Bombing Iran shouldn’t be to bring the Islamist Mullahs back to the negotiating table. Negotiations with the Devil are pointless.
Bomb Iran to bring about a Free Iran with real regime change. Give the government to the people!
1 - Attack the regime with overwhelming force and remove ALL the leaders. None of this “proportional response” nonsense.
2 - Let Israel join the fray, with a focus on destroying the Basij and the infrastructure holding the people hostage.
3 - Arm the Iranians!
4 - Give them air support.
The only solution is regime change.
@MattPRD Hey @MattPRD can you use it to get $YNE back up so I can at least get my initials investments made into it back. I don’t even want the supposed gains it was going to give anymore; just the over 90% lost back.
Shared today by Bev Perry in the Expand Dem Values in the House and Senate Facebook group.
I need to say something that's been bothering me for a while, and I'm saying it as a Marine Corps veteran who leans center-right.
This isn't partisan. This is observation.
We've slow-faded into accepting militarized police as normal, and nobody seems to notice or care.
Even as a USMC pilot, I went through six months of infantry training as an officer before flight school. I've worn the gear. The helmet, the tactical vest, the whole kit. And I can tell you from experience, it changes you.
There's a psychological shift that happens when you strap that stuff on. You feel different. You carry yourself different. You start seeing the environment differently. In the Marine Corps, that shift was appropriate because it's a combat culture and organization.
But these are American streets. American citizens. And we've got law enforcement dressed like they're kicking down doors in Fallujah to serve warrants in suburbia.
What happend to high standards and real policing tactics? Think Adam-12...Officers Reed and Malloy. Crisp uniforms. A revolver. A baton. High standards and professionalism. They looked like public servants because they were public servants. They de-escalated. They talked to people. They were part of the community.
Now? Tactical gear, beards, ball caps, Oakley sunglasses, sleeve tattoos, and a tactical kit that would make special operators jealous. And we've turned it into a fetish. We celebrate it. We assume that because someone looks hard, they must be a professional.
They're not.
I loved the Marine Corps. But I'll be honest, I was also blinded by it for a while. Mission first. Unit over everything. And that mentality made sense in that context.
But law enforcement doesn't get that critical examination. "Back the Blue" has become a shield against accountability. A blanket assumption that a badge plus gun equals hero. That tactical gear equals competence.
It doesn't.
Most people who join law enforcement aren't special operators. They're average people who desperately want to belong to something bigger than themselves. I understand that impulse deeply, it's why I joined the Marines. But wanting to belong doesn't make you qualified. Looking the part doesn't mean you can perform under pressure. And wrapping yourself in warrior aesthetics doesn't make you a warrior.
Old school law enforcement represented something. Standards. Bearing. Discipline. Professionalism that was demonstrated, not costumed. A revolver and a baton meant you had to rely on your training, your words, your judgment, not overwhelming firepower.
What I see now in law enforcement is the costume without the culture. The gear without the training. The authority without the accountability.
Are there good people in law enforcement? Of course. I know some personally. But this reflexive "law enforcement can do no wrong" mentality is lazy, dangerous, and intellectually dishonest.
A woman is dead. And before we sort ourselves into teams and start assigning blame, maybe we should ask harder questions:
Why do we accept a militarized police force as normal?
Why do we assume tactical gear equals tactical competence?
Why have we let "Back the Blue" become a substitute for actual standards?
I wore the uniform. I went through the training. I know what that gear does to your head.
It shouldn't be normalized on American streets against American citizens.
And we shouldn't pretend everyone wearing it is qualified to carry it. The fact that he called her a “fucking bitch” after he shot her three times should be a huge red flag for all of us.
I was thinking that once we get to base we should start making some other mini apps under $YNE that accrue value back to the main $YNE token - thoughts?
And that way we could have all sorts of apps, learning apps, games, we could have a whole network of apps/tokens under the $YNE umbrella.
And $YNE holders benefit from all of it.
We could even then get $YNE community members to make their own $YNE apps that accrue back to the main $YNE token.
CC: @flaunchgg@base I feel like this could an awesome way for @yesnoerror to use your tech!
What is consciousness? Many see this as the deepest mystery. My guess: One day, when digital systems claim to have inner experiences, we will just shrug and accept that consciousness accompanies sufficiently rich and robust information processing.
🏆 YESNOERROR LEADERBOARD 🏆
1. @ppedros99
2. @Chubstixxx
3. @dicross_jr
4. @yesnoerroruser
5. @MattPRD
6. @Flan289
7. @Sylas971657
8. @boutdaprofits
9. @sir_jackob
10. @JCiepluch23811
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🛠️ $YNE DEVELOPMENT UPDATES 🛠️
JUST FINISHED
1. You can now run audits from the @yesnoerror mobile website.
2. Login/account creation issues fixed now that the @X team has resolved their API outage.
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IN PROGRESS
1. Auto posting notable audit results on the @yesnoerror X account.
2. Auto auditing content and data from important sources (science, government, finance, etc).
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NEXT ON THE ROADMAP
1. Token gated audit dashboards with AI summaries and trends across audits from a specific category (i.e. "Science").
2. Improved onboarding flow from new user to first audit.
3. Trigger an audit from on-chain $YNE transaction.
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👍👎🚫
Announcing the new @yesnoerror, the AI agent for auditing ALL online information for errors.
News articles, @X posts, scientific research, and more.
Find errors. Catch errors. Protect humanity.
Powered by the $YNE token.
Soon we are releasing an important update to @yesnoerror. It will greatly expand on what the error auditing AI agent can do.
1) Experimenting beyond science
2) Benefits for $YNE holders
I'm looking at it on my development environment right now. It's getting close.
Can't wait to share more.
@MattPRD@yesnoerror I have to say, YNE is probably the most productive project I've run across on-chain and it is a legitimately cool application of both AI and blockchain.
When $YNE and @yesnoerror launched, we were in the heat of the bull market. When Trump took office, the entire market felt the impact.
At first we rode a huge, market-wide hype wave—up and then down. But we didn’t sell our 90 million tokens. Why? Because without them we wouldn’t have any YNE, and YNE is our most valuable asset. Many hedge funds and investors offered to buy them directly from me for millions of dollars, and I turned down every single offer. Why? Because I want more YNE, not less.
Now we’re rebuilding on the strength of our own success. Not everyone will build in these conditions—many projects simply stopped—but we’re forging ahead.
As we keep building, the market will eventually come back, and when it does, we’ll be stronger and better than ever.
Anyone can now use @yesnoerror error auditing on any PDF for free.
Coming up next:
- Special features for $YNE holders
- Track # of views on analysis so we can show trending analysis
- Ability for anyone to be able to leave comments on analysis
- Support for more than just PDF file formats (docs, webpages, images, etc)
- Integration with @perplexity_ai for real time fact checking against recent news and the web.