Elon Musk just put the entire university system on trial.
Not the curriculum. Not the professors. The premise.
Musk: “You don’t need college to learn stuff. Everything is available basically for free. You can learn anything you want for free.”
For a thousand years, universities held one monopoly. Access. You paid the toll or you stayed ignorant.
The internet erased that in a decade.
Every lecture. Every framework. Every textbook. Free. From any screen on Earth.
The six-figure tuition is no longer buying knowledge. It is buying a signal.
Musk: “There is a value that colleges have, which is seeing whether somebody can work hard at something, including a bunch of annoying homework assignments, and still do their homework assignments.”
That is the product. Not intelligence. Not creativity. Not vision. Compliance.
You are paying $200,000 to prove you can tolerate bureaucracy on a schedule.
Musk: “Colleges are basically for fun and to prove you can do your chores. But they’re not for learning.”
The entire system is a sorting machine for corporate HR. It does not measure what you can build. It measures whether you can sit still, follow directions, and deliver on command.
Four years of obedience dressed as education.
Musk: “If you’re trying to do something exceptional, you must have evidence of exceptional ability. I don’t consider going to college evidence of exceptional ability.”
The system optimizes for average. It rewards the compliant. It certifies the patient. It quietly filters out everyone who refuses to wait for permission.
The ones who reshaped the modern world never finished the test.
Musk: “Gates is a pretty smart guy, he dropped out. Jobs is pretty smart, he dropped out. Larry Ellison, smart guy, he dropped out.”
They did not drop out because it was too hard. They dropped out because the speed limit was too low.
The most dangerous thing a university does is convince a generational talent that finishing the syllabus is the achievement.
It is not. It is the floor.
A degree is a receipt for compliance. The future has never belonged to people who finish their homework. It belongs to the on
🚨 JUST IN: The US stock market has just closed at ALL-TIME RECORD HIGHS while President Trump is having wild success in Beijing
"This market's ON FIRE!"
"The NASDAQ and S&P up to RECORD HIGHS." 🔥
DOW back above 50,000
Trump was right again 🇺🇸
@EricLDaugh This is great, except history has shown that when such programs are offered corporations use this to reduce liability. Reminder, pension plans started declining primarily with the introduction and rise of 401(k) plans, could this be the beginning of the end of corporate matching?
🚨NYC SOCIALIST GRIFTER ZOHRAN MAMDANI’S FAMILY JUST GOT CAUGHT IN A MASSIVE “FREE GROCERY STORE” SCAM RAKING IN MILLIONS WHILE PRETENDING TO HELP THE POOR!
Follow @UnmaskTheSys
His brother Eli Mohammed Mamdani buys condemned, falling-apart buildings from the city for literal pennies on the dollar… then immediately flips them right back to the city at full market value for the “free grocery” program.
Then they hire their cousin Rufus Theodore Mamdani’s construction company to “fix them up” — pocketing as much as $5 MILLION PER STORE for the entire Mamdani crime family.
That’s how communism works, folks — the elites preach “equity” while their own bloodline gets filthy rich off taxpayer-funded scams.
The watchdog group just blew the whole rotten operation wide open.
Share this everywhere before they try to bury it!
Follow @mcafeenew for more drops.
She was 12 years old when she realized that people were dying because doctors couldn't check their DNA fast enough—so she wrote a computer program that could do it in seconds instead of hours.
Her name is Sofia Tomov. And at age 12, she decided that if the world's leading scientists couldn't solve a problem fast enough, she'd solve it herself.
The problem: doctors prescribe medication without knowing how a patient’s DNA will react. Hidden mutations can make the drugs dangerous—even deadly.
Adverse drug reactions kill over 100,000 Americans each year. Fourth leading cause of death. More than car accidents. More than diabetes.
Sequencing a patient’s genome seems like the solution. But the human genome has six billion base pairs. Analyzing it takes hours. Sometimes days.
For someone having a heart attack or seizure, that’s too long. People die waiting.
The smartest scientists had tried for years. They couldn’t solve it.
Sofia did.
She wrote an algorithm that could scan a genome for dangerous drug-reaction mutations in seconds instead of hours.
She wasn’t just interested in computers—she wanted to save lives. At eleven, she filed a patent for a device that safely disposes of medications to protect water supplies.
At twelve, she tackled a problem that had stumped the world. She studied genetics, learned which mutations affect drug metabolism, and coded a program that could identify risks fast enough for emergencies.
Her algorithm focused on the critical DNA regions, used machine learning, and optimized speed without losing accuracy.
In 2016, she entered the Discovery Education 3M Young Scientist Challenge. She competed against thousands, many older. She made the finals with her life-saving algorithm.
Sofia’s vision is global. Every patient’s genome could be sequenced. Doctors could know instantly which medications are safe. Lives saved.
She showed that age doesn’t determine impact. Credentials don’t determine value. You need research, understanding, and courage to act.
Sofia saw a problem killing thousands every year and thought: “I can fix that.”
And she did. At twelve.
CONGRATS:
KRAKEN became the FIRST digital asset company to gain direct access to the American payment system.
Digital payments for ALL are the way forward.
Not a CBDC