What were you like in the 90s?
From dancing the macarena to using cellphones, the 90s were home to trends and lifechanging inventions – ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) is one of them.
RUTF made malnutrition treatment accessible closer to home, helping 9 out of 10 children recover in a matter of weeks.
But millions of children still need what we started in the 90s and together, we can make it happen.
The easiest way to miss life changing gains is having “battered bull” syndrome where you either don’t buy obvious coins (ton after durov backed it) or sell too soon (zec, hype)
You can’t “get lucky” and make it on a home run play without max conviction
The only thing that differentiates the majority who made life changing money and kept it vs those who gave it back - pulling profits into the bank account where they can no longer be gambled
Otherwise gambler’s instinct takes over and dry powder is used to size into large bets
For a driver born without arms, FSD Supervised is life-changing accessibility
“I was born without arms and have driven with my feet my entire life. I’m a fully licensed driver, and traditionally I drove with my left foot on the steering wheel and my right foot handling the gas and brake. My only legal restrictions are automatic transmission and power steering.
Over the years, though, the strain from my congenital birth defects has led to significant arthritis in my hips. I drove a Model 3 for the past seven years, and it honestly helped extend my independence in a huge way.
Recently upgrading to the Model Y – along with Full Self-Driving – has been a complete game changer for me.
It dramatically reduces the physical pressure and fatigue of driving and has helped preserve a level of freedom and mobility that means a great deal to me.
Most people understandably think of Tesla in terms of innovation or sustainability, but for some of us, this technology truly becomes life-changing accessibility.”
– John F.