Spyke

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24 March 2025

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Maurice previously had considered himself lucky when at first noticing the toilet paper dispenser was empty, graciously accepted whatever luck had availed him of some extra paper from the next stall. After having lost his job earlier that day, Maurice was finally hoping his luck had turned.

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Trump’s approval rating sinks to lowest point of his second term

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for what its worth, there are no trump flags in my fl neighborhood for the first time ever and i over heard two old men complaining about the economy in a supermarket isle and about having to go on support for the first time in his life, all I could overhear distinctly was "at least with clinton we got". Purely anecdotal and these vermin that support him are good at crawling under dirt when it suits them, but who knows

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Mystery company accidentally blew $500 million on Claude in a single month — failed to put usage limit on licenses for employees

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considering i read a good article about axios editors inside trading the iran war, this makes sense it appears axios is the source of this https://www.axios.com/2026/05/28/ai-spending-roi-enterprise-costs, article about axios https://www.salon.com/2026/05/09/axios-accused-of-market-manipulation-with-iran-reporting/

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SHOCK POLL: Trump Approval Craters to 33% in New AP Poll, Whopping 67% Disapprove

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No excuse, but that anger seems to only exacerbate the issue. For what its worth, i think the information age has created a huge curse of knowledge between generations and social economic groups and social media is being weaponized to increase this phenomenon

The "curse of knowledge" is a cognitive bias where experts or informed individuals fail to accurately imagine what it is like not to know something, assuming others share their level of understanding. This leads to poor communication, teaching difficulties, and overestimating others' knowledge. It differs from the Dunning-Kruger effect, where people with low ability overestimate their competence.