Evils' only purpose is to convince humanity to reject its own divinity.
Why can't we get any research money into any of these potential human powers listed below before we start implanting freaking computer chips into our brains?
Clairvoyance
Precognition
Clairaudience
Telekinesis
Biokinesis
Astral Projection
Biolocation
Animal Communication
Xenoglossy
Aura Reading
Intuitive Diagnosis
Dream Visitation
Dream Visitation seems most interesting since it is notably mentioned in the book, "Think and Grow Rich," by Napoleon Hill where he mentions that Thomas Edison visited him in a dream and when he confronted Edison about it (who was still alive at the time), Edison's only reply was, "Your dream was more a reality than you may imagine it to have been" and then offered no further explanation.
@elonmusk@larryellison@finkd@JeffBezos@q_larrypage@jensenhuang@Steven_Ballmer@peterthiel
@Polymarket That's really cool and creative! @Coinbase won't even let me the change the background to my physical card - I have to have the Coinbase blue color as my debit card background.
Plans released for a $16 billion mile-long ship capable of carrying 80,000 people.
The 'Freedom Ship' would be home to about 50,000 people, with space for 10,000 tourists and 20,000 crew members.
"The Freedom Ship is envisioned as a permanently mobile city at sea designed for long-term residence rather than short-term travel," the company says.
The ship would be about 8 times the size of the current largest ship in the world, the Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas.
The plans include a 15,000-seat stadium, schools, colleges, shops, clubs, a water park, a music hall, museums, parks, and more.
The ship, which would run on nuclear, would be too large to dock and would remain in international waters.
Freedom Cruise International says it would go around the world every two to three years.
Insane.
Maybe she prefers the smell of wreckage and carnage cause those are the smells drunk drivers release into the air when they slam into a family of 4 slaughtering them on their way to church while they live. Yeah that's a better smell - the smell of drunk drivers is far less annoying.
@TheMarcitect There is something about Luna that seems off. I feel like she's somehow the new Nancy Pelosi (hot with tits), but on the conservative side. She's too outspoken.
@r0ck3t23 This is the exact interview when everybody realized Ma was a complete idiot. Like really, after I saw and heard Ma's rebuttal, I knew I could one day make it big too. Cause I thought if this moron could make it, so can I!
@WhiteHouse Could you all reach out to @dabeull to see if he'll play at Freedom 250? We need funky frequencies to start dominating the airwaves again. 🎵🎶🇺🇸📻🦾
Garbage engagement! And I hate that I have to contribute to your "engagemen," but you and Carl Moon are the guy Steve Carell's character is talking to in this scene in the movie, The Big Short. "Guess my net worth." Who tf cares!? Provide real content and engagement - not this trash.
@joeroganhq Yeah this really takes years of practice huh, Dana. Dana, made such a horrible decision with this slap box bullshit. @ufc should've gotten into Muay Thai.
@TheMoonCarl You're exactly the guy Steve Carell's character is talking to in this scene. What kind of engagement slop is this? "Guess my net worth." Who tf cares about your net worth? People like you need to just go the fuck away... forever.
Peter Thiel said something that flatly contradicts everything business culture claims to believe.
Thiel: “Most people believe that capitalism and competition are synonyms. I believe capitalism and competition are antonyms.”
That’s not a nuance.
That’s a complete inversion of how you’re taught to think about value.
Every business school. Every startup pitch. Every founder origin story.
All built on one article of faith.
That competition is the engine. That the best companies win by outfighting everyone else.
Thiel says that’s exactly why most businesses fail.
Thiel: “A world of perfect competition is a world where all the profits are competed away.”
Follow the logic to its end.
More competitors. Thinner margins. Longer hours. Less money.
Competition doesn’t create wealth.
It dissolves it.
The harder you fight inside a crowded market, the less there is left to win.
Thiel: “The example I use of a bad type of business is opening a restaurant, which is super competitive and nobody ever makes any money doing it.”
A million restaurants in America. Most will be gone inside five years.
Not because the food was bad. Not because the founders didn’t sacrifice everything.
Because they entered a game where even the winners barely break even.
Thiel: “The example of a fantastic monopoly business I give is Google, which basically has had no competition in search since 2002.”
Google didn’t outcompete Yahoo.
Google made Yahoo a footnote in a history nobody reads.
And it has printed money every single day since.
One company fought for a market.
The other became the market.
That distinction is the entire lesson.
Thiel: “It is the goal of every founder, of every entrepreneur, to try to build a monopoly business.”
But this goes deeper than business advice.
Competition feels productive because it’s measurable. You can track your rank. Your market share. Your position relative to everyone else.
But relative position is not value creation.
You can spend an entire career optimizing for a category someone else invented and call it progress.
Bezos didn’t outcompete bookstores. He built something bookstores couldn’t even categorize.
Thiel: “If you’re a one-of-a-kind company, a happy company that’s doing something different, you are a monopoly.”
The pattern never changes.
The people who built the most wealth in human history didn’t win a competition.
They made competition a non-concept.
They didn’t play the game better. They designed a different game entirely. One where they set the rules and the margins and the terms.
And that reframes the only question that actually matters.
Not how do I beat the competition.
Why am I competing at all.
Because competition is a confession.
That someone else defined the game. Someone else set the rules. Someone else decided what winning looks like.
And you showed up to play on their terms.
The most valuable things ever built weren’t better answers to existing questions.
They were entirely new questions.
And the person who writes the question will always own the answer.