Girino Vey!'s avatar
Girino Vey!
girino@girino.org
npub18lav...cfsz
Software developer and political nihilist.
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Girino Vey! 2 weeks ago
Girino Vey!'s avatar
Girino Vey! 2 weeks ago
Girino Vey!'s avatar
Girino Vey! 2 weeks ago
Two-thirds of the deputies who abolished the French monarchy were lawyers. The Bolshevik central committee was packed with educated professionals. Iran's revolutionary ideology was built by a man with a PhD from the Sorbonne. Popular media will tell you revolutions are led by the desperate. But in reality, they're led by the ambitious and denied. Peter Turchin, the complexity scientist who built a historical database to test why societies collapse, calls this counter-elite formation. When a system trains more people for leadership than it has leadership positions, the surplus redirects. Robespierre graduated first in his class at one of Paris's most prestigious schools. Danton purchased a legal position just below the aristocracy he'd shortly help destroy. Lenin met his future wife at a revolutionary meeting disguised as a pancake party. Shariati spent three days in a hospital after a Paris demonstration, then went home to build the ideology that outlived him. None of them were born radicals. They were professionals denied. In 75% of cases Turchin tracked, elite overproduction preceded state breakdown. The lag was roughly a generation. Which means the credential explosion of the 1990s and 2000s isn't producing tomorrow's disruption. It's producing disruption twenty years out, after the grievance has calcified into an identity. Bacon saw it in the 1600s - the danger when "more are bred scholars, than preferment can take off." Those scholars find each other. They organize. The variable was never ideology or moral conviction. It was absorption; whether a system could make room for the class it credentialed. When it couldn't: lawyers rewriting a nation's constitution overnight. Educated organizers building workers' councils. A PhD translating Fanon between Sorbonne lectures, then going home to bring down a monarchy. Source:
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Girino Vey! 2 weeks ago
A lot of people assume that changing your mind means you stopped caring. But sometimes the opposite is true. Sometimes you change your mind because you cared enough to stop ignoring reality. Ideas should not be judged by how compassionate they sound in theory. They should be judged by the incentives they create, the outcomes they produce, and the lives people actually live under them. History is full of systems that promised fairness, security, equality, and compassion, yet repeatedly produced shortages, corruption, censorship, dependency, fear, and concentrated power. That realization is uncomfortable because it forces you to separate intentions from results. Good intentions alone do not feed people, create prosperity, protect freedom, or prevent suffering. Incentives matter. Decentralization matters. Voluntary exchange matters. Freedom matters. Letting go of an idea you once believed in is rarely dramatic. It usually happens slowly, quietly, through years of observing contradictions that no longer fit the story you wanted to believe. But once you start prioritizing what actually works over what merely sounds moral, it changes the way you see economics, politics, power, and statism itself. Source:
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Girino Vey! 2 weeks ago
⚔️🍥 E se Brasil x Japão virasse um anime? Antes de a bola rolar, um criador de conteúdo usou IA para transformar um dos confrontos mais aguardados da Copa do Mundo em um episódio digno de uma grande saga. De um lado, o Brasil liderado por Endrick, uma das grandes revelações do torneio. Do outro, o Japão apostando no talento e na criatividade de Takefusa Kubo para tentar surpreender mais uma vez. As duas seleções chegam embaladas por um futebol ofensivo e envolvente, prometendo um duelo que tem tudo para ser um dos mais marcantes desta Copa do Mundo. A IA transformou cada jogada, drible e ataque em cenas cinematográficas, criando a sensação de que esse confronto saiu diretamente de um anime. O resultado parece menos uma partida de futebol e mais o episódio decisivo de uma grande batalha. E você, quem leva a melhor? E de quanto o Brasil ganha? 👀⚽🔥 👉🏻 Me siga para mais vídeos da Copa do Mundo como esse. 🎥 Créditos: Kalshi FC #ia #anime #futebol #copadomundo #brasil #japao #endrick #kubo #worldcup2026 Source:
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Girino Vey! 2 weeks ago
Um dos quadros mais criativos do período de Copa do Mundo no Casseta & Planeta era o divertido “Os Melhores Hinos das Seleções das Copas”, em que os humoristas faziam músicas aleatórias para os países participantes e recheadas de piadas. No trecho que vamos postar, a brincadeira é com duas seleções que muita gente realmente confundia: Eslováquia e Eslovênia. Com o humor característico do programa, os Cassetas imaginam os habitantes dos dois países irritados por serem constantemente confundidos, transformando essa situação em uma sequência de piadas que arrancou muitas risadas dos telespectadores. A graça do quadro estava justamente em pegar curiosidades reais das seleções e dos países participantes para criar sátiras leves e bem-humoradas, algo que marcou as coberturas de Copa feitas pelo programa durante muitos anos. E você? Já confundiu Eslováquia com Eslovênia alguma vez? 😅 Conta pra gente nos comentários e, se ainda não segue a página, vem fazer parte do nosso time no Quando eu vi na TV . . . . . #tv #humor #copadomundo #worldcup #seleção Source:
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Girino Vey! 2 weeks ago
This is the story of how two characters became an entire universe. Grab a coffee. At the beginning of this year, I created a tiny character named Capychan. A little Brazilian girl dressed as a capybara, with a pineapple on her head. There was no business plan. No content strategy. No World Cup project. I simply thought she would make me smile. A few weeks later she met her best friend. Kikichan. A Japanese girl dressed as a fox, with a little orange on her head. Together they starred in small adventures. Simple videos. Stories I created because they made me happy. If someone had told me that a few months later I would create 48 original mascots, 48 guardian gods, hundreds of videos, daily illustrated match recaps, and cover every single World Cup match… I would’ve laughed. My plan was simple. Brazil. Japan. That was it. Then opening day arrived. Almost on impulse, I created two more characters. Mexico. South Africa. I thought I was done. Instead, people asked: “What about my country?” Argentina. Cape Verde. Morocco. Bosnia. Jordan. Curaçao. That’s when everything changed. I spent countless hours researching folklore, wildlife, architecture, traditional clothing, food, symbols, and history because I wanted every mascot to truly belong to its country. Then I made things even harder. Every nation would receive its own guardian god. Inspired by its land. Its legends. Its animals. Its soul. Without realizing it… I wasn’t creating characters anymore. I was building an entire universe. Meanwhile, the matches never stopped. Every day brought new games, new deadlines, new artwork, new standings, new stories. Today the group stage is over. I look back at everything… and honestly… I still don’t know how I pulled it off. Maybe that’s the lesson. The biggest projects rarely begin with a perfect plan. They begin with one small idea… and the courage to take the first step. Source: