In the 1950s, Yuri Nikolaev, a Russian psychiatrist, started treating mentally ill patients with prolonged water fasting.
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) May 2, 2026
He went on to treat over 8,000 people. Reports suggest that over 70% of patients showed significant improvement, with many returning to normal functioning… pic.twitter.com/OIyzLqdiJO
Saturday, May 2, 2026
MASSIMO: In the 1950s, Yuri Nikolaev, a Russian psychiatrist, started treating mentally ill patients with prolonged water fasting. . . over 70% of patients showed significant improvement, with many returning to normal functioning…
If you follow CDC schedule, you are guaranteed to have a dead, disabled or permanently injured child. Stop all vaccines! https://t.co/ga6b8WqFEQ
— sashalatypova.substack.com "Due Diligence and Art" (@sasha_latypova) May 2, 2026
PETER CLACK: Despite decades of hysteria and trillions of dollars spent on renewables - coal, oil and gas still produce 81% of the world's primary energy.
Research from groups like the IEA and various mining analysts suggests that to meet Net Zero by 2050, the world will need to mine more copper in the next 25 years than has been mined in the last 5,000 years.
New copper mines are not popping up either. It takes an average of 16 years to move a copper mine from discovery to first production. --Peter Clack
Solar panels and turbine blades are destined to become the actual 'fossils' from a bygone age.
— Peter Clack (@PeterDClack) May 1, 2026
Much of this unusable rubble will lie in the ground for thousands of years—a legacy of a modern world where recycling is a myth used to prop up a narrative of free wind and sunshine.… pic.twitter.com/9byhvSVaGO
Solar panels and turbine blades are destined to become the actual 'fossils' from a bygone age. Much of this unusable rubble will lie in the ground for thousands of years—a legacy of a modern world where recycling is a myth used to prop up a narrative of free wind and sunshine. Despite decades of hysteria and trillions of dollars spent on renewables - coal, oil and gas still produce 81% of the world's primary energy. It's around 10 to 30 times more expensive to recycle a solar panel than to landfill it. Hundreds of thousands of decommissioned wind turbine blades the size of Boeing 707 wings, are never going to be recycled. High-purity silicon used in wind solar is produced by heating quartz (silica) with carbon (usually in the form of coal, coke, or wood chips) in a submerged-arc furnace at temperatures exceeding 2,000°C. Nothing can justify the colossal electricity volume needed to run the furnaces, which, in the world's largest solar-producing regions, are still supplied by coal-fired grids. Recycling costs far more than any benefits. A 90% figure often cited refers primarily to the steel towers and internal wiring, which are valuable. But the 'green' challenge remains with the composite blades and the economic gap in solar recovery. A technology can be 'recyclable' in a lab but a costly 'liability' in the real world if the market for those recovered materials doesn't exist without massive subsidies. While solar panels may pay back the 'joules', they don't necessarily pay back the quality of energy (baseload/dispatchable) used to create them. With a decommissioning cycle occurring before 2050, we are essentially stuck in a perpetual loop of high-energy manufacturing swallowing the very fuels we are trying to replace. Research from groups like the IEA and various mining analysts suggests that to meet Net Zero by 2050, the world will need to mine more copper in the next 25 years than has been mined in the last 5,000 years. New copper mines are not popping up either. It takes an average of 16 years to move a copper mine from discovery to first production. We are significantly behind the curve for the volume required for EVs, wind turbines, and massive grid expansions. Environmental regulations and permits often stretch that 16-year average out. This creates a paradox where 'green' regulations slow down 'green' mineral extraction. It isn’t just copper; a single 3 MW wind turbine requires approximately 2 tons of rare earth magnets. We use massive diesel-burning fleets to mine the minerals for 'clean' energy. We are demanding a 500% increase in the production of minerals like lithium, graphite and cobalt by 2040. As we dig deeper for lower-grade ore, the energy required to extract each ton of metal rises, creating a feedback loop where we need more energy just to get the materials to build 'energy-saving' tech. The industrial cost of waste from high-tech civilisations must eventually hit a geological wall. Are we planning for that wall or still accelerating towards it?
When the White Man “chimps out” everyone else has no choice but to lay the fuck down.
— The Rebel (@RockyTheRe44006) May 2, 2026
Borders are redrawn, changes on a global scale. pic.twitter.com/5czdgF9KYZ
White men are afraid of their own power.
When black people chimp out it looks like nihilistic gang violence and drive-by shootings.
When brown people chimp out it looks like Allah Akbar and it looks like cartels.
When white people chimp out it looks like ubiquitous domination, a level of conquest that other people could never f****** conceive of is the reality. And that makes a lot of people . . . it makes a lot of people uncomfortable and on some level I don't even like being the one to say it because temperamentally I'm a sensitive person. But we have to start acknowledging that's the reason why all of this has been foisted upon us as a people is because they are afraid of us is the reality.
PETER CLACK: The world will have to deal with 43 million tons of decommissioned wind turbine blades by Net Zero in 2050. To put that in perspective, it’s the equivalent weight of 215,000 locomotives.
from Peter Clack,Feature of the Global Warming grift, not a bug https://t.co/Il5i4b4g9U
— Tom Luongo (@TFL1728) May 2, 2026
The world will have to deal with 43 million tons of decommissioned wind turbine blades by Net Zero in 2050. To put that in perspective, it’s the equivalent weight of 215,000 locomotives. These blades are made of high-strength composites designed to survive decades of brutal weather, and they are notoriously difficult to recycle. They were built to last, but they weren't built to disappear. Every turbine standing today will likely be decommissioned and replaced at least once before 2050. Without a cost-effective way to recycle fibre-reinforced polymers, the majority of these massive blades are destined for eternity - buried forever in turbine graveyards. China, Europe, and the US will account for the vast majority of this waste, creating a mountainous industrial heartache that many Net Zero models simply haven't priced in.But 43 million tons of purely composite blade waste every 20 years is a colossal physical reality.