Jason Post

942 posts

Jason Post

Jason Post

@JasonPostTX

Tham gia Eylül 2024
281 Đang theo dõi61 Người theo dõi
Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@BrianRoemmele We’ve been talking about reprap machines for a long time but what about raw materials? How is this done from 0? There will be gatekeepers…???
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
Understand when you build your debates about “them” and “they” are not going to allow you and me to let our robots build more robots: We ain’t asking permission. It is already taking shape in garages around the world it will not stop. It is not utopia—it is just not dystopia.
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele

Once robots making robot in your garage scales, central distribution from 1000s of miles away collapse, permanently. It was all centered around “cheap labor”. Now YOU own the cheapest labor. Today this is an AI video… Tomorrow it is yours.

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Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@brianeharrison How about our county governments? Would it be some form of a sales tax? Raise consumption taxes?
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Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@brianeharrison Although I agree with you, we have to ask how would we fund our public school systems without property taxes?
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Brian Harrison
Brian Harrison@brianeharrison·
Texas would have the most conservative and pro-LIBERTY legislature in America, Democrats would no longer chair any committees, our Obama Parlimentarian would be fired... And we’d start ELIMINATING PROPERTY TAXES on day one!
Mike 🇺🇸@MikeyDog

@brianeharrison We need @brianeharrison to be Speaker of the Texas House and set the legislative agenda there. #TxLege

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Mindi
Mindi@hey_mindi·
There is something catastrophically wrong with Americas vet business. I sat for 3 hours yesterday with our 11 year old dog. Test after test. I kept signing financial agreement papers, desperate to find an answer to what’s wrong. Every step of the way, a thorough explanation of the need to do xyz. Always with the sentence at the end “that runs $____” Sign this. By the end of the 3 hours, my choices were pay $5000 to admit her for the rest of the afternoon or put her down. I couldn’t think straight. I walked in with her hours prior thinking she just had some little bug that would be simple to resolve. I can’t stop thinking about how many people would have to choose option 2, because $5000 out of left field isn’t possible to pay. I also can’t believe that I was forced to sit and watch a 14 min vaccine commercial reel on repeat for 3 hours while I contemplated our devastating circumstances. This can’t be the norm. If you have a prayer, I humbly ask if you’d lift our family up this Easter Sunday.
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Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@AndrewYang This is not smart or thought through. The politicians and bureaucrats will always look for ways to kill innovation. Taxing the bots will make governments gatekeepers and we all know how this will turn out.
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Jay Anderson
Jay Anderson@TheProjectUnity·
🇬🇧THIS IS A TEST 🇺🇸 ARE YOU IN AMERICA? I want to see if X has quietly added this regional restriction to their algorithm. Drop a comment if you're in America and see this post!
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Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@BrianRoemmele Or… will the bourgeoisie find a way to perpetuate it and maintain control as they always have. I don’t have the answer but it keeps coming to mind as we look ahead to the age of robots. Politicians are already screaming “Tax the Robots!”
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Brian Harrison
Brian Harrison@brianeharrison·
Should the Texas House have a "Republican" Speaker who was supported by JAMES TALARICO??
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Mike Lee
Mike Lee@BasedMikeLee·
Should President Trump use his Article II authority to convene Congress to (1) fund DHS, and (2) pass the SAVE America Act?
The Daily Signal@DailySignal

.@SenMikeLee has been calling for President Donald Trump to invoke his power under Article II of the U.S. Constitution to force Congress back into town to get to work—a power not invoked since 1948, when President Harry Truman used it, writes @GCaldwell_news dailysignal.com/2026/03/31/wil…

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Jason Post đã retweet
Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
He drives a school bus in Dallas, Texas. But the kids on his route call him something else — Dad. Every morning before the sun is fully up, Curtis Jenkins pulls his yellow school bus to the curb and waits. Not just to pick up kids. To see them. For seven years, Curtis noticed things other people missed. The little girl who folded her paper lunch bag perfectly every day but left it on the bus — because there was nothing inside. The boy whose shoes were too small. The kids who got on quiet, eyes down, carrying weight no child should have to carry alone. So Curtis did something simple. He made his bus a community. He gave every child a job — a greeter, an assistant, a "police officer" keeping order in the aisles. Every morning he'd call out, "We're going to care about each other and love everybody, right?" And 50 small voices would answer back. But it didn't stop there. Over the years, Curtis spent thousands of dollars of his own money — money he saved by skipping his own Christmas gifts with his wife — on birthday cards, bikes, backpacks, turkeys at Thanksgiving, and 70 hand-wrapped Christmas presents. He didn't buy random gifts. He asked each child what they wanted. Then he went and got exactly that. No donation page. No announcement. No cameras. When the story finally got out and people questioned how a bus driver could afford it, Curtis just smiled. "It doesn't take money. It takes discipline." But here's the part that will stay with you. When a reporter asked the kids what they loved most about Curtis — not one of them mentioned the gifts. A fifth grader named Ethan, whose parents had divorced when he was four, looked up and said quietly: "He's the father that I always wanted. In some ways, I wish my dad could have been like that." Curtis heard it. Didn't flinch. Just nodded. "That's the paycheck right there," he said later. "If I can get that, you can keep the money." He wasn't looking for a medal. He wasn't going viral on purpose. He was just a man who decided, every single morning, that his bus would be the safest place those kids walked into all day. Sometimes the person who changes a child's life forever isn't a teacher or a coach or a counselor. Sometimes it's the person behind the wheel of a yellow bus at 7 a.m. — who chose to show up, and chose to care, when nobody was asking him to. Tag someone who needs to read this today. 💛
Mr PitBull tweet media
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Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@TheProjectUnity Rubio and Kennedy are starting to look a whole lot more interesting..
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Jay Anderson
Jay Anderson@TheProjectUnity·
Vice President says UFOs are real and they are demons. Yep, this is our timeline.
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Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@TheProjectUnity True, but the south of Lebanon is kind of its own state exactly ruled by the government of Lebanon… Just saying
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Jay Anderson
Jay Anderson@TheProjectUnity·
When it's a country we don't like, Russia INVADES Ukraine. When it's a country we like, Israeli Troops CROSS INTO Lebanon. Wording is a subtle witchcraft.
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
So let me get this straight... The EXACT SAME PEOPLE who gave Elon Musk a standing ovation for DOGE, and then only voted on 1 DOGE cut... ...are the SAME PEOPLE saying we need secure elections, but won't pass the SAVE Act????
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Jason Post
Jason Post@JasonPostTX·
@NotPsychoPNut @RBystrianyk That’s from the TB vaccine. TB has been eliminated in most of the developing world, but they do still administer the TB vaccine and most of Latin America. They now do it on the back of the shoulder, but a lot of women and men still have it on one of their arms.
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Roman Bystrianyk
Roman Bystrianyk@RBystrianyk·
In the 19th century, “humanized lymph” was the standard method of propagating the smallpox vaccine. It involved taking pustular (pus!) material (lymph) from the vaccine sore of a vaccinated person and transferring it directly to the arm of another person —typically after the recipient’s arm had been scored with a lancet. For much of the century, this method of arm-to-arm vaccination was the primary means of administering the vaccine. No hypodermic needle. No sterilization of the site. Often, there was no clear understanding of the material’s precise origin—whether it derived from cowpox, horsepox, goat, or someone suffering or who died with smallpox.) Does this sound like science to you? “...children and adults comparatively recently vaccinated with humanized lymph, and some showing good marks, may subsequently, within few days, months, or years, contract smallpox is an undoubted fact, known to all of us. I have myself recorded 469 cases of persons, of all ages and both sexes, suffering from smallpox after vaccination, with 99 deaths — an average of 21 per cent.; and higher figures are given by Dr. Collie. Now, many of these sufferers showed good vaccine marks of the kind that would be deemed worthy of an extra grant from the Government-Inspector (at least, I used formerly to receive such grants for doing similar work); and yet they took smallpox-some within six days, some within six months, and some within six years of vaccination.” — Dr. Browning, the Medical Officer of Health for Rotherhithe, London [George William Winterburn, PhD, MD, The Value of Vaccination: A Non-partisan Review of Its History and Results, 1886, pp. 75–76.]
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Kevin Carpenter
Kevin Carpenter@kejca·
Apple CEO Tim Cook: "I don't want people looking at their smartphone more than they're looking in someone's eyes." "If they are just scrolling endlessly, this is not the way you want to spend your day. Go out and spend it in nature."
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Jason Post đã retweet
The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
May 16, 1963. Gordon Cooper was orbiting Earth alone inside a capsule barely big enough to turn around in, moving at 17,500 miles per hour. He had been up there for over a day. Then the warnings started. First a faulty sensor screaming that the ship was falling — it wasn't. He switched it off. Then something far worse: a short circuit knocked out the entire automated guidance system. The one that kept the capsule steady. The one that was supposed to bring him home. Without it, reentry was nearly impossible. Too shallow an angle and the capsule would bounce off the atmosphere back into space. Too steep and it would incinerate. The margin for error was razor thin — and every computer that was supposed to hit that margin was dead. Down on the ground, NASA engineers watched the telemetry in silence. They could see everything going wrong. They could fix nothing. Cooper didn't panic. He uncapped a grease pencil and drew lines directly on the inside of his window to track the horizon. He looked up at the stars he had spent months memorizing and used their positions to orient the ship by eye. Then he set his wristwatch. Because when you have no computers left, you become the computer. At exactly the right moment — calculated in his head, confirmed by the stars outside — he fired the retrorockets. The capsule shook. The sky turned to fire. For several minutes, no one on Earth could reach him as plasma swallowed the ship whole. Then the parachutes opened. Faith 7 hit the water just four miles from the recovery ship — the single most accurate splashdown in the entire Mercury program. The man with a wristwatch and a few pencil marks on a window had outperformed every automated system NASA had. We talk a lot about technology saving us. And it often does. But Cooper's story is a quiet reminder that behind every machine, there still has to be a human being who can look out the window, think clearly under pressure, and decide what to do next. The final backup was never the software. It was him.
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