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Former U.S. presidential candidate Andrew Yang on why "learn to code" went from the safest career advice to the worst in just 4 years: Yang recently returned from an AI conference out west and what he heard alarmed him. "They said to me that what we're going to see...

346,304 views • 1 month ago •via X (Twitter)

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VP VANCE PREDICTED: PEOPLE ARE GOING TO GET ANGRY, AND RIGHTFULLY SO "This stuff we can and we should prosecute, and I'm just telling you, this is going to be a real problem, and the people are going to get really pissed at Senate Republicans if we don't have the U.S. attorneys on the ground to actually achieve justice. People are going to get angry, and rightfully so." If you want justice, you've got to empower the President of the United States to actually appoint the officers of justice all over the country. The Democrats are stalling that, and we're going to wake up in a couple of years, if we don't have more U.S. attorneys approved, if we don't have more judges approved, we're going to wake up in a couple of years and realize that we've done a lot of great work at the Trump administration, but justice is not being meted out as it should be because we don't have the people on the ground. That is a big problem, and I know that's somewhat unrelated to Arctic Frost, but it actually is related to Arctic Frost, because you cannot get the justice for the people who are targeted by the Biden administration unless we've got good people, especially in these U.S. attorneys offices, and that's something we've got to pay attention to over the next year. Spying on President Trump, prosecuting him, investigating senators, congressmen, and congressmen who are just aligned with the President of the United States some of this stuff is going to get covered by statute of limitations, but some of this stuff we can and we should prosecute, and I'm just telling you, this is going to be a real problem, and the people who watch your show are going to get really pissed at Senate Republicans, excuse my language, if we don't have the U.S. attorneys on the ground to actually achieve justice, people are going to get angry, and rightfully so. If you want justice, you've got to empower the President of the United States to actually appoint the officers of justice all over the country. The Democrats are stalling that, and we're going to wake up in a couple of years, if we don't have more U.S. attorneys approved, if we don't have more judges approved, we're going to wake up in a couple of years and realize that we've done a lot of great work at the Trump administration, but justice is not being meted out as it should be because we don't have the people on the ground. That is a big problem, and I know that's somewhat unrelated to Arctic Frost, but it actually is related to Arctic Frost, because you cannot get the justice for the people who are targeted by the Biden administration unless we've got good people, especially in these U.S. attorneys offices, and that's something we've got to pay attention to over the next year. Spying on President Trump, prosecuting him, investigating senators, congressmen, and congressmen who are just aligned with the President of the United States some of this stuff is going to get covered by statute of limitations, but some of this stuff we can and we should prosecute, and I'm just telling you, this is going to be a real problem, and the people who watch your show are going to get really pissed at Senate Republicans, excuse my language, if we don't have the U.S. attorneys on the ground to actually achieve justice, people are going to get angry, and rightfully so.

Svetlana Lokhova

254,268 views • 5 months ago

Max Igan, interview posted Sept. 11, 2025: "Israel... controls the U.S. now. Benjamin Netanyahu said...we are... in possession of a superpower because Israel now... controls the U.S. Everything Donald Trump is doing, he's doing for Israel...But...people are waking up to this" This clip of Igan (Max Igan), "an author, filmmaker, musician, podcaster, and researcher originally from Australia who has garnered a large following for his work over the years speaking truth to power," is taken from an interview with Hrvoje Morić (Geopolitics & Empire) posted to the Geopolitics & Empire Rumble channel on September 11, 2025. (Igan's CV is per the G&E video description.) ----------------Partial transcription of clip--------------- "Israel basically controls the United States now. Benjamin Netanyahu said about three months ago, we are now in possession of a superpower because Israel now completely controls the United States. Everything Donald Trump is doing, he's doing for Israel. "And this is, this is the largest weapon manufacturers and the biggest military on earth. So, you know, if you speak out against Israel and then the United States puts sanctions on you and you know, all sorts of stuff. So this is kind of what's happening and where we're going. "But a lot of people are waking up to this now as well. So, you know, as negative as it gets, I mean, I've often said that, people will let this happen. You won't see any real pushback until it comes to people's own backyard. And now in the United States, it's coming to their own backyard. "The state of America. You've been to America recently? It's like the Third World. It's incredible. Philadelphia, you know, even in Manhattan there's piles of garbage everywhere. And la, like burnt out half of la. The other they go to San Diego, the whole center of town smells like urine. It's incredible. Homeless people all over the place. And it's like the Third World. Everyone, America is presented as this fantastic thing on tv, but when you go there and see what it's become over the last 20 years, if you go there and a lot like I go there quite a bit, and over the last 20 years I've seen it deteriorate to the point that it's shocking. It's absolutely shocking. "A lot of the people within the United States simply can't see it because they're there and amongst it, you know. But, it's shocking. And I've often said the only way you're going to bring down America, you can't wage a war against America because everyone's armed. You can't invade the place. If it's going to be destroyed, it's got to be destroyed from within, which is what is happening. All of the dual Israeli citizens in government. There's a new organization formed called AZAPAC, which is the, it's like AIPAC, only it's the anti-Zionist committee. "So that's all formed in the United States. And a lot of pushback. There's a lot of pushback happening and that might be the way out, I mean, through public awareness. I mean, once it gets so bad that you can't help but see it and you realize that all of this has been legislated to happen, you know, the only thing that stops the people pushing back and making the United States great again is the government and the police. So perhaps we need to address that, you know, and it's the same in every country. So, you know, for all of the negative stuff that's going on. "You get to the point where you think, well, you know, we're almost past the point of no return. I still see it as a positive because you can't not see it now. And, I think we are going to see some major pushback. It's going to get a lot uglier yet, but I think through it, I think we're going to head to some freedom after this."

Sense Receptor

43,911 views • 9 months ago

Chamath and Larry Summers Debate the Market Reaction to Trump's Tariffs Lawrence H. Summers: "If this is such a terrific thing, why do markets think it's so terrible for the American economy?" "Maybe the market's just completely wrong ... but the job of markets is to look forward." "It's to look passed the immediate." "It's to see what the long run consequences are going to be." "And markets are making a pretty devastatingly negative judgment on this step." Chamath Palihapitiya: " Larry, that's not true." " So let's just establish a couple facts about 'the markets.'" "Number one, there are two markets and they behave totally differently, and sometimes inversely to each other." "There's the stock market and there's the bond market." 1) Stocks: mean reversion "With respect to the stock market, what they are debating, and you're right Larry, is what is the effective long-term rate of return a dollar needs to generate in order to pay me back that dollar?" "That is what the fundamental stock market does." "And what we've seen for many years with trade imbalances, trade deficits, and close-to-zero interest rates, of which more of that happened under Democrats than Republicans, we have allowed the stock market to inflate past historical averages." " What we've actually seen happen in the last week is what most people would call mean reversion." "The stock market is still way above where it was last year, two years ago, three years ago." "What has happened is that the forward multiples have compressed. So that's number one. That's a fact." 2) Bonds: it's possible a major trade blew up "And then with respect to bonds, what we are seeing now is there are two very complicated issues." "In the last two days, we saw one part of the bond market totally get out of whack." "And what we know is that the yields changed materially in a very acute way, which is atypical of how the bond market typically digests a philosophical change in approach to policy." " What we heard in the last 24 hours is a lot of this move may have been attributed to an enormous levered bet on US treasuries by a Japanese hedge fund." " It will take three, and four, and five, and six weeks for us to really know." 3) Private credit: something to watch closely " Separately, what we do know, though, where the structural complexity of the market — and this is where, Larry, I agree with you — is acute and important to observe is in the credit markets for private companies." "And that is where you have to pay a lot of attention."

The All-In Podcast

98,290 views • 1 year ago

David Friedberg: The AI Jobs Panic Is a Crock of Sh*t Why? The revenue potential outweighs the cost savings by 100x. “There is no job loss with AI. I've said it a thousand times, and I will say it again, and again, and again. What I see on the ground, and what I've seen at dozens of companies, including my company that I run, there are two sides to a business. There is revenue and there’s costs. On the cost side of the equation, AI can be used to reduce humans doing things that cost money, to some extent. The effect there, I would argue, is nominal. The real opportunity with AI is on the revenue side, where suddenly one engineer can do 100x or 1000x what they used to be able to do, meaning you can make more products at your company, whether those are agricultural seed products, or boats and ships, or software for companies, or clothing, or what have you. Because of AI, everyone has the ability to expand their revenue base to create more products, and that is the foundation of good economic prosperity. It is called productivity. We can grow productivity in this country with AI. So where I see AI being used is on the revenue side 100x more than the cost side. And in that equation, people are hiring like crazy. We cannot hire enough people. I just had a review meeting with my product and engineering team two days ago, and they're like, ‘We want to add an extra 15 headcount to our engineering squads because we have all this opportunity to do stuff that we couldn't otherwise do.’ So we are going to hire more people. And to Sacks' point, we are seeing that show up in the jobs numbers. The idea that AI is going to destroy jobs is a Luddite idea that is being disproven every single day, and I see it on the ground. It is only a matter of time before people wake up to this and they realize that this narrative that they've all been sold is a crock of sh*t.”

The All-In Podcast

151,538 views • 21 days ago

Anthropic is kicking OpenAI’s ass: Insights from the largest revenue explosion in tech history Brad Gerstner on how Anthropic dominated the last 90 days, and could they hit a $100B run rate by EOY!?: “Anthropic was literally counted out of the game last year, and they've kicked OpenAI's ass over the last 90 days. Bam, you have the largest revenue explosion in the history of technology. So you have to ask, what's going on? The first thing, for me, is that model and product capability just hit this threshold near AGI, whatever the hell you want to call it. And everybody, like Altimeter, said, ‘Damn, this is so good. I have to have it. This is no longer about my IT budget. This is about labor augmentation and labor replacement. Turns out that the TAM for intelligence is radically different than anything we've seen before. And I think the best example of this, right, this is millions of self-interested parties, consumers, enterprises, a thousand now over $1M, right? It's not that there was some great go to market at Anthropic that all of a sudden they snuck up and blew everybody away. No, it was companies demanding the product. They're getting throttled on the product. Why? Because it's so good. It makes them better at their business. We knew intelligence was going to scale on the exponential. The question was whether revenue will scale on the exponential, and that's what we're seeing. And remember, they're doing this with only 1.5-2 gigawatts of compute, and the models are only getting better. So I think when you look out toward the end of the year, I would not be shocked if you see Anthropic exiting this year at $80-$100B in revenue.”

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69,708 views • 2 months ago

No Longer A ‘Conspiracy Theory.’ Former Arizona State Senator Confirming There Are Trails Of Chemicals Sprayed From Planes That Are Toxic & Harming Your Health ‌ Says “You better wake up and fight back now” ‌ “My name is Karen Johnson. I served in the Arizona State Legislature for 12 years. I was in the House for eight of those years and in the Senate for four of those years. ‌ When you see a plane fly overhead, there's a trail that leaves the end of that plane and it goes from one horizon all the way to the other as the plane flies across. And it begins to filter out and cover more and more of the sky in kind of ripples. It widens out and fills the whole sky i mean it how could anybody think that that was the case and then to live and to be underneath that and know that whatever is in that is falling down upon you and upon your animals and upon the earth and i mean uh... it's frightening to me and if people don't start really waking up and facing the fact that we've got people that are doing terrible things to us and we had better wake up and fight back now. ‌ —- You know it's interesting because of the different weather modification programs, there's something like I think right around 32 in the continental U.S. alone going on. So the theory is that geoengineering is in part weather modification. ‌ — I think it's wise for us to stay focused on just the aerospraying and the toxic effect of these chemicals, the destruction of the planet and the damage to human health.” ‌ I can’t transcribe this all down to X’s text limits but this is over 7 minutes of excellent information

Wall Street Apes

378,631 views • 2 years ago

Mark Zuckerberg on why he prefers to recruit people directly out of college In this interview from 2005, a 21-year-old Mark Zuckerberg is asked what he looks for in a new hire. There’s two things, he says. “Number one is raw intelligence. You can hire someone who has been doing software engineering for 10 years, and if they’ve been doing it for 10 years, that’s probably what they’ll be doing for the rest of their life. That’s cool — there are some things that that person can do and they’re definitely useful in an organization and can do a lot of stuff. But if you find someone whose raw intelligence exceeds theirs but has 10 years less experience, they can probably adapt and learn way quicker. Within a very short amount of time they’ll be able to do a lot of things that [the person with 10 years of experience] will never be able to do. So that’s the most important thing that I look for.” The second thing he looks for is alignment with what the company is trying to do: “People can be really smart or have skills that are directly applicable, but if they don’t really believe in it, then they’re not going to work hard or care enough to develop the relevant experience in order to succeed. The best people I’ve hired so far have been people who didn’t really have that much engineering experience. I hired a couple of electric engineers out of Stanford to do programming stuff, and they had very little programming experience going in, but they were really smart and really willing to go at it. The guy who just wrote photos was one of those guys, and if you’re willing to just do whatever it takes to get photos out, then you’re probably more valuable than someone who is just a career software engineer.” He concludes: “Those are the things I’m looking for and why I would rather recruit people out of college.” Video source: Stanford eCorner (2005)

Startup Archive

54,696 views • 6 months ago

WATCH: Alexa Henning absolutely nukes panel of liberals on ABC News Live melting down over Trump’s slate of cabinet appointments: “It sounds like everyone on the panel kind of forgot what happened last week. I mean, Donald Trump ran and united independents, Republicans and Democrats. I traveled with the President. I saw what he was building in Wisconsin and Michigan. He won 312 electoral college votes and the popular vote and flipped the House and flipped the Senate. And the loyalty question, I just have a problem with that talking point. What are you supposed to appoint when you are president and you win — the people elect you? No one here, I don't believe, was elected. You choose the people that are going to support your agenda. Barack Obama did that. Joe Biden did that. And Donald Trump is going to do that. And regarding DOJ, we just watched some of the most polarized, politicalized actions from Merrick Garland. He jailed grandmothers and pastors for praying. He arrested parents for speaking out at school boards. I mean, that was someone that directly went after his political — Biden’s political opponents and they after Donald Trump. So, I think there's a lot of goldfish memory going on. A lot of people forgot what has transpired over the last five years, eight years even and Donald Trump — the fact is he united so much of the country around these ideas that we would have — we would see power restored back to the American people and away from the bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. and a lot of people joined his campaign because of what RFJ said. I mean, yes, no one should be surprised by this, but I've never heard anyone say, oh, crap, this is not what want. This is exactly what people wanted overwhelmingly and voted elected him.”

Curtis Houck

89,029 views • 1 year ago

Andrew Ng, co-founder of Google Brain and Coursera, on the worst career advice being given about AI right now: He doesn't mince words about what he's hearing from supposed experts: "As early as earlier this year and certainly last year, there are a few people advising others to stop learning to write code because AI will automate it." His reasoning is rooted in a historical pattern most people miss: "As something becomes easier, more people should do it, not fewer. When the world moved from assembly language to COBOL, there were actually articles saying, 'Well, we now have COBOL. Programming is so easier. Looks like we don't need programmers anymore.' But the opposite happened." Andrew believes the same thing is happening now with AI-assisted coding: "As we now have AI assisted coding, a lot more people should be coding. And I think the demand for software, custom software, has no practical ceiling. So the cost of software engineering comes down, which it is, we'll just get more and more great software out in the world." But here's where the advice gets uncomfortable for experienced engineers. Andrew Ng is honest about what he's seeing on the ground: "It is true that a fresh college grad that is really on top of AI will outperform a full stack engineer with 10 years of experience that is still doing things they were back in 2022, 3 years ago before GenAI." However, there's a nuance most people miss when they hear that stereotype: "The other piece that is less well appreciated is the best engineers I know are not fresh college grads. They're actually very experienced engineers that deeply understand architecture and the conceptual framework of how to think about computers and additionally are on top of AI and on top of these AI skills."

Big Brain AI

211,462 views • 1 month ago