rajesh

5.2K posts

rajesh

rajesh

@rajesh62

DeepSeek enjoyer

Malta Katılım Haziran 2009
3.9K Takip Edilen683 Takipçiler
rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
'Manor' of Manor Farm stands for manorial system- feudal system of England from 11th- 14th century Orwell makes propaganda claim that feudal order (proxy for British hereditary ruling class style empire) is inevitable. NOT a case for US style capitalism based on competition 🤷‍♂️
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rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
Is Animal Farm in the same tradition as post WWI work ‘Cause of World Unrest’ by Nesta Helen Webster (as part of Empire WWI propaganda arm Wellington House) that blamed Jews for revolutions including the Russian one? which was itself in pursuit of Empire foreign policy goals /fin
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rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
Animal Farm by George Orwell is pro-feudalism screed. in a book of ‘isms’, Manor Farm is feudalism MF looks good compared to the worst of communism that Animal Farm represents message is ‘it is futile to rebel against feudal order, coz new leaders will turn into feudal lords’!!
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Anthony Gomez
Anthony Gomez@AnthonyFGomez·
Welp. That was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen. Starship 39 ready for battle.
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Douglas Macgregor
Douglas Macgregor@DougAMacgregor·
BREAKING: Russia and Ukraine agree to ceasefire.
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rajesh@rajesh62·
while token consumption is by itself not a great metric for productivity, I am certain that all the high impact people of tomorrow are consuming massive amounts of ai tokens right now
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rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
in general communists, fascists, socialists and even capitalists are what ever propaganda claims they are all are ambiguous (even capitalism is ambiguous in whether one puts citizen enterprise first or makes money independent of oversight) so propaganda can move around labels depending on whatever serves their own interests
rajesh@rajesh62

@elonmusk nazi campaign pledge in 1933 was to ‘socialise industry, eliminate interest on capital’ (Inside Europe by John Gunther, 1936)

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rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
@elonmusk nazi campaign pledge in 1933 was to ‘socialise industry, eliminate interest on capital’ (Inside Europe by John Gunther, 1936)
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Hitler was a socialist, therefore all socialists are Hitler
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rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
the UK democracy is fake so are those of most Crown realms like Canada, NZ (prob Australia) civil servants and diplomats are permanent- can’t be transferred by elected leaders- and legally required to be ‘servants of the crown’ not people. majority from 0.5% pool of population- the ‘Public Schools’ to which hereditary nobility/gentry go Britain has a hereditary ruling class problem
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Amit Schandillia
Amit Schandillia@Schandillia·
America’s constitution is shorter than an average article on my Substack. And it runs a country. Mind blown. 🤯
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Mark Federschmidt
Mark Federschmidt@BoosterTribe·
Made by humans at Starbase, TX.
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Owen Lewis
Owen Lewis@is_OwenLewis·
@DrPhiltill 80x growth. That's insane. x.com/i/status/20523…
Nina Schick@NinaDSchick

Just a reminder: @anthropic’s target was annualised growth rate of 10x. That tracker in ARR: 2023: $0 - 100m 2024: $100m - 1bn 2025: $1bn - 9bn 2026: currently at over $44bn, if current trajectory continues it will be 80x growth over the year (!) - straight from @DarioAmodei. Lessons: There is a huge, vast, market for Intelligence. We are so desperately compute constrained!

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Aleksandar Brezar
Aleksandar Brezar@brezaleksandar·
The best story you'll watch all week: apparently the Italian town of Punta Marina in Ravenna has been suffering from a peacock "invasion" and residents are not amused. The editing alone is Primetime Emmy-worthy. Sound on. You can thank me later. 😎
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rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
the oldest modern logo is from 524 years ago. the Aldine press of Venice in times before Copernicus, Shakespeare, Newton, Mark Twain published works sold everywhere in Europe. a landmark printer
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rajesh
rajesh@rajesh62·
Napoleon was an extraordinary human yet Lafayette, the Frenchman turned American General, who had met both Napoleon and Alexander Hamilton declared Hamilton the greatest man he had ever come across. ahead of Napoleon
Ancient History Hub@AncientHistorry

205 years ago today, Napoleon Bonaparte died on a tiny British prison island in the middle of the South Atlantic. He was 51. He had ruled most of Europe. And he changed the world so thoroughly that you are still living inside the systems he built. Start with the obvious one. The Napoleonic Code. He commissioned it in 1800, sat in on the drafting sessions personally, argued with the lawyers, and pushed it through in four years. Equality before the law. Property rights. Religious freedom. The end of feudal privilege. It is still the basis of civil law in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Portugal, most of Latin America, Quebec, Louisiana, and chunks of the Middle East and Africa. About a third of the planet writes contracts using rules a Corsican artillery officer wrote between battles. He sold Louisiana to Thomas Jefferson in 1803 for 15 million dollars. Roughly four cents an acre. It doubled the size of the United States overnight. Without that deal there is no St. Louis, no New Orleans as an American city, no Lewis and Clark, no Manifest Destiny. The American century starts with Napoleon needing cash for a war. He invaded Egypt in 1798 with an army and, weirdly, 167 scientists, mathematicians, and artists. They found the Rosetta Stone. That single slab is the reason we can read hieroglyphs at all. Egyptology as a field exists because Napoleon brought scholars to a war. He built the Bank of France, which still runs French monetary policy. He created the lycée system that still educates French teenagers. He shoved the metric system across Europe at sword-point until it stuck. He emancipated the Jews of every territory he conquered, tearing down ghetto walls in Rome, Venice, Frankfurt. He abolished serfdom in Poland. He standardized road networks, civil registries, and tax codes that European governments still operate from. And then there's the soldiering. He fought around 60 major battles and won most of them. Austerlitz, in 1805, against the combined Russian and Austrian empires, is still taught at West Point as one of the closest things to a tactically perfect battle ever fought. He was outnumbered, baited the enemy onto ground he had pre-selected, and broke them in a single afternoon. Three emperors took the field that morning. Only one walked off it on his own terms. He slept four hours a night. He read constantly, dictated letters to four secretaries at the same time, and personally signed off on everything from cavalry boot specs to the seating chart at the Comédie-Française. Wellington, the man who finally beat him at Waterloo, was asked decades later who the greatest general in history was. He answered without hesitating. "In this age, in past ages, in any age, Napoleon." He lost, in the end, because he could not stop. Russia in 1812 swallowed his army whole. Six hundred thousand men marched in. Maybe a tenth came back. He abdicated in 1814, escaped from Elba, ruled France again for 100 days, and lost it all for good in a wheat field in Belgium in June 1815. The British shipped him to St. Helena, a volcanic dot 1,200 miles off the African coast, and waited. He spent six years there dictating his memoirs, gardening, complaining about the dampness, and quietly rewriting his own legend so effectively that Europe spent the next century arguing about him. He died on May 5, 1821, during a storm so violent it ripped up the willow tree he liked to read under. His last words trailed off into fever. France. The army. Joséphine. Nineteen years later France brought him home. Two million people stood in the snow to watch the coffin go by. He was a tyrant. He was a reformer. He started wars that killed somewhere between three and six million people. He also wrote the rulebook that a third of humanity still lives under. Most people who try to conquer the world are forgotten inside a generation. Napoleon has been dead for 205 years and we are still arguing about him because we are still using his furniture.

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okazakitomohiro
okazakitomohiro@oo_kk_aa·
ニャッキの伊藤有壱さんにお声掛け頂き、コマ撮りの展覧会に一作家として参加しています。私はコマ撮り分野ではない場所から活動をはじめて、デザインの視点でのコマ撮りに取り組んできましたが、今回初めてコマ撮り界の本丸の方々とご一緒でき嬉しいです。今6年目のマッチ撮影素材等を展示しています
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Sovey
Sovey@SoveyX·
Did you know Korea sells “one-a-day” banana packs? Instead of every banana ripening at once, each one is at a different stage. One is ready today. The next one is ready tomorrow. The last one is still spiritually in college, “experimenting.” Simple. Genius. Solves the entire banana problem. What do you think? Would you prefer your bananas this way?
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