- The dollar loses 7% a year.
- AI is coming for white-collar work.
- Robots are 10 years out.
@saylor just laid out what young people should actually do about it.
12 lessons:
Ancient history researcher Jimmy Corsetti just released a new video on the second Great Sphinx...
And it is one of the most grounded and well researched takes on this topic I have seen.
The detail that stands out most is that the mound where the second sphinx is allegedly buried simply did not exist in 1929 but appears clearly in photographs taken just one year later in 1930.
Jimmy traced this to the massive excavation operations across the Giza Plateau where archaeologists used railway tracks to transport debris and dumped it into large heaps across the site.
That single chronological observation is more grounding than anything Biondi has released so far.
He also addresses the Dream Stela, the 15 ton granite slab found between the Sphinx's paws depicting two sphinxes facing away from each other, which predates any modern scanning technology by several thousand years and has never been satisfactorily explained.
And he addresses Biondi's technology honestly, noting that standard ground penetrating radar reaches a maximum of 15 metres while Biondi claims detection over 1,000 metres from a still image taken from orbit, that the Giza water table sits directly in the path of the alleged complex, and that the software has never been submitted for independent verification.
🔹Mound absent in 1929, appeared in 1930
🔹Giza water table complicates scanning claims
🔹Likely excavation debris from the Giza dig-out
🔹Press conference June 21st, imagery promised
🔹Dream Stela depicts two sphinxes facing apart
🔹Biondi claims 100% certainty, not peer reviewed
But here's the most important aspect of the entire discussion... Even if Biondi's claims are overstated, that does not mean there is nothing beneath Giza.
Herodotus wrote 2,400 years ago of a massive labyrinth beneath Egypt that made the pyramids themselves look modest.
People reportedly walked 8 miles through underground tunnels between Giza and Saqqara as recently as 60 years ago.
The legends pointing to something beneath this site go back millennia and they do not come from nowhere.
The only thing that actually resolves this is physical verification. A single drill hole and a camera is all it takes to end the debate permanently.
The Egyptian authorities are the only obstacle and sustained collective pressure from enough people is the only thing that has ever moved obstacles like that.
This community is larger and louder than it realises.
Every conversation, every share, every person who refuses to stop asking the question is part of that pressure.
Something is down there. We just need permission to look.
Are you willing to help push for the dig?
@scottmelker@glove Something similar happened to me 3 months ago. Those words hit true... When your Bitcoin is stolen, there is no support line, no reversal, no second chance. Just one decision in one moment that can’t be taken back.
🇪🇺 Telegram sent this message to all its users in France regarding Chat Control. People must know the names of those who try to steal their freedoms:
Today, the European Union nearly banned your right to privacy. It was set to vote on a law that would force apps to scan every private message, turning everyone’s phone into a spying tool.
France led the push for this authoritarian law. Both former and current Interior Ministers, Bruno Retailleau and Laurent Nuñez, supported it. Last March, they declared that police should see French citizens’ private messages. The Republicans and Macron’s Renaissance group voted for it.
Such measures are supposed to “fight crime”, but their real target is regular people. It wouldn’t stop criminals — they could just use VPNs or special websites to hide. Officials’ and police messages wouldn’t be scanned either, since the law conveniently exempts them from surveillance. Only YOU — ordinary citizens — would face the danger of your private messages and photos being compromised.
Today, we defended privacy: Germany’s sudden stand saved our rights. But freedoms are still threatened. While French leaders push for total access to private messages, the basic rights of French people — and all Europeans — remain in danger.
A message from Liam Óg:
"A massive thank you to my legal team.
Darragh, Jude, blinne, Brenda, Gareth and to all at Phoenix law.
A special thanks also to my interpreter Susan.
This entire process was never about me, never about any threat to the public and never about "terrorism", a word used by your government to discredit people you oppress.
It was always about Gaza.
About what happens if you dare to speak up.
As people from Ireland we know oppression, colonialism, famine and genocide.
We have suffered and still suffer under "your empire".
Your attempts to silence us have failed, because we are right, and you are wrong.
We will not be silent.
We said we would fight you in your court and we would win.
We have.
If anyone on this planet is guilty of terrorism, it is the British state.
Free Palestine!
Tiocfaidh ár lá."