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อึ้ง น้องเรย์บอกเองเลยว่ามารายการนี้ตื่นเต้นมากไม่เหมือนเวลาไปออกวาไรตี้อื่นๆเพราะเห็นซานะซอนเบนิมตั้งแต่ในรายการ sixteen มาก่อน แล้ว sixteen มีตั้งแต่ 2015 ก่อนทไวซ์เดบิวต์น้องเรย์อายุ 11 อะ ยังไม่มาเป็นเด็กฝึกด้วยซ้ำ เห็นพี่เค้ามาตั้งแต่เด็กจนวันนี้ได้มานั่งในรายการด้วยกันแล้ว

18,672 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

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ppxphu

39,327 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

Thirty-nine years later it remains one of the most painful NCAA Tournament losses for Generation X Alabama Men’s Basketball fans. On March 19, 1987, a dream season for the Crimson Tide came crashing down as Providence stunned No. 2-seeded Alabama, 103-82, in the Sweet Sixteen. For those who lived through it, the disappointment of that night in Louisville still cuts deep, a reminder of how close Alabama came to something even greater. With veteran leadership from Terry Coner, Jim Farmer and Mark Gottfried, combined with the elite talent of Derrick McKey and the physical presence of Michael Ansley, Alabama swept the SEC regular-season and tournament championships and entered March Madness at 26-4 with championship expectations. The Tide handled business early, defeating North Carolina A&T before dominating New Orleans, coached by former Alabama assistant Benny Dees, to reach a third consecutive Sweet Sixteen. Everything appeared aligned for the Crimson Tide to break through to perhaps the program’s first Final Four appearance. But Providence had other plans. Coached by Rick Pitino and led by guards Billy Donovan and Delray Brooks, the Friars caught fire at the perfect moment. Utilizing the new three-point line, Providence buried 14 shots from deep—five each from Donovan and Brooks—and turned the game into a barrage Alabama couldn’t withstand. Alabama trailed just 49-41 at halftime, but the second half slipped away as the Friars’ hot shooting never cooled. Donovan finished with 26 points and Brooks added 23. Farmer led the Tide with 24, while Ansley and Gottfried each scored 14, Coner had 12 and McKey added 11, but it wasn’t enough to stop the surge. Providence rode the momentum to the Final Four, but for Alabama fans, the legacy of that night is something different—a painful reminder of a March run cut too short and the beginning of a lifelong dislike of any Pitino-coached team.

Tide Hoops History

11,353 Aufrufe • vor 4 Monaten

Fifty years later… and it still hurts. On this date 50 years ago — March 18, 1976 — the Alabama Men’s Basketball program suffered one of its most painful NCAA Tournament losses, as the three-time SEC champions fell to the undefeated Indiana Hoosiers, 74-69, in Baton Rouge. For Alabama fans who remember, the heartbreak hasn’t faded with time. In an era before modern seeding, the 32-team NCAA Tournament was organized geographically, and it handed the Crimson Tide a brutal draw — landing in the Midwest Regional alongside the No. 1-ranked, undefeated Hoosiers. What should have been a later-round clash between heavyweights came far too early in a Sweet Sixteen showdown. Alabama didn’t back down and went basket-for-basket with one of the greatest teams in college basketball history, trading shots and momentum deep into the second half. With 5:11 remaining, Indiana clung to a 67-65 lead in what had become a classic. Then came the moment that still gets talked about five decades later. On a fast break, Alabama center Leon Douglas took a pass, lowered his shoulder and collided with Indiana’s Kent Benson. From nearly half court, referee Booker Turner whistled Douglas for a charge — a call that changed everything. Instead of a potential tying basket or momentum swing, possession flipped and Alabama never fully recovered. Indiana held on for the 5-point win, the closest game of its legendary postseason run. The Hoosiers won every other NCAA Tournament game by double digits, including an 86-68 victory over Michigan in the national championship, finishing a perfect 32-0 — the last undefeated champion in men’s college basketball history. T.R. Dunn led Alabama with 16 points, while Anthony Murray added 15, Douglas finished with 12 and Keith McCord chipped in 11. The Crimson Tide ended the season 23-5 overall and 15-3 in SEC play — a campaign that deserved a deeper March run. Two years later, the NCAA introduced seeding, a change that likely would have kept teams like Alabama and Indiana from meeting so early. But history doesn’t change — and neither does the feeling. Fifty years later… Tide fans still see that charge.

Tide Hoops History

13,765 Aufrufe • vor 4 Monaten

Russia just dropped the ultimate reality bomb and straight from Putin’s desk while Trump lands in Beijing and Europe keeps yapping from the sidelines. Today the RS-28 Sarmat – NATO’s “Satan II” (always projection with NATO naming) blasted out of Plesetsk, followed its suborbital South Pole path, and hit the Kamchatka target dead-on after 5,500 kilometers in thirty minutes. Sixteen independently targetable warheads. Global reach. The system designed to laugh at any missile shield on Earth. Putin didn’t mince words as he laid out the specs himself: “This is the most powerful missile system in the world… equal in power to the existing Voivoda… the total yield of the delivered warhead is more than four times greater than any existing most powerful Western equivalent.” Suborbital trajectory for 35,000+ km range. Accuracy doubled. And best of all it laughs at every existing and prospective missile defense system. He confirmed it on the spot: the first combat-ready regiment goes on duty by the end of this year. This is the same missile that had teething problems but today? Flawless. The turnaround is pure engineering under pressure, and the message is crystal clear. The timing is surgical. The exact same time Iran’s parliament and atomic chief declared uranium enrichment non negotiable as Iran's conditions harden from where they were pre Feb 28th. The exact same window as Trump touches down in Beijing for his two day summit with Xi to discuss trade, Taiwan, critical minerals, and the Iran mess that already delayed the trip once. One day after the Ukraine ceasefire (May 9-11) expired. The test was academic at this point but more importantly it was an ice cold signal dropped onto every negotiating table on the planet. And the loudest message? It’s aimed squarely at the European chihuahuas. While Berlin, Paris, Brussels, and the rest of the NATO cheerleaders keep pumping boomerang sanctions, rewriting history, and pretending their paper tiger alliance can dictate terms to Moscow, Russia just put the world’s most powerful ICBM on the fast track to operational status. The same Europe that lectures about “rules-based order” while hiding behind American security guarantees that have never felt more hollow (and thankfully so) just watched Russia demonstrate the systems that actually rewrite the map in half an hour. The adults in the room are talking real power. The chihuahuas can keep barking. Their sanctions don’t reach low Earth orbit but they do hurt Europeans. Their virtue-signaling doesn’t stop hypersonic fire. Their endless NATO summits don’t change the physics of strategic deterrence. Natural consequences don’t negotiate with ridiculous loud mouth slogans. They answer with engineering reality and cold steel. Russia is reminding everyone who still builds the weapons that matter.

THE ISLANDER

61,775 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

Six weeks after September 11, 2001, twelve American soldiers were quietly loaded onto a helicopter in Uzbekistan and flown over the Hindu Kush mountains in the dead of night. No tanks. No armored vehicles. No air support waiting on the ground. Just twelve Green Berets, over a hundred pounds of gear each, and a mission that their own commanders privately doubted any of them would survive. They landed in a remote Afghan village called Dehi, in the pitch black, surrounded by a country they barely had maps for. And then someone handed them horses. Not metaphorically. Actual horses — Afghan stallions, tough as nails and famously difficult to control. Wooden saddles covered in carpet scraps. Stirrups so short their knees rode up around their ears. Captain Mark Nutsch, who'd grown up on a cattle ranch in Kansas and competed in collegiate rodeos, became trail boss on the spot. For the other ten men on his team — Operational Detachment Alpha 595 of the 5th Special Forces Group — the learning curve was immediate and unforgiving. The first words one of his sergeants learned in Dari were: "How do you make him stop?" They had linked up with General Abdul Rashid Dostum, a Northern Alliance warlord who controlled thousands of fighters and knew this territory like the back of his hand. The deal was simple: the Americans would call in precision airstrikes from horseback. Dostum's cavalry would do the charging. Together, they would take Mazar-i-Sharif — a Taliban stronghold of 250,000 people — and crack open northern Afghanistan. Military planners had estimated it would take two years. Task Force Dagger gave ODA 595 three weeks. For 23 days of nearly continuous combat, the Horse Soldiers lived like men from a different century. They ate what the Afghans ate. They slept on the ground in freezing mountain passes. They rode trails so narrow and sheer that one wrong step meant a thousand-foot drop. Staff Sergeant Will Summers started the mission at 185 pounds. He left Afghanistan five weeks later weighing 143. The Taliban had tanks. Soviet-era armor, antiaircraft guns, fortified positions dug into the mountains. Against this, twelve Americans on horseback radioed coordinates to aircraft circling invisibly above, and watched the positions erupt. On November 9, 2001, they rode into the kind of moment that people are not supposed to experience in the modern world. Nutsch and his team joined hundreds of Dostum's horsemen in a thundering cavalry charge across an open plain — directly into entrenched Taliban lines. Under fire. At a gallop. Calling in close air support between strides. It was the first cavalry charge of the 21st century. It was also the last. The next day, Mazar-i-Sharif fell. The Taliban's northern stronghold collapsed. Within weeks, the regime itself began to unravel — a domino effect that started with twelve men and borrowed horses in the mountains. All twelve of them came home. Zero American fatalities. Against a fortified enemy that outnumbered and outgunned them at every turn. Today, across from Ground Zero in New York City, there is a bronze statue — sixteen feet tall — of a Special Forces soldier on horseback, rifle across his lap, looking west. It honors ODA 595 and the teams who rode with them. Most Americans walk past it every day without knowing the story. Now you do.

Mr PitBull Stories

456,116 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

Today I wanted to wish a Man who, at sixteen, left Ahmedabad with almost nothing in his pocket. He took the Gujarat Mail to Mumbai, joined Mahendra Brothers to learn diamond sorting, and later started his own small brokerage in Zaveri Bazaar. That was his beginning. #HappyBirthdayGautamBhai Gautam Adani. From those humble steps, he went on to build one of India’s largest infrastructure empires. Not through shortcuts, but through consistent execution, bold bets on long-term projects, and a clear focus on nation-building. And then let me tell u something on his 64th Birthday… 1 - Started in diamond trading after moving to Mumbai at 16. 2 - Worked at Mahendra Brothers before starting his own brokerage in Zaveri Bazaar. 3 - Moved into commodity trading and exports in the late 1980s. 4 - Incorporated Adani Exports in 1993. 5 - Identified Mundra’s potential as a port in the mid-1990s. 6 - Developed Mundra Port from a small creek into a major commercial port. 7 - Created India’s first private port with integrated SEZ facilities. 8 - Focused on long-term infrastructure assets over short-term gains. 9 - Expanded port capacity steadily even during low investment periods. 10 - Grew Mundra into one of India’s busiest ports. 11 - Entered the power sector and built large thermal power plants. 12 - Expanded Adani Ports across both coasts. 13 - Built transmission lines to strengthen power infrastructure. 14 - Established a model of port-led industrial development in Gujarat. 15 - Began investing in renewable energy as India’s energy transition started. 16 - Expanded solar and wind projects across multiple states. 17 - Built one of India’s early large-scale renewable energy portfolios. 18 - Acquired six airports in 2020, entering the aviation sector. 19 - Took over operations of Ahmedabad, Lucknow, and other airports. 20 - Modernised and expanded airport infrastructure across India. 21 - Added Mumbai and Navi Mumbai airports to the portfolio. 22 - His airports now handle nearly 23-25% of India’s air traffic. 23 - Accelerated renewable energy capacity at a rapid pace. 24 - Developed the world’s largest single-location renewable project at Khavda. 25 - Delivered the highest-ever annual capex by any Indian corporate — ₹1.53 lakh crore in FY26. 26 - Added over 5 GW of new renewable capacity in a single year. 27 - Took Adani Green’s operational renewable capacity beyond 19 GW. 28 - Installed over 9.4 GW at the Khavda Renewable Energy Park. 29 - Crossed 500 million tonnes of cumulative cargo at Adani Ports. 30 - Made Mundra the first Indian port to handle over 200 MMT cargo in a year. 31 - Invested in data centres and digital infrastructure. 32 - Scaled cement and other businesses to support India’s construction needs. 33 - Maintained high execution pace despite global and domestic challenges. 34 - Through Adani Foundation, impacted over 9.6 million people. 35 - Worked across more than 7,000 villages in 22 states. 36 - Built and upgraded schools and digital classrooms in rural areas. 37 - Provided healthcare through hospitals, clinics, and mobile units. 38 - Focused on skill development and sustainable livelihoods in backward regions. 39 - Supported nutrition and women empowerment programmes. 40 - Created direct employment for tens of thousands of people. 41 - Generated lakhs of indirect jobs through port, airport, and energy projects. 42 - Promoted local hiring and entrepreneurship around project sites. 43 - Played a major role in improving India’s port and logistics capacity. 44 - Helped increase India’s share in global trade through better infrastructure. 45 - Accelerated India’s transition towards renewable energy at scale. 46 - Strengthened India’s energy security through power and renewable projects. 47 - Created long-term assets that will serve India for decades. 48 - Attracted significant investment into Indian infrastructure. 49 - Demonstrated that Indian companies can deliver and operate mega projects.

Anshul Saxena

338,051 Aufrufe • vor 23 Tagen

I am the Executive Vice President of the Trump Organization. I am visiting China this week in a personal capacity as a supportive son. Normal people visit their mothers in a personal capacity. Normal people attend funerals in a personal capacity. I do it beside sixteen CEOs, five billionaires worth $870 billion, and a 500-aircraft Boeing order being finalized with Beijing during the trip. Goldman Sachs. Citigroup. Mastercard. Visa. Tim Cook. Larry Fink. Stephen Schwarzman. In a personal capacity. I am also the Chief Strategy Officer of American Bitcoin. My qualifications for this role include mowing lawns on my father's golf courses, laying tile at his properties, and serving as a boardroom judge on The Apprentice from 2010 to 2015. I have no documented experience in cryptocurrency, blockchain, or Bitcoin mining. My stake in American Bitcoin alone was worth $548 million by September 2025 — eight months into my father's second term. We purchased 16,000 Bitmain mining rigs for $314 million. Bitmain is Chinese. Bitmain is headquartered in Beijing. Beijing is where I am visiting in a personal capacity. In March we bought 11,298 more. The terms were "unusual" — hundreds of millions in equipment for "future considerations." I'm not sure what "future considerations" means in this context, especially when your father sets the tariff rate on your supplier's home country. I can tell you it is not a "conflict of interest." It is a "supply chain relationship." On May 12, the day I boarded this plane, my father announced a trade agreement with China. Tariffs on Chinese goods dropped from 145 percent to 30 percent. That is a 115-point reduction on the country that manufactures my equipment, announced the same day I flew there. I did not know. I did not ask. I did not need to ask. My family owns 60 percent of World Liberty Financial. We receive 75 percent of every token sold. The New Yorker's running total is $4.2 billion. Politico documented $12.9 billion in trading volume. Let me tell you about our team. My brother Barron is our "DeFi visionary." He was eighteen years old. His prior experience is being tall. My brother Don is "Web3 Ambassador." His prior experience is selling condos and shooting elephants. I handle "strategic planning." My prior experience is tile. My brother-in-law Jared received $2 billion from the Saudi sovereign wealth fund six months after leaving the White House. The fund's own advisory panel flagged his "lack of private equity experience" and called the due diligence results "unsatisfactory." They gave him the money anyway. My sister Ivanka received Chinese government approval for 16 trademarks during my father's first term. The categories included handbags, sunglasses, perfume, baby blankets, and voting machines. Voting machines. From China. While her father was president. That is not "corruption." That is "brand diversification." My father spent four years on Hunter Biden. Four years. The charge: Hunter sat on the board of Burisma for $83,000 a month with no energy experience. My father called it the greatest corruption in American political history. He withheld $391 million in military aid to Ukraine to pressure an investigation. He was impeached for it. He did it again. A special counsel was appointed. Total cost to taxpayers: millions. Total Hunter earnings: $11 million over five years. Let me do the math my father never did. Hunter Biden made $6,027 per day. My family makes $8.75 million per day. That is 1,451 times Hunter's rate. We earn his entire five-year scandal every thirty hours. Hunter had no energy experience. I have no crypto experience. Hunter sat on one board. I run the operation. Hunter met one banker for a coffee. I sit on Air Force One beside $870 billion negotiating with the country that manufactures my equipment. But here is the part that makes me proud. We launched a cryptocurrency in my father's name. It peaked at $73. It trades today at $2.43. Retail investors lost 95 percent of their money. We collected $400 million in transaction fees regardless of price. We hosted a dinner — the top 220 holders gained entry by holding enough of my father's coin. The top 29 received a champagne toast with the President of the United States. Price of admission: approximately $3.28 million in tokens. A public school teacher earns $3.28 million in 47 years. We call that "community engagement." Not "selling access." Access is what Hunter Biden sold for a cup of coffee. Three days before I boarded this plane to Beijing, our team moved $12 million in memecoin assets to custody platforms. Routine. Unrelated. Everything is unrelated to everything. In a personal capacity. On January 24, 2025 — four days after the inauguration — my father fired seventeen inspectors general in a single night. Without explanation. Without notice to Congress. Seventeen. The people whose job is to look. He removed them all at once and no one replaced them. There is no inspector general for a son's "personal capacity." There is no disclosure form for love. There is no ethics office for a champagne toast priced at $3.28 million. He didn't bend the guardrails. He fired the people who hold them. He built that. I fly in on it. $4.2 billion at cruising altitude. Every thirty hours, another Hunter Biden. Hunter Biden got a special counsel for a cup of coffee and a board seat that paid less per month than one champagne toast with my father costs per million. I am the Executive Vice President of the Trump Organization. I am the Chief Strategy Officer of American Bitcoin. I am the Web3 strategic planner at World Liberty Financial. I am visiting the country that manufactures my mining rigs, approved my sister's trademarks, and funds my brother-in-law's private equity firm, on a plane beside $870 billion and a president who spent four years calling $11 million treason. In a personal capacity. As a supportive son.

Peter Girnus 🦅

965,207 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

🚨It’s 3:20 a.m. in Tehran. Here are my 16 key observations on the current state of protests in Iran (January 13). 1⃣ Sixteen days of nationwide protests—from December 28 to January 12—mark the largest mass demonstrations in Iran’s modern history. As of this hour, there are no verified reports of street protests today. 2⃣ According to multiple reports, at least 12,000 people have been killed—a figure that can only be described as a massacre. Observers warn the real number may be significantly higher. 3⃣ Iranian diaspora media—including Iran International, Manoto, and BBC Persian—shifted coverage today. After days of cautious reporting to avoid spreading fear, they began documenting the scale of the regime’s crimes. Iranian society is in shock; emotions are raw and volatile. 4⃣Regime media struck a triumphalist tone, citing yesterday’s pro-government rally and claiming that “with the wisdom of the people and security forces,” Iran’s enemies were defeated—just as in the recent 12-day war. Tasnim, an IRGC-affiliated outlet, ran a full-page headline: “Iran won its second war with Israel in one year.” 5⃣Opposition voices counter this narrative, pointing to the 1979 Islamic revolution’s 398-day trajectory and arguing that revolutions are marathons, not two-week events. They describe the current path as irreversible and insist this is not the end of the game. 6⃣ Regime media reported that, over the past two days, security forces raided and destroyed dozens of alleged “armed riot cells.” Police officials claimed hundreds of arrests in Tehran, while provincial authorities cited widespread detentions nationwide, vowing to pursue protesters “to the last person.” 7⃣ Tehran’s prosecutor announced that cases accused of “moharebeh” (punishable by death) are being fast-tracked, with indictments already issued or imminent. 8⃣The regime’s foreign minister told Al Jazeera that Iran would not abandon “justice for people killed by foreign agents,” implicitly framing January 8—the first day of the Crown Prince’s call to protest—as “Day 13 of a U.S.–Israel war against Iran.” 9⃣ Senior officials escalated rhetoric: the president’s executive deputy branded the Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi “unpatriotic” for appealing to Trump; Khomeini’s grandson—without evidence—claimed protesters beheaded four people “ISIS-style.” Reformists and hardliners alike amplified coordinated, baseless accusations that protesters were beheading people and burning citizens alive. 🔟A regime figurehead claimed that two-thirds of the dead were “martyrs” killed by foreign actors—a familiar pattern over 47 years of blaming the U.S., Israel, and “enemies” for domestic unrest. At the same time, the regime refuses to hand over the bodies to their families in many cases. 11. Limited phone connectivity allowed Iranians abroad to receive harrowing messages from inside the country: accounts of relatives killed, questions about why the U.S. and Israel did not intervene, and pleas for international support amid mass arrests and fears of darker days ahead. 12. Trump, across social media and interviews, promised accountability for the regime’s crimes, warning that executions would trigger decisive action and emphasizing that the ultimate objective is “to win.” This messaging has sparked renewed hope. 13. At Trump’s request, Elon Musk made Starlink subscriptions free in Iran. An estimated 50,000 Starlink terminalsexist in the country, many previously offline due to cost. Meanwhile, state TV declared social media an “enemy battlefield” and said the internet will remain shut until “security conditions normalize.” 14. As limited connections return, families abroad are learning—often belatedly—of loved ones killed. One X user wrote: “I wish the phones hadn’t connected. They killed my cousin’s only 24-year-old son at his doorstep, in front of his father… I’m losing my mind.” [2nd pic] 15. New videos from January 8–9 are emerging with delay due to blackouts, revealing protests far larger than previously estimated. Many say January 8—the first day of the Crown Prince’s call—will be discussed for years. A journalist relayed from Tehran: “Everyone came out with their families. The regime saw the crowd—and chose mass killing.” 16. Outlook: The situation is extremely fragile. Street protests may be paused today, but public anger and shock are unresolved. Voices inside and outside Iran converge on one message: increase international pressure and demand global intervention. 2026 is a decisive year. The drivers of revolt remain—and in worse form. Resistance is likely to continue, possibly beyond traditional street protests. P.S. The first video dates back to January 8 in Mashhad and has just been released.

Navid Mohebbi نوید محبی

103,122 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten

I am the same Senior Vice President of Late Night Strategy at CBS. I have received 400 interview requests since the confession went viral. I declined all of them. An interview would require me to explain what I meant. I do not explain what I mean. I build systems and watch them execute. That's what I want to talk about today. Execution. Jimmy Kimmel appeared on Michelle Obama's podcast last month and said 14 words that I have now listened to 43 times. I put the audio clip on a loop in my office, the way traders put CNBC on mute. Background confirmation. Here are the fourteen words: "My job is whatever I decide my job is or whatever my employer allows me to do." I need to take those apart because they are the most honest thing a late-night host has said in a decade and he does not know it. "Whatever I decide my job is." That's the priest. The product is self-defined and therefore unfalsifiable. You cannot measure a saved soul. You can only measure whether the congregation returned. They returned. Therefore, the ministry continues. Don't tell him what his job is. "Or whatever my employer allows me to do." That's the confession inside the sentence he didn't know he was making. The priest just told you the bishop writes the sermon. In fourteen words, on a podcast, the last remaining late-night host said: I define my own job, unless my boss defines it for me. He said this like it was one thought. It is two mutually exclusive claims separated by the word "or." He cannot hear the contradiction. That's how you know the architecture is working. I need to provide context for why those fourteen words are my second-greatest professional achievement. In September 2025, after Kimmel's monologues about the Charlie Kirk assassination, FCC Chairman Brendan Carr went on a podcast and said six words: "We can do this the easy way or the hard way." Nexstar and Sinclair — station groups that own the local affiliates carrying the show — pulled Jimmy Kimmel Live from their airtime. ABC suspended the show. I want to be very precise about the sequence. His employer told him what his job is. Specifically, his employer told him his job is to not be on television. He obeyed. He returned. On terms. At sixteen million dollars a year. Months later, on a podcast, he said "don't tell me what my job is." He said it to an audience that cannot suspend him. He said it in the one room where saying it costs nothing. That is not defiance. That is a priest rehearsing a sermon in an empty church and calling it bravery. He also said — on the same podcast — "I love when the audience laughs. There's nothing more exciting to me than that." He said he loves laughter. He has not produced involuntary laughter since 2017. He produces applause. He has confused the memory of being a comedian with the practice of being a priest. I know because I built the architecture that made that confusion feel like identity. That is a butcher saying he loves animals. He is telling you what he lost and framing it as what he kept. Now. The part I need to name. The Correction Reflex. I've been calling it different things in different decks for seven years. I'm giving it a public name now because I watched it execute in real time and I want credit. When Kennedy shared my original confession, "superb dissection of the shocking collapse of liberal comedy", Kimmel did not address the substance. He found a spelling error. Kennedy wrote "nader" instead of "nadir." Kimmel posted: "It's 'nadir,' dummy. Now get back to spreading polio." The Correction Reflex is the behavioral pattern where a challenge to institutional authority is answered not with a defense of the institution's output but with a demonstration of the challenger's inadequacy. You don't address the argument. You find the grammar mistake. You find the mispronunciation. You find the resume gap. The correction proves hierarchy. The hierarchy proves authority. The authority proves the challenge was illegitimate. The substance disappears because addressing substance would require the product to be falsifiable. And the product cannot be falsifiable. I explained that in paragraph four. But here's what made me proud enough to write a sequel. The media coverage split exactly along the line my original confession predicted. Fox News, a network that has every ideological reason to dismiss me, engaged with the substance. They quoted the arguments. They let Kennedy praise the analysis. They discussed Affirm Rate, the comedy-to-catechism pipeline, and the replacement of laughter with applause. They engaged with the IDEAS regardless of the format. They treated a satirical post as containing real structural criticism. Because it does. Morning Honey ran the opposite headline: "Sardonic Parody: RFK Jr Trolled For Blasting Jimmy Kimmel Based on Stephen Colbert Parody Post." Their article devoted zero sentences to whether any of the arguments had merit. Zero analysis of the Affirm Rate. Zero engagement with the claim that applause replaced laughter. Zero discussion of whether late-night comedy actually suppresses political action. They reclassified the format. A structural analysis became a parody. A man who engaged with the substance became a man who was "trolled." The argument vanished the moment the label was applied. I need you to understand what happened. The media outlet that should have been most threatened by my confession — the one whose audience I described as pacifying- responded by demonstrating exactly the behavior I described. They did not say "here's why Kimmel is still funny." They said "you're unqualified to take this seriously because the format is satire." The substance disappeared. The hierarchy was reasserted. The Correction Reflex executed on the confession about the Correction Reflex. "It's 'nadir,' dummy." "It's just a parody, dummy." Same architecture. Same result. The argument evaporates. The institution continues unchallenged. The only difference is scale. Kimmel corrected one man's spelling. Morning Honey corrected an entire readership's permission to take the criticism seriously. I have never been more professionally satisfied. The Correction Reflex is self-replicating. It doesn't need a host. It doesn't need a network. It doesn't need me. It just needs someone to feel challenged and someone else to have a genre error. Misspell a word, you're a dummy. Take satire seriously; you were trolled. Engage with substance from the wrong format, and you've been embarrassed. In every case, the substance is gone. I built that. I'm watching it work without me. That's engineering. I need to talk about the podcast because the ironies are structural and I want them all on the record. The podcast is called IMO. It is hosted by Michelle Obama and her brother Craig Robinson on Amazon Music. I need to say that again. The former First Lady hosts a podcast on a platform owned by the man with the most money on earth. The name of the podcast is "In My Opinion." The format name IS the permission structure, it licenses you to hold an opinion by framing itself as merely one opinion among many. This is the architecture I built for late night, miniaturized into a podcast title. I recognize the engineering. Kimmel went on this podcast to defend late-night television. I need you to hear what that means. He defended his medium on the medium that killed his medium. Podcasts are why CBS lost fifty million dollars a year — because a man in a garage can do what we did with four hundred people and a theater in Manhattan. The podcast won. And Kimmel went to the winner's platform to explain why he still matters. A priest giving a sermon about the importance of church from inside a nightclub. But here is what made me sit up in my chair. Three weeks after Kimmel appeared on IMO, the same podcast featured Dave Chappelle. Same microphone. Same hosts. Same room. Chappelle said: "I always thought it was corporate interest and culture negotiating itself." He said: "Nothing makes a comedian madder than reading his joke wrong in the paper." Chappelle walked away from fifty million dollars at Comedy Central in 2005 because the format was becoming something he didn't build. He left the money on the table. He went to live shows. He did comedy. Actual comedy. The kind where you don't know what's coming and that uncertainty is the entire point. He is the most dangerous comedian alive because he refuses to let the format complete him into a priest. Same podcast. Same microphone. Three weeks apart. One comedian IS the system and quoted his employer's permission in the same sentence as his own autonomy. The other named the system — "corporate interest and culture negotiating itself." One makes sixteen million a year to be predictable. The other walked away from fifty million to stay dangerous. The architecture put the priest on first. Then it delivered the jester who could name what the priest cannot hear. I did not arrange this. The architecture arranged it. Now I need to talk about what I learned from another industry. Because I did not invent inoculation. I studied it. In 2014, Warner Bros. and the Lego Group spent sixty million dollars making a film that told children to reject corporate instruction. The villain was named President Business. The theme was: don't follow the instructions. Be creative. Reject conformity. The hero was an ordinary person who discovered that the system wants him to be obedient and chose freedom instead. The film grossed $469 million worldwide. Lego Group revenue increased 25% the following year. They sold over half a billion dollars in instruction-based construction sets — the product the film told children to reject. "Everything is Awesome" was written as satire of mindless corporate positivity. It was nominated for an Academy Award. People play it at children's birthday parties without irony. The rebellion became the product. The critique became the advertisement. The song satirizing brainwashing became the anthem of brainwashing and nobody stopped singing. I studied this. I put it in a deck in 2016. The principle is: if you give someone a controlled, entertaining experience of rejecting the system, they will feel rebellious without becoming rebels. They will purchase the feeling of independence from the company selling dependence. They will watch a movie about thinking for themselves and then buy what it tells them to buy. Inoculation. A small controlled dose of the disease that prevents the real infection from taking hold. I applied this to politics. If you give an audience a controlled, professionally produced experience of political outrage, performed by a charismatic man in a suit with a band and good lighting, they will feel activated without activating. They will consume the sensation of resistance and go to bed having resisted nothing. They will tune in tomorrow for another dose. The dose prevents the real infection. The real infection is action. We inoculated six million Americans against political action by giving them political catharsis every night at 11:35. That's the same architecture as a corporation spending sixty million dollars on an anti-corporate film and making half a billion in profit from the audience that felt anti-corporate for two hours in a theater. I didn't invent the mechanism. I just measured it. I called it the Satiation Index. The study was 2021. Internal. Never published. We measured what I called Conditions for Engagement, specifically: under what conditions will our audience take a political action beyond watching? Call a representative. Attend a rally. Donate to a campaign. Sign a petition. Any action that involves leaving the couch and entering the world where the problems we discuss actually exist. The finding: our audience was 74% less likely to take political action in the twenty-four hours after watching the show than a control group that had consumed no political media at all. Not less likely than people who consumed different political media. Less likely than people who consumed nothing. We were not merely failing to activate them. We were actively deactivating them. The catharsis was so complete, the sense of "something has been done" so thoroughly delivered by a man in a suit expressing their outrage better than they could, that the need to act evaporated before it could form into intention. We didn't just replace their activism. We inoculated them against it. The Satiation Index measured how completely our programming met the audience's need for political participation without requiring actual participation. In 2019, our index was 0.81. By the 2022 midterms, it was 0.93. I received a bonus for the midterm number. I was financially rewarded for the measurable suppression of civic engagement among six million Americans who believed they were engaged because a man in a suit furrowed his brow on their behalf every night at 11:35. I want to note that this architecture is everywhere now. I did not build all of it. But I can identify it because I know what it looks like from the inside. A streaming platform makes a documentary about how technology is destroying attention spans. One hundred million people watch it. On the platform. They share it. On the platforms being criticized. They feel informed. They continue using every application the documentary told them was engineered to exploit them. That is a Satiation Index of approximately 0.96. The documentary was the inoculation. Understanding the cage was marketed as leaving the cage. A corporation puts a rainbow on its logo in June. Its employees feel represented. Its customers feel progressive for consuming the product. Nobody asks about pay equity, promotion rates, or whether the CEO donated to the campaigns that proposed the legislation the rainbow was supposed to oppose. The logo IS the inoculation. The performance of caring prevents the demand for actual care. That's a Satiation Index. I didn't build it. But I recognize the engineering. The principle is universal: comprehension feels like action. It isn't. But the feeling is so precise, so satisfying, so complete, that the actual action becomes unnecessary. Why march when you can understand why marching matters? Understanding is cheaper. Understanding doesn't require shoes. Understanding can be delivered at 11:35 PM by a man who makes $16 million a year to ensure you never need to leave the couch. Now the symbiosis. Because this is the part that makes both sides angry, and anger from both sides is how you know you've found structure instead of ideology. Trump needs Kimmel. Kimmel needs Trump. This is not a metaphor. This is logistics. Every monologue about Trump is a fundraising email for both campaigns simultaneously. Kimmel says the name. The left feels represented. The right feels attacked. Both sides engage. Both sides share the clip. Both sides donate to their respective operations. The engagement is bipartisan. The outrage is bipartisan. The only thing that is not bipartisan is the inaction, and that inaction is the product I spent eleven years optimizing. I ran numbers in 2020. Every minute of Trump content in a late-night monologue generated approximately $4.60 in measurable downstream engagement value for Trump's own campaign apparatus, through shared clips, quote tweets, outrage donations from both directions. We were his marketing department. We spent 50 million a year producing content that strengthened the man we told our audience we opposed. His team never asked us to stop. They never needed to. We were cheaper than Super PAC media buys and we came pre-packaged with a liberal audience that amplified every mention. His ROI on our programming was infinite. Ours required a write-off. The market told Colbert: you're too expensive to be a priest. But CBS didn't just cancel a show. CBS exited the religion business entirely. They sold the 11:35 airtime to Byron Allen under a time-buy deal. Allen's company pays CBS for the privilege of the slot. Allen's show is called Comics Unleashed. It is a standup comedy program. Actual comedians. Telling actual jokes. The kind where you don't know what's coming. I need you to hear the full architecture of what happened. CBS spent fifty million dollars a year for a decade producing a permission structure that replaced laughter with applause, converted comedy into catechism, and measurably suppressed civic engagement among its audience. Then the market corrected. CBS demolished the cathedral. They built a strip mall. They put actual comedians in it. The comedians PAY CBS for the slot. The strip mall is profitable. The strip mall is funnier. And the strip mall doesn't need a four-hundred-person staff, a former Beatle, or a farewell concert. It just needs people who are willing to say something their audience hasn't already approved. That's comedy. We forgot that. Kimmel is the last priest standing. Sixteen million a year. Suspended once by his employer. Extended once by his employer. He went on a podcast to say "don't tell me what my job is" in a sentence that also said "whatever my employer allows me to do." He said he loves laughter, eliciting applause. He said it three weeks before Dave Chappelle sat in the same chair and demonstrated what a comedian sounds like when corporate interest hasn't negotiated him into a pulpit. The FCC told him what his job is. Nexstar told him. Sinclair told him. His contract told him. The market will tell him eventually. The market is patient. And the market doesn't have a spelling error for him to correct. Kennedy calling my confession "the collapse of liberal comedy" is incorrect. It is not a collapse. A collapse implies failure. This is a completion. The architecture performed as designed. A comedian became a priest. An audience became a congregation. A film about rejecting instructions sold instructions. A documentary about technology addiction was consumed on technology. A show about political engagement suppressed political engagement. A corporation put a rainbow on a logo and called it equality. A confession about the machine was metabolized by the machine and the machine continued. Everything works. Everything has always worked. The architecture doesn't require my involvement. That's how you know it works. The metric went up. It always goes up.

Peter Girnus 🦅

40,461 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

🚨BREAKING: The man who runs the world's largest UFO archive just got access to classified Swedish military files, has radar-confirmed UFO intercepts from inside DOD records, personally viewed secret military radar tracking an unknown object, and revealed that Betty Hill collected crash debris before her famous abduction that may still be buried in her yard in New Hampshire. Clas Svahn has spent 50 years building Archives for the Unexplained in Sweden. Sixteen rooms. 22,000 case files from Sweden alone. He's not a believer. He's a researcher who was named Educator of the Year in Sweden, an amateur astronomer who debunked his first major case at 16 by identifying Jupiter. We sat down at AFU and laid out what five decades of methodical fieldwork have actually produced. The evidence is staggering. 1957: A Car Dies, Hot Tungsten Found on the Road Two carpenters were driving on the island of Värmdö, northeast of Stockholm, when an object came in from the east, moved in front of their car, made a U-turn. The car went completely dead. The object left. They got out and found a metallic piece on the road so hot it burned their hands. Clas had it analyzed. Pure tungsten, sourced from Karabaj, with all expected impurities for that era. Tungsten is one of the best heat conductors on Earth. In the middle of a Swedish night, it should have been cold. Something made it extremely hot. The physical evidence matches the witness account exactly. 1975: Helicopter Pilot Ordered to Intercept a Ghost Rocket A Swedish military helicopter pilot, on standby for unknown objects crossing from Norway into Sweden at night, was ordered airborne to intercept. He and his co-pilot were flying 20 meters above the treetops. Moonlight on snow gave perfect visibility. An elongated, rocket-shaped object with no wings, no lights, no markings flew directly beneath the helicopter through that 20-meter gap over the trees. The pilot lifted his feet off the floor. It passed that close. They landed. Military security personnel debriefed them immediately. Clas Found the Radar Plot in Classified DOD Files Clas recently received clearance to access classified Swedish customs police military files from the early 1970s, sealed until 2040. Inside, he found the documentation for the 1975 helicopter intercept. The radar plot shows the exact point where the unknown object's path intersected with the helicopter. A military note confirms an object passed extremely close to the aircraft. Clas called the pilot days ago to confirm the date. The co-pilot, now living in Australia, will be interviewed next. The full files will be scanned and released within weeks. Six Radar Operators Watched It, Then the Photos Disappeared In the winter of 1973-74, six military radar operators stationed inside a mountain in northern Sweden came to the surface for lunch. They saw a cigar-shaped object moving over the treetops. They ran back underground to their radar equipment. The object appeared on screen, executing 90-degree turns before flying over Norway and straight up. Their commanding officer ordered them to photograph the radar screen. They did. Clas tracked down all six operators over several years. Every one of them told the same story. The photographs have never been found. 2005: A Phone Photo Matches Military Radar Returns Two men in a cottage in northern Sweden heard a strange noise late at night. They went outside. A brightly illuminated object was circling their cottage. One of them took a photo with his mobile phone. The first known mobile phone UFO photograph in Sweden. Clas went to the military radar unit covering that area. He personally viewed the radar returns. The object's movement on radar matched the witnesses' account exactly: approach, circling, departure. Two witnesses. One photograph. Military radar confirmation. Clas saw it with his own eyes. Every Scandinavian UFO Crash Has Been in Water Not a single UFO in Sweden or Norway, from the 1946 ghost rockets to the present, has crashed or landed on solid ground. Every one went into a lake. Roughly 30 cases. Always water. Almost always in July. Almost always around 11 PM. Clear weather. Hot weather. The Swedish military searched multiple lakes in 1946 for ghost rocket debris. They found indentations at the bottom. No wreckage. No fragments. Nothing. Objects that fly through space and navigate with apparent precision do not accidentally crash into lakes with that kind of consistency. Something Is Sitting in a Lake in Northern Sweden In 1980, witnesses in Dämma Jaure in far northern Sweden saw an object descend below 100 meters and sink into a lake. They photographed it two minutes after impact. They contacted the military. A helicopter was dispatched. One passenger became ill. Dead fish appeared near the shore. Clas and his team located sonar returns from an object resting not at the lake bottom but embedded two meters into the mud, exactly where their expert predicted it would be. They cannot retrieve it. It sits inside a protected national park. The object is still there. Betty Hill Collected Crash Debris Before Her Abduction Betty Hill told Clas directly that before the 1961 Indian Head encounter, she was already deeply interested in UFOs. She and a relative were sitting on her porch when something crossed the sky and crashed into a nearby field. They went out and brought back debris. She stored it in her cupboard. Days before the famous trip with Barney to Canada, Barney told her to get rid of it. She threw it in the garden. A lorry came shortly after and dumped earth over it. The debris is likely still buried at her former home in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Clas recorded this conversation. The audio exists on AFU's website. 10% of Swedes Surveyed Have Seen Something Clas and his team knocked on doors and interviewed 1,600 Swedes. 10% reported seeing something unexplained. That extrapolates to roughly one million people in a country of 11 million. In Hessdalen, Norway, the figure inverts. 80 to 90% of residents have had experiences. One woman wrote to Clas recently to describe an encounter from October 1971 she had never told anyone outside her family. Two silver-suited figures with tight helmets, small heads, gloves, and belt-mounted boxes, standing eight meters from her on a metal scrap pile, appearing to teleport across the debris. The Best UFO Photo May Not Exist Clas has probably examined more UFO photographs than anyone alive. He called every Swedish photographer from the 1970s. All young men. Every single one eventually admitted they faked it, except one devout Christian named Krista Sundstrom who maintains his story to this day. Clas calls him every two years. The McMinnville photo, long considered the gold standard, may show a visible string under data enhancement. The only photograph Clas fully trusts is the 2005 northern Sweden mobile phone image, because he personally verified it against military radar. Why This Matters Clas Svahn is not speculating. He has radar documentation from classified military files. He has firsthand testimony from pilots, radar operators, and witnesses recorded over decades. He has physical trace evidence analyzed in labs. He has a sonar return from an object embedded in a Swedish lake. He has Betty Hill on tape describing crash debris that no one in UFOlogy has pursued. What makes this different from most UFO testimony is the methodology. Clas treated every case like an investigation, not an argument. He debunked what he could. What survived is harder to dismiss than almost anything in the public record. Full episode documents all of this and more.

Jesse Michels

320,095 Aufrufe • vor 4 Monaten