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Top Harris surrogate makes major admission about Trump while mocking Dems: 'Can’t sell worth s---'

Mark Cuban admitted this weekend that "Democrats can’t sell" and that President Donald Trump is a master at marketing, saying he is better than Paris Hilton and Dennis Rodman.

Cuban, who during the 2024 presidential campaign served as one of former Vice President Kamala Harris’ top allies and campaign surrogates, also revealed he told Harris advisors to "not even try" advising him on messaging.

"Donald Trump is a great salesperson, he really is a great marketer," he said.

Motioning with his hands, Cuban continued: "I’d put him up there, Donald Trump, then Paris Hilton, then Dennis Rodman."

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The comparison drew laughs from the crowd at the "Principles First" summit in Washington, D.C., to which Cuban responded, "Seriously!"

"I mean those two below are some of the best marketers I’ve ever seen in my entire life, and Donald Trump surpassed them," he said.

Cuban, who is a businessman, TV personality and co-owner of the Dallas Mavericks, emerged as one of Harris’ most fierce supporters during the 2024 campaign. He received a lot of backlash when he appeared to insult pro-Trump women by suggesting that Trump never surrounds himself with "strong, intelligent women."

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Despite this, he had some brutal words to say about Democratic messaging and ineptitude on Saturday.

"I learned that Democrats can’t sell worth s---," he laughed, according to other clips that surfaced from the weekend summit. "They’re so persnickety about every little detail, and that’s why Republicans at the presidential level — I don’t want to say kicked their a-- because it wasn’t a runaway — but yeah."

Cuban said that Democrats "had no idea" how to communicate their policies to moderates and small business owners.

"If you gave the Democrats a dollar bill and said: ‘You can sell these for 50 cents,’ they would hire 50 people to try to do it and then would not know how to sell the dollar bill for 50 cents," he continued. "If you gave it to Donald Trump and said, ‘Sell this dollar bill for $2,’ he’d figure out a way, right? He’d tell you that $2 bill is, you know, huge. … That’s the problem, and that’s what I learned."

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He revealed that during the campaign, he told Harris staffers to not even try sharing campaign advice with him.

"It got to the point where after the first event I went to, I said to the Harris people: ‘You’re not allowed to say a word to me. I don’t care what you think. I’m just going to do what I think is right,’" said Cuban.

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"That in essence is how Donald Trump has become so successful," he continued. "Because he’s able to put out messages and people see in him what they want to see." 

Cuban proceeded to caution that he believes Trump is "still in the salesmanship stage" and his ability to message effectively "doesn’t mean that he can execute on them."

"I think now people are starting to ask: ‘OK, its great to sell it. Now can you execute it on it?'" he said.

AI startup Anthropic finalizing $3.5B funding at $61.5B valuation amid AI race with OpenAI

Anthropic is closing in on a massive $3.5 billion funding round that would push its valuation to $61.5 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal. The AI startup, known for developing the Claude chatbot, continues to attract deep-pocketed investors eager […]

The post AI startup Anthropic finalizing $3.5B funding at $61.5B valuation amid AI race with OpenAI first appeared on Tech Startups.

Freedom of speech is ‘on the line’ in a pivotal Dakota Access Pipeline trial 

A sign says “Indigenous Sovereignty Protects Air, Water” behind barbed wire fencing at a protest camp.
NORTH DAKOTA, UNITED STATES – 2017/02/22: Defiant Dakota Access Pipeline water protectors faced-off with various law enforcement agencies on the day the camp was slated to be raided. | Photo: Getty Images

A pivotal trial over the embattled Dakota Access Pipeline opens today that could have grave consequences for protests in the US and the future of the environmental group Greenpeace.

Members of the Standing Rock Sioux and more than 500 other tribes protested the development of the pipeline alongside demonstrators who joined from across the US nearly a decade ago. Legal battles are still in motion, even after oil started flowing through the pipeline that runs from North Dakota to Illinois in 2017.

The company that operates Dakota Access, Energy Transfers, is suing Greenpeace for $300 million in a lawsuit that goes on trial this week. Energy Transfers claims that Greenpeace supported protesters’ “unlawful acts of trespass” and property destruction to stop construction. It also alleges that the organization spread false information about the company and concerns about the pipeline’s impact on the environment and cultural sites to the public and to banks financing the project.

“This directly impacts everybody, not just Standing Rock, not just Greenpeace.”

Paying that amount in damages would be equivalent to about 10 times Greenpeace USA’s annual budget, according to …

Read the full story at The Verge.

I spent $32,000 turning my basement into a home gym. It took longer than I thought, but it's been worth it.

A sleek, all-black gym with neon white hexagonal lights.
Antonio Perez spent one year and $32,000 creating a dream gym for his family.

Courtesy of Antonio Perez

  • Software engineer Antonio Perez, 47, spent the past year and $32,000 building his dream at-home gym.
  • After his wife became wheelchair-bound, he felt guilty leaving daily for the gym.
  • The most expensive piece of equipment was a $3,600 AssaultRunner Pro treadmill he bought for his daughter.

This is an as-told-to essay based on a conversation with software engineer Antonio Perez, 47, who lives in Bath Township, Ohio, about 30 minutes south of Cleveland. Over the past year, he turned his house's woodworking shop into a basement gym. The following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

I bought the five-bedroom house for $485,000 in 2019. The previous owner used the basement as a woodworking shop, but I knew we would transform it into something different.

Originally, I thought the basement might be a home movie theater and I would just use one of the bedrooms for my exercise equipment. While researching home theaters, though, I realized we probably wouldn't use it enough to justify the cost.

A basement woodworking space with a "Cold Beer" sign hanging on the wall.
The original woodworking shop in Perez's basement.

Courtesy of Antonio Perez

My wife developed Multiple System Atrophy, or MSA, in 2020, a neurological disease similar to ALS. By 2023, she was wheelchair-bound and it was difficult for her to leave the house. I started to feel guilty every time I left for the gym. What if she needed help going to the bathroom and no one was there?

The gym was also for the whole family. I'm trying to get back into shape personally. I weightlift around three to five days a week when I'm focused on a program. I also have two daughters, 19 and 17, who have played lacrosse, tennis, soccer, and basketball over the years.

My two-month project turned into a yearlong odyssey

Like all home improvement projects, you think it's going to be faster than it is. I originally thought it'd be a two- to three-month project. I started in February 2024 and only felt like everything was completed last week — over a year later.

I didn't set a specific budget. I knew I wanted it to be nice, and I kind of did it on the fly. If I saw a piece of equipment that I wanted and I could afford it, I bought it. In total, the project cost me around $32,000.

The flooring took a lot of research. I had to strip out all the old linoleum glue, which required renting a sander. I knew I wanted a material that mimicked professional gyms, so I went to Home Depot and got samples. I wanted it to feel dense when you stepped on it.

Perez's all-black home gym filled with professional equipment.
Perez researched flooring at professional gyms to find the right style.

Courtesy of Antonio Perez

While researching home theaters, I saw a really cool speaker system. It was dark black, but you could see the wood grain coming through. I tried to replicate that for the walls, and I think I nailed it.

The hardest part was spray-painting the ceiling. I used 10 gallons of paint, which means I held up that extension wand for hours and hours.

I taught myself how to do some of the DIY work and learned to be patient

The lighting was surprisingly easy, especially since it was my first electrical job ever. I used YouTube videos to learn how, but it turned out to be a simple project to run together a couple of lines and put together junction boxes. I settled on the hexagonal shape after seeing pictures of some other home gyms. The lights were relatively cheap, only around $500, and I didn't even use all the ones I picked up.

I wanted it to be extra bright since the floors and walls were so dark. My daughter thinks its too bright, but I think it's perfect.

If you're attempting to build a home gym on your own, just know it takes time. Life gets in the way. You'll put down one coat of paint and realize you need another, but then your family needs you, so you don't go back for another month or two.

I bought some equipment secondhand and splurged on other pieces

I knew I wanted a really solid power rack system, so I started with that. There were options for 80" or 92" of height. Initially, I was worried I would hit my head on the ceiling doing pull-ups with the 92", so I got the 80". But when I set it up, it was too small for me to do overhead lifts. So now I have two racks.

I used Facebook Marketplace for some of the equipment, like two rep bars, a trap bar, and a powerlifting bench for the glutes and hamstrings. For really big equipment though, I didn't want to skimp. I wanted to make sure it was reliable.

Life-size cutouts of girl playing tennis and gymnastics sit next to excercis equipment in the gym.
Perez used decorations from his daughter's graduation party for the gym.

Courtesy of Antonio Perez

The hardest piece of equipment to pull the trigger on was the AssaultRunner Pro treadmill. It was about $3,600, which I thought was just way too much for a treadmill. Nothing powers up like it — you can get to the speed you want instantly. My daughter really wanted it for interval training, so I got it.

For my daughter's high school graduation party last year, I bought a whole bunch of cutouts of her in action. Now, they decorate the gym. I told the younger one that we'll add her photos to the collection next year.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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