the luxury of waiting for the evidence timeline to close. A regulator doesn't have the luxury of approving therapies that haven't been proven. Both positions are correct in isolation. The problem is that the system was never designed for a field that now moves faster than the regulatory framework built to oversee it. Dr. Goodyear's point is the one most people in oncology avoid saying out loud: we need innovation in how we regulate as urgently as we need innovation in what we regulate.
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Jann Breslin
Jann Breslin@jannz77·
@theallinpod Interested if/where glyphosate ranked in the study Frieberg highlighted…. It has to be in the list … it’s been detected in people’s urine.
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The All-In Podcast
The All-In Podcast@theallinpod·
POD UP! Core four is back 🚨 Big show: -- SpaceX-Cursor deal, using compute as leverage -- SaaS debt bomb coming to PE?, venture debt risk -- Software bloodbath, buy low potential? -- New Apple CEO: future of the company -- SPLC indictment, major allegations, out of control NGOs -- Science Corner returns! Colon cancer cause discovered? (0:00) Bestie intros! (4:55) SpaceX-Cursor deal, compute as leverage (18:33) SaaS bloodbath, debt bomb incoming, buy the dip? (46:20) New Apple CEO: John Ternus succeeds Tim Cook, what's next for Apple? (1:00:32) SPLC indictment, out of control NGOs (1:19:03) Science Corner: Potential cause discovered for colon cancer spike in young people
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Jann Breslin
Jann Breslin@jannz77·
Since this is what we use I asked Grok about using Geothermal for cooling data centers. Grok: **Geothermal-type (or ground-source) cooling systems for data centers** are a promising alternative to traditional evaporative cooling towers. They leverage the Earth's stable underground temperatures (typically around 50–60°F/10–15°C at moderate depths) as a heat sink or source, dramatically reducing or eliminating water consumption through evaporation. ### How Geothermal Cooling Works in Data Centers - **Closed-loop ground-source systems**: A fluid (usually water mixed with antifreeze or a similar heat transfer fluid) circulates through sealed pipes or boreholes buried deep in the ground (vertical loops) or laid out horizontally. The fluid absorbs heat from the data center's servers (often via heat exchangers or liquid cooling loops) and rejects it into the cooler ground. The ground acts as a thermal battery, dissipating the heat naturally. No direct exposure to air means **minimal to no evaporation**. - **Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage (ATES) or similar open/hybrid variants**: Cold water is drawn from underground aquifers, lakes (e.g., deep lake water cooling), or abandoned mines, used to absorb heat, and then returned to the source. The water is not "consumed" via evaporation—it is returned, often at a slightly warmer temperature that dissipates naturally. - **Cold Underground Thermal Energy Storage (UTES)**: Off-peak energy creates a "cold reserve" underground for later use during peak cooling demand. These can pair with **liquid cooling** (direct-to-chip or immersion) for high-density AI workloads or serve as part of hybrid setups with air cooling. ### Water Usage: Minimal and Not Subject to Heavy Evaporation/Blowdown Unlike evaporative systems: - **No significant evaporation losses** — The primary water "use" is the initial fill of the closed-loop system. Ongoing makeup is only needed for minor leaks or minor losses (often negligible over time). Studies and operators note that closed-loop geothermal makes ongoing water consumption **very low or near-zero**, far below traditional towers. - **No routine blowdown for contaminants** — Because there's little to no evaporation, dissolved solids (minerals, heavy metals) do not concentrate as aggressively. Chemical treatment (biocides, corrosion inhibitors) may still be used in smaller amounts to protect the loop and equipment, but sludge buildup and the need for frequent refreshing are greatly reduced. The system is designed as a recirculating closed circuit. - **Net water impact** — In return-to-source systems (e.g., ATES or lake-based), water is withdrawn and returned without net consumption, though thermal impacts on the source must be managed. This contrasts sharply with evaporative cooling, where 70–80% of water can be lost as vapor. **Result**: Geothermal/closed-loop systems can cut data center water use by a large margin (often 90%+ reduction vs. evaporative) and are highlighted as a path toward "water-free" or ultra-low-water cooling, especially when combined with higher server temperature tolerances or dry heat rejection. ### Pros and Cons **Advantages**: - Very low water consumption and no evaporation-driven losses/contaminant buildup. - Energy-efficient (reduces chiller/compressor runtime by using "free" ground cooling). - More reliable and stable temperatures. - Environmentally beneficial in water-stressed areas. **Limitations**: - High upfront costs for drilling boreholes or excavating loops (site geology matters). - Land/space requirements (or deep drilling) can limit scalability for massive hyperscale facilities. - Best suited to certain climates and locations; not universal (though hybrids expand applicability). - Initial system fill uses water, and any additives in closed loops require careful management if there's ever discharge. Examples include facilities using mine water, ATES in Europe/North America, and projects exploring abandoned coal mine water for cooling. Companies like Equinix and others deploy these where conditions allow, and research (e.g., from U.S. Department of Energy) continues to advance cold storage integration. In summary, geothermal-style systems largely avoid the evaporation + blowdown cycle that drives water use and contaminant issues in traditional cooling. They represent a fixed (or near-fixed, low-maintenance) fluid volume in closed designs, making them highly attractive for sustainable operations—though adoption depends on location, cost, and scale. Many operators use them selectively or in combination with other technologies for optimal results.
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The All-In Podcast
The All-In Podcast@theallinpod·
David Friedberg: The datacenter is the new symbol of the wealthy tech class, and Americans are starting to really hate rich people @friedberg explains what he believes is the core issue behind the datacenter pushback “Most people in America are starting to really hate rich people. And there's no physical space that better represents the wealth in America, the wealth creation that's happened that a lot of people feel left behind from, than the datacenter. It is the temple of the wealthy. It is the way that the rich, elite, tech, kind of political, connected billionaires that we're obviously all attached to are taking from the poor, getting themselves ahead, shooting themselves to space, leaving everyone else behind, and the datacenter, I think, is the representation of their progress. And it is a representation of the progress that others don't feel. For a consumer's life to actually be altered in a meaningfully positive way, most people don't feel that yet. The best thing they see is some medical advice they're getting on ChatGPT or something, and that's kind of the end of it for them. So I think there's a lot of this populism that's swollen and that's taken over, not just the US, but probably a good chunk of the West. And the datacenter is the target.”
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Jann Breslin
Jann Breslin@jannz77·
@ChildrensHD Why /who ever thought this was a good idea to compensate doctors for prescribing treatments..??.. ...actually ANY treatment ..??..
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Children’s Health Defense
Children’s Health Defense@ChildrensHD·
Oncologists are making millions from prescribing chemotherapy to patients. “Chemotherapy is the only class of drugs in the United States where the doctor is allowed to make a cut.” “They make a significant cut.” “The last study I read said that the average oncologist in the United States makes 55% of their income on chemotherapy drugs that they sell.  “That shouldn’t be the case that their incomes are based that heavily on promoting a particular class of drugs.” @drkellyvictory @drdrew @twc_health
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John Rich🇺🇸
John Rich🇺🇸@johnrich·
You don't hate big Pharma and big Health enough. They are "Firing" cancer patients for daring to take a protocol that's not approved by the hospital? Hello 2022 all over again...Hey @RobertKennedyJr are you aware of this?
Mary Talley Bowden MD@MaryBowdenMD

Cancer doctors are “firing” patients for taking ivermectin and fenbendazole. That’s why most of the patients I know aren’t telling their oncologists. Great conversation @joevaron and @DoctorCole.

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Mary Talley Bowden MD
Mary Talley Bowden MD@MaryBowdenMD·
Cancer doctors are “firing” patients for taking ivermectin and fenbendazole. That’s why most of the patients I know aren’t telling their oncologists. Great conversation @joevaron and @DoctorCole.
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