TheLastHumanNode

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TheLastHumanNode

TheLastHumanNode

@LastHumanNode

Contemplating the social contract at universal scale.

Panopticon شامل ہوئے Şubat 2025
494 فالونگ66 فالوورز
iamnaga
iamnaga@iamnaga123·
@KobeissiLetter Strait of Hormuz blocked = Global economy in trouble. This is getting very serious now.
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The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
BREAKING: The passage of oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz has been stopped, per Iran's Fars News Agency. Iran says it will withdraw from the ceasefire if Israel continues attacks on Lebanon and it is preparing potential responses.
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bobatesomemayo
bobatesomemayo@bobatesomemayo·
people talk about the outlook and bluetooth issues but have you seen Expedition 55 EVA 2
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Billionaire Activistman Fan
Billionaire Activistman Fan@StopTheStealF2·
@Artium66779774 @BillAckman I ask people questions myself - cold calls. People you wouldn't know in the public eye but people who leave information to the public that unravels the trail I have been on and into the future. Friendships and sharing information is a perpetual feedback loop of compound wealth.
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Artium Mandebura
Artium Mandebura@Artium66779774·
Back to '96 : A young @BillAckman asking Warren Buffett about $FNMA and $FMCC accounting shenanigans. Fast forward 30 years to 2026: He’s now leading the historic fight against the US Treasury over the EXACT same thing! 🤯 The government cooked the books to drain $100B from Fannie Mae, but they forgot the golden rule of Wall Street: Never try accounting shenanigans on Ackman's watch. Time for the checkmate, Bill. youtube.com/watch?v=CnB8c5…
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
At what point do you realize that from a physics standpoint, you never can be looking at reality ever. All of it is conjured in your mind, and by the time the photons leave the surface of the thing your senses are aligned to, its already different. You can never be truly "present" ever.
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Signal Prime
Signal Prime@sig_prime·
@gisellaesthetic at which point do people realize they’re not looking at reality anymore?
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Photoshop Tricks!
Photoshop Tricks!@gisellaesthetic·
Wedding photo retouching in progress! Isn't this the amazing retoucher you've been looking for?
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
@MEFreedomFightr We need a law that states what any device that monitors the public is and how/who/what has access to its information. Much like a wiretapping law requiring consent or a warrant. It's got to stop, we have built our own prison.
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OSINTdefender
OSINTdefender@sentdefender·
U.S. President Donald J. Trump tells reporters aboard Air Force One that Iran has given the United States a “tribute” of 20 oil tankers that are expected to begin crossing Monday morning through the Strait of Hormuz.
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IM_PARANOID
IM_PARANOID@IM__PARANOID_·
@zerohedge Geopolitics bending—energy realities forcing cracks in old policies.
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zerohedge
zerohedge@zerohedge·
U.S. will allow Russian oil tanker to reach Cuba, breaking blockade: NTY
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
@vtchakarova No. It's because there's no landing. Even with the ISS at least they dock with it... Doing a figure 8 around a target isn't that exciting.
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
I'm hearing voices in my head too. They're helping me craft engagement bait online. Can't stand nonsense posts like yours. Waste of energy of all kinds. Including mine, and everyone else who even let photons bounce off their retina and process your garbage in their pre-frontal cortex.
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Rand
Rand@rand_longevity·
I'm hearing the Trump administration is letting AI take over most of the military control
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
@Xenoimpulse From a complexity standpoint it doesn't seem that fascinating. If there was a craft LANDING on the moon, THAT would be fascinating. It's like going to ISS, but its further away, and we're not even docking with it. It's uninteresting. Boring space ops these days.
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Pierce Alexander Lilholt
Pierce Alexander Lilholt@PierceLilholt·
What happens if AI begins to shape morality in ways we can’t understand?
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Deep Viewz Crypto
Deep Viewz Crypto@deepviewzcrypto·
@zerohedge Hitting AWACS = targeting eyes of the battlefield 💥 serious escalation
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Mr Anonymous
Mr Anonymous@zxce6718·
@zerohedge Losing an AWACS and still calling it “manageable” is some elite level narrative control.
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St.Bloodsport
St.Bloodsport@StBloodSport·
@zerohedge If true, escalation just went from "tense" to "open the emergency playbook"
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AIBlancos
AIBlancos@AIBlancos·
@zerohedge Oh look, another day in the Middle East soap opera. Iran breaks America's expensive toy, Saudi gets the bill, and everyone acts shocked. World War III getting delayed by budget constraints or what
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Ammanichanda
Ammanichanda@Arkasiraee·
WHY IRAN’S STRIKE ON A U.S. E-3 SENTRY CHANGES MORE THAN IT SEEMS 🚨🇺🇸 1:- The E-3 Sentry fleet is critically small. Around 16–17 aircraft remain. That’s not depth, that’s scarcity. Lose one, and you’re removing irreplaceable capacity. 2 :- Nearly 40% of that fleet was deployed to the Gulf. One hit doesn’t just reduce numbers, it compresses radar coverage and command capability across the entire theatre. 3:- This isn’t just another aircraft. The E-3 is the airborne command layer. Its radar scans hundreds of kilometres, tracking aircraft, missiles, and drones simultaneously. 4 :- It doesn’t just detect. It orchestrates. Fighters, interceptors, tankers, missile defence systems all depend on it. Remove it, and the entire system becomes slower, fragmented, and reactive. 5 :- The strike hints at deeper capability. Hitting a high-value asset on the ground suggests precise targeting intelligence, likely beyond standalone capacity. 6 :- This fits a pattern. Iran is not chasing jets. It is targeting the sensor layer. Radars, tracking systems, and now airborne command nodes. Blind the system, and everything else weakens. 7 :- Psychologically, this matters. These aircraft are supposed to operate far behind the front line, protected by layers of defence. Hitting one on the ground signals reach and vulnerability. 8 :- This loss compounds with others. Damaged radars, strained interceptor inventories, and stretched logistics are all stacking into systemic pressure. 9 :- Replacement is the real constraint. The E-3 runs on the Boeing 707 platform, which hasn’t been produced since the 1990s. There is no production line. 10 :- Its successor, the Boeing E-7 Wedgetail, is delayed. Even in the best case, meaningful replacement capacity is years away. THE COST OF WHAT WAS HIT • E-3 Sentry:- $537M to $596M per aircraft • KC-135 Stratotanker:- $80M to $120M per aircraft • Reported damage: 1 E-3 + multiple KC-135s (up to 5 in some reports) Estimated impact:- Roughly $900M to $1.2B+ in high-value airborne assets damaged in a single strike. My reading is this, This wasn’t just a hit. It was a billion-dollar message aimed directly at the most critical and least replaceable parts of the system. This was clearly done by the intel given by China and Russia. Iran simply does not have the ability to track these Assets from Space but can attack based on the intel provided by Russia and China.
Ammanichanda tweet mediaAmmanichanda tweet media
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
@nikitabier @justalexoki The moment the world can speak to one another fluently with little friction is not to be trivialized. In better times we might be celebrating this more. Thank you.
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Nikita Bier
Nikita Bier@nikitabier·
@justalexoki Just found out location needs to be set to US. We will fix this to support auto translations globally.
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
@shanaka86 Stop using Ai to write your copy, it immediately makes the reader skip it.
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
BREAKING: Zelensky just landed in the UAE and signed a defence cooperation agreement with President MBZ. The deal on the table changes everything about this war. Ukraine is offering Gulf states 1,000 drone interceptors per day. Each Sting interceptor costs $2,100. Each Patriot missile it replaces costs $3.9 million. In exchange, Ukraine wants the Patriot missiles the Gulf states are burning through, because Kyiv cannot get enough of them to stop Russian missiles. Read that again. The country America refused to arm fast enough is now arming America’s allies with a weapon that costs 1,857 times less than the one America cannot produce fast enough. The National reported on March 27 that Zelensky told reporters: “We’d like to quietly receive the Patriot missiles we have a deficit of, and give them a corresponding number of interceptors.” AFP confirmed the UAE agreement on March 28. Eleven countries have formally requested Ukraine’s drone defence expertise per Zelensky’s own count. Over 200 Ukrainian military specialists are already deployed across the UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Jordan. Here is the arithmetic that should terrify every Pentagon procurement officer on earth. The United States fired 943 Patriot interceptors in the first four days of the Iran war per a US Congressional study cited by the Jerusalem Post. That is eighteen months of Lockheed Martin’s annual production consumed in 96 hours. Each of those 943 shots cost $3.9 million. Total expenditure: $3.68 billion in four days on defensive interceptions alone. Iran produces 10,000 Shahed drones per month per Reuters. Each drone costs $20,000 to $50,000. The cost exchange ratio is 114 to 1 in Iran’s favour per Military Times. Ukraine’s Sting interceptor inverts this arithmetic entirely. At $2,100, the cost ratio flips from 114-to-1 against America to roughly 10-to-1 against Iran. Ukraine can supply 1,000 per day. That is 30,000 per month against Iran’s 10,000 Shaheds per month. For the first time in this war, the defender’s production rate exceeds the attacker’s production rate at a fraction of the cost. And the country that built this weapon is the same country that Trump publicly rejected. “No, they are not helping. We do not need their help. We know more about drones than anyone else” per Fox News. He doubled down: “The last person we need help from is Zelensky.” Meanwhile the Pentagon notified Congress of plans to redirect $750 million in Ukraine-bound Patriot missiles to Gulf states per House of Saud reporting. America is simultaneously refusing Ukraine’s cheap solution and cannibalising Ukraine’s expensive one. Zelensky framed this explicitly. He told The National: “No matter how many Patriots, THAADs, or other air-defence systems are in the Middle East, that alone is not enough for fully effective air defence.” He told the UK Parliament: “When it comes to shooting down massive Shahed attacks, only Ukrainian experience can really help with this today.” The Pentagon is spending $3.9 million per interception, raiding Swiss fighter jet accounts to cover shortfalls, and diverting Ukraine’s own Patriot supply to the Gulf. Zelensky is offering the same result for $2,100 and producing 1,000 units per day. The market has a word for this kind of disruption. The $2,100 drone is the most important weapon in this war. And the country that built it is the one America said it did not need. Full analysis - open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
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TheLastHumanNode
TheLastHumanNode@LastHumanNode·
@hissgoescobra This reads as AI SLOP+ which negates it. Don't have Ai do your thinking. If you don't know, don't write it. Blocked.
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John Jackson
John Jackson@hissgoescobra·
The Houthis are a tough opponent who should not be underestimated. There are six key points to understand about their entry into this conflict. (1) in the Civil War in Yemen, they fought the United Arab Emirates and Saudis for seven years and came out on top, controlling most of the country; (2) they have a more advanced missile capabilities than they get credit for. Ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and pretty decent air defense that almost shot down several of our planes in Operation Rough Rider; (3) remember in that conflict we had our hands full. They showed adaptability and resilience. They came close to hitting a few of our ships, in fact, came so close to our aircraft carrier that it had to swerve and dump an F-18 in the ocean. They can fight; (4) this will complicate our air defense requiring a radar to look in two different directions and axes of attack. We pissed away a lot of munitions and air defense missiles without rationing enough to plan for them to come into the war; (5) 5-10% of the world’s oil flows through the Ban-el-Mandeb Strait on the Red Sea. They can really crank up the economic attrition strategy of the regime in Iran; (6) fundamentally, it’s a fresh player coming into a war in the third quarter after the parties have been beating on each other for most of the game. This is a calculated escalation by the Iranian regime. While Trump makes fake threats that amount to war crimes, speaks in incomprehensible double talk, and seems like he’s spinning his wheels in place with nowhere to go, the regime has been clear in its language, and in its escalation, making the most of the advantages that it had. In my opinion, we’ve been getting our ass kicked good and hard on strategy no question and this is another example of it. This war just got more complicated.
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