DeFi Travis

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DeFi Travis

DeFi Travis

@Defi_Handyman

Proud father, music fanatic, THE Local Handyman, avid snowboarder, crypto hobbyist, natural health advocate, seeker of knowledge & understanding, wide awake.

Milwaukee, WI Entrou em Mart 2016
365 Seguindo341 Seguidores
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DeFi Travis retweetou
Toby Cunningham
Toby Cunningham@sircryptotips·
Bayer has just SUED Pfizer, BioNTech, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson in federal court. Because the mRNA stabilisation technology used in every single COVID vaccine injected into your kids, your parents, your pregnant friends, your grandmother in the care home was patented by Monsanto in the 1980s for CROPS. And the company that owns the patent is now in court demanding royalties. This is not a conspiracy theory. This is Bayer's own lawyers, in Bayer's own filings, on the public record. They are literally arguing in federal court that their agricultural genetic modification technology was copied and injected into human beings WITHOUT A LICENSE. Meanwhile Moderna just paid Roivant $2.25 BILLION to settle a separate mRNA patent lawsuit. BioNTech is suing Moderna. GSK is suing Moderna. Everyone is suing everyone. The patent fights alone are going to cost these companies tens of billions of dollars. If Bayer is right, then every single "safety study" that was rushed through in 2020 was looking at the wrong thing. They were testing a vaccine. They were not testing an agricultural genetic modification platform being used in humans for the first time. I have been saying this since 2021. The same institutions that LIED to you about Iraq having WMDs, about the 2008 bailouts being a "one time thing", about inflation being transitory, about Epstein killing himself, those are the SAME institutions that told you to take a shot based on two months of trial data. If you still trust them after THIS one, I genuinely do not know what to tell you. Wake up. Get healthy. Get off their food. Get off their media. Get off their system.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In 1900, John D. Rockefeller controlled approximately 90 percent of all petroleum refining in the United States. He was, by some calculations, the richest private individual who had ever lived. He had a problem. Scientists were discovering that compounds derived from coal tar, a petroleum byproduct, could be used as synthetic medicines. Aspirin, derived from coal tar, had been launched by Bayer in 1899. The petroleum waste stream Rockefeller had previously had to dispose of could now be sold back to the public as medicine at a markup of roughly 10,000 percent. He had another problem. American medicine in 1900 was a competitive ecosystem of homeopaths, herbalists, naturopaths, osteopaths, midwives, and traditional doctors who used food, plants, water, and lifestyle as the primary tools of healing. Approximately half of all American medical schools taught some form of natural or alternative medicine. Rockefeller bought into the German pharmaceutical industry, eventually taking a substantial stake in IG Farben, the conglomerate that included Bayer, BASF, and Hoechst. He then commissioned a report. The report was written by Abraham Flexner, an educator with no medical training, funded by the Rockefeller and Carnegie Foundations, and published in 1910. It declared that natural and alternative medical schools were unscientific quackery. It recommended the closure of more than half of all American medical schools and the standardisation of the rest around medicine based on synthetic patented drugs. Congress acted. Half of American medical schools closed within a decade. The remainder accepted Rockefeller and Carnegie funding on the condition that their curricula be reorganised around pharmaceutical treatment. Nutrition was removed. Herbal medicine was removed. Lifestyle intervention was removed. The doctor's job was redefined: diagnose the symptom, prescribe the drug. The drugs were petroleum-derived. The petroleum was supplied by Rockefeller-controlled refineries. The medical schools were funded by Rockefeller. The journals were funded by Rockefeller. The AMA was supported by Rockefeller. The hospitals were funded by Rockefeller. By 1925, the American medical system was a vertically integrated extension of the petroleum industry, operating under the marketing slogan that it was scientific. This is the system that exists today. The pharmaceutical industry generates approximately $1.5 trillion in annual revenue. The American population, 4 percent of the global total, consumes approximately 50 percent of all pharmaceuticals manufactured. The system was not designed to make people healthy. The system was designed to manage symptoms in a way that produces lifetime customers. A healthy patient is a former customer. A managed patient, who takes the pill every day for the rest of their life, is an annuity. The objective has always been to keep you in that profitable corridor between healthy and dead. Long enough to keep buying. Not so well that you stop. The doctor who advises you to fix your metabolism by changing your diet is, from the point of view of the system that trained him, a defective product. The doctor who prescribes you a statin, a metformin, an antidepressant, and a blood pressure medication for life is performing exactly as designed. The system was designed by an oil baron who needed to sell the waste products of his refineries. It still functions, 116 years after the Flexner Report, exactly the way he designed it. You are the customer. The corridor is where you live.
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Valerie Anne Smith
Valerie Anne Smith@ValerieAnne1970·
"For children, the COVID Vaccine mortality risk ratio is 30 to 1. There are 30 child vaccine deaths for every 1 saved." ~Dr Brian Hooker, PhD
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MJTruthUltra
MJTruthUltra@MJTruthUltra·
Dear Unvaccinated citizens of the world,THIS is a reminder, to congratulate you on surviving a multi-billion dollar psychological propaganda operation meant to demoralize you into compliance. You beat them… but don’t ever stop demanding they pay for what they did to us. They all belong in prison. rumble.com/v2nr2ry-the-un…
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DeFi Travis
DeFi Travis@Defi_Handyman·
@pestctrlguy All fun an games until you have to work with nasty chemicals for you job. There's probably some statistic on how this shortens lives.
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Casey McDaniel - Pest Control Guy
We did a termite job yesterday. 6 man hours of labor (me and my cousin) $177 in chemical costs We charged $2800. 3 hours of work. $15.61 a minute for 3 hours straight. I get told every day that pest control is easy and anyone can do it. We beat Orkin’s price by half and homeowners keep hiring us. I wonder how this is possible in such an “easy” industry.
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DeFi Travis
DeFi Travis@Defi_Handyman·
Big different between CEO emails and and giant dump of customer service inquiries. AI can triage these inquires, reply to simple needs backed by historical responses, and move along the needs to their correct department heads. Automation at scale is the sweet spot, not at the individual level...at least not for email.
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Charles Haywood
Charles Haywood@TheWorthyHouse·
I don't understand this idea that "AI" can "answer your emails." I sent more than 200,000 emails during the fifteen years I ran a business (and probably 150K more sent when I was a lawyer). Each one required my personal input, tacit knowledge that simply cannot be reduced to an algorithm, involving the balancing of hundreds or thousands of pieces of information internal to me. If I allowed "AI" access to every written piece of data about my business and my prior correspondence, it would not cover 10% of the necessary information to respond correctly to emails, much less the relative weightings and interactions of each of those pieces of data. Whose emails is "AI" supposed to answer? The new "AI" customer response bots are worse than the old ones. Seriously, what emails are we talking about?
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just put the entire university system on trial. Not the curriculum. Not the professors. The premise. Musk: “You don’t need college to learn stuff. Everything is available basically for free. You can learn anything you want for free.” For a thousand years, universities held one monopoly. Access. You paid the toll or you stayed ignorant. The internet erased that in a decade. Every lecture. Every framework. Every textbook. Free. From any screen on Earth. The six-figure tuition is no longer buying knowledge. It is buying a signal. Musk: “There is a value that colleges have, which is seeing whether somebody can work hard at something, including a bunch of annoying homework assignments, and still do their homework assignments.” That is the product. Not intelligence. Not creativity. Not vision. Compliance. You are paying $200,000 to prove you can tolerate bureaucracy on a schedule. Musk: “Colleges are basically for fun and to prove you can do your chores. But they’re not for learning.” The entire system is a sorting machine for corporate HR. It does not measure what you can build. It measures whether you can sit still, follow directions, and deliver on command. Four years of obedience dressed as education. Musk: “If you’re trying to do something exceptional, you must have evidence of exceptional ability. I don’t consider going to college evidence of exceptional ability.” The system optimizes for average. It rewards the compliant. It certifies the patient. It quietly filters out everyone who refuses to wait for permission. The ones who reshaped the modern world never finished the test. Musk: “Gates is a pretty smart guy, he dropped out. Jobs is pretty smart, he dropped out. Larry Ellison, smart guy, he dropped out.” They did not drop out because it was too hard. They dropped out because the speed limit was too low. The most dangerous thing a university does is convince a generational talent that finishing the syllabus is the achievement. It is not. It is the floor. A degree is a receipt for compliance. The future has never belonged to people who finish their homework. It belongs to the ones who never needed the assignment.
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Karl Mehta
Karl Mehta@karlmehta·
A massive Swedish study followed 30,000 women for 20 years. Sun exposure tracked. Mortality tracked. The researchers were stunned by what they found. Here's what avoiding the sun actually does to your lifespan:
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DeFi Travis
DeFi Travis@Defi_Handyman·
Oldest got F'd by his vaccines, full blown autistic, adult now, we will care for him for life. Daughter is a straight A student in nursing school, youngest son 6'2" shreadded and headed for the trades. This feels a lot like more pharma funded "science" to fear monger weed. There are also confounding variables surely ignored to achieve desired results.
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Anish Moonka
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.
Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.@hubermanlab

Cannabis is detrimental to sperm: even if they can fertilize, there can be DNA damage. Many miscarriages and (in the case of IVF) “day 3 crashes” which is when paternal DNA normally kicks in, are cannabis related. Dr Natalie Crawford on the Huberman Lab podcast out now.

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C. M. KeyMoney
C. M. KeyMoney@kimyamiyaki·
Interesting findings. However, i personally know multiple cases of several men and women who used during the time the mother got pregnant and the children formed, developed and grew up just fine with no developmental issues whatsoever. So either this is a closed one sided argument or it's focusing on the worst case scenarios and not mentioning the situations where this harm was not the case. Where it helped the mother with nausea and the kids were just fine. 🤷🏽‍♂️
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“Sudden And Unexpected”
They tried to bury this one deep, but the truth is leaking out. A peer-reviewed study just dropped linking mRNA COVID “vaccines” to blood cancers (leukemia, lymphoma — the nasty stuff). Authors say they got slammed with rejection after rejection from journals. Why? Because it didn’t fit the sacred “safe and effective” narrative. John Campbell laid it out: getting anything published that challenges the mainstream is like trying to push a boulder uphill in a hurricane. One co-author basically said exposing the censorship battle might be more important than the findings themselves. They’ll call it “misinfo.” They’ll scream “anti-vax conspiracy.” But people are still dropping from “turbo cancers,” sudden heart issues, and mystery clots years later. How many more have to get injured or worse before we admit these experimental shots were never properly tested for long-term cancer risks? If it doesn’t fit the narrative, they censor it. Simple as that. Read the full studies here: Main paper: oncotarget.com/article/28827/… Censorship battle: oncotarget.com/article/28829/…
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In 1953 an American physiologist called Ancel Keys stood up at a World Health Organization conference in Geneva and presented a graph. The graph plotted fat consumption against heart disease mortality in six countries. The United States at the top. Japan at the bottom. A smooth upward curve in between. The room was convinced. The graph would go on to define global nutrition policy for the next seventy years. There was one small problem with the graph. Keys had data from twenty-two countries. He chose six. The other sixteen, which included France and Switzerland eating vast quantities of butter and cheese with low heart disease, and countries like Chile eating almost no animal fat and having high heart disease, did not produce the line he wanted. So they were not on the graph. When this was pointed out, in print, at the time, Keys did not engage with the science. He launched a career. He became chair of the American Heart Association's nutrition committee. He got himself on the cover of Time magazine. He organised the Seven Countries Study, a sequel to the cherry-picked six, which selected populations and time points that would confirm his hypothesis and excluded those that would not. Crete was measured during Lent. The comparisons were, by design, not fair. Then he did the thing that turned him from a scientist into a politician. He went after the opposition. Dr John Yudkin, a British physiologist, published a book in 1972 called Pure, White and Deadly, arguing that sugar was a better fit for the heart disease data than fat. His data covered more populations, more years, and more accurately matched the rise in cardiovascular mortality across the twentieth century. Keys called him, in print, a charlatan. He used his position at the AHA to block Yudkin's research from conferences. He pressured editors. He lobbied funders. Yudkin's grants dried up. His reputation was systematically dismantled by a man who was, at this point, not doing science but running a protection racket for a hypothesis. Yudkin died in 1995 in obscurity. His work has since been quietly vindicated. Nobody has apologised. Meanwhile the American Heart Association, funded since 1948 by a $1.7 million donation from Procter and Gamble (makers of Crisco, a product that urgently needed a reason for Americans to stop cooking with lard), adopted Keys's recommendations and issued them as medical advice. The American public complied. Butter consumption collapsed. Margarine tripled. Seed oils, negligible in 1950, became the dominant cooking fat. The food industry reformulated thousands of products to remove fat and replace it with sugar, because the fat was the enemy and the sugar was not. American obesity rates, stable for fifty years, began to climb in 1977, the year the McGovern committee translated Keys's hypothesis into federal guidelines. They have not stopped climbing since. Type 2 diabetes followed. Metabolic syndrome followed. Fatty liver disease, which barely existed in 1950, became endemic. The entire constellation of chronic metabolic disease now occupying every doctor surgery in the developed world tracks, almost perfectly, onto the adoption curve of the guidance Keys spent his career promoting. He retired to Italy, drank olive oil, ate cheese, lived to 100, and described himself in interviews as a pioneer. He was a pioneer. He pioneered the practice of producing a predetermined conclusion from selective data, destroying the reputations of anyone who noticed, and using institutional capture to convert the conclusion into policy. Ancel Keys was not wrong the way scientists are sometimes wrong. Ancel Keys was wrong the way politicians are wrong. Deliberately. Profitably. Without consequence. You are still eating the consequences now.
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Kanika
Kanika@KanikaBK·
MOST PEOPLE DON'T KNOW THIS There are Python libraries giving free market data for 170,000+ tickers. Stocks. Crypto. Forex. Economic indicators. No Bloomberg. No expensive APIs. Here are 12 libraries every quant dev should bookmark👇
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk thinks the entire education system is built on a broken assumption. That every student should learn the same thing. At the same speed. In the same order. At the same time. Musk: “Everyone goes through from like 5th grade to 6th grade to 7th grade like it’s an assembly line. But people are not objects on an assembly line.” The model was designed for a factory economy. Standardized inputs. Predictable outputs. That economy is gone. The assembly line is gone. But the education system still runs on its logic. A student who masters algebra in two weeks sits through eight more weeks because the calendar says so. A student who struggles gets dragged forward because the schedule doesn’t wait. Neither is being served. Both are being processed. Musk: “Allow people to progress at the fastest pace that they can or are interested in, in each subject.” AI doesn’t teach a classroom. It teaches a student. One at a time. Every time. It skips what a student already knows. It finds where they’re stuck and approaches it from a different angle. It adjusts in real time. Not at the end of a semester when the damage is already done. A student obsessed with basketball learns fractions through shooting percentages. A student who builds in Minecraft learns geometry through architecture. The subject doesn’t change. The entry point does. No teacher with thirty students can do this. Not because they lack skill. Because the math doesn’t work. AI doesn’t have that constraint. Musk: “You do not need to tell your kid to play video games. They will play video games on autopilot all day. So if you can make it interactive and engaging, then you can make education far more compelling.” The brain isn’t broken. The format is. Kids learn complex systems and strategic thinking for hours voluntarily. Then walk into a classroom and can’t focus for twenty minutes. That’s not a discipline problem. That’s a design problem. Musk: “A university education is often unnecessary. You probably learn the vast majority of what you’re going to learn there in the first two years. And most of it is from your classmates.” Four years. Six figures of debt. And the real value comes from the people sitting next to you. Not the institution charging you. The degree doesn’t certify knowledge. It certifies endurance. Musk: “If the goal is to start a company, I would say no point in finishing college.” The system was built to train employees. If you’re not trying to be one, it has nothing left to offer you. Every lecture. Every textbook. Every curriculum. Now available instantly. Personalized to any learner. Adapted to any pace. The question isn’t whether the old model survives. It’s how long we keep forcing students through it while the replacement already exists.
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Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
this shouldn't be free. Vibe-Trading is an open-source AI trading agent that ships with 64 finance skills, 29 specialist swarm team presets, cross-market backtesting, and a full quant analysis toolkit. The architecture is what makes it different from everything else in this space. It's not a wrapper around one model with a few finance prompts. It's a DAG-based multi-agent system where specialized agents collaborate, debate, and hand off between each other while you watch the entire reasoning process stream in real time. You get: > Technical analysis across Ichimoku, harmonic patterns, Elliott Wave, SMC, and 60+ other setups > Quant tools: factor IC/IR analysis, quantile backtesting, Black-Scholes, full Greeks, portfolio optimization via MVO, Risk Parity, and Black-Litterman > Alt data: social sentiment, behavioral finance signals, macro regime detection, sector rotation > Crypto desk: perp funding basis, liquidation heatmaps, stablecoin flows, DeFi yield, token unlock tracking > Full CLI with a TUI, a FastAPI web server, and a React frontend HK/US equities and crypto data are completely free. Docker deploy takes 2 minutes. github.com/HKUDS/Vibe-Tra… MIT License. 100% Opensource.
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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
A healthy, active mom in her mid-40s in Chicago — never smoked a day in her life — gets diagnosed with lung cancer. Her doctor’s response? “You’re not the first young woman I’ve seen today with this.” According to a new Northwestern Medicine study, 65% of people diagnosed with lung cancer today don’t qualify for standard screenings because the guidelines only cover heavy smokers aged 50–80. Researchers are seeing more cases in younger non-smokers, especially women. Doctors admit they don’t fully know why this is happening. Possible suspects include air pollution, aerosols, cleaning products, gas stoves — but nothing is proven yet. Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer deaths in the U.S., and this trend is quietly shifting who it affects. It’s a sobering reminder that “never smoked” no longer means “immune.”
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Berk Aladag
Berk Aladag@aladagberk·
SEO içerik endüstrisi resmen bitti. Tek bir geliştirici, tek bir GitHub reposuyla stratejiyi, yazımı, editörlüğü ve 5 bin dolarlık faturayı aynı anda işten çıkardı. Adı SEO Makinesi. Anahtar kelimeden yayınlanmış yazıya sıfır insan.
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Tulsi Soni
Tulsi Soni@shedntcare_·
🚨SEO agencies are going to lose it. An open-source tool just replaced $2K–$12K/month retainers—free. It’s called GEO-SEO Claude, built on Claude. → Audits your site for AI search (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, AI Overviews) → Finds why you’re not getting cited—and fixes it → Generates reports, llms.txt, and crawler insights instantly Only 11% of sites get cited by both ChatGPT + Google AI Overviews. This shows you exactly how to get there. RT+ Like + reply “SEO” — I’ll send it + pick a few people for a bonus giveaway.
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