@zimm3rmann@SmiLeY_5150_77@1zzyzyx1 Or reconfigurations and annual PM's yadda yadda yadda. Or maybe they're reliant on them because of poor calculations or maybe they're natural gas and it is more economical. Or maybe they are using them to not crash the existing system.
@Jonijuliano23@1zzyzyx1 That's fuckin disgusting and you're an idiot. Lot's of people get arrested for shit they didn't do too because the tech didn't perform as advertised.
@Chris_T4257@1zzyzyx1 God damn! How fucking stupid do you have to be to immediately boil it down to red tie blue tie bullshit. You hyper partisan fucking retards have ruined this country with your lack of critical thinking skills.
Google's former CEO just said what everyone in AI already knows
Building wealth is getting easier if you actually learn the tools
Not by scrolling AI threads
By understanding agents, Codex Code, prompts, memory, skills, MCP, and routines
Save this before it disappears from your feed
Everything below is free:
ChatGPT basics
https://t.co/p1ZEv4vG4f
OpenAI Academy
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Prompt engineering
https://t.co/gFV0OAXnQo
GPT-5.5 prompting guide
https://t.co/TJOxZ77Y6C
OpenAI API docs
https://t.co/24OlDTxEcA
Responses API
https://t.co/DLnWfUZEUS
Agents SDK
https://t.co/irt7DTJ745
Agents SDK quickstart
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Tools + function calling
https://t.co/A40Dege36x
Structured outputs
https://t.co/Jawb4njrJa
Conversation state
https://t.co/YkbSXmUk3A
ChatGPT memory
https://t.co/ojhvlLbVWp
ChatGPT projects
https://t.co/Svo7ATFTGc
Custom GPTs
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Tasks in ChatGPT
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Codex overview
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Codex quickstart
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Codex CLI
https://t.co/kUySSiEBL5
Codex GitHub repo
https://t.co/FoiGgP5ash
Codex best practices
https://t.co/E1PtLvDDaj
AGENTS.md
https://t.co/eaAJkQDp4x
Codex skills
https://t.co/OsrLujQnkX
Codex MCP
https://t.co/uHCuY9Ram7
Codex subagents
https://t.co/QboZoCEzHT
ChatGPT Apps SDK
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Apps SDK quickstart
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ChatGPT developer mode + MCP
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OpenAI Cookbook
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All of this costs $0
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Este fue el secreto más oscuro de Winston Churchill en la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
Dentro de este búnker, 6 hombres fueron voluntariamente enterrados vivos para espiar a las fuerzas de Hitler.
Exiliados del mundo con solo 7 años de suministros, su historia fue clasificada durante décadas.
🧵Bienvenidos a la Operación Tracer:🧵
The engineer who built Claude Code just dropped a 28-minute video on how to write prompts that actually work
I've seen $300 courses that don't cover what he shows in the first 10 minutes
CLAUDE.md files, memory shortcuts, parallel sessions, prompting patterns
all in one video and completely free works whether you're a developer, a beginner, or someone who's been using Claude for months.
In 1879, JP Morgan paid a man to invent the lie that is the foundation of modern economics.
A billionaire who helped start Amazon just exposed the whole thing on Diary of a CEO, and once you hear it you will never look at paychecks the same way again:
146 years ago, a guy named Henry George wrote a book called Progress and Poverty.
It was the first mainstream book about the rich systematically stealing from the poor, and It literally became the bestselling book in the history of the United States at the time.
The working class was reading it everywhere, and the people at the top of the economy completely lost their minds.
So JP Morgan personally brought a man named John Bates Clark to Columbia University, which was essentially the intellectual headquarters of Wall Street, and told him to fix the problem.
Clark wrote a book called The Distribution of Wealth. In it, he invented something called the "theory of marginal productivity," which claims that because markets are perfectly efficient, the amount of money you earn reflects EXACTLY the value you contribute to the economy.
If you make $15,000 a year, that's because you're providing $15,000 of value. If a hedge fund manager makes $500 million a year moving money around, that's an accurate reflection of the value he creates in the world.
And Clark literally said the quiet part out loud IN HIS OWN BOOK.
He wrote that they had to prove to working people that no matter how much they make, whether it's a little or a lot, it accurately reflects their value, because if workers ever concluded that their labor was worth more than they were being paid, they would revolt and destroy the entire system.
That was the whole point. The theory was built to prevent a revolution.
And it worked so well that it got absorbed into mainstream economics and is STILL taught as a foundational principle to this day.
Every time a CEO tells you "the market decides your salary," they're repeating a framework that was literally commissioned by JP Morgan in the 1800s to convince you not to ask for more.
Nick Hanauer, the billionaire who told this story, also shared the numbers that prove why it matters right now:
The median full-time worker in America earns about $60,000 a year. If that same worker had maintained the same share of GDP they held in 1975, they wouldn't be making $60,000. They'd be making $120,000. That gap goes all the way up to the 90th percentile. If you earn $180,000 today, you'd be earning $250,000 under the old distribution.
The ONLY people who benefited from 50 years of economic growth were the top 10%, and the vast majority of that went to the top 1%. That is trillions of dollars every single year that used to be wages for ordinary working people and now sits in the accounts of the wealthiest people on the planet.
This happened because of policy. Tax cuts for the rich, deregulation for the powerful, and wage suppression for everyone else, all justified by an economic theory that was invented specifically to make you believe you deserve exactly what you're getting.
And the craziest part is that GDP growth rates in America were 4 to 4.5% for decades when workers were included in prosperity. As soon as the neoliberals took over in the mid-1970s and implemented these policies, GDP growth fell to 3% and eventually to 2%.
Including people in the economy doesn't slow growth down. It's literally the thing that CREATES growth. And the theory that convinced the world otherwise was a hit job paid for by one of the richest men in history to keep workers quiet.
What do you think?
Sellers are delusional and I’m tired of people pretending they aren’t.
Home prices need to drop 30% or more most markets or this number is going to keep growing.