Drop everything you're doing and watch this now. RIGHT NOW.
Ari K and Schuyler Brown, I have no idea who you 2 beautiful bastards are, but you're instant legends. Hopefully someone in the comments knows and tags.
SAVE Act Calculator: It may be cheaper and faster to revert your married name back to your birth certificate name
https://t.co/KvpFeULtH1 calculates how much you have to pay to get your papers together to vote.
In many cases, it's CHEAPER for a married woman to revert her
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name back to her maiden name than it is to pull together all the stupid required docs.
SAVE Act: The most pro- and anti feminist legislation in the stupidest ways.
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Hot take: The SAVE Act is the most pro-feminist legislation in a generation.
For decades, women were told to keep their maiden names. It took a MAGA administration to finally make it the financially rational choice.
The calculator is free.
https://t.co/b6ChNVl4jH
This has been elon's dream for years. To copy China's system where you are in a fishbowl.
X will know everything about you as well as control your money flow.
It's modeled after China's WeChat.
Sam Altman told the world exactly what skills will matter when AI takes over 30 to 40 percent of the global economy.
He was asked what his own kids should do to survive it.
His answer was surprisingly human.
He said the single most valuable thing anyone can build right now is the meta-skill of learning how to learn.
Not a degree or a certification but the raw ability to adapt when everything around you changes.
He also said learning to understand what other people actually want and building useful things for them will be more valuable than almost any technical knowledge.
That skill has never been automated and is not close to being automated.
He said human creativity and the desire to express it are, in his words, limitless.
Every major technological revolution increased the demand for creative, curious, and socially intelligent people, not decreased it.
The Industrial Revolution is the clearest parallel.
Machines replaced physical labor and people were terrified.
The next generation took those machines and built industries, art forms, and institutions nobody had conceived of before.
The people who thrived were not the ones who competed with the machines. They were the ones who learned to direct them toward something new.
That dynamic is already playing out right now with AI.
The practical implication is this, depth in a single rigid skill is becoming less valuable.
The ability to move across domains, pick up new tools quickly, and apply judgment in ambiguous situations is becoming more valuable.
Altman also pointed to something most career advice ignores entirely, learning how to interact with the world, build relationships, and earn trust from other people.
Those are things AI can simulate but cannot replace.
The honest opportunity in this moment is not to outrun AI. It is to focus on the things that make you irreducibly human.
Curiosity, judgment, empathy and the ability to ask the right question before anyone knows what the right question is.
The people who will matter most in an AI-driven economy are not necessarily the ones who understand the technology deepest.
They are the ones who can figure out what the technology should actually be used for.
Altman has spent his career betting on human potential in the face of technological disruption.
Based on every historical precedent, that is still the right bet to make.
@KevinCastley of shady building practices and construction building material shortages, I would not want to be anywhere near there when the buildings come down. Always be wary of buildings that are built that fast. Always.
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@KevinCastley 1. China is not a communist country. it is a fascist dictatorship
2. a lot of that was built on hyperspeed with very degraded materials. It was designed to "awe" the world but many of those skyscrapers have a very short shelf life. This was not intentional per se, but because 1/2