Ben Lovell @[email protected]

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Ben Lovell @socksy@toot.cat banner
Ben Lovell @socksy@toot.cat

Ben Lovell @[email protected]

@socksy

In these trying times he/him fediverse (slightly more active): https://t.co/FkrEyNucHa bsky: https://t.co/H6WVqvCjBG

Berlin, Germany Katılım Temmuz 2008
585 Takip Edilen350 Takipçiler
Ben Lovell @socksy@toot.cat
@dhh Is this ironic (can't tell these days)? This is a list of condescending things, none of which unique to the US... which is exactly what "American exceptionalism" is referring to. Or was that the point?
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DHH
DHH@dhh·
As a Dane calling America home for nearly two decades, it took me a while to recognize American Exceptionalism as a real phenomenon. But it is! And this is a great list of reasons why.
Konstantin Kisin@KonstantinKisin

For my British and European friends who are "shocked" and "surprised", here are 10 reasons you didn't see this coming. Read this short post and then read the replies from our American friends who will confirm what I'm saying. 1. Americans love their country and want it to be the best in the world. America is a nation of people who conquered a continent. They love strength. They love winning. Any leader who appeals to that has an automatic advantage. 2. Unlike Europeans, Americans have not accepted managed decline. They don't have Net Zero here, they believe in producing their own energy and making it as cheap as possible because they know that their prosperity depends on it. 3. Prices for most basic goods in the US have increased rapidly and are sky high. What the official statistics say about inflation and the reality of people's lives are not the same. 4. Unlike you, Americans do not believe in socialism. They believe in meritocracy. They don't care about the super rich being super rich because they know that they live in a country where being super rich is available to anyone with the talent and drive to make it. They don't resent success, they celebrate it. 5. Americans are the most pro-immigration people in the world. Read that again. Seriously, read it again. Americans love an immigrant success story. They want more talented immigrants to come to America. But they refuse to accept people coming illegally. They believe in having a border. 6. Americans are sensitive about racial issues and their country's imperfect history. They believe that those who are disadvantaged by the circumstances of their birth should be given the opportunity to succeed. What they reject, however, is the idea that in order to address the errors of the past new errors must be made. DEI is racist. They know it and they reject it precisely because they are not racist. 7. Americans are the most philosemitic nation on earth. October 7 and the pro-Hamas left's reaction shocked them to their very core because, among other things, they remember what 9/11 was like and they know jihad when they see it. 8. Americans are extremely practical people. They care about what works, not what sounds good. In Europe, we produce great writers and intellectuals. In America they produce (and attract) great engineers, businessmen and investors. Because of this, they care less about Trump's rhetoric than you do and more about his policies than you do. 9. Americans are deeply optimistic people. They hate negativity. The woke view of American history as a series of evils for which they must eternally apologise is utterly abhorrent to them. They believe in moving forward together, not endlessly obsessing about the past. 10. America is a country whose founding story is one of resistance to government overreach. They loathe unnecessary restrictions, regulations and control. They understand that freedom comes with the price of self-reliance and they pay it gladly.

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Ben Lovell @socksy@toot.cat
@equalityAlec Ah yes, collecting business cards and asking your aides to follow up with people, famously political activities one would only expect a prepared prosecutor to undertake
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Alec Karakatsanis
Alec Karakatsanis@equalityAlec·
I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a news story like this. It’s all horrific, but just take a look at how it mythologizes prosecutors. Just totally unhinged “reporting”:
Alec Karakatsanis tweet mediaAlec Karakatsanis tweet mediaAlec Karakatsanis tweet media
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Alec Karakatsanis
Alec Karakatsanis@equalityAlec·
The first thing right now on the homepage of the New York Times, a news organization, is this smattering of gibberish.
Alec Karakatsanis tweet media
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
This is a dramatic change, and not the kind of change that people who voted for Brexit were hoping for.
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Ben Lovell @[email protected] retweetledi
Kevin Cannon
Kevin Cannon@multikev·
I’m excited to launch a personal project I’ve been working on with @mateuszsiek91 🚀 Fluidmotion, a web app for making beautiful animated background for apps, videos or presentations.
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Ben Lovell @socksy@toot.cat
@mishakarpenko I feel also that a big similarity here is some people’s enthusiasm at what’s clearly something v. important, but trying to use it completely wrong. Feel like half of these AI ideas are this generation’s pets.com
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Misha
Misha@mishakarpenko·
I kinda feel the same. I do feel that it’s the next big thing, I want to use it badly and am constantly trying to find a place for it in my life. But I still don’t have many use cases for GPTs, especially when I’m off work. How do you folks use it?
Andrew Mayne@AndrewMayne

We're very much in an early 1990s Internet moment. You either use systems like GPT-4 daily and "get it", or you're sitting on the sideline calling it a fad or a bubble that's about to peak.

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Ben Lovell @socksy@toot.cat
Pitch finally released it's AI generator so now I can finally post all the stupid slides I've been DM'ing colleagues
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