What do you mean Bryan Johnson is doing his weird science shit on his girlfriend but its probably the most comprehensive and highly funded research in women's health and he is probably going to cure endometriosis ?????
@REnglandDC@PoPville this was wild, only DC would rebrand to "the area [was] known for extreme poverty, "shabby shanties," disease outbreaks (malaria, typhoid), and gang violence." when what we really need are some dope Irish restaurants to celebrate the heritage and drive commerce $
Love this - comments are full of strife around who "deserves it" and wonky facts about income (but not assets), but the heart of the issue is where we invest - why would you invest in the age group with the least amount of potential future earning? Bc healthcare costs? Fix that.
As @MayaMacGuineas explains, right now we spend $6 on seniors for every $1 on kids under 18. When Social Security began, seniors were the poorest — today children are.
To add insult to injury, we have mortgaged their future with $39 trillion in debt and growing. It is immoral what we are doing to our children and grandchildren.
“Young women and men are being comforted by the false premise that childbearing may be delayed without consequences,” writes Dr. Sarah Poggi. “The science says differently.”
This 70-second clip is spreading like wildfire for a reason.
Chris Cuomo asks the question every cancer patient fears:
“Are you just giving people false hope?”
Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong doesn’t answer with words.
He pulls up actual brain scans.
Patient: failed surgery, failed radiation, failed chemo.
Result after Anktiva + BioShield protocol: tumor visibly shrinking in months — with NO chemo and NO radiation.“
These aren’t anecdotes. These are scans.”
The moment at 0:52-1:00 will stop you in your tracks.
This is the same treatment that started saving “no-hope” patients back in 2015-2017 and just keeps delivering complete remissions years later.
Watch the full 1:11 clip, see the proof with your own eyes, then tell me:
Is this the turning point we’ve all been waiting for?
Patients, doctors, caregivers — your voice matters. Drop your reaction below. This deserves to be seen by millions.
(Always consult your physician — not medical advice)
This is an incredible analysis of the true cost of living in the US - we need to get real here, we are leaving people behind because we are using 1963 stats for 2025 problems
This is what the future is going to look like. You’re either
1. A great active operator (good at running businesses) 2. An insanely good investor
Or poor
VCs will have partners from both sides of the aisle just like lobbying firms, a logical progression of tech and policy becoming commingled. Sequoia ahead of the curve.
@hnshah Literally beautiful - “why do you work so much?” … I don’t even know how to answer that question there are so many logical flaws embedded in it
Most people have no idea what it actually takes to be a founder. They talk about vision, grit, or passion. Those words are props.
What you really sign up for is a life where every decision feels like it costs something real. You will spend years being misunderstood. By your team, your family, even the people you hire to help you. You will fail in public and still need to keep the energy up in private. Every founder lives with the weight of knowing that you can do everything right and still get crushed by luck, timing, or somebody else’s mistake.
Founders aren’t braver than anyone else. They just get used to uncertainty, then stop waiting for clarity. Most of your wins won’t feel like wins at all. The first revenue will be too small. The first team will outgrow you or leave. The first product that feels right will barely matter to the market. You will doubt yourself in private, sometimes every week. The founders who last figure out how to keep moving while the ground shifts underneath them.
Most outsiders want the founder badge but none of the scars. They want the upside, not the drag. The hardest part is sticking around after every plan gets blown up and you have to rebuild with less optimism and more scar tissue. What makes it work isn’t relentless hustle or some mythical trait. It’s learning to make peace with constant discomfort, and then making decisions anyway.
If you need constant reassurance, you’ll give up before the real work begins. If you want everyone to like you, you’ll never make the calls that matter. If you can’t handle months where nothing feels certain, this life will eat you alive.
But if you can hold your own in chaos, get better at being wrong, and still want to show up and try again, you just might have a shot at building something that matters.
That’s what it actually takes. And nobody cares until you make it work.
Today, we at OpenAI launched Deep Researcher and I wanted to share a deeply personal story about how amazing this tool is and how it will change the world. Trigger warning, related to cancer....1/9