From Miriam Pschak “I was born a Muslim in Iran. I was raised on Islam, educated in its scriptures, and even became an Islamic leader here in America—an Imam, an executive director of CAIR, and president of the Muslim Forum of Utah. So don’t insult my intelligence by telling me I believe in something I don’t understand. I understand Islam inside and out—and that’s why I left it. You say Islam is the religion of Abraham and that Christianity is paganism? That’s the same tired propaganda I used to preach before I studied the Bible for myself. Abraham looked forward to the promise of the Messiah (John 8:56), and that promise was fulfilled in Jesus Christ—the Son of God, not just a prophet, but God in the flesh. You call it idolatry, but the truth is, you worship a distant, unknowable deity who demands submission but offers no assurance of salvation, no love, and no personal relationship.
Islam claims simplicity, but it's not spiritual clarity—it's theological shallowness wrapped in slogans. You say “God alone,” but then claim the Qur'an is eternal and uncreated, that Muhammad is the perfect man, and that prayers must be recited in Arabic to be valid. That’s not pure monotheism—that’s blind ritualism. You call Christianity confusing, yet it’s Islam that denies the very sacrifice that fulfills God's justice and love. I’ve seen Christian doctors, scientists, and theologians embrace Jesus not because they’re deceived, but because they found the truth—a truth you refuse to face because it means letting go of the lies you were fed. Islam is not the religion of Abraham—it’s a 7th-century political invention that twisted Scripture to build an empire. I left Islam not because I was ignorant—but because I finally understood it. And once I saw the truth in Christ, I was set free.”
NO EXISTE PALESTINA
1. Antes de Israel, había un mandato británico, no un Estado palestino.
2. Antes del Mandato Británico, existía el Imperio Otomano, no un Estado palestino.
3. Antes del Imperio Otomano, existía el Estado islámico de los mamelucos de Egipto, no un Estado palestino.
4. Antes del Estado islámico de los mamelucos de Egipto, existía el Imperio ayubí-kurdo, no un Estado palestino.
5. Antes del Imperio ayubí, existía el reino franco cruzado y el reino cristiano de Jerusalén, no un estado palestino.
6. Antes del Reino de Jerusalén, existían los imperios Omeya y Fatimí, no un Estado palestino.
7. Antes de los imperios omeya y fatimí, existía el imperio bizantino, no un estado palestino.
8. Antes del Imperio bizantino existía el Imperio sasánida-persa, no un Estado palestino.
9. Antes del Imperio Sasánida-Persa, existía nuevamente el Imperio Bizantino, no un Estado palestino.
10. Antes del Imperio Bizantino existía el Imperio Romano, no un Estado palestino.
11. Antes del Imperio Romano, existía el Estado judío asmoneo, no un Estado palestino.
12. Antes del Estado judío asmoneo estaba el Imperio seléucida helenístico, no un Estado palestino.
13. Antes del imperio seléucida helenístico, existía el imperio de Alejandro Magno, no un estado palestino.
14. Antes de Alejandro Magno, existía el Imperio Persa, no un Estado palestino.
15. Antes del Imperio Persa, existía el Imperio Babilónico, no un estado palestino.
16. Antes del Imperio Babilónico, los reinos de Israel y Judá no eran estados palestinos.
17. Antes de los reinos de Israel y Judá, existía el Reino de Israel, no un Estado palestino.
18. Antes del Reino de Israel, existía la teocracia de las doce tribus de Israel, no un Estado palestino.
19. Antes de la teocracia de las doce tribus de Israel, había una aglomeración de ciudades-reino cananeas independientes, no un Estado palestino.
Ha habido muchos gobiernos allí, pero nunca un Estado Palestino.
Tesla is deploying $50 BILLION across 6 factories, a chip fab, robot production lines, AI supercomputers, lithium refineries, and solar manufacturing.
To put that in perspective:
Tesla made $477 million in profit last quarter.
And is investing at roughly 100x that rate.
Every other CEO on Earth would get fired for that ratio.
Elon's doing it on purpose.
Here's what he's assembling:
- Own chip factory (TERAFAB with Intel, $25 billion, targeting 1 terawatt of AI compute per year)
- Own energy grid (Megapacks powering entire cities)
- Own robot workforce (Optimus production starting this year, 1 million units per year at Fremont, 10 million per year planned at Giga Texas)
- Own transportation network (robotaxi live in Austin, Dallas, Houston with zero accidents, expanding to 9+ cities)
- Own AI training infrastructure (Cortex 2 supercomputer online, 280,000 GPUs by June)
- Own lithium refinery (Texas, ramping now)
- Own solar panels (new design with 3x the power zones of conventional panels)
- Own satellite compute (80% of TERAFAB output going to SpaceX orbital AI satellites)
This is just insane.
No company in history has attempted to own this many layers of its own supply chain simultaneously.
Amazon took 20 years to become profitable because Bezos reinvested every dollar into infrastructure. Wall Street called him insane the entire time.
Elon is running the same playbook but across MORE industries, at a FASTER pace, and with technology that didn't exist 5 years ago.
The TERAFAB alone is designed to produce 70% of the output of the world's largest semiconductor foundry. Under one roof. Logic chips, memory, and packaging all vertically integrated.
But why is he doing this?
Elon said existing suppliers including TSMC, Samsung, and Micron simply cannot supply Tesla at the levels it needs.
When you can't buy enough of what you need, you build the factory yourself.
That's the Henry Ford playbook from 1920.
Ford owned the rubber plantations, the iron mines, the glass factories, the railroads, and the forests that supplied his assembly lines.
Elon is doing the same thing. Except his version includes orbital data centers, humanoid robots, and autonomous vehicles.
The AI5 chip is already taped out.
His team worked 6 months straight through holidays and weekends to finish early. He called it the best edge compute inference chip in existence. They're already designing AI6 AND Dojo 3.
Meanwhile Tesla's FSD has 1.3 million paid subscribers globally. Record new subscriptions last quarter. Regulatory approval just landed in the Netherlands. China approvals expected by Q3.
While every other automaker is trying to figure out how to compete with BYD on price, Elon is building the infrastructure layer that makes the car almost irrelevant.
Because if you own the chips, the energy, the robots, the AI, the transportation network, AND the manufacturing...
The car is just the interface.
The real product is the ecosystem.
Elon is spending $50 billion to build a parallel economy that doesn't depend on anyone else's supply chain, anyone else's chips, or anyone else's energy grid.
That's closer to being a country than just a company.
And whether you love him or hate him, nobody else alive is even attempting this.
Elon Musk just admitted the most expensive mistake of his career.
It quietly dismantles the entire credentialing mythology.
Musk runs rockets. Neural implants. Autonomous fleets. Humanoid robots. The most complex engineering operation on earth.
You would assume he selects above all for one thing. Raw intellect.
Elon Musk: “I’ve made the mistake of thinking that sometimes it’s just about the brain. I think it actually matters whether somebody has a good heart.”
He didn’t learn this from a textbook.
He learned it by hiring the sharpest minds on the planet.
And watching the ones without character build things that were technically stunning and structurally corrosive.
The establishment sold the opposite story for a hundred years.
Get the degree. Get the credential. Get the paper.
That paper was supposed to prove you were exceptional.
It doesn’t.
A degree is proof of compliance.
It proves you showed up. Met deadlines. Followed a rubric.
Sat inside an institution for four years. Never once challenged the structure that held it together.
It does not prove you will speak when the room expects silence.
It does not prove you care about the thing you are building more than the title you hold while building it.
It does not prove you have a spine.
Raw intelligence without character is not an advantage.
It is a precision instrument aimed at your own foundation.
Now extend the lesson.
Intelligence itself is being demonetized.
An algorithm is about to solve in seconds what takes a PhD an entire career.
When cognitive power becomes unlimited and too cheap to meter, the premium on being smart collapses to zero.
The establishment spent a century grading you on the exact skill we just taught silicon to do better, faster, and for free.
But a machine cannot feel conviction.
A model cannot hold a moral line.
A server farm cannot refuse to cut a corner out of duty to another human being.
When intelligence becomes infinite, character becomes the only scarce resource left.
Integrity is not a soft skill anymore.
It is the last advantage that cannot be automated.
We spent a generation outsourcing our worth to our intelligence.
Intelligence is about to become the cheapest thing on earth.
Character will become the most expensive.
The mind was never the measure of a person.
The heart always was.
Tim Cook just told eight billion people what the next decade is going to cost them.
He didn’t mention chips. He didn’t mention software. He didn’t mention revenue.
He diagnosed something permanent about human nature.
Cook: “Whatever you do with your life, be a builder.”
That wasn’t a commencement speech. That was a verdict on the century.
On one side, the people who make things. On the other, everyone who watches them do it.
For twenty years the internet blurred that line. You could scroll, react, repost, and convince yourself you were participating.
Artificial intelligence just closed that window. Permanently.
If your reflex is to consume, AI will feed you content until you are perfectly, comfortably irrelevant.
If your reflex is to build, AI just handed you the output of a thousand engineers on a single screen.
Same technology. Opposite trajectories. The fork happens the second you touch it.
This is the most lopsided advantage ever given to ordinary people.
One person with the right architecture now ships what entire departments couldn’t build three years ago.
One creator with the right process now produces what agencies billed seven figures for.
The leverage is not marginal. It is generational.
And it only compounds if your default setting is creation.
Cook: “The best founders… spend most of their time building, piece by piece.”
Not theorizing. Not consuming someone else’s roadmap. Not waiting for the perfect model to arrive.
Stacking. Quietly. Relentlessly. Brick by brick while the crowd argues about whether the building is even real.
The gap between the person building and the person commenting on the build is about to become the defining fracture of this century.
Not wealth. Not credentials. Not access.
Orientation. Whether your hands move toward the tool or away from it.
Cook: “True builders believe their work will one day be bigger than them.”
That has never been more literal.
We are constructing intelligence that will outlast the species that designed it. What you lay down today compounds across decades you will never see.
The divide ahead is not rich and poor. It is not credentialed and uncredentialed.
It is the people who build and the people who watched.
You either pick up the tools or you become the foundation someone else pours.
O alerta urgente do Cardeal Robert Sarah aos cristãos viralizou:
“Acordem. O Islã é um perigo. Se os cristãos não começarem a se importar com a nossa fé, o Islã dominará o Ocidente. Eles imporão suas leis e cultura... Nós iremos declinar.”
🚨O piloto da NASA, Victor Glover, RESPONDEU com firmeza após ser questionado sobre o significado de ser o primeiro homem negro a visitar a Lua:
“É a história da humanidade, não a história negra, não a história das mulheres, mas sim a história da humanidade.”
“Também ESPERO que estejamos caminhando na direção oposta, para que um dia não precisemos mais falar sobre isso como algo inédito.
Que um dia, isso seja simplesmente — e ouçam bem — que isso seja a história da humanidade.”