peter woodman (@clango) 's Twitter Profile
peter woodman

@clango

ID: 644503

linkhttps://ghost.boo calendar_today16-01-2007 07:08:29

2,2K Tweet

1,1K Followers

2,2K Following

Joe Kerr (@societylivr1984) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There's an old saying in Schelling—I know it's in Hegel, probably in Schelling—that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as... as... tragedy... the second time as... as... it's funny if it happens again

There's an old saying in Schelling—I know it's in Hegel, probably in Schelling—that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as... as... tragedy... the second time as... as... it's funny if it happens again
Adam Wathan (@adamwathan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It's 2014. You're writing code in Sublime Text, managing projects in Trello, and building UIs with Bootstrap 3. You don't know it yet, but this is as good as things will ever get, and it's only downhill from here.

Contingent West (@contingentwest) 's Twitter Profile Photo

With Zohran, a Twelver Shia, facing Eric Adams, a Turkish proxy, I think we can consider the NYC mayoral race the final phase of the Ottoman-Safavid conflict

sofia (she/her) (@allaboutthem3ts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

oh look at me im francisco lindor I’m the most handsome baseball player ever I’m woke as fuck so is my incredibly multi-talented wife I have more WAR than any shortstop in the 21st century and I have a beautiful family fuck you

George Sears 2028 Voter (@byyourlogic) 's Twitter Profile Photo

timothy faust 🇵🇸 when the stewards of computers were oddly tall ponytailed men who made everyone uncomfortable with their utilikilts, everything worked. Now it’s all fleece-wearing automatons who were the MBAs of previous generations and everything SUCKS

Robin Rimbaud - Scanner (@robinrimbaud) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Farewell to French composer Éliane Radigue (1932-2026) who taught us the radical power of slowness, of patience, and attention stretched to the threshold of perception. Her work will continue to resonate—slowly, endlessly—like a tone that never quite fades.

Farewell to French composer Éliane Radigue (1932-2026) who taught us the radical power of slowness, of patience, and attention stretched to the threshold of perception. Her work will continue to resonate—slowly, endlessly—like a tone that never quite fades.