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There's a balance for women between being assertive and coming across as aggressive.

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We discussed the importance of being present and focused.

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Don't trust, verify. In the future, with deepfakes and advanced technology, it will be hard to distinguish between what's real and fake. It's crucial to rely on your own experiences and intuition to navigate this era of manufactured content. Your devices are taking over tasks that used to strengthen your brain connections.

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My preferences are only half of what they should be. These preferences should be my own. It all depends on what you want and what you like, it's only half of what it should be.

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We all need to be aware and informed. Strive to be more aware rather than less. Stay woke.

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We must all stay aware and informed. Strive to be more awake than not, whether you consider yourself the most awake or just more awake.

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We lack a common language on water, unlike climate change. Developing this common language is crucial for us to make progress in addressing water-related issues.

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I believe it's important to stay true to our values.

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As a woman, there's a balance to be struck between being tough and being a bitch.

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Simplify yourself, buddy. I'm confused about the situation. Simplify yourself, buddy. I'm confused about the situation.

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As a woman, there's a balance to be struck between being tough and being a bitch.

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Us is not who you think he is. You were attempting a mission to extract data. How do you embrace and teach a culture that accepts this approach, especially when you're not intentionally trying to?

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Speaker 0: Take this in and understand what we’re actually dealing with. Many views exist—from Trump being a pedophile protecting pedophile buddies, to Israel infiltration and cover-ups, to it being a Democrat hoax. The reality, as described here, is that there is a supranational global cabal that has operated for nearly a hundred years, using money laundering, blackmail, drug trafficking, human trafficking, and other nefarious operations to fund and overthrow countries, serving as the shadow power of the world. We can see who these people are, their intentions, and the outcomes of their policies, and they are still being shoehorned into the most important positions in the world specifically because they’re part of this cabal. Main players mentioned include Larry Summers, who, per Epstein documents, was named executor of Jeffrey Epstein’s estate after his death. The money Epstein received from Les Wexner and others to create a starting fund and build a reputation as a financier is said to be returning to the coffers of Larry Summers, seen as part of this operation. The analogy is that this operation is like a corporation with Epstein as a brand under an umbrella, where if one asset (like Irish Spring) fails, its resources are absorbed back into the wider corporate structure. Summers, formerly Treasury Secretary, who helped destroy Glass-Steagall and contributed to the 2008 market crash dynamics, is said to have his bailout-money influence guided by Larry Fink at BlackRock. Summers, who was head of Harvard and later appointed to OpenAI’s board, is linked to the governance of the AI company behind ChatGPT. Larry Ellison is described as corresponding with Epstein and Ehud Barak (former Israeli prime minister) about which politicians serve their interests, including arranging a meeting between Marco Rubio and Tony Blair due to shared interests in this cabal. Epstein is depicted as a central, manipulative figure involved in selling weapons from Israel, meddling in elections, and influencing universities in Russia, raising questions about his influence and reach. The speaker emphasizes Epstein’s reach across political and corporate spheres and the question of his power, asking how such influence is possible. Speaker 1: The question is, how do you go about that? Speaker 0: He didn’t even go to school for trading; it’s all fabricated. He is a spymaster and a kingpin in a mafia. This group, including Les Wexner, Jeffrey Epstein, Larry Summers, Larry Ellison, Donald Trump (at this point), is part or perhaps the managing structure of the same organization discussed in the Eagle two documents from the 1960s, where the CIA sought autonomy from Congress by creating its own income streams, including drug trafficking in Vietnam. The opioid and drug-running links are tied to Iran-Contra, with George H. W. Bush involved in opium trade and the drug-running networks. Bill Gates and other figures are alleged to have involved in cover-ups during CIA-driven operations in South America, with Gary Webb’s Dark Alliance cited as exposing such networks. Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton, when Bill was governor of Arkansas, allegedly helped run headquarters in Mina for flights to and from Colombia, spreading drugs across the United States. The assertion is that the same group runs drugs, rigs elections, and is involved in various crises, including alleged connections to COVID-19, Russiagate, 9/11, and the assassination of Charlie Kirk, forming a pattern of the last decades of upheaval in America. The discussion moves toward Epstein’s network and the sources of his money, with emails revealing connections, against a backdrop of broad search for Trump and the prevalence of unconfirmed, baseless anonymous claims. The core claim is that the true representation is the “new world order” and a banking-based intelligence network where intelligence agencies originated from banks. The CIA’s founding from the OSS is tied to MI6, which allegedly drew on the Rothschild banking intelligence, tying the CIA, MI6, and banking elites together. The speaker concludes that the same names—running drugs, stealing elections, burning down skyscrapers, and flying airplanes—appear repeatedly, linking DEI, ESG, white discrimination claims, and Epstein to the same global web.

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What you care about matters. Life is long, and it's important to focus on what truly matters to you.

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Speaker 0: I had a guy who worked, very, very, very high up at Citibank. And he told me around 2008, he said, Glenn, you know, don't worry about the financial system. And I'm like, uh-huh. And he said, you know, we're never gonna go broke. I mean, do you know how much just the national parks are worth? And I looked at him and said, are you seriously telling me that we should commoditize the national parks? And he said, it's gonna happen. And I wonder now if this is what he was talking about. If it was just a digital not actually selling them, it's just a digital commoditization of our parks. Speaker 1: Yeah. So apply this now to the the phrase that we all heard during the COVID era, you'll own nothing and be happy. Well Yes. There's certain people that want to own everything, and that includes things that have never been able to be owned before that were considered things like the public commons, like rivers, lakes, the ocean itself, natural forests, all sorts of it. These people want to put all of that into the financial system, fractionalize it, tokenize it, and sell pieces of it around, use it to speculate on. Mean, it's It's very insane. Yeah. And so, this is just one aspect of digital currency play. Obviously, there's a lot more than that just going on as well. I would argue that a lot of this push, particularly in The US for dollar stablecoins supposedly being better than a central bank digital currency, also falls into this paradigm we talked about earlier of, you know, moving from the public to the private of the public private partnership because a lot of these stablecoin issuers, you know, if the the big concerns about CBDCs was that they're seasable, they're surveillable and they're programmable, Well, all of those three things also can apply to stablecoins. The only difference is that you would have a private company issue it and control it. But we've seen time and again how a lot of these private entities are willing to do that. When contacted, just look at how Bank of America behaved with January 6, people accused of wrongdoing on that day, for You know, they have no qualms in doing that and engaging in those type of activities. And the biggest dollar stablecoin issuer, Tether, which just hired Bo Hynes from the White House, they have openly said that they are a close partner of the US government for dollar hegemony globally and have uploaded the FBI, the Secret Service and other aspects of the US government onto its platform directly and have seized tethers from people just because government told them to, and this was during the Biden administration. So they obviously are willing to do that under any administration, and it's essentially functioning as a de facto public private partnership, even though we're being told it's a it's much better than a CBDC, but in terms of its impacts on civil liberties, you know, that's not necessarily true. So, again, vigilance is is important here.

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As a woman, it's important to find a balance between being strong and being perceived as mean.

Into The Impossible

Christopher Sweat: Philosophizing in Public (208)
Guests: Frank Wilczek, Sheldon Glashow, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Michio Kaku, Michael Saylor, Roger Penrose, Jill Tarter, Sara Seager, Noam Chomsky, Sabine Hossenfelder, Sarah Rugheimer, Stephen Wolfram, Avi Loeb, Jim Simons
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Brian Keating speaks with Christopher Swat, a philosopher and thinker, about the impact of technology on society and individual understanding. They discuss the evolution of tinkering and experimentation, highlighting how automation distances people from basic processes. Swat reflects on his childhood, emphasizing his early interests in technology and the internet, and the empowerment he received from his mother to explore these areas. They delve into the concept of black intellectualism, with Swat expressing frustration over being categorized based on race, arguing that it diminishes the value of his contributions. He critiques the framing of discussions around race and identity, advocating for a more nuanced understanding. The conversation also touches on natural law, the constraints of the Constitution, and the challenges of venture capital in fostering innovation. Swat emphasizes the need for intellectual rigor in public discourse and the importance of creating in public, encouraging others to engage with complex ideas openly.

Philion

The Fraud Situation in Minnesota is Insane..
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A provocative monologue tackles a federal fraud investigation centered on Minnesota’s Somali community, portraying a billion-dollar misallocation of taxpayer funds as both a local scandal and a political weapon. The host frames the Walz administration as negligent, accusing officials of ignoring whistleblowers and using aggressive rhetoric to demonize a specific immigrant group, while linking the Feeding Our Future and related schemes to Al-Shabaab and foreign aid that allegedly routed money overseas. Throughout the segment, the speaker blends outrage with conspiracy-like insinuations, suggesting that fraud investigations are politically weaponized and that national policy shifts—such as mass deportations or tighter immigration rules—would be preferable to any form of amnesty. The narrative oscillates between moral indignation, sensational description of media coverage, and insinuations about who bears responsibility, including lawmakers, bureaucrats, and even the media itself. In exploring the implications, the host contends that corruption transcends communities and threatens public trust, urging stringent accountability and implying that addressing fraud requires decisive action rather than blame-shifting. The overall tone is combative and partisan, using vivid metaphors and digressions to argue that immigration policy, governance, and accountability are indivisible in the current political moment.”], topics

Modern Wisdom

Is The Manosphere Really That Dangerous? - Louis Theroux
Guests: Louis Theroux
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Louise Theroux’s conversation with Chris Williamson centers on the rise of the manosphere and its reach through algorithmic social platforms, exploring how online culture and monetization intersect with real-world identities, masculinity, and peer validation. The episode opens with Theroux describing his motivation to investigate how viral, provocative figures shape young men’s beliefs and behaviors, and how the online environment rewards outrageous persona, modular clips, and rapid, crowd-sourced feedback. He uses examples of influencers who promote hyper-masculine posturing, consumerist success, and anti-feminist rhetoric, noting how these figures leverage shortcuts in attention economies to gain money, fame, and influence while often masking more complex personal histories and questionable ethics. A key thread is the tension between entertainment and serious social consequences: the same content that feels like satire or performance can drive real hostility, misinformation, and coercive marketing through questionable online products and services. Theroux provides a layered analysis of why this content resonates, especially among younger men, tying it to broader social shifts such as the erosion of traditional role models, economic precarity, and the psychological pull of belonging, identity, and status in a hyper-connected world. He argues that the algorithm’s design not only personalizes what users see but also nudges preferences, encouraging increasingly extreme or polarizing content. The discussion moves from the mechanics of content creation to the human impact, including the construction of “parasocial” bonds between viewers and online personalities, and the performative self that many young men adopt online. The guests reflect on how this environment blurs lines between public performance and private life, examining the wide spectrum within the manosphere—from self-improvement to outright misogyny—and how platforms’ incentives shape what gets amplified. They also consider potential pathways for constructive engagement: highlighting positive role models, promoting genuine self-improvement, and pushing for healthier media literacy without stigmatizing legitimate concerns about male mental health and identity. Toward the end, the conversation shifts to ethics and responsibility, acknowledging the difficulty of separating critique from vilification and the challenge of offering useful guidance to boys and men while avoiding blanket condemnation of online communities. Theroux emphasizes the need for empathy, critical scrutiny of technology, and a nuanced cultural discourse that supports healthier forms of masculinity and social belonging in a rapidly changing digital landscape.

Philion

Paris is on Fire..
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Paris on Fire: hundreds of thousands fill the streets as protests flare across the city and beyond. Reporters describe Paris as in upheaval, with Antifa protesters in black flags and red banner allies converging on major sites while riot police in gas masks and shields stand ready. The protests are linked to broader French discontent: arguments over deficits, inflation, and a retirement age rising from 62 to 65, along with frequent changes of prime ministers in two years. Demonstrators chant against nationalism and demand more rights for workers and taxes on the rich. Observers note the absence of French flags, replaced by Palestine and communist symbols, and mention Macron’s policies as a focal point of anger. In the United States, Antifa is described as a terrorist organization, while in Paris the crowd frames Antifa as an idea rather than a formal organization. Participants predict that mass turnout intimidates authorities and that a leftist government elected in 2024 has not calmed street protests one and a half years later.”,“Footage shows dumpsters burning, bricks gathered, clashes erupting as tear gas fills the air and police move in. Protesters argue for social rights and tax justice, while others call for anti-nationalist action; at times they clash with the riot lines. The scene underscores a sense that this is a political war in Paris, with communist flags visible and the absence of a French flag.”], topics

a16z Podcast

a16z Podcast | The Topic That's Lasted the Entire History of Computing -- Bundling and Unbundling
Guests: Benedict Evans, Steven Sinofsky
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In the Andreessen Horowitz podcast, Hendricks Evans and Steven Sinofsky discuss the enduring themes of bundling and unbundling in the software industry. They reference Jim Barksdale's assertion that there are only two ways to profit in software: bundling and unbundling. The conversation highlights the trend of unbundling features into standalone apps, driven by limited screen real estate and easier app switching. Sinofsky emphasizes that innovation leads to feature bloat, prompting the need to split applications into modules. They explore the contrasting app ecosystems in the U.S. and China, noting that Chinese apps often integrate multiple services, enhancing user experience. The discussion also touches on user engagement metrics, emphasizing that app usage is more crucial than mere downloads. They conclude that while bundling simplifies discovery, unbundling allows for better feature exploration, creating a trade-off between application and feature discovery. Ultimately, both approaches have their merits, depending on the context and user needs.

The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #2420 - Chris Masterjohn
Guests: Chris Masterjohn
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The Joe Rogan Experience episode with Chris Masterjohn dives into the central role of mitochondria in health and aging, reframing sleep, energy, and disease as energy-management problems rather than isolated symptoms. Masterjohn argues that sleep serves to restore mitochondrial energy reserves, with creatine and other fuels acting to extend the brain’s energy capacity during sleep deprivation. He expands the concept to everyday life, explaining that mitochondria are the power plants that supply energy for growth, repair, digestion, and even the immune system, and that mitochondrial efficiency declines with age at roughly 1% per year, though substantial variation exists between individuals. He emphasizes a “food-first, pharma-last” approach: obtain optimal mitochondrial function through nutrition and lifestyle before adding supplements or drugs. The discussion covers a spectrum of interventions: creatine supplementation for improved cognition and recovery, the nuanced use of CoQ10 and methylene blue (with testing to identify who might benefit and avoid harm), and the cautionary tale of seed oils, which he links to long-term vascular damage via damaged fatty acids on LDL particles rather than simply cholesterol levels. The conversation extends to vitamin D, iodine, and selenium’s roles in thyroid health, and the importance of nose-to-tail animal eating to support mitochondrial energy and antioxidant capacity. They also explore strategies to protect cognition and mobility through varied movement, skill-based training, and environment, arguing that aging healthily requires maintaining energy to both perform and adapt. The pair discuss the limitations of short trials in nutrition science, the historical debates around seed oils and cholesterol, and the value of holistic, individualized testing to guide supplementation. Throughout, Masterjohn weaves in practical guidance—spanning sunlight and red-light therapy to enhance mitochondrial function, the potential of nattokinase for clot breakdown, and the need to balance energy, sleep, and mental acuity for a robust, long life—calling for a nuanced, evidence-informed approach rather than one-size-fits-all dogma. topics [

Mind Pump Show

How To Find The Perfect Amount of Time to Workout For You | Mind Pump 2387
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The average person often under-exercises or over-exercises, leading to suboptimal results. Many individuals mistakenly believe that more workouts equate to better progress, but this can overwhelm the body’s ability to adapt. Effective exercise is about finding the right dose; too much stress can hinder progress, while too little won’t elicit change. The hosts emphasize that exercise is a stressor, and the body adapts to it, but if overwhelmed, it prioritizes recovery over adaptation. They advocate for structured strength training, suggesting two full-body workouts per week or five shorter sessions of 15-20 minutes. Walking is also highlighted as a beneficial daily activity that promotes health without excessive stress. The discussion underscores the importance of individual variance in exercise routines and the need to adjust based on personal circumstances, such as sleep quality and overall stress levels. Ultimately, the goal is to do the least amount of work necessary to achieve the most significant results.

The Dr. Jordan B. Peterson Podcast

You Probably Should Have Read the Bible | Franciscan University | EP 251
Guests: Franciscan University
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Jordan Peterson discusses his visit to the Museum of the Bible, emphasizing that it serves as a history of the book and highlights the Bible's foundational role in Western literature. He reflects on the significance of having a canonical text in major Abrahamic religions, noting that the Bible, as a library of books, presents a cohesive narrative. Peterson explores the complexities of perception and ethics, asserting that ethical frameworks guide our understanding of the world. He critiques postmodernist views that reduce interpretation to power dynamics, arguing instead for a shared ethical foundation rooted in intrinsic human worth. He posits that societies recognizing this worth tend to be more desirable. Peterson suggests that the Bible's narratives provide a meta-truth, essential for establishing frameworks of perception and ethical direction. He concludes that the Bible's truth lies in its role as a precondition for all judgments of truth, asserting that understanding this relationship is crucial for navigating the complexities of modern life and fostering meaningful discourse.

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

Did Liberal Feminism Ruin the Workplace? | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
Guests: Helen Andrews, Leah Libresco Sargeant
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The podcast features a discussion between conservative writers Helen Andrews and Leah Libresco Sargeant, both critics of feminism, on the nature of gender differences and their impact on modern institutions. Helen Andrews, author of "The Great Feminization," argues that feminism has led to the feminization of institutions, driving out masculine virtues and resulting in "wokeness." She characterizes wokeness, exemplified by the MeToo movement, as a distinctly feminine pathology involving shutting down conversations, politicizing neutral spheres, and an aversion to direct conflict. Andrews links these observations to evolutionary biology, suggesting that male group dynamics are hierarchical and conflict-resolving, while female dynamics can involve protracted conflict and ostracism. She contends that anti-discrimination laws disproportionately punish "masculine vices" while allowing "feminine vices" like gossiping and indirectness to flourish, leading to a structural bias. Leah Libresco Sargeant, author of "The Dignity of Dependence," offers a different critique, arguing that liberal feminism fails by forcing women to suppress their natural dependence, particularly related to pregnancy, to fit into workplaces designed for men. She advocates for institutions that accommodate human fragility and interdependence, not just for women but for all individuals, emphasizing that a society that ignores the needs of the weak ultimately suffers. Sargeant believes that the current societal emphasis on autonomy over dependence is a fundamental injustice, hitting women first and hardest, and contributes to declining marriage and birth rates. She suggests that workplaces should be realistic about the "materials" they work with – human beings who are fragile, have dependents, and can get sick or pregnant. The hosts and guests debate the origins and implications of "wokeness," with Andrews seeing it as a direct consequence of feminization and Sargeant viewing it as a broader American religious revival focused on guilt. They discuss how feminization impacts truth-seeking in fields like law and academia, with Andrews warning of dangers like Title 9 "kangaroo courts" if female virtues are unchecked by masculine ones. Sargeant, however, emphasizes universal virtues like faith, hope, and charity, and the importance of men finding purpose in protecting and providing. Both agree on the need for employers to care for their employees but differ on the role of anti-discrimination law, with Andrews arguing it hinders honest career advice and Sargeant advocating for workplaces that genuinely support family life. The conversation concludes by exploring whether modern workplaces can foster better gender interaction or if more distinct gendered spaces are needed, and the broader societal challenges of gender polarization and declining family formation.
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