John Nash

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John Nash

John Nash

@LondonChartists

Owner of a Tesla dealership on Tatooine. On Planet Earth, i try rebuild the American dream of prosperity and liberty.

Korea Katılım Ağustos 2009
698 Takip Edilen871 Takipçiler
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John Nash
John Nash@LondonChartists·
There is no viable alternative to American leadership. Yes it may have its excess, but a world without the US will be dull, stagnating and ultimately criminalized. US is the only place on earth where a kid can go from the slums of Mumbai to become CEO of Mastercard.
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Lord Bebo
Lord Bebo@MyLordBebo·
🇺🇸🐍 RFK Junior removes pair of black racer snakes from Dr. Oz's patio with bear hands Would you dare?
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Antonello Guerrera
Antonello Guerrera@antoguerrera·
Former Ferrari chairman Montezemolo tears the new electric Ferrari “Luce” apart: “I cannot say what I really think: I would harm Ferrari. We risk the destruction of a legend. So sorry. Take the Prancing Horse off. At least the Chinese won’t copy this car”
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Megatron
Megatron@Megatron_ron·
🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump’s war on Iran is hitting the Americans pretty hard. Americans are falling behind on loan and credit card payments at the fastest pace since the 2008 financial crisis, with credit card defaults hitting near-15-year highs.
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David Nino Rodriguez
David Nino Rodriguez@ninoboxer·
🚨BREAKING: There is NO water in The Rio Grande?! I’m standing here in New Mexico and the river is completely DRY. Nearby AI data centers are consuming massive amounts of water to keep their systems cool. Meta’s Los Lunas facility alone has reportedly been tied to roughly 75 million gallons of water usage per year connected to Rio Grande resources and it’s only ONE of many projects expanding across the state. People can argue over the exact numbers, but one thing is undeniable… these facilities require enormous amounts of water and there are more data centers across the country being built as we speak. This is starting to look like an environmental disaster in plain sight. We need to put pressure on local representatives and the President to examine this environmental crisis before it’s too late.
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Michael Sikand 🦑
Michael Sikand 🦑@michaelsikand·
Stocks are making new highs. But people have never felt worse about the economy. In 2000, consumer sentiment and stocks rocketed up together. This time, people are looking for EVERY reason to be negative despite real earnings growth. Aren't bubbles built on consensus?
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John Nash
John Nash@LondonChartists·
@Kekius_Sage This is too far. First we need to manage biological body mentenance. We need to either slow aging process or...attach the human brain to machinery that performs heart/lungs/kidney/liver/hormone function. Your questions are good for the year...2120... Dumb frog
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
The ultimate tragedy of the interplanetary is not the millions of light years they must conquer. It is the sobering dawn of realization that beneath a thousand unfamiliar suns, the arrow of time only deepens their isolation.
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Hedgie
Hedgie@HedgieMarkets·
🦔Uber's COO Andrew Macdonald said on Saturday that the company is having a harder time justifying its AI spend. After CTO Praveen Neppalli Naga went viral in April for admitting Uber burned through its 2026 Claude Code budget in four months, senior engineering leaders concluded higher token usage was not translating into proportionally more useful product. Macdonald said the link between AI consumption and shipped features is "not there yet." CEO Dara Khosrowshahi confirmed on the earnings call that Uber is slowing hiring to fund its AI spend. Duolingo also walked back its decision to include AI usage in performance reviews last month. My Take Uber is the first major enterprise where the C-suite has publicly admitted, on the record, that the AI productivity story is not closing for them. That matters because Uber is not a skeptic. The company went all-in on AI tooling, set internal targets, and burned through its annual research and development budget in four months trying to make it work. The conclusion from the people running the experiment is that tokens consumed and value shipped are not the same number, and management is finally noticing. Duolingo's reversal lands in the same week for a reason. CEO Luis von Ahn said employees were asking whether they needed to use AI just to use AI, which is Goodhart's Law showing up in a performance review system. When usage becomes the metric, employees optimize for usage, not output. Microsoft canceled internal Claude Code licenses, Google AI Pro stripped credits from paid subscribers, and now Uber is admitting the ROI does not close at scale. The narrative has shifted in the last 30 days from "AI productivity is here" to "AI productivity is harder to measure than we thought." The companies pushing tokenmaxxing internally are now the same companies signaling cost pressure externally. The IPO calendar for OpenAI and Anthropic is going to get a lot more complicated if the largest enterprise customers keep saying this out loud. Hedgie🤗
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Ryan Detrick, CMT
Ryan Detrick, CMT@RyanDetrick·
They keep telling us that only a few stocks are accounting for all the gains and the market is top heavy. Checks data... The S&P 500 equal-weight just closed at a new high last week. This is a clue things are just fine under the surface.
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John Nash
John Nash@LondonChartists·
@topkekius I have no idea why indians want to answer. I mean.....a porn movie with indians will definitely plunge global birthrate
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@topkekius·
who here has participated in a threesome
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Winston
Winston@ChurchillWw·
A wafer made at TSMC's new Arizona fabs still has to cross the Pacific to come back as a finished chip, because the packaging step that does that work is almost entirely in Asia. Amkor is now building that step near those fabs, a $7 billion campus in Peoria, Arizona, that starts production in 2028 and will run the same leading-edge packaging behind Nvidia's AI accelerators. manufacturingdive.com/news/amkor-ari…
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John Nash
John Nash@LondonChartists·
@topkekius Yea... you just found out that the window is broken on both sides ?
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John Nash
John Nash@LondonChartists·
@topkekius Youmotherfuckin degenerates, shut thw fuuck up. The Frog s trying to show us all the Truth. And the truth is we re in a far worse situation. The window ia broken on both sides.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In the 1980s, the Norwegian salmon farming industry ran into a colour problem. Wild salmon are pink because they eat krill and small crustaceans containing a pigment called astaxanthin. The pigment accumulates in the muscle tissue and gives the flesh its colour. That colour is one of the cues a diner uses, consciously or otherwise, to decide whether the fish on the plate is appetising. Farmed salmon, raised on soy protein, corn meal, fish meal from wild-caught smaller fish, and stabilisers, do not eat krill. They do not accumulate astaxanthin. Without intervention, their flesh is grey. Washed-out, unappealing grey. Nobody buys a grey salmon. So the industry adopted synthetic astaxanthin, manufactured by Hoffmann-La Roche, originally developed as a feed additive to brighten poultry yolks. It is added to salmon feed in measured doses. The doses are calibrated against a colour chart called the SalmoFan, produced by the same company, which the farmer holds against a slice of flesh from a slaughtered fish to confirm the pigmentation has reached the commercially desirable shade. The SalmoFan has fifteen shades. The farmer picks the target shade based on what the supermarket buyer in the destination country considers appealing. Norwegian salmon, sitting on the ice in a British supermarket, has been colour-graded to match the expectations of a marketing department in Hoddesdon. The fish you're looking at is the colour the company chose. The fish didn't pick it. The krill didn't provide it. The pigment came from a Swiss laboratory. You're eating a paint sample. The paint is fish-flavoured. The fish remembers krill. It has never tasted krill. The krill is in a different part of the supply chain.
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John Nash
John Nash@LondonChartists·
@topkekius Most absurd thing is to care aboutwhat women think or want. Just useless.... they are simple pets, who cares what they think... if they ever think....
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@topkekius·
why do women like what they can’t have
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John Nash@LondonChartists·
@topkekius WHO THE FUCK GIVES A SHIT ABOUT WHAT WOMEN LIKE ?
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Bull Theory
Bull Theory@BullTheoryio·
🚨 GLOBAL FUNDS ARE DUMPING SOUTH KOREAN STOCKS AT THE FASTEST PACE IN HISTORY. South Korea's KOSPI continued to hit new ATH after semiconductor stocks like SAMSUNG, SKHYNIX soared multiple highs. Now global funds are rapidly pulling money out as volatility spikes, dumping $13.2 BILLION in May. Foreign investors have offloaded more than 112 TRILLION won or $74+ BILLION in Korean stocks so far in 2026. In March alone, overseas investors sold a record 43.5 TRILLION won or $29.5 BILLION worth of Korean equities, that was the largest monthly foreign sell-off EVER recorded. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix saw massive outflows. KOSPI reaching record highs even after massive outflows, while South Koreans are cashing out their Life Insurance and Loans for buying stocks.
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