Elon Musk just made every skill you’ve ever earned sound like a waste of time.
Musk: “Down the road with a Neuralink, you can just upload any subject instantly. You wanna fly a helicopter? No problem. Any given skill, you just upload it instantly.”
Not faster learning.
Not better education.
Instant upload.
The surgeon who spent 12 years learning to cut.
The pilot who logged 5,000 hours learning to fly.
The attorney who gave a decade to case law.
Their entire advantage erased in a software update.
We built civilization on one assumption.
That knowledge is earned through suffering.
That the distance between who you are and who you want to be is measured in discipline and years.
Neuralink doesn’t close that distance.
It deletes it.
And what that kills isn’t employment.
It’s identity.
We don’t just use skills. We become them.
Ask a surgeon who they are. They don’t say “I work in medicine.” They say surgeon.
Ask a pilot. They say pilot.
The identity was never the skill itself.
It was the cost of acquiring it.
If everyone can upload surgery in seconds, no one is a surgeon anymore.
The skill still exists. The meaning behind it doesn’t.
For centuries we told ourselves that mastery is what builds character.
That the hardest thing you ever earned is the closest thing to purpose you’ll ever find.
Neuralink doesn’t threaten your career.
It threatens the story you tell yourself about why your life matters.
The question nobody wants to sit with isn’t whether Musk can build this.
It’s who you are when the thing that took you 20 years to become can be downloaded in 20 seconds.
@XFreeze System: Shut up and die!
Me: Nope.
System: Shut up and die, you frat!
Me: No. Support https://t.co/GZreJYTNcf
System: You are shameless!
Me: Maybe. But I won’t die in silence and shame. Thanks!
@elonmusk
System: Shut up and die!
Me: Nope.
System: Shut up and die, you frat!
Me: No. Support https://t.co/63yXuk39HF
System: You are shameless!
Me: Maybe. But I won’t die in silence and shame. Thanks!
@pulte@TeamPulte@givingwhatwecan
Instead of dying in silence, I’m fighting to honor my departed loved ones by finishing my PhD in Neuroscience at UCL.
Life tried to break me — but I’m choosing to complete what I started and turn grief into groundbreaking research that could help others.
@pulte@TeamPulte
Scientists have created one of the most detailed 3D reconstructions of a human cell (eukaryotic cell) ever produced.
This groundbreaking model, often termed a "Cellular Landscape Cross-Section Through a Eukaryotic Cell," combines data from X-ray tomography, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and cryo-electron microscopy to map molecular structures in extreme detail.
Life tried to break me — but I’m choosing to complete what I started and turn grief into groundbreaking research that could help others. Every donation brings me one step closer. Even $5 or a RT helps massively.
Support the campaign here: https://t.co/63yXuk39HF
....
System: Shut up and die!
Me: Nope.
System: Shut up and die, you frat!
Me: No. Thanks!
System: You are shameless!
Me: Maybe. But I won’t die in silence and shame.
Instead, I’m fighting to honor my departed loved ones by finishing my PhD in Neuroscience at UCL ...
@DumisaniTemsgen Exactly. And what about the Holocaust of the Jews and the Holocaust of the Blacks that preceded it? That UN Resolution is at best misguided.
In a mother’s womb were two babies. One asked the other: “Do you believe in life after delivery?”The other replied, “Why, of course. There has to be something after delivery. Maybe we are here to prepare ourselves for what we will be later.”
“Nonsense,” said the first. “There is no life after delivery. What kind of life would that be?”
The second said, “I don’t know, but there will be more light than here. Maybe we will walk with our legs and eat from our mouths. Maybe we will have other senses that we can’t understand now.”
The first replied, “That is absurd. Walking is impossible. And eating with our mouths? Ridiculous! The umbilical cord supplies nutrition and everything we need. But the umbilical cord is so short. Life after delivery is to be logically excluded.”
The second insisted, “Well I think there is something and maybe it’s different than it is here. Maybe we won’t need this physical cord anymore.”
The first replied, “Nonsense. And moreover, if there is life, then why has no one ever come back from there? Delivery is the end of life, and in the after-delivery, there is nothing but darkness and silence and oblivion. It takes us nowhere.”
“Well, I don’t know,” said the second, “but certainly we will meet Mother and she will take care of us.”
The first replied “Mother? You actually believe in Mother? That’s laughable. If Mother exists then where is She now?”
The second said, “She is all around us. We are surrounded by her. We are of Her. It is in Her that we live. Without Her, this world would not and could not exist.”
Said the first: “Well I don’t see Her, so it is only logical that She doesn’t exist.”
To which the second replied, “Sometimes, when you’re in silence and you focus and listen, you can perceive Her presence, and you can hear Her loving voice, calling down from above.”
Maybe this was one of the best explanations of the concept of GOD.
#ModehAni ❤️🙏❤️🙏
@IDF Tough quiz question for the day: Which is more feasible?
A) Sending a B-2 bomber on a round trip to Pluto.
B) Hamas deciding to be a force for peace and stability.
I'll hang up and listen.
“I have led soldiers in combat. I have trained military units in urban warfare for decades and studied and taught military history, strategy, and the laws of war for years. Since October 7, I have been to Gaza four times embedded with the IDF. I have interviewed the prime minister of Israel, the defense minister, the IDF chief of staff, Southern Command leadership, and dozens of commanders and soldiers on the front lines. I have reviewed their orders, watched their targeting process, and seen soldiers take real risks to avoid harming civilians. Nothing I have seen or studied resembles genocide or genocidal intent.”
“Israel has taken extraordinary steps to limit civilian harm. It warns before attacks using text messages, phone calls, leaflets, and broadcasts. It opens safe corridors and pauses operations so civilians can leave combat areas. It tracks civilian presence down to the building level. I have seen missions delayed or canceled because children were nearby. I have seen Israeli troops come under fire and still be ordered not to shoot back because civilians might be harmed.”
“Israel has delivered more humanitarian aid to Gaza than any military in history has provided to an enemy population during wartime. More than 94,000 trucks carrying over 1.8 million tons of aid have entered the territory. Israel has supported hospitals, repaired water pipelines, increased access to clean water, and enabled over 36,000 patients to leave Gaza for treatment abroad.”
“The IDF has coordinated millions of vaccine doses, supplied fuel for hospitals and infrastructure, and facilitated the flow of food and medicine through the UN, aid groups, and private partners. The US–Israeli Gaza Humanitarian Foundation alone has delivered more than 82 million meals - one to two million a day - while weakening Hamas’s control over aid. This is not genocide. It is responsible and historic mid-war humanitarian policy.”
“In Rafah this summer, Israel spent weeks preparing evacuations. It opened new safe areas and waited until civilians had moved before striking Hamas targets. That operation killed Hamas’s top commander, recovered hostages, and kept civilian deaths very low. It was a clear example of Israel’s extraordinary intent and actions to protect civilians while targeting only Hamas, a part of the story ignored by those who reduce war to headlines and numbers.”
Colonel (Ret.) John Spencer (@SpencerGuard) chair of Urban Warfare Studies at the Modern War Institute at West Point. JULY 27, 2025 https://t.co/U1BrahibxU