A 21-YEAR-OLD FROM CHINA RUNS 300 AI AGENTS AT ONCE. THE PART THAT MATTERS ISN'T THE SPEED, IT'S THAT NONE OF THEM CAN LIE TO HIM
he opens the dashboard and shows the swarm live, 300 Kimi K2.6 agents firing in parallel, then Opus 4.8 checking every single output against its source. this is not just a faster swarm. it is a loop that refuses to stop while anything is still wrong
he pointed it at 100 EV-market companies. first pass: 12 failed. wrong revenue, dead citations, empty fields. second pass: 3 failed. third pass: zero
this is not another agent demo. it is a system that catches its own mistakes before he reads a single row
Elon Musk said the loneliest moment of his life was lying in an empty house after his divorce, realizing he had nobody to call.
He had employees. Thousands of them. He had investors. Board members. Engineers waiting for his decisions. Two companies depending on him every hour.
But at 2am in an empty house with the divorce papers signed, none of that mattered. There was no one to talk to. No one who was there because they wanted to be, not because he was paying them.
He told Rolling Stone that he didn't want to be alone. That he couldn't stand the empty bed. That he would be willing to give up a lot just to have the right person next to him.
This is the richest man on earth describing the same feeling that millions of ordinary men feel every night. The specific loneliness of knowing you can buy anything except the one thing that actually fixes the quiet.
He went on to date. To marry again. To divorce again. To have children with multiple women. Searching in every direction for the thing that fills the gap.
People assume wealth solves loneliness. That at a certain net worth the human problems disappear. They don't. They just get louder in a bigger house.
You want me to be mad that 250,000 British girls were raped by brown invaders. But I want to know why the same outrage wasn’t seen when it was just 25 British girls.
And I’ll tell you this - You, the men of Britain, will even tolerate 2.5 million of your women being raped and trafficked by the brown invaders, or more!
Why?
Because you are waiting for permission from someone to do what needs to be done and that permission will never come.
The problem isn’t so much the invader (don’t get me wrong, they are a problem), the problem is there is something faulty with our psychology. We have become the dumb, obedient golden retriever of the races of man. This mindset has to be erased from us, forever, or we will be wiped out.
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.
I am personally going to hold my SpaceX shares forever, like quite literally. I think that, this is the biggest mission of any company in history, going after the biggest markets of any company history with the biggest moat.
— Shaun Maguire
ELON MUSK: The only way to reach 1,000 terawatts of AI power is a mass driver on the Moon.
"In order to get to 1,000x from a terawatt per year. The only way that we can really achieve that is on the moon with a mass driver, essentially where you do local production of photovoltaics and radiators on the moon, maybe you bring the chips from Earth, or you could conceivably make the chips on the moon, and but you need most of the mass to be made on the moon, so you don't have to transport it to the moon from Earth, and then because the moon has no atmosphere and only 1/6 Earth's gravity, you can accelerate the AI satellites into deep space without a rocket, so you can basically shoot them into space using an electromagnetic gun, like a, like a rail gun type. I mean, just, it's basically a linear electric motor, as a way to think about it."
Peter Thiel: Europe will never have massive tech companies because they fear success.
"In Silicon Valley, there's this pornography of failure. You talk about all your failures, and this somehow means you're going to succeed."
"In the social democratic European societies, it's acceptable to be moderately successful, it's not acceptable to be wildly successful. If you have a successful company that's starting to grow, it will get short-circuited, and you'll sell the company. You'll never get to an enormous company if you sell it along the way."
"The single most important decision in the history of Facebook— summer of 2006. It was two years into the company. We got an acquisition offer for $1B from Yahoo to buy the company. There were three of us on the board— Mark Zuckerberg, myself, and another VC. We had a meeting to decide if we should take the $1B."
"The two of us thought it was a lot of money, we should maybe take it. Mark started the board meeting— 'this is a pro forma thing, we're just going to talk about this for 10 minutes. Obviously we're not taking it.'"
"Any super big tech company is one where you've been offered multiple times for people to buy it, and you've chosen never to sell it. You're not that afraid of success."
"In Europe, the answer is to check out sooner rather than later and go back to the decade-long vacation that people are on in Europe."
Anthropic CEO:
"If my revenue is not $1 trillion, even $800 billion,
there's no force on earth, no hedge on earth,
that could stop me from going bankrupt."
In a 3-hour podcast, Dario Amodei does the math on his own bankruptcy.
Revenue 10x a year.
90% of code written by the model.
A country of geniuses by 2028.
He can't tell you if it ends in trillions or zero.
The most honest voice in AI, or the biggest bubble admitting it?