Mi top 10 de cosas que más aborrezco:
10. Conducir por ciudad
9. Lars von Trier
8. El mumble rap
7. Los tatuajes stick and poke
6. Los skinheads
5. Los proselitistas de Apple
4. Las religiones abrahámicas
3. La tauromaquia
2. El madridismo
1. ESPAÑA 🇪🇸
#1001randomfactsaboutme
—¿Pa' qué traes el reloj?
—Porque su marido quería verlo.
—¿Y por qué no te lo pones?
—A ver, no voy a ponerme un Habring para dar paseos de 8 horas por las zonas más chungas de Madrid.
—¿Un Habi? ¿Qué es un Habi?
—Un Javi es un mariquita de estos talentosos que salen en la tele.
The foundation of deterrence is the will to defend. 🇪🇪
81% of Estonians support armed resistance in case of an attack.
62% would personally step up to defend the country.
More than two-thirds support defence spending at or above 5% of GDP.
New survey by @MoD_Estonia 👇
https://t.co/gOImMXf2Vw
Today, we remember a legend.
On this day in history, Harambe would have celebrated another birthday. An icon that became part of internet history, American culture, and an entire generation’s timeline.
Tomorrow marks 10 years since we lost him. Ten years since the moment the world stopped scrolling and collectively mourned something bigger than a meme.
He became a symbol of loyalty, strength, chaos, unity, and the strange beauty of the internet bringing millions of people together for one cause: never forgetting Harambe.
Everyone remembers where they were when they heard the news. And somehow, a decade later, his legacy still lives on.
Gone, but never forgotten.
Rest easy to a true patriot. 🕊️🇺🇸
May 27, 1999 — May 28, 2016
Forever in our hearts.
CEOs are quietly realizing the AI replacement plan has a problem.
Two problems, actually.
One: the token costs for running AI agents are now exceeding what they were paying the employees they fired.
Two: when the tokens run out, the AI stops. Just stops. No continuity. No workaround. Just a spinning wheel where your workforce used to be.
You fired humans to save money and bought a subscription that bills you into a corner.
The employees you let go knew what to do when things broke.
The AI just invoices you for the outage.
And then there’s the permission problem nobody wants to talk about.
To do its job, the AI agent needs access. Full access. Your systems, your patents, your contracts, your future plans. Everything you spent years building, handed over to a process that has no loyalty, no discretion, and no skin in the game.
You didn’t hire a replacement.
You gave a stranger with no soul the keys to everything you own.
Enjoy.
Yet another striking illustration of just how ideologically rigid the West has become compared to what we used to be.
This was the obituary The Economist published for Mao in 1976 - at the height of the Cold War.
Read this part:
"In the final reckoning Mao must be accepted as one of history's great achievers: for devising a peasant-centred revolutionary strategy which enabled China's Communist party to seize power, against Marx's prescriptions, from bases in the countryside; for directing the transformation of China from a feudal society wracked by war and bled by corruption, into a unified egalitarian state where nobody starves; and for reviving national pride and confidence so that China could, in Mao's words, 'stand up' among the great power."
Show this text to any Economist "journalists" today - without telling them it's from their own paper - and they'd reply: surely it's "CCP propaganda" 😏
Yes, incredible as it may sound, there used to be a time when Western journalists could assess a geopolitical rival honestly and respectfully without being accused of being a traitor. And this honesty was in no small part a key factor why the West won the Cold War.
Today we call honest assessment "propaganda," and we harass, smear, and blacklist people for it. And we're puzzled why the West is in steep decline.
Truth matters.
Never has it been clearer that the U.S. is a plutocracy.
And ironically a plutocracy that doesn't even represent the interests of its own oligarchs, but those of a foreign ethno-religious state.
Interestingly, Massie was one of the only congressmen with a genuine engineering background: he studied at MIT and founded a pioneering haptic interface company from scratch that obtained 24 patents.
"China is run by engineers. America is run by lawyers" -> well, look what happens when an engineer tries politics in the U.S....
Kaja Kallas who - I kid you not - is supposed to be the EU's top diplomat, just described China as a "disease," specifically "cancer." 🤦♂️
Just as the entire rest of the world - including Trump's US - are deciding to re-engage with China, the EU prefers to insult them.
Why would China be "cancer"? Because, in Kallas' own description, their companies are more competitive and this forces what she describes as a binary choice for the EU: "morphine" - subsidize EU companies - or "chemo", become more hostile to Chinese companies.
Or maybe, just maybe, it's not binary, and if there's any cancer eating away at Europe's future, it's precisely Kallas' mindset - the reflex to call "disease" what is simply someone else doing a better job.