RYANOZ

746 posts

RYANOZ

RYANOZ

@RyanozRyan

เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2025
9 กำลังติดตาม51 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
rocket Voyager 1’s distance represents less than 0.0000004% of the galaxy’s width.
Elon Musk@elonmusk

@xdNiBoR If civilization drops below the tech level needed for interplanetary spaceflight before making life multiplanetary, that could be the end of consciousness

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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Orwell was a genius
Krzysztof Szczawinski 🇵🇱@Kristof_Poland

Animal Farm by George Orwell, in short: 1. Old Major, the fattest pig on the farm, delivers a sermon about "liberation." He has never missed a meal in his life – but he is the most envious of the Man – the producer, the entrepreneur… 2. “Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy” – the ideology is manufactured from the start, designed not to free the animals but to direct their resentment away from the pigs and toward a useful target. Every revolution needs an enemy. The pigs chose the farmer. 3. The revolution’s commandments were never a constitution. They were a management tool – sacred enough to motivate, vague enough to rewrite, and controlled from the beginning by the only ones who could read – the pigs. 4. Boxer the horse, the most honest creature on the farm, decent, loyal yet naive, totally devoted, responds to every setback with the same answer: “I will work harder!” He means it completely. He works himself half to death. It is the most heartbreaking sentence in the book – because the new system is perfectly designed to absorb exactly that kind of devotion and give nothing back. When he finally collapses from exhaustion, he is sold to the knacker. For cash. The pigs buy more whisky with the proceeds. The other animals are told he died in a hospital receiving the best care. The most useful animal on the farm is the one who never once suspects he is the product. 5. The commandments get rewritten at night not because power corrupted the revolution – the rewriting was always the plan. Language was the weapon from the first speech Old Major ever gave. 6. “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others” – this is not the system’s failure. It is the system’s true face, finally visible once the animals are too exhausted and confused to object. 7. Orwell’s message: the lie came first. And the "liberation" it promised delivered something far worse than what came before – because the fattest pig was merely selfish at the start, but by the end is selfish and fluent in the language of "justice." He took all the eggs. He took everything. And made the hens thank him for it. The fattest pig knew what he was doing all along…

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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
This doesn’t apply to advanced civilizations. The Romans were archaic by comparison. They didn’t have pocket supercomputers, AI robots delivering sushi to the pyramids at 2am, or shared virtual worlds with millions while we scroll and simulate. We didn’t “forget” how they built — we outgrew the constraints. These diatribes always assume some advanced tech utopia we haven’t developed yet. So what is it? The part they leave unsaid is always the same: Transhumanism. Brain modifications, neural interfaces replacing screens, eyewear that locks us in deeper, screentime ballooning beyond 8+ hours into full simulations and constant machine merging. Posthumanism as the “next step.” Here’s the truth they dodge: there isn’t much real innovation left in the current paradigm. We’re already paying the price in screen addiction — eroded attention, thinned creativity, outsourced imagination, and shrinking human agency. The body becomes a sketch to be “upgraded,” limitations that give life meaning get engineered away, and we drift into dependency on systems we don’t control. Preserving civilization isn’t about racing further into posthuman merger. It’s about protecting what’s left of our humanity — real agency, physical mastery, deep relationships, and unmediated experience — before we optimize ourselves into something lesser. The future won’t be won by those who keep merging with the machine. It belongs to those who refuse to.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Egypt forgot how to build the pyramids. Rome forgot how to build the aqueducts. Some still carry water today. What they built still stands. Neither civilization remembers how they did it. Musk: “You look at great civilizations like ancient Egypt, and they were able to make the pyramids, and they forgot how to do that.” Musk: “And the Romans, they built these incredible aqueducts. They forgot how to do it.” No army invaded them. The knowledge just stopped getting used, and the moment it did, it was gone. Same collapse. Compressed into fifty years instead of a thousand. Musk: “In 1969, we were able to send somebody to the moon… Then the space shuttle retired, and the United States could take no one to orbit.” Musk: “People are mistaken when they think that technology just automatically improves… it will, by itself, degrade.” Capability doesn’t sit in a vault. It only exists inside the people doing the work right now. The second they stop, it doesn’t pause. It disappears. That should not scare you. It should focus you. Nobody loses a civilization to war. They lose it the moment they stop building. Nobody is owed the future. It belongs to whoever keeps building it.
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Kevin O'Leary aka Mr. Wonderful
Kevin O'Leary aka Mr. Wonderful@kevinolearytv·
The narrative about data centers that were built in Virginia 20 years ago, they were old technology. They used a lot of water, they were very noisy, they created a lot of heat. But like every other technology, it's advanced dramatically. Today, we don't use a lot of water in data centers because it's a closed loop system like your car, your radiator. It stays inside a system. Many turbines now don't use water at all, they’re air-cooled. This narrative about data centers destroying the environment is an old story, and it's being used by those that don't wanna see this advance. We just need more capacity. We have to build it more responsibly, and that's exactly what's going on now. So this narrative is mostly a falsehood. And I think I know who's spreading this falsehood by the way. They're not our friends.
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
@Polymarket His. HeadsWidth officially points like a pentagon.
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Polymarket
Polymarket@Polymarket·
JUST IN: War Sec. Hegseth officially appoints Marc Andreessen to the Pentagon’s new Defense Policy Board.
Polymarket tweet mediaPolymarket tweet media
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
@JonChurchEA @AmiriKing Get his number then… next time you’re in a burning building… we’ll give him a call for ya.
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Jon Church
Jon Church@JonChurchEA·
@AmiriKing Cops had it under control. This is not the firefighters job. The firefighter is not a coward, he runs into burning buildings to save peoples lives.
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Amiri King
Amiri King@AmiriKing·
A scholar dances with joy after beating a man unconscious at an intersection. (The scholar was driving the wrong way and collided with the victim) A firefighter stands by and refuses to even exit his SUV. Shave your mustache and switch professions, coward.
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jay plemons
jay plemons@jayplemons·
The great lie is that society is divided between rich and poor. The great truth, as David Friedberg puts it, is makers vs takers. Makers build, create, and deliver real value: houses, software, art, businesses, and everything that moves civilization forward. Takers watch, criticize, analyze, and politic. They push the lie that the rich hoard unfairly so the poor must seize it… all while positioning themselves to rule the chaos. As @friedberg tells his kids: “At the end of the day, if you made something and someone else valued it, you were a maker. That was an amazing achievement. That is a great day.” Takers thrive on division. Makers drive progress. Time to choose your side.
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
@CuriosityonX Because they are more advanced and we’re just in their simulation?
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Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
If aliens really do exist, why haven’t they visited Earth?
Curiosity tweet media
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan

@nypost The water truth: U.S. data centers consumed 17.4 billion gallons directly in 2023 — equivalent to the annual usage of approximately 160,000 households. Projections: 38-73 billion gallons by 2028. Even "closed-loop" systems involve substantial evaporative losses.

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New York Post
New York Post@nypost·
Panic over data centers is wildly exaggerated — they use less water than golf courses and less energy than the USA’s fridges trib.al/oNxwNyN
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan

@nypost Data Centers are not advancing human potential — it’s racing blindly into post-humanism. Kids today are already drowning in screen addiction, with attention spans shredded and curiosity replaced by endless dopamine scrolls. That’s worth defending against!

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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
@nypost Data Centers are not advancing human potential — it’s racing blindly into post-humanism. Kids today are already drowning in screen addiction, with attention spans shredded and curiosity replaced by endless dopamine scrolls. That’s worth defending against!
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
This is not merely a resource issue — it reflects a deeper cultural pattern. As previously noted: DATA CENTERS = SCREEN ADDICTION. Between 76 % and 82 %+ of internet traffic consists of video, live-streaming, augmented reality, virtual reality, photos, everyones lived experience!! Americans average 7–12+ hours of daily screen time, with children increasingly immersed in dopamine-driven scrolling. We are constructing vast infrastructure to support endless content consumption while human attention and intellectual curiosity erode. From the 1956 IBM 5 MB mainframe to today’s infinite feeds, we have not reduced demand — we have supercharged it.
RYANOZ tweet media
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
Technocrats dismiss critics as "not aligned with progress" or accuse them of misinformation. Yet communities are experiencing the real consequences: noise, heat, rising power bills, land pressures, and strained resources. The data, maps, charts, and human costs tell the accurate story. #DataCenters #AIReality
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RYANOZ
RYANOZ@RyanozRyan·
This is not merely a resource issue — it reflects a deeper cultural pattern. As previously noted: DATA CENTERS = SCREEN ADDICTION. Between 76 % and 82 %+ of internet traffic consists of video, streaming, and photographs. Americans average 7–12+ hours of daily screen time, with children increasingly immersed in dopamine-driven scrolling. We are constructing vast infrastructure to support endless content consumption while human attention and intellectual curiosity erode. From the 1956 IBM 5 MB mainframe to today’s infinite feeds, we have not reduced demand — we have supercharged it.
RYANOZ tweet media
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The Wall Street Journal
Arizona’s largest utility is proposing a 45% electricity-rate increase for data centers and a 14.5% hike for households. No one is happy. on.wsj.com/4dYmOLC
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