According to Grok, a live broadcast of this woman watching an Iraqi football match at Franso Hariri Stadium in Erbil, Iraq, aired on the Iraqi sports channel ALFORAT. Because of her natural beauty, the video is rapidly going viral on social media.
My documentary on the Islamification of Birmingham has been demonetized on YouTube after reaching 600,000 views. So here is the entire video on X.
In the video, I'm told that it's okay to strike your wife if she's disobeying you. I'm told that I would have to leave the grocery store and go to the city center in order to be able to find a white person. I'm told that all women in the UK who cheat should be executed.
Thank you to @elonmusk for commenting on this video and allowing this content to be on X. If it weren't for X I genuinely think the west would have reached the point of no return already.
NSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT.
Spend 1 hour with this.
Claude AI FULL COURSE that teaches you how to BUILD and AUTOMATE anything.
The people who watch this tonight will wake up tomorrow with a new skill.
Watch it and Bookmark it now.
My friend applied to 100+ quantitative researcher jobs in two years. No PhD. No callbacks.
Few days ago Jane Street offered him $600,000.
The thing that helped him the most was this master class by IMC, one of the biggest HFT market makers in the world. Free on YouTube. One hour.
Their head of alpha research explains how top trading firms actually build their models. Not the YouTube tutorial version. The real one.
He watched it on a Sunday. Paused it nine times. After that hour he told me something I didn't believe. "It's embarrassingly simple."
Three days later he applied to Jane Street.
Every single question they asked him, he knew from that video.
INSTEAD OF WATCHING AN HOUR OF NETFLIX TONIGHT.
This 1 hour Stanford lecture by Joel Peterson will teach you more about negotiation and getting what you want than most people learn in years.
Bookmark it and give it an hour, no matter what.
IN 1985 ONE OF THE GREATEST PHYSICISTS WHO EVER LIVED SAT DOWN TO EXPLAIN HOW COMPUTERS ACTUALLY WORK AND TOLD A ROOM FULL OF ENGINEERS THE MACHINE IS COMPLETELY DUMB
76 minutes from Richard Feynman, still called the clearest explanation of what a computer really is ever given.
-> The idea that lands: a computer is just a very, very fast, very, very dumb file clerk. It doesn't think. It follows tiny simple rules, billions of times a second.
All the complexity you're in awe of comes from stacking simple things. There's no magic underneath. There never was.
Forty years later everyone calls the model "Intelligent". Feynman already told you what it really is: speed, not thought.
Being amazed by the machine was never the point -> understanding what it's actually doing is.
Most people are dazzled by what AI says. The ones who watched this know exactly what's happening underneath.
Bookmark & Watch it today. This one's a legend ↓
A Krishnamurti quisieron convertirlo en el líder espiritual del mundo. Pero prefirió pasar 60 años dando charlas por todo el mundo.
En ellas explicaba por qué la gente nunca cambia de verdad. 6 razones por las que sigues estancado:
1. Creer que puedes cambiar poco a poco
After my brother Mashal Khan’s lynching, my education was stopped for a year, but my dreams could not be silenced.
Journalism was Mashal’s passion. I promised to continue the journey he couldn’t finish.
Today, I graduate in Journalism. A promise made, a promise fulfilled. ❤️
George Soros bet $10 billion against the British pound and broke the Bank of England in one day - walking away with around $1 billion
"I'm only rich because I know when I'm wrong"
his own lecture on the theory behind it - reflexivity. free.
bookmark and watch it
Nassim Taleb: the richest man in the Roman Empire woke up every morning pretending he was poor.
Seneca had more to lose than to gain from his wealth - so he rehearsed losing it. Every so often he'd live on bread and water as if shipwrecked, just to make the downside familiar and harmless.
That's the whole game, Taleb says: arrange your life so you have far more upside than downside - then randomness stops scaring you.
"Make more when you're right than you lose when you're wrong - that's antifragile."
"Always keep more upside than downside from random events."
"The Stoics aren't unmoved by the world - only by bad events."
~70 min, free. the oldest trick for surviving a world you can't predict ↓
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.
A community college professor named Marty Lobdell taught the same study skills lecture for 30 years. The video quietly became one of the most watched educational recordings online, with over 10 million views.
He spent his career watching students fail not because they were lazy, but because no one had taught them how their brain actually works when learning something difficult.
The lecture, “Study Less Study Smart,” contains a powerful framework.
Your brain cannot sustain focus the way most people believe. Studies show the average learner hits a wall between 25 and 30 minutes. After that, efficiency collapses. You’re still sitting there, but almost nothing is being absorbed.
Lobdell told the story of a student who planned to study 6 hours a night, 5 nights a week. Thirty hours total. She failed every class. She was not lacking effort. She was confusing time near books with actual learning. The fix is simple: when focus drops, stop, take a 5 minute rewarding break, then return. That reset makes a massive difference.
He also destroyed the myth of highlighting and re reading. Recognition is not the same as recall. To prove it, he read 13 random letters. Almost no one remembered them. Then he turned them into “Happy Thursday.” The entire room recalled them instantly. The brain stores meaning, not repetition.
This is why elaborative encoding works so well.
Finally, he shared the most important principle: 80 percent of study time should be active recitation. Close the book and explain the material in your own words. Teach it to someone else or an empty chair. Retrieval is where real learning happens.
His closing line stuck with me: If this information does not change your
behaviour, you have not actually learned it.
The best students do not study more hours. They stop confusing the feeling of studying with the reality of learning.
🚨 Stanford AI professor Andrew Ng just released a completely free 2.5-hour AI Prompting course.
And honestly, this might be one of the most useful AI courses for beginners and professionals right now.
Andrew Ng is one of the biggest names in AI education: