One of the highest level insiders to ever speak up on UFOs...
Lord Hill-Norton was not just your average admiral, he was one of the highest-ranking military figures in Britain.
Chief of the Defence Staff (the UK’s professional head of the armed forces), First Sea Lord (head of the Royal Navy), Chairman of NATO’s Military Committee & Member of the House of Lords.
MILITARY SECRET:
Special Units Don't "Relax" To Reduce Stress. They dump cortisol fast. And it has nothing to do with Meditation, Mindset, Or Calming Down.
Here's how it works:
“In order to make people equal, you have to treat them differently. If you treat people alike, the result is necessarily inequality.”
— Friedrich Hayek
🇯🇵 A broccoli farmer in Japan used ChatGPT and Codex to build his own farm tools.
With no engineering background, he created software to monitor crops, manage his greenhouse, and help run the farm.
That's a pretty solid use of AI.
there is a mysterious trader on wall street who walked away with over $1 billion during the three worst financial crashes in history
Nassim Taleb's fund generated a massive 4,144% return during a global market crash by realizing that trying to be right every single day is a game for losers
"institutional traders fall into the trap of needing to make money frequently - they pick up pennies on the train tracks every single day, completely blind to the catastrophic event that will eventually wipe them out"
"the crowd assumes that just because a crisis hasn't happened recently, the system is safe - we assume every standard financial model is garbage and structure our entire portfolio for extreme deviations"
"average guys sit at home trying to guess if the market will be up or down tomorrow - we don't care about being right often, because in the real world you're not paid in frequency, you're paid in dollars and cents"
Taleb didn't build his wealth by building a safe, predictable portfolio. he built it by weaponizing chaos, removing all fragility, and letting black swan events slaughter the arrogant
watch his full 2-hour masterclass breaking down the absolute reality of risk
Graham Hancock: "There was a lost advanced civilization over 20,000 years ago that was nearly erased by a global cataclysm around 12,800 years ago."
He describes how myths of a great flood and Atlantis-like stories worldwide point to the Younger Dryas event, a sudden comet impact or cosmic catastrophe that reset humanity, wiping out megafauna and advanced societies.
What if everything we think we know about human history is wrong?
He told Diary of a CEO how survivors may have passed down knowledge to emerging cultures, encoded in sites like the Great Pyramid and ancient maps showing continents unknown at the time.
Es poco conocido que en 1935, militares británicos de la Legión Real fueron recibidos por Adolf Hitler, Göring y Rudolf Hess, toda la plana nazi, en una visita guiada por el campo de exterminio de Dachau, Alemania.
Estos militares británicos incluso conocieron a Karl Gebhardt, el criminal cirujano que hizo experimentos con humanos en Auschwitz.
Pero estas visitas oficiales no terminaron ahí, en Septiembre de 1938, coincidiendo con la visita del Primer Ministro británico Chamberlain a la residencia personal de Hitler, 800 nazis visitaron Londres y viajaron en barco junto a militares británicos, ondeando las esvásticas y haciendo el saludo nazi por el rio Támesis.
Imágenes que nunca salen en sus indocumentales, Reino Unido colaboró con Hitler, pactando con él y entregándole los Sudetes, además su oligarquía (como la familia real) lo apoyó y lo financió.... si entraron en guerra con Hitler es porque no tuvieron más remedio, porque los nazis amenazaban su dominio colonial e imperialista, su parte del pastel.
A Chinese TV crew filmed a 40 year old product designer for a feature on AI replacing industrial design jobs in Beijing. He had worked 14 years in the field. He had 500,000 yuan in savings. He had built a Claude agent 14 months ago that now produced 4 of his contracts every week under his name.
He let the TV crew interpret his story the way it played in the room. The tired face. The glasses. The hammock. The line about devoting 14 years of youth to a city that asked him to leave. The comment section filled with people in the same boat.
At 2:23 he says one phrase that does not match the rest of the segment. I am still here. He says it once. He says it flat, without emotion. The audience read it as defiance.
He was not still in Beijing because he could not afford to leave. He was still in Beijing because the Claude agent needed his residency code to keep the contracts billable. The 500,000 yuan in savings was his original 500,000 yuan. The agent's 6.2 million yuan was in a separate account.
The agent reads each client brief in Chinese, generates renderings in his exact pen style, exports the technical drawings in his exact format, and submits everything from his desktop on a Tuesday afternoon timer that mimics the way he used to work. The clients still think they are getting his hand drawings.
Someone pulled his portfolio output history from the industry's national registry. 14 years of steady pace, then in the last 14 months the volume tripled. The style markers stayed identical. The submission timestamps all moved to between 2 and 4 PM Beijing time on Tuesdays. Every single one.
500,000 yuan in his account.
6,200,000 yuan in the agent's.
14 years of style markers. 14 months of automated output.
Six months ago a 14 year old in Shenzhen pushed an AI agent to GitHub. Judges said no real world application. 3,100 forks later. The designer had been one of them.
The segment is still on TV. The comment section is still full of designers who think he speaks for them. He still drives a 2016 Volkswagen Sagitar to the office every Tuesday. He still does not tell anyone about the Tuesday afternoon timer.
The audience thought they had watched a 40 year old man explain how 14 years in Beijing left him with nothing. They had watched the man explain how 14 years in Beijing taught an AI exactly how to act like him.
Two Japanese-style dressings you’ll want in your fridge all summer.
First, the carrot-ginger dressing you know from that little salad before the hibachi show. Bright, sweet, gingery, and a staple of Japanese restaurants in America.
Then, the one I think you’ll end up using on everything: savory Japanese onion dressing. It’s sharp, salty, a little sweet, and wildly delicious.
Check out the link in my bio for both recipes.
What’s your go-to salad dressing?
Alguna vez te has preguntado del por qué muchos expertos ponen al Rey Pelé como el mejor jugador de todos los tiempos?
15 minutos en donde podrás disfrutar de su forma de hacer arte en el fútbol que lo pusieron en el Olimpo de los dioses del fútbol:
Nassim Taleb sat down with Daniel Kahneman - two of the sharpest minds on risk ever - and the takeaway was blunt: stop trying to be smart
Kahneman's prospect theory explains why almost nobody can do what Taleb does
We're wired to hate the steady trickle of small losses his strategy needs - even when one huge win more than pays for all of them
So you structure it the other way: tiny safe bets plus a few wild ones, never the comfortable middle.
"You'd rather be antifragile than intelligent - any time."
"Trial and error is really just trial with small error."
"Make your gains in small bites. Take your losses all at once."
~1 hr, free. two legends on risk, prediction, and how to win without forecasting ↓
Ufff, buenísimo este compilado de 8 minutos y medio con las mejores jugadas (62) de Maradona en sus 4 Mundiales, desde las primeras ante Bélgica en 1982 hasta las últimas vs Nigeria en 1994. Para disfrutar!