Steve Sailer has spent a lifetime observing human behavior and coming to obvious, sensible conclusions. For the crime of noticing reality, he’s been ostracized, although secretly everyone still reads him.
(3:53) What Was the Impact of Black Lives Matter on Black Lives?
(20:26) The Mexican Cartels Targeting the Appalachian Whites
(31:06) Why Democrats Hide Crime Statistics
(35:17) The Increase in Anti-White Racism
(43:05) Emmitt Till
(49:11) Are Race Relations Getting Better?
(1:01:20) Demographic Change
(1:11:05) Will Donald Trump Win the Election?
(1:39:58) Schools Getting Rid of the SAT Requirement
(1:38:33) Is the Country Becoming More Open and Receptive?
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As a European, I can confirm: it's true. EU regulations have become a laughing stock even within Europe. Currently, bottle caps can no longer be twisted off - for climate protection reasons (I have never thrown away a cap). As a citizen, you feel treated like a small child.
At the same time, Europe is losing more ground every day in the competition for artificial intelligence. In Germany, there is still no model of the flagship company AlephAlpha. That only leaves Mistral in France. As far as digitalization in general is concerned, Europe is lagging behind anyway. In the meantime, I no longer see any possibility of Europe playing in the premier league when it comes to AI.
Implemented a visualization for the neural network today. This is a neural network being trained to learn the snake game in a terminal.
It's built in Rust using @ratatui_rs
More input details in thread
It's incredible how accurate this Portuguese world map is for the time when it was made in 1502.
It is known as the Cantino world map after Alberto Cantino, a spy who smuggled this map into Italy working for the mighty Duke of Ferrara Ercole I d'Este!
To use the Montreal subway, you tap a paper ticket against the turnstile and it opens. But how does it work? And how can the ticket be so cheap that it's disposable? I opened up the tiny NFC chip inside to find out more... 1/15