yoleven
18.6K posts

yoleven
@outfielding
Abolish time zones 👏 Lobotomies for all 👏 Go boost yourself 👏 Block tally: 137
timbuktu Katılım Eylül 2011
2.2K Takip Edilen578 Takipçiler

Ok I can explain this to you, because unlike this bunch of losers I’ve worked in marketing.
What we market to you is this:
An identity you want > A product > A sale
Doesn’t matter if it’s a teapot or a banking app. That’s what you do with an ad. Does it make you feel smart? Prestigious? In on the joke? Cool? Safe?
That’s how advertisers think. If I say “This hat is cool, and good!” that’s a 2/10 ad. If I say “This hat is the hat you wear on holiday this year when the warm Italian sun floods the vineyards” that’s already put the hat on your head and a luxury holiday.
Now, most people do not like racism. I know that’ll shock you because of Elon’s whack algorithm, but most people identify as “not a racist”. Easiest way to say to someone, look how open minded we are, and you are just like us? Diversity in an ad.
It’s just sales.
You’re just dumb so you see an “agenda”.
'Seeing is believing'@dave24144975
An agenda...
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@pokerheadrush Math is a bit off.
You're only getting 33:1 if you actually get stacks in and win 100% of the time you hit the set.
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🤔Help! In this hand, I was playing $1/$2 no-limit hold’em online.
Lojack opened to $6 from a $200 stack.
It was folded to me on the button, and I had 8♦ 8♥ with $200 in front of me.
This opponent was not super aggressive, so I decided not to 3-bet. I just called there.
My pocket pair is going to flop a set or better about 12% of the time.
And I’m calling $6 to win $200, so my implied odds are much better than the one time out of 8.3 that I’m going to flop the set or better.
I’m actually getting 33.3-to-1 on my call.
And it is very likely someone in the blinds on this passive site will call.
I went ahead and called, and sure enough, the big blind called.
The board came A♠ 8♣ 5♣.
The big blind checked, and lojack bet $8 into $19.
What would you like to do here with the flopped middle set?
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@abike1999 guess what
its already all over everything, human and dog sources.
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Pets on furniture. You people are not wiping their feet EVERY TIME they come in from outside. You are not wiping their behinds EVERY TIME they poop or pee.
That is all over your bed, couch, rug, etc and it's disgusting.
༈༈@Shirinsmit
What is extremely unhygienic but everyone seems to do it anyway???
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yoleven retweetledi

Like my healthy 34 year old son that died 16 days after his first Pfizer vaccine. Autopsy showed aortic dissection but histology was not done at time and I had to send his tissues to Germany for histological analysis. Analysis showed myocarditis, pericarditis and spike protein in aorta which decimated endothelium in aorta. Without autopsy and histology the lie of RARE is easily perpetuated. Vaccine injuries and deaths are Real, Not Rare!
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In poker, there are biases that populations follow. You can call these "hive minds," and if you can exploit them you will print money.
There is the the recreational hive mind, there is the Chinese pro one, the Western pro one, and even the top pros have one.
Real life actually works similarly, and it is difficult to escape group biases and status quo's. A notorious bias is that of Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic (WEIRD) culture.
Supposedly an aspect of enlightenment is removal of all mind...
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@AmandiOnAir On the downside, the Epstein files wouldn't be released
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@Protentialmn @jeremyausmus Maybe you should move up to where they respect your raises
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@jeremyausmus Can still be played to some degree, just not in the tougher fields.
Most of the stuff I play I get a lot of flexibility in ranges, sizes, etc, and get many hyper exploit spots.
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I really do miss pre-solver poker. Back then, everyone was in the streets trying things with no answer keys. It led to tons of pure exploits and incredibly interesting decisions. You actually had to figure out your opponent in real-time, which created so many distinct, unorthodox playing styles that you just don't see much in the modern game.
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yoleven retweetledi

@pokerheadrush That explains buddy's reaction when I show him a starting hand chart
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@aakashgupta @bp22 Believe it or not, people can just plant a tree in the ground themselves and it'll just grow there
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Let me explain exactly why every new subdivision in America looks like the top photo, because the math is wild.
A mature tree increases a home's value by 7 to 19 percent. On a $400,000 house, that's $28,000 to $76,000. A single shade tree produces the cooling equivalent of ten room-size air conditioners running 20 hours a day. One tree on the west side of a house cuts energy bills by 12 percent within 15 years. The bottom photo is worth more, costs less to live in, and sells faster. This has been documented by the University of Washington, Clemson, Michigan State, and the USDA. The data is not in dispute.
Removing those trees saves the builder roughly $5,000 per lot. Concrete trucks need twice the dripline radius of every standing tree. Utility trenches need flat ground. A bulldozer flattens 200 lots in an afternoon. Preserving trees adds weeks and thousands per home.
So the developer pockets $5,000 in savings and the buyer eats $50,000 in lost value for the next two decades. The person making the decision and the person paying for it have never been in the same room.
The Woodlands, Texas is the proof of what happens when they are. George Mitchell bought 28,000 acres of Houston timberland in 1974 and preserved 28% as permanent green space. He forced McDonald's to build behind the tree canopy. That McDonald's became one of the highest-volume locations in Texas. The first office building, designed to reflect the surrounding forest so you couldn't see it from the street, leased completely.
The Woodlands median home price today: $615,000. Katy, a comparable Houston suburb that clear-cut: $375,000. Named #1 community to live in America two years running.
Fifty years of data. The trees are worth more than removing them saves. Developers clear-cut anyway because they sell the house once and leave. You live in it for 30 years.
bitfloorsghost@bitfloorsghost
we ruined such a good thing
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@conviction_meta @Ed429_ @0xEnjooyer Those give you 20% more reps? Lucky. Caffeine just keeps me awake and steak actually makes me tired if I eat a big one
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@conviction_meta @Ed429_ @0xEnjooyer Can you name something with a comparable effect that we can get at the grocery store
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Seems you both agree creatine has benefits, but just not to the degree of how much benefit it will provide
It’s an irrelevant convo to have when everyone has different perspectives and goals
Yoleven just wants to make his point that creatine is a top 3 natural supplement compared to the downside risk of others, but Ed doesn’t think the results are as significant as users lead it on to be
The insignificance of the results are typically up to the work put in from the individual or just simply having a higher perception of results
Again, who cares
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When I say I’m enjoying my 2026 dating life, I mean stress-free. I got asked out on a date, and in today’s world, I had to ask: “Are you able to cover the date, or should we go 50/50?” He appreciated the honesty and chose 50/50. Cool. So I showed up hair in a bun, oversized sweatshirt, sweats, Crocs, no bra, nails not done… missing one, actually. And this man had the audacity to say he wished I’d put in more effort. I told him there was no reason to dress up to grab food with the homie. 🤣🤣🤣
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yoleven retweetledi

She Called The FBI In 1996. They Opened A File. Then They Told Her It Never Existed. She Spent 29 Years Being Called A Liar.
September 3, 1996.
A file is opened inside FBI headquarters.
Classification: child pornography.
The woman who made the call is identified only as "a professional artist."
She described photos she had seen inside a Manhattan mansion. She described the man who owned those photos. She described what she witnessed being done to young girls.
She gave them everything.
Then she waited.
Nobody called back.
Nine years later, a local detective in Palm Beach knocked on a different door. Found forty victims. Handed the FBI photographs, videos, and documented evidence of child trafficking across multiple states.
The FBI opened a formal investigation.
Two years later — they closed it.
One plea deal. Thirteen months. Out by noon every day on work release.
The trafficking continued. The FBI kept receiving tips. For eleven more years, women were brought to his island, his Manhattan townhouse, his private ranch.
For eleven more years — the file sat there.
It took a newspaper reporter to force the arrest in 2019.
Thirty-three days later, he was dead.
Now twelve women — listed only as Doe 1 through Doe 12 — are standing in federal court.
They're not suing his estate.
They're suing the FBI.
They want $100 million. And they want every internal document, every memo, every email showing exactly who received each tip — and made the decision to do nothing.
But here's the part that changes everything.
When the FBI's own internal review was published in 2020 — it didn't mention the 1996 complaint. Not once.
For another five years, the woman who made that call was told: your report doesn't exist.
In December 2025, the DOJ confirmed it did.
One page. Dated September 3, 1996.
Which means someone inside the FBI knew that file existed — and chose not to include it in their own review.
The question isn't whether the file was real.
The question is: who decided to make it disappear?
usstories.mstfootball.com/lam/twelve-wom…

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