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satoshi never existed. nobody writes code like that. not that clean, not that surgical. the early bitcoin codebase doesn’t read like code from some anonymous guy on the internet. bitcoin's early codebase looks like it was handed to us. the whitepaper came out six weeks after the 2008 crash....

53,612 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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Sorry if I did not answer many of you. I’ve never been a fan of the online eulogy. The immediate fallout is always about loved ones. And we should leave those closest be. And then I realised of course I was just incredibly upset, and a large digital outpouring is inevitable and testament to his character. My devastation came from having to watch it all unfold. From spending years trying to help and actually getting him close to a point where he almost had a normal life again - then being powerless to stop him doing things he should not have. Powerless in every sense as it also meant it sometimes not being my place to say anything. In the end watching some of the evil shits around enable the worst of it was too much for me, I had to step back it was too painful to watch. I told my mate who was filling in for me looking after him “ah I just need some space from it all, I’ll be back with him after Christmas” and then suddenly there was no Christmas. And it turned out no one was to blame, and I immediately looked to blame myself most of all, fearing the worst. But it was a simple accident in the end. A bolt out of the blue. So if you are ever estranged or overwhelmed by friends and family and think it will all be OK one day - DON’T put it off. Reach out now. Grab that person and hold them tight. There may not be a tomorrow. You might not be around to see them off. There may not be the grand luxury of time available you thought there was. He died in the arms of his beloved son, and that is a measure of comfort, if a passing can ever have any. He was my mentor, my friend and my glad burden. And there was nothing I would not do for him.

The Secret DJ.

40,740 просмотров • 1 год назад

Blake Lively’s Met Gala Moment Was Deeply Tone-Deaf Blake Lively showing up at the Met Gala this year, smiling like nothing happened, honestly felt surreal. Not in a good way. More like… are we all just expected to pretend the last two years didn’t happen? Because that’s what it looked like. A reset. A clean slate. As if everything that went down with Justin Baldoni just evaporated the moment she stepped onto that carpet in a Versace gown. And I’m sorry, but it doesn’t work like that. You don’t get to be at the center of a situation that serious, with that much damage done to someone’s reputation, and then just reappear in full glamour mode like it was all some minor inconvenience. Whether people want to admit it or not, that whole situation left a mark. On him, on the project, and on how people see her now. What makes it worse is the timing. Walking into one of the most visible events in the world right after everything wrapped up just feels… off. There’s no reflection in that. No pause. No sense that any of it actually mattered beyond being something to get past. And then there’s the bigger issue. When something tied to a story about domestic violence turns into this kind of public spectacle, it cheapens it. It stops being about the message and starts being about ego, control, and image. That’s the part that doesn’t sit right. You can call it strategy, you can call it PR, but to a lot of people it just reads as tone-deaf. Versace dressing her? That’s their choice. But let’s not pretend fashion houses don’t pick sides when they do that. They know exactly what kind of attention it brings. Same with the Met Gala. They don’t “accidentally” invite people. Every name is a decision. So yeah, people are going to question it. They should. Because this didn’t feel like a comeback. It felt like someone stepping right back into the spotlight without acknowledging the weight of what just happened. Like the expectation is that the audience will move on simply because she has. Not everyone will. And honestly, they shouldn’t have to. PS: That’s the only soundtrack that actually fits that red carpet. moment.

Queen Esther

1,925,226 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

I’m probably one of the only Teslanaires out there, if not one of the very few, still cutting my own hair. I cut my own hair again today, and it reminded me that becoming a multi-millionaire usually isn’t a random coincidence. People see the $ and think it just happened. What they usually don’t see are the small habits behind it. Of course, I could go spend $25–$50 on a haircut that probably looks better than the one I give myself. But that’s not really what matters to me. I don’t care that much about looking perfect. I care about controlling my time. I care about staying grounded. I care about keeping the kind of habits that helped me build wealth in the first place. And honestly, I enjoy doing it. I’ve been cutting my own hair for so many years that I don’t even think about going to the barber anymore. It’s just normal to me now. It saves time, keeps me frugal, and reminds me that wealth is usually built in the small choices nobody claps for. That’s the part people miss. A lot of people see wealth and assume it was luck. But a lot of the time, it’s really the result of small disciplined habits repeated for years. Not wasting $ just bc you can. Not wasting time just bc other people do. And the funny part is, one day my fleet of Tesla Bots will probably be doing it for me anyway. But until then, I’m good doing it myself. Bc to me, being wealthy was never about trying to look rich. It was about building a mindset. A mindset that values time, discipline, and freedom more than appearances. And once you really live that way, it shows up in a lot of things, even something as simple as cutting your own hair.

Teslaconomics

16,514 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

Elon Musk nearly went bankrupt building something nobody on Earth wanted to build. Then he gave it all away for free. Most people still don’t understand what actually happened. Before Tesla, not a single major automaker was serious about electric vehicles. EVs were a punchline. Glorified golf carts. The entire industry laughed them off. Elon looked at that vacuum and decided he would fill it himself. Not because it was profitable. Because if he didn’t, nobody would. That bet nearly killed Tesla. The company came within weeks of total collapse. Multiple times. Consider what they were up against. Combustion engines had 150 years of compounding innovation. 150 years of supply chains, manufacturing infrastructure, and institutional knowledge threaded into every single component. Tesla had a vision and 15 years. They built everything from nothing. The cars. The batteries. The software. The factories. Then came the part nobody talks about. Tesla had to build the entire charging infrastructure itself. A global Supercharger network. Thousands of stations spanning continents. Just so people could actually drive the cars they were selling. That is not a car company. That is a civilization-scale engineering project. Built by a company that was weeks from death. Then the numbers landed. The Tesla Model Y became the best-selling car in the world. Not the best-selling EV. The best-selling car on Earth. Three straight years. 2023. 2024. 2025. After 150 years of combustion dominance, an electric vehicle from a company that almost didn’t survive outsold every gas car on the planet. Then the story turned. Tesla open-sourced their patents. Opened the Supercharger network to competitors. The company nearly bled out building what nobody else would. Then they handed the blueprints to everyone. For free. Elon Musk: “It’s because it’s very important to accelerate the transition to sustainable transport. And this is really important for the future of the world.” He had the monopoly. He gave it away. He chose the mission over the moat. Without Elon, the auto industry would still be polishing combustion engines and pretending the future was decades away. He built what nobody would. Nearly lost everything in the process. Outsold the entire industry. Then handed the blueprints to his competitors for free. The mission was never about Tesla.

Dustin

15,084 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

When CK was kneeling, that was a defining moment for the culture, I believe it created a rare moment of leverage for blacks, one of the first since I believe since Martin Luther King Jr. where the Black community was visibly unified and the country was forced to look. We were together, and it threatened the power. Then Jay-Z, with all his influence on the culture stepped in as a bridge for the establishment, and the momentum collapsed. Just like that, the pressure was gone. Our unity was neutralized. And that’s what that mfer took from us. Now fast-forward. You see Jay-Z seated at elite tables, surrounded by power and exclusivity. And it’s hard not to read that moment as the reward for selling his people out. That’s not legacy, that’s payment. That’s the prize for defusing a movement that could’ve forced real recognition and real leverage for Black people as a collective. That seat didn’t come from lifting us, it came from standing on a movement we created and redirecting it to them. We are observing incentives⬇️. Influence like that doesn’t come free, and loyalty that unanimous doesn’t happen by accident. When every major voice goes quiet at the same time, when criticism disappears overnight, it raises a simple question: who benefited, and who paid the cost? That dinner wasn’t symbolism, I bet. It was confirmation. The moment was traded, and the bill was paid by us. Power always selects a familiar face. Not to free us but to manage us. Kendrick isn’t being elevated by accident. He’s being positioned another puppet. Strip away all the rhetoric, and look at the incentives. That’s how manipulation works. Idiots. Wake up.

industrypolitics

25,074 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад