Todd Drenth

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Todd Drenth

Todd Drenth

@twdrenth

Management MacGyver

Michigan, USA Katılım Ocak 2012
2.2K Takip Edilen795 Takipçiler
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Athenaeum Book Club
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc·
Alexander Solzhenitsyn gave the most controversial speech *against* Western Civilization at Harvard in 1978. As a survivor of the Russian Gulags, they expected him to praise the West. Instead, he made a jarring accusation: The West is a dying civilization. If it doesn't change its ways, it is doomed to collapse. In fact, he said this has been the case for 500 years, when the West made a crucial mistake: "How did the West decline from its triumphal march to its present debility? ...the mistake must be at the root, at the very foundation of thought in modern times. I refer to the prevailing Western view of the world which was born in the Renaissance… I refer to humanism — the proclaimed autonomy of man from any higher force above him." Solzhenitsyn said humanism made man autonomous from God, Truth, and objective morality. If all morality is subjective, then man has nothing to live nor die for. Naturally, he loses his courage, embraces materialism, and grows effeminate to modern evils. So, what is the solution? A return to belief in a transcendental morality under God: "If, as claimed by humanism, man were born only to be happy, he would not be born to die. Since his body is doomed to death, his task on earth evidently must be more spiritual… The fulfillment of a permanent, earnest duty so that one’s life journey may become above all an experience of moral growth: to leave life a better human being than one started it." All cultures live, or die, based on their respect of the True, Good, and Beautiful. To save the West, Solzhenitsyn says start with beautifying your soul, for that is both how you live well, and begin to make civilization itself beautiful again.
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Tim Carney
Tim Carney@TPCarney·
The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg

NEW: Oklahoma high school principal seen charging at and disarming a school shooter in footage obtained by @SHumphreyTV. Pauls Valley High School Principal Kirk Moore is being called a hero after getting shot while stopping a school shooter. The suspect, identified as 20-year-old Victor Hawkins, was a former student who said he wanted to shoot up the school “like the Columbine shooters did.” While taking down the shooter, Moore was shot in the leg. He is expected to recover and says he is looking forward to returning to work as soon as possible. "I look forward to returning to work as soon as possible so that I may continue my life’s work educating the next generation of Oklahoma leaders. Until then, my thoughts are with our outstanding students, safe today in the arms of their families and friends," he said. Hero!

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Dudes Posting Their W’s
Dudes Posting Their W’s@DudespostingWs·
A group of guys, an Englishman, two Scots, and a Welshman aren’t allowed to have a dog according to their landlord. They spot a neighbor walking a dog and decide to email, offering to walk it whenever needed. The neighbor responds… with a handwritten letter from the dog.
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Michael A. Arouet
Michael A. Arouet@MichaelAArouet·
The main reason why left policies don’t work, and in many cases, like rent controls or minimum wage, even achieve the exact opposite of what was intended visualized. The left doesn’t understand that economics is like physics, nobody can change its laws. Not even their feelings.
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Tim Carney
Tim Carney@TPCarney·
Obviously the research on this is fairly new, but man...
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

The research behind this is wild. Your sperm carries a set of instructions that tell your genes when to turn on and off. A Duke University study found that THC rewrites those instructions. The more weed in your system, the bigger the changes. It goes straight for the genes your future embryo needs in its first week of life. I had to read the "day 3 crash" part twice. For the first three days after fertilization, an embryo runs entirely on the mother's DNA. Day 3, the father's genes switch on. If those genes carry cannabis damage, the embryo just stops growing. Fertility doctors see this happen in their labs: embryos that fertilized fine and looked healthy on day 2 go completely still by day 5. Boston University tracked 1,535 couples trying to have a baby. Men who smoked weed once a week or more doubled their partner's miscarriage risk. That number held up even when the woman herself never touched cannabis. And the miscarriages clustered in the first 8 weeks, right when the father's damaged DNA would be doing the most harm. Duke also found that the specific genes THC alters in sperm overlap with genes linked to autism. One of those genes, called DLGAP2, helps brain cells communicate with each other. It was changed in cannabis users' sperm. When researchers bred THC-exposed male rats and checked their offspring, the same altered gene pattern showed up in the pups' brains. The damage crossed a generation. Weed has gotten way stronger over the last 30 years. THC content was about 4% in the 1990s but nearly quadrupled to 15% by 2018, and modern dispensary strains regularly sit at 20-30%. Concentrates go up to 95%. Quitting for about 11 weeks (one full cycle of sperm production) reverses some of the DNA changes. Not all of them. Duke's lead researcher says men should stop at least 6 months before trying for a baby. Half of your kid's genetic blueprint comes from you, and right now, THC is editing that blueprint before conception even happens.

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Bruce Koerber
Bruce Koerber@DivineEconomy·
What are the consequences? A counterfeit culture. Wars and inflation. Layers of veils hiding the spiritual potential of humanity.
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Todd Drenth
Todd Drenth@twdrenth·
@mattyglesias The answer to the problem of tanking is to eliminate the draft which is an unjust and inefficient means of allocating human talent; perverts incentives to reward losing; and stifles innovation and investment.
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Todd Drenth
Todd Drenth@twdrenth·
@EricCrossMLB Having Duran, Naylor, and Pena all on the same team has been a struggle. Especially combined with slow starts from Alonso, Bichette, K. Marte, Marsee, and Yanier Diaz. My quest for a 4th straight title are off to a bad start. They can all get hot at he same time any day now.
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Eric Cross
Eric Cross@EricCrossMLB·
Big-name players without a home run yet this season. Bobby Witt Jr. Fernando Tatis Jr. Jazz Chisholm Jr. Francisco Lindor Austin Riley Jarren Duran Josh Naylor Vinnie Pasquantino Jeremy Peña Byron Buxton Michael Busch
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Todd Drenth@twdrenth·
@mattyglesias The NBA on floor product has become nearly unwatchable. It's boring and not interesting. And that's before you factor in the tanking.
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Matthew Yglesias
Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesias·
The crisis of the NBA regular season is a lot more than “tanking” — the whole thing is constructed to feel low stakes and frustrating because neither home court advantage for contenders nor barely making the playoffs for middling teams is very valuable. slowboring.com/p/the-nbas-pro…
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Todd Drenth
Todd Drenth@twdrenth·
Another beautiful Sunday at Augusta.
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Culture Explorer
Culture Explorer@CultureExploreX·
Michelangelo was only 23 when he carved the Pietà. More than 500 years later, it still feels impossible. Has any sculptor ever created something more beautiful than this?
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Arsen Ostrovsky
Arsen Ostrovsky@Ostrov_A·
OTD in 1945, Buchenwald Death Camp was liberated from the Nazis by American troops. Legendary newsman Edward R. Murrow was the first reporter on scene. This is how he began describing what he saw: "Permit me to tell you what you would have seen and heard had you had been with me on Thursday. It will not be pleasant listening ..." He then continued "There surged around me an evil-smelling stink. Men and boys reached out to touch me. They were in rags and the remnants of uniforms. Death had already had marked many of them, but they were smiling with their eyes." Murrow concluded: "I pray you to believe what I have said about Buchenwald. I reported what I saw and heard, but only part of it. For most of it, I have no words. If I have offended you by this rather mild account of Buchenwald, I'm not in the least sorry."
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
The scariest finding in this paper: the subjects couldn't tell it was happening. UPenn ran this study on 48 healthy adults. One group slept 8 hours. Another slept 6. Another slept 4. For 14 straight days. They tested cognitive performance every 2 hours from 7:30am to 11:30pm. The 6-hour group's reaction times, working memory, and sustained attention deteriorated on a near-linear curve. By day 14 they were performing at the same level as someone who hadn't slept at all in 48 hours. The 4-hour group hit that threshold by day 6. Here's the part that should unsettle everyone who thinks they "do fine" on 6 hours: the subjects' self-reported sleepiness flatlined after the first few days. Their brains kept getting worse. Their perception of how impaired they were stopped updating. The cognitive decline was invisible to the person experiencing it. The researchers found a hard threshold. Any wakefulness beyond 15.84 hours in a day produces cumulative neurobiological cost. That cost compounds every single day you exceed it and does not reset with a weekend of sleeping in. About 35% of American adults sleep less than 7 hours a night. 40% of those get 6 hours or less. In 1942 that number was 11%. We built an entire professional culture around a sleep schedule that this paper says is functionally equivalent to pulling consecutive all-nighters. "I'm fine on 6 hours" is the most common response to sleep research. The first thing chronic sleep debt destroys is your ability to notice chronic sleep debt.
Nicholas Fabiano, MD@NTFabiano

Sleeping <6h a night for 2 weeks reduces cognitive performance equal to 2 nights of total sleep deprivation.

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Brandon Zicha
Brandon Zicha@ProfBZZZ·
A student today at my elite university admitted to me today that she took a class so she could work on reading for more than 20 minutes at a time. She can't read. She mainly skims and summarizes, she says and still gets A's. This student is, by professional standards, illiterate. Gonna have high GPA when she graduates. This conversation was had after 6 of 22 students dropped my course because the maximum reading per week in one week was over 100 pages. What people aren't grasping is that this is literally *dangerous*. These people are going to be come doctors, engineers, etc. They are - by any metric - vastly less capable than prior generations. These effects are cumulative over a lifetime. This grade inflation is part of the problem, but not even close to the entirety. And the problem obviously starts in K-12. Students don't know history because, you can't actually become historically literate on the advice of 'never assign more than 30 pages a week'. You can't develop any of the skills that came with literacy. This is, quite honestly, a civilizational catastrophe.
Steve McGuire@sfmcguire79

79% of grades at Yale are A-range. Graduating summa cum laude requires a record high GPA OF 3.98.

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