2026-03-02


Worthy

  • The happiest I’ve ever been

    For years, you’ve sat in front of a rectangle, moving tinier rectangles, only to learn that AI can now move those rectangles 10x better. As someone outside the equity class, you begin to wonder what your role is in this new paradigm. And whether rectangles were ever your ticket to happiness in the first place. When I was the age my basketball kids were, The Social Network came out. Like so many, I am a product of that generation. I accepted the propaganda that my value to this world only went as far as my product could scale. At 28, I’m finally beginning to challenge that.

Horseshit

Epstein

  • The Epstein Files And The Epstein Class

    Watch a certain kind of Ivy league student give a speech and you're bound to listen to them effusively (and confusingly) praise someone else for all of their own success. Often someone peripheral to that success but who's powerful and possibly important to their ambitions, such as a college professor from whom they may later want a sterling graduate school recommendation. You see this behavior repeatedly in the Epstein files. Uncle Jeffery?...hello? Though I suppose when your life's goal is to make it into the snake pit of Goldman Sachs' upper echelon then you better learn early to "uncle Jeffery".

    The Epstein files reveal the servile nature of that class of people and the ultra-narrow self interest that drives so many of them. Self interest so narrow that it can ultimately fail to serve their self-interest. This failure manifests not just in missed opportunities, but crucially at the most basic aim of self interest, ie self preservation. Reading the Epstein files is like watching greedy critters recklessly expose themselves to fatal risk for a chance to get a bite at a juicy treat. Mouse (or pussy?) trap be damned.

  • Epstein files reveal deeper ties to scientists than previously known


Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation

  • Using git while trans

    Git was not designed with people's names changing in mind. This is a problem, because people's names do change for many reasons. The most common one many people will be familiar with is women changing their surname when marrying a man. The one I am concerned about is the name change that trans people go through as part of a social transition. Unlike changing a surname at marriage, in which a person's "maiden name" can remain common knowledge, changing your name during a transition leaves behind what we commonly call a "deadname". Revealing a trans person's deadname is a safety issue, which is a problem when working with git.

    • Safety issue? No more so that revealing a maiden name...

AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World

Neo Gambling / Crypto con games

Left Angst

Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security

External Security / Militaria / Diplomania

  • Who was iran funding?

    Remember how we went into the USSR archives after the Soviet fall and found out which American groups, etc. they'd been funding? Getting the opportunity to do so with Iran would be very interesting.

    • Thread is interesting for the people who don't believe the Russians fund US groups.
  • U.S. Military Has Used Long-Range Kamikaze Drones in Combat for the First Time

    America's clone of Iran's Shahed-136 had been used against Iran in an ironic vignette of modern drone warfare.

    “The U.S. military got hold of an Iranian Shahed,” according to the U.S. official in December. “We took a look and reverse-engineered it. We are working with a number of U.S. companies in the innovation space.” “The LUCAS drone is the product of that [reverse-engineering] effort,” the official added. “It pretty much follows the Shahed design.”

    The LUCAS was designed by SpektreWorks. Its website provides basic specifications for a related target drone design called the FLM 136, which has a stated maximum range of 444 miles and can stay aloft for up to six hours. Its total payload capacity, not counting fuel, is 40 pounds, and it cruises at a speed of around 74 knots (with a dash speed of up to 105 knots). Whether these details reflect the capabilities of the operationalized LUCAS design is unclear.

    Overall, the Tomahawk has been deployed more than 2,350 times. At roughly $1.4 million apiece, the Tomahawk missile has an intermediate range of 800 to 1,553 miles and can be launched from more than 140 U.S. Navy ships and submarines.

  • Iran's Missile Barrage Tests Whether US Has Enough Interceptors

  • U.S. Races to Accomplish Iran Mission Before Munitions Run Out

  • US Military says 3 service members have been killed

    3 U.S. service members were killed, 5 wounded: The U.S. military said three service members have been killed and five others seriously wounded since the operations began. They are the first known American casualties from the fighting.

World

Iran / Houthi

Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp

  • A Small Nonprofit Did What the FDA Would Not

    When you account for what the FDA failed to account for, the math changes. Vaccine risks outweighed benefits for the general population of 18–25-year-old males relative to hospitalizations: those caused by vaccine-attributable myocarditis/pericarditis exceeded the hospitalizations prevented via vaccination — by between 8% and 52%, with the team’s most likely scenario showing a 38% excess.

Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda