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The most common pushback when I post recipes under $15 is always the same - people nit-pick local prices, say it takes too much time, or complain that it’s “not real food” and ask why poor people should be subjected to rice and secondary cuts. To me, that reaction...

185,188 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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my new song “BREAKDOWN.” is out on the 21st of June!!! 🖤🖤🖤 I wrote this poem because it’s been the hardest year for my mental health. In my life I’ve always never felt good enough, it’s just the thing that’s eaten me up. For as long as I can remember i have felt constantly afraid of how quickly my head can turn dark. It’s always been so hard to fight the darkness that i inevitably have. A lot of people will say it’s a phase and it will go away. But it doesn’t and the reality of the situation is I have to find strategies to deal with it. To put it plainly the things I don’t like about myself will probably never change, people tell me one day I’ll come-to terms with them one day but I want that day to be FUCKING NOW. This song is a message to myself to try and exist alongside my insecurities and my darkness by grounding myself and remembering what is real in life and the world is so much bigger than me. Try and get out of your head and notice the world around you, notice the things and people around you. Connect with them, the chances are they probably feel the same. Don’t let the bullshit inside your head consume you. It just wastes precious time. Remember what is real. Help people, be kind, help the world, help yourself. If you think you can’t do it, you can. You can get through this, trust me. Use this poem in a mornin to get u out of bed, use it when youre about to back out of something last minute, use it when you’re at your darkest. It’s got a little bit of light in it. Don’t forget to put your feet in the grass … Mind

YUNGBLUD

66,331 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce

Let me be clear. I am not saying everyone in every state or country can eat for exactly $5 a day. What I am showing you is what it costs ME. In Houston. In a 900-square-foot, 55-year-old apartment with terrible insulation. Paying almost $1,500 a month in rent. Supporting my daughter. Working $13 an hour at Papa John’s. I am not rich. I am not sponsored. I am not shopping at Whole Foods buying grass-fed anything every night. I’m buying eggs. Ground beef. Chuck steak on sale. Butter. Cheese. Sometimes kielbasa. Sometimes bacon. That’s it. My content is not a universal guarantee. It’s a blueprint. You still have to calculate your own cost of living, your local grocery prices, your income, and your priorities. What works in Houston may look different in New York or rural Alaska. I get that. But here’s the part people don’t want to talk about. When you stop buying processed food multiple times a day because you’re constantly hungry, when you stop paying for junk that keeps you inflamed, when you start reducing doctor visits, copays, and prescriptions because your body is actually healing… the math changes. It changes more than people expect. Now let me address something I say over and over again that I will keep saying. When you are on a fixed income, when you have just a little bit of money to work with, you cannot always get the best quality products. I know that. And I will never shame someone for that. But even with that being said, I will ALWAYS encourage someone to eat kielbasa, hot dogs, spam, lunch meat, bacon, or grocery store corn-fed ground beef over fast food, frozen pizzas, boxed meals, ramen, and highly processed food that isn’t even real food. 100% of the time. Every single day of the week. A $1 pack of hot dogs with no bun is still better than a $1 bag of chips. A $3 tube of ground beef is still better than a $3 frozen pizza. It’s not perfect. But it’s REAL. And real food heals. I get comments every single day telling me I need to buy grass-fed, I need to support local ranchers, I need to get pasture-raised eggs and wild-caught everything. And in an ideal world? Absolutely. I would love that. But that is not the reality for most of the people who follow me. My content is for the normal people. The working people. The broke people. The single parents stretching a paycheck. The people living in food deserts doing the best they can with what they have access to. That’s who I made this for. That has always been who I made this for. I eat real food. It’s not fancy. It’s not Pinterest pretty. It’s a bowl of ground beef with cottage cheese. It’s a burger patty with slabs of butter. It’s eggs with extra yolks. And it healed my body. If you’re looking for picture-perfect carnivore content with aesthetically plated grass-fed ribeyes and fancy kitchen setups, that’s not what you’re going to find here. There are wonderful creators who do that and I respect them. But if you want realistic, sustainable, working-class metabolic healing from someone who is living it in real time on a real budget? You’re in the right place.👑

Queen of Carni

158,514 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

Alex Karp, Palantir: “At a certain level of accomplishment, you’re in an artistic space where it’s very hard to explain why you have your insights.” "There’s one country in the world where you get rewarded for that.. in America, if you deliver, you can be you.” “This is a maximal freedom culture… & that self-expression—because it’s not playbook—creates an environment that is exceedingly hard to compete with & will piss off all the right people.” . . . "I think in the end, to do something important—whether it’s me, or @elianoayounes, or look at all these people here—these are among the best and most talented people in the world. At a certain level of accomplishment, you’re in an artistic space where it’s very hard to explain why you have your insights, and it goes way beyond experiences that have of course also influenced them. But I just have artistic impulses, and they shape my life, and I’ve allowed myself—or I’ve been forced to allow myself—the freedom to live that way. And there’s one country in the world where you get rewarded for that, because in America, if you deliver, you can be you. You’re your own boss, right? You decide who you want to talk to, you decide who you don’t want to talk to. You have ideas of things you’d like to advance on. And I think one of the biggest variables in my life is simply that I live in a culture where if you deliver—in this case economically—and by the way, at 18, for most investors, we were failing for at least 15 years. Many would say 18 years. Honestly, some would say until two years ago. And still, this is a culture where the financials are going to show up. That’s only possible in this culture. I guess maybe because I lived abroad so long, it’s easier for me to accept and rely on that. I think sometimes people who’ve lived here their whole life don’t always exactly understand that this is a maximal freedom culture. It’s the only culture like this in the world, and it allows you to self-express. And if you self-express, that self-expression—because it’s not playbook—creates an environment that is exceedingly hard to compete with and will piss off all the right people."

Molly O’Shea

52,497 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Robots will bring billionaire living to a lot more people. I had the blessing to eat with Guy Savoy several times. One of the best chefs in the world. He, and other top chefs taught me about the importance of getting fresh ingredients. Here is how robots and World Models will bring that and what do I mean by “everything as a service?” In three years I will have this conversation with my 1X Neo humanoid robot: “Hey Neo I want to upgrade our food to billionaire level.” “I can do that. Food as a service costs $500 a month. I will buy only hand grown fresh organic food and I will prepare amazing meals for you and your family.” Where is the supply chain for such food? Farmers’ markets where everything is fresh and organic. You gotta stop buying at grocery stores to upgrade your diet. “Hey Neo here are the keys to Tesla Robotaxi. And here is my credit card. Start up food as a service.” Neo will take an autonomous car to the market. “But Neo how do you know where to go?” “Well a guy on X did a video of the farmer’s market nearby.” “I watched it, and now know roughly the kinds of things I can get there.” We are too late to start today, the market is closed now, but we can start next week. Look at this video the way Grok does. I am playing humanoid today. In one visit my Neo will ingest all of this into its World Model. In the second visit it will get even better. In the third visit even better. World models are going to be real time by the end of next year from a variety of companies. فيصل Tesla Robotaxi already serves both our home and the market. Our Tesla drove us there and already knows where it is. Grok is already a world model. In a few minutes it can tell you what it learned by watching this video. It watches all my videos before distributing them to you. So it knows how not to overwhelm @jason’s feed with my prolific posting. It will get a lot better soon. But after three trips to this farmer’s market my robot will know everything about this market including the names of the farmers. Watch this video, you meet one. Grok can do a RAG search and learn everything about him, including that he doesn’t have a Website, and only posts on Facebook. Also that he takes Apple Pay. It already knows everything it sees. The names of the vegetables, fruits, nuts, and what is ravioli. One vendor sells fresh ravioli made early this morning. If you are freaked out by privacy have your Neo stay in the garage until it is time to do something for you. In three years I will be eating fresh food with my brother in law while football is on the TV. If you don’t have a robot you won’t eat as well unless you are a billionaire who can afford to pay the human to shop and cook for you. The Robotaxi network starts up next year (without humans). The world models get good next year. By 2030 every one of you will have a robot in your home, at least part time. Who has the best world model? Tesla. Who understands the real world better? Grok. (I didn’t give this video to anyone else). Who soon will have the best humanoid? Tesla. Which company already has a Robotaxi in my driveway? Tesla. Which company has the best video ingestion engine? Tesla. Which company is about to turn on a real time world model? xAI. Which company would you want to invest in? Tesla and xAI. Which is why, if you are a Tesla investor and you didn’t vote for Tesla to invest in xAI you hurting yourself.. Everything as a service is about to arrive. Everyone who can afford a $20,000 robot, which can be financed will have it next year. I will. Anyone worried about privacy has no idea how useful this all will be to make your lives better. And how much money it will make for a robot company to put it all together. And only Tesla has all the pieces to make the meal.

Robert Scoble

1,363,973 görüntüleme • 7 ay önce

Steve Jobs: The difference between good people and great people is 50-to-1 “I’ve always considered part of my job was to keep the quality level of people in the organizations I work with very high. I mean that’s what I consider one of the few things I can contribute individually myself — versus the team that work with — is to really try to instill in the organization the goal of having only A players.” Steve argues this is especially important in technology where there’s a huge range between the best person and the worst person: “In a lot of fields, the difference between, say, the worst taxicab driver and the best taxicab driver to get you across town in Manhattan might be 2-to-1. The best one will get you there in 15 minutes, the worst one will get you there in half an hour… Or the best cook and the worst cook, maybe it’s 3-to-1… But in the field that I’m in. In software in particular. The difference between the best person and the worst person is about 100-to-1 or more.” He continues: “The difference between a good software person and a great software person is probably 50-to-1 or 25-to-1. Huge dynamic range. And therefore, I have found — and not just in software but in almost everything I’ve done — it really pays to go after the best people in the world.” But as Steve points out, this isn’t always easy: “It’s very painful when you have some people that are not the best people in the world, and you have to get rid of them. But I’ve found that my job has sometimes been exactly that, to get rid of some of the people that didn’t measure up. And I’ve always tried to do it in a humane way, but nonetheless it has to be done and it’s not ever fun.”

Startup Archive

45,133 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce