reSee.it - Tweets Saved By @unapologetic_cm

Saved - May 18, 2024 at 6:08 PM

@unapologetic_cm - Unapologetic Crypto Man

The 'Firewall' laws that Obama is referring to are anti-lgbt laws that prohibit teachers from hiding the fact that they're grooming kids. Once those were removed, states got tons of grant money to push his Pedo Agenda. Bribery, if you will https://t.co/zER7tRujQr

Video Transcript AI Summary
States are offered grants to improve education by holding themselves accountable and developing strong plans. They must remove laws that prevent evaluating teachers based on student performance. Support for successful charter schools is encouraged, while underperforming schools will be shut down. Several states have already taken steps to meet these criteria. The competition for Race to the Top grants has begun, with changes being made at the local level to improve education.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: We're saying to states, if you are committed to real change in the way you educate your children, if you're willing to hold yourselves more accountable, and if you develop a strong plan to improve the quality of education in your state, then we'll offer you a big grant to help you make that plan a reality. Now, before a state is even eligible to compete, they'll have to take an important first step. And this has caused some controversy in some places, but it shouldn't be controversial. Any state that has a so called firewall law will have to remove them. Now, here's what a firewall law is. It basically says that you can't factor in the performance of students when you're evaluating teachers. That is not a good message in terms of accountability. So we said if you've got one of those laws, you want to compete for these grants, you've got to get rid of that law. And we'll encourage states to take a better approach when it comes to charter schools and other innovative public schools. When these schools are performing poorly, they'll be shut down. But when innovative public schools are succeeding, they shouldn't be stifled, they should be supported. And I'm proud to say that already a number of states have taken us up on this challenge. Across the country, different groups are coming together to bring about change in our schools teachers' unions and parent groups businesses and community organizations. In places like New Haven, educators and city leaders have come together to find a smarter way to evaluate teachers and turn around low performing schools. In states like California and Indiana and Wisconsin, you're seeing steps taken to remove these so called firewall laws, so we can have a clear look at how well our children are learning and what can be done to help them learn better. States like Delaware and Louisiana, Tennessee and Illinois are all making efforts to let innovative charter schools flourish. So a race to the top has begun in our schools. But the real competition will begin when states apply for the actual Race to the Top grants. They had to make some changes just to even join the race. But now the race starts, and we're going to start seeing even more interesting changes at the local level.
Saved - January 18, 2024 at 8:09 AM

@unapologetic_cm - Unapologetic Crypto Man

@disclosetv Watch the full video here... https://t.co/JiZGhAG93y

@unapologetic_cm - Unapologetic Crypto Man

THIS is The Most Dangerous Speech so far from Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission. She is Pure Evil !! Take time to listen closely and SHARE THIS. We are under attack from the Corporations AND Our Governments. #WEF24 #WeWillNotComply !! https://t.co/r8du5gCRB2

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses the global risks outlined in the annual global risk report, highlighting disinformation, misinformation, and polarization as top concerns. They emphasize the need for trust-building and global collaboration to address these challenges. The speaker also discusses the importance of public-private sector partnerships in finding solutions. They mention the ongoing conflict in Ukraine and Russia's failure in achieving its strategic goals. The speaker emphasizes the need to support Ukraine and empower its resistance. They also discuss Europe's progress in improving energy resilience and transitioning to clean energy. The speaker concludes by emphasizing the importance of tackling disinformation and misinformation, as well as responsible use of artificial intelligence. They believe that Europe can lead in industrial AI and calls for strengthening democracy and protecting it from interference.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Yeah, Claus. Your annual global risk report makes for a stunning and sobering read. For the global business community, the top concern for the next 2 years is not conflict climate. It is disinformation and misinformation followed closely by polarization within our societies. These risks are serious because they limit our ability to tackle the big global challenges we are facing. Changes in our climate and our geopolitical climate, shifts in our demography and in our technology, spiraling regional conflicts and intensified geopolitical competition and their impacts on supply chains. The sobering reality is that we are once again competing more intensely across countries than we have in several decades. And this makes the theme of this year's Davos meeting even more relevant, rebuilding trust. This is not a time for conflicts or polarization. This is a time to build trust. This is a time to drive global collaboration more than ever before. This requires immediate and structural responses to match the size of the global challenges? I believe it can be done, and I believe that Europe can and must take the lead in shaping that global response. The starting point for that is to look deeper at the global risk report to map out a way forward. Many of the solutions lie not only in countries working together, but crucially, on businesses and governments, business and democracies working together. It has never been more important for the public and private sector to create new connective tissue because none of these challenges respects borders. They each require collaboration to manage risks and to forge a path forward. And this is what I want to talk today about. While governments hold many of the levers to deal with the great challenges of our time, business have the innovation, the technology, the talents to deliver the solutions we need, to fight threats like climate change or industrial scale disinformation. Europe is uniquely placed to show how this can work because our democracies and our businesses and interests that align, creating prosperity, wealth, and security for people, creating a stable environment to unlock innovation and investment, and creating equal opportunity and freedom. And this is more important than ever as we start 2024, the biggest electoral year in history. Democracies across the world will head to the polls, and half of the global population will be affected. This includes over 450,000,000 people in the union. A union of 27 democracies, where all of us have the right to speak our mind, to be ourselves, even if we are different from the majority. In a democracy, it is the people with their choices and behaviors, who pick winners and losers in the economic arena. Companies are free to compete. Change makers are free to innovate. Merit determines economic success, and our rules are built to ensure this, to protect intellectual property to protect the safety of industrial data, to protect the savings of people and companies, and Europe stands up for global trade based on fair and open market. Of course, like in all democracies, our freedom comes with risks. There will always be those who try to exploit our openness, both from inside and out. There will always be attempts to push us off track. For example, with disinformation and misinformation. And nowhere has there been more of that than on the issue of Ukraine. So let me provide you with some real information. Russia is failing on strategic goals. It is first and foremost a military failure. We haven't forgotten that when Russia invaded Ukraine, many feared that Kyiv would fall in just a few days and the rest of the country within weeks. This did not happen. Instead, Russia has lost roughly half of its military capabilities. Ukraine has driven Russia out of half of the territories it had captured. Ukraine has pushed back Russia's Black Sea Fleet and reopened maritime corridor to deliver the grain to the world. And Ukraine has retained its freedom and its independence. Russia's failure is also economic. Sanctions have decoupled its economy from modern technology and innovation. Russia is now dependent on China. And finally, Russia's failure is also diplomatic. Finland has joined NATO. Sweden will follow soon. And Ukraine is closer than ever on its path to the European Union. And all of this tells us that Ukraine can prevail in this war, but we must continue to empower their resistance. Ukrainians need predictable financing throughout 2024 and beyond. They need a sustained supply of weapons to defend Ukraine and regain its rightful territory. They need capabilities to deter future attacks by Russia, and they also need hope. They need to know that with their struggle, They will earn a better future for their children, and Ukraine's better future is called Europe. And it was with immense joy that last month, we decided to launch the negotiations of accession for Ukraine's EU membership. This will be Ukraine's historic achievement, and it will be Europe responding the call of history. Ladies and gentlemen, we all know that Russia's invasion has also had an impact on the cost of living and the cost of doing business here in Europe. I know how much that has affected some of your companies. But I started by saying that the risks we face require collaboration between countries and businesses and that our joint capacity to respond was far stronger than we might believe. And nowhere is this best exemplified than when it comes to energy and sustainability? 2 years ago, before Russia's aggression against Ukraine, 1 in 5 units of energy consumed in the European Union In 2021, were imported from Russia. The high dependence on Russia was widely recognized as a risk, especially after Russia's occupation of Crimea. And then came Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Russia had already increased Europe's vulnerability by deliberately not filling gas storages to their usual level. And in the face of Ukrainian heroism and European solidarity, Putin decided that the time had come to threaten Europe directly by cutting gas supplies and using energy as his weapon. We all carry the bruises from Putin's decision. We face difficult choices and uncertainty, especially during winters. But we made the right choices. Now only 2 years later, Europe has taken its energy destiny back into its own hands. Last year, 1 in 20 units of energy consumed in the European Union came from Russia. Sure, the crisis checked momentum in the European economy, but fears of economic collapse proved unfounded. And now energy prices have come down and stayed low even during the recent cold snap at the start of January. Gas storages are still well supplied. Europe has made real progress in improving the resilience of its energy system. How was this possible because we acted in collaboration, because we had well functioning and open market and good friends around the world that stepped up and stepped in alternative supplies. Because we had a single market that allowed us to redirect flows of energies to where it was needed. But most of all, because we doubled down on clean energy transitions, investing in the clean, efficient, and renewable technologies of the future. European industries and companies have been central to this. Latest numbers from the International Energy Agency show that growth in renewable energy capacity hit another record in the European Union in 2023. And the European Union improved the efficiency of its energy. The best energy is the one that is not used by almost 5%. And in this way, we turned Putin's challenge into a major new opportunity. Last year, for the first time, the European Union produced more electricity from sun and wind than from gas. And this year, for the first time, the European Union is set to get more overall energy from wind and solar photovoltaic than it does from Russia. That is good news. But amid the reasons for optimism, let us not forget a key lesson from the crisis. Overreliance on one company, one country, one trade route comes with risks. And that is why the European Green Deal puts such strong emphasis on not just reducing emissions, but also on a strong competitive European presence in the new clean energy economy, and this includes Europe's leadership in clean energy technology, development and innovation. Ladies and gentlemen, dear Claus, let me go back to the number one concern of the global risk report, disinformation and misinformation. Job. Tackling this has been our focus since the very beginning of my mandate. With our digital services act, we defined the responsibilities of large Internet platforms on the content they promote and propagate, a responsible to children and vulnerable groups targeted by hate speech, but also a responsibility to our societies as a whole. Because the boundary between online and offline is getting thinner and thinner. And the values we cherish offline should also be protected online. And this is even more important in this new era of generative AI. Now the World Economic Forum Global Risk Report puts artificial intelligence as one of the top potential risks for the next decade. First of all, let's not forget that AI is also a very significant opportunity if use in a responsible way. I'm a tech optimist and as a medical doctor by training, I know that AI is read already revolutionizing health care. That's good. AI can boost productivity at unprecedented speed. 1st movers will be rewarded, and the global race is already on without any question. Our future competitiveness depends on AI adoption in our daily businesses, and Europe must up its game and show the way to responsible use of AI. That is artificial intelligence that enhances human capabilities, improves productivity, and serves society. We should invest where we have a competitive edge. For instance, Europe has got talent. There are nearly 200,000 software engineers in Europe with AI experience, and that is a greater concentration than in the United States and China. And our continent also has a huge, a huge competitive edge when it comes to industrial data. We can train artificial intelligence on data of unrivaled quality, and we want to invest in this. And this is why we will provide European start ups and SMEs with access to our world class supercomputers so that they can train and develop and test sterile AI models. This is similar to what Microsoft is doing for ChatGPT by running it on its own supercomputers. We will also put common European data spaces at the service of startups, and we will make available massive amounts of data in all EU languages Because AI should work also for non English speakers. This is the new frontier of competitiveness. And Europe is well positioned to become the leader of industrial AI, the use of AI to transform critical infrastructures to become intelligent and sustainable. When we took office 4 years ago, we felt the need to set clear guardrails at European level to guide the development and deployment of artificial intelligence. And this is the thinking behind Europe's artificial intelligence act, actually the first of its kind anywhere in the world, and another example of how democracies and businesses can help strengthen each other. The artificial intelligence act builds trust by looking at high risk cases like real time biometric identification. And by building that trust, it enables companies to innovate in all other fields to make the most of this new and revolutionary technology. Ladies and gentlemen, our world is in an era of conflict and confrontation, of fragmentation and fear. For the first time in generations, the world is not at a single inflection point. It is at multiple inflection points with risks overlapping and compounding each other. And there is no doubt that we face the greatest risk to the global order in the post war era. But in my mind, there is also no doubt that we can move forward with optimism and resolve. Yes. The risks we face are real and present. But in order to face risks, we have to take risks together. And this is what Europe has always done. The European Union is at its best when we are bold as we've seen only in the last few years on the European Green Deal, on Next Generation EU, on supporting Ukraine, or on facing up to the pandemic. The next years will require us to think in the same way, and I believe the common power of our democracies and our businesses and industry will be at the heart of this. Our companies thrive on freedom, on freedom to innovate and to invest and to compete. But freedom in businesses relies on the freedom of our political systems. And this is why I believe strengthening our democracy and protecting it from the risks and interference it faces is our common and enduring duty. We need to build trust more than ever, and Europe is prepared to play a key role. Thank you very much.
Saved - December 9, 2023 at 12:44 PM

@unapologetic_cm - Unapologetic Crypto Man

@dom_lucre Listen to this one... https://t.co/L1CTdsQzGR

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses the Tyrone Maze Rat Experiment, which took place in 1940. The experiment involved dividing rats into two groups: one in a good environment and the other in a bad environment. The rats in the good environment thrived, while those in the bad environment struggled and exhibited negative behaviors. The speaker draws parallels between the rat experiment and the challenges faced by marginalized communities, suggesting that external factors play a significant role in shaping behavior. They argue that these communities are being psychologically experimented on and express a motivation to break the cycle and bring about positive change.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Hey. Stay 1 with your stuff out here, family. Speaker 1: Just your typical Speaker 0: nigga shit, and I'm just tired Speaker 1: of the typical nigga shit. I used to yeah. What keep you focused? Right. Speaker 0: What keep me focused is looking at the community. Speaker 1: You know what I'm saying? Speaker 0: It's, something called the Tyrone Y'all need to look that up. It's called the Tyrone's maze rat experiment. It went down in 1940. He end up getting it from another, psychiatrist in In 18/40, it's called the Tyrone Maze Rat Experiment. And what they did was they took a few 100 rats right, and they split Them and they divided them. And what they did was they created an environment for both of these rats to live in. In one subject, They took about a 100 rats and they put it in an environment where it had clean water. They put it in an environment where it had a right amount of space where the rats can, You know, get basically, if they wanted to be by themselves, they could. Speaker 1: They made sure that it was good food Speaker 0: in there. They didn't have any type of poisons Put inside the foods. Speaker 1: They even gave them space Speaker 0: to breathe, to go upstairs, downstairs. They just gave them this abundant environment. Right? They put these Rats in there. Mind you, these are the same rats with the same genetic molecular structure with nothing different. They both came from the same mama, the same daddy, the same family tree. Right? So they took these rats. They put 1 in a good environment, then they put the other 100 rats in a bad environment where they didn't get water. If they did get water, the water actually had acids in it. They made sure they didn't give them the regular food. I think they gave them, like, cat food or something like that with a bunch of pellets that was inside of them. Right? They stuck them on top of each other, and they made sure So that the space was very, very small. They never cleaned any poop out of the maze. They never cleaned they pissed out of the maze, and they left I'm in there. They left them in there for 4 months, and they watched how they behavior changed. They went back and they got the actual rats that came shitting from the good environment and they put them in a maze. They ended up going through the maze very, very fast. Then they ended up going to get The rats that they put in a bad environment and put them in a maze, and they didn't know how to even make it through the 1st section of the maze. So he like, maybe this is a coincidence. So he did it. So what he did was he switched the rats. He took the rats that was smart, that made it through the maze that was in the good environment, and he put them in a bad environment. Then he took the rats that was in a bad environment that was dummies that couldn't make it through the maze at all, and he put them in a good environment. He waited 4 months, then he took them back out. The same Rats that was good and smart, that was in a good environment, that he put in a bad environment, now they couldn't make it through the maze. The same rats that was in a bad environment, there was dummies that couldn't make it through the maze. He put them in a good environment. Now they making it through the maze and making it through life just fine. So he said, damn. It ain't the genetics. It ain't it ain't who these people is as individuals. It's the community. It's the environment that you put these biological entities in that changes the way they interact The environment and with themselves. Did you know he did another 6 month experiment on the same rats that he left in the bad environment? Guess what they doing, killing each other. Some of the male rats started humping other male rats. Homosexuality. Look. The Other rats that was at the at the bottom that didn't have the food, these niggas went upstairs to the other rats and started robbing them for food and water. I I said, damn. This sound like your typical project. Don't you Speaker 1: sound like the p j's? Speaker 0: This is a real rat experiment. So it made me start questioning. I had to sit back and really rub my shit. Speaker 1: Turn And a robbing rat? Speaker 0: They turned into robbing, homocysts. Speaker 1: You gonna do? It's a survival it's a survival mechanism at this point. Speaker 0: Now check this out though, goddess. It was a selective group of female rats, and I really want y'all to look this up when y'all get home today. Watch this. It will fuck your mind up. The female rats, they started pampering themselves. They used to let their children just do what the fuck ever. They started pampering Sales. All they was worried about Speaker 1: hood rats. Which one of these? See, these was the hood Speaker 0: rats. Okay. Speaker 1: The hood rats. Right. Exactly. So the hood rats Speaker 0: I must've got me The hood rats, all they did was pamper themselves. The only thing that they worried about was their fur. They worried about their weight. They never they they didn't worry They children anymore. They weren't worried about the the the mama papa rat. The only thing that they focused on was they actual sales. And then the father rats started going to other From parts of the actual rat experiment cage, it started, like, bullying on the younger children. It was crazy, man. Look. It gets so deep when you really start watching it. It even Rape rapist started happening. Rape with the older male rats in the community started raping the younger males and the younger, the younger female rats. Same thing that happens in the ghetto where where a a young girl will get touched on by their uncle or a young male will get touched on by their uncle or their auntie. This happens. So it's like, damn. Is this rat experiment that's going on in Tyrone rat maze experiment the same shit that's going on with us And these communities and then you have to ask yourself projects. In the projects. Speaker 1: And who built these communities? Speaker 0: We didn't build these communities. We ain't put the liquor stores in these communities. We ain't put dope in here. You got something called Russian a k forty sevens. Niggas ain't never been to Russia. You got Japanese SKs. We ain't never been to Japan. We got that come from we got all these different things In the community of America that's outside of America when niggas ain't never left the block. How was they getting there? This shit was set up. So once I realized like, damn, Me and my people is in a a rat maze. This is a project. We are being psychologically experimented on. That's when I said, okay. This is my motivation. It's time to break the psychological Speaker 1: change of my people. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Speaker 0: Yep. So once I fully got myself up out of it, my whole mission
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