Sunday, June 28, 2026

America Doesn't Trust the News Anymore—Here's Why

 



The ratings merchants didn't kill journalism overnight. They murdered trust first. Walter Cronkite left, and the truth started competing with ratings, outrage, and algorithms.

There was a time when a television anchor walked into your living room every evening like the oldest man in the family. He did not scream. He did not wink at the camera. He did not chase clicks because clicks did not exist. He simply told you what happened. You trusted him because he spent decades earning that trust, one broadcast at a time. That man was Walter Cronkite. Today, I look at the news landscape and I cannot help saying it: they don't have them as Walter Cronkite anymore.

Cronkite was not perfect. No journalist is. But perfection was never the point. Credibility was. When he looked into the camera and signed off with, "And that's the way it is," millions of Americans believed that he had done everything humanly possible to separate fact from rumor and reporting from theater. He became known as "the most trusted man in America" because the public saw him as a referee, not a player. During the 1970s, public trust in television news reached levels around 72%, a figure that seems almost mythical today.

Fast-forward to today, and the newsroom often looks less like a courthouse and more like a boxing ring. Every network has its cheering section. Every headline seems designed to trigger outrage before understanding. Speed beats accuracy. Emotion beats evidence. Opinion often wears the costume of reporting. The race is no longer to get the story right. It is to get the story first, collect the clicks, dominate the trending list, and worry about corrections later. By then, the damage has already packed its bags and moved into millions of minds.

I sometimes wonder whether we even reward honesty anymore. Suppose a reporter spends 3 weeks verifying documents, interviewing witnesses, and checking every claim before publishing a story. Another reporter posts a half-baked rumor within 20 minutes. Guess who gets the viral traffic first? The Internet has turned journalism into a food fight where whoever grabs the biggest slice first wins, even if the meal turns out to be rotten.

The business model changed, and journalism changed with it. Cronkite worked in an era when the evening newscast competed mainly on credibility. Today's media competes on engagement. Outrage is engaging. Fear is engaging. Tribal loyalty is engaging. Calm analysis? That often dies quietly in the algorithm.

The numbers tell an ugly story. Gallup's long-running surveys show that Americans' trust in mass media has steadily fallen for decades. Recent measurements put overall trust around 31% to 32%, depending on the survey, a dramatic collapse from the trust levels enjoyed during Cronkite's era. (

That collapse did not happen because Americans suddenly became allergic to facts. It happened because too many people began believing that facts were being filtered through political, corporate, or ideological lenses before reaching the public. Whether every suspicion is justified is almost beside the point. Trust, once broken, behaves like a cracked mirror. You can glue it together, but everyone still notices the lines.

History offers painful reminders of why credibility matters. During the Watergate scandal, investigative reporting helped expose abuses of power that eventually forced President Richard Nixon to resign. The reporting was relentless because journalists understood that evidence mattered more than applause. Cronkite's broadcasts did not resemble courtroom dramas. They resembled court records. Facts first. Conclusions later. That discipline helped strengthen public confidence rather than exhaust it.

Even the Vietnam War demonstrated the weight that trusted journalism could carry. After traveling to Vietnam in 1968, Cronkite concluded that the conflict appeared headed toward stalemate rather than victory. His commentary mattered precisely because he had built decades of credibility before expressing that judgment. His reputation gave his words extraordinary influence, not because he shouted louder than everyone else, but because people believed he had earned the right to be heard.

Today, the opposite often happens. Every microphone comes preloaded with suspicion. Before a report even airs, half the audience assumes it is propaganda while the other half assumes it confirms everything they already believe. That is not journalism serving democracy. That is journalism trapped inside tribal warfare.

I find it ironic that technology promised unlimited access to information, yet many people have never been more confused about what is true. We have thousands of news sources, millions of social media accounts, endless podcasts, livestreams, influencers, anonymous leaks, edited clips, artificial intelligence, and algorithms deciding what deserves attention. We are drowning in information while dying of certainty.

Some argue that journalists merely reflect society's divisions. I disagree. They also amplify them. If every disagreement becomes a national emergency, every rumor becomes breaking news, and every political opponent becomes a villain, then eventually the audience forgets how to distinguish smoke from fire. Cry wolf every day, and the real wolf eventually walks through the front door unnoticed.

I do not blame only journalists. Consumers deserve part of the bill. Too many people no longer search for truth. They shop for confirmation. They do not ask, "Is this accurate?" They ask, "Does this agree with me?" News organizations noticed. They gave customers exactly what many wanted. In business, demand creates supply. In journalism, that can become poison.

The saddest part is that excellent journalists still exist. They spend months investigating corruption, exposing fraud, documenting wars, and risking their lives in dangerous places. They deserve respect. But they now operate inside an ecosystem where one viral conspiracy can outrun a year of careful reporting before breakfast. Their voices compete not merely with other reporters but with influencers, anonymous accounts, edited videos, fabricated images, and artificial intelligence capable of producing convincing falsehoods within seconds.

When I hear someone say that journalism has always been messy, I nod. Of course it has. Newspapers made mistakes long before television existed. Reporters have always carried biases because reporters are human beings. But there is a difference between occasional failure and institutional surrender. There is a difference between making an honest mistake and building an entire business model around perpetual outrage.

Maybe I sound old-fashioned. Fine. Some things deserve to become old-fashioned only after they are replaced with something better. Integrity has not been replaced with something better. Neither has patience. Neither has verification. Neither has trust.

When Walter Cronkite ended his broadcasts, people felt informed. Today, many people finish watching the news feeling angry, suspicious, exhausted, or manipulated. That may be good for ratings. It is terrible for democracy.

So when I say they don't have them as Walter Cronkite anymore, I am not talking about nostalgia. I am talking about standards. Cronkite represented a profession that understood a simple truth: credibility is earned in drops and lost in buckets. Once the public believes the referee has picked a team, the game changes forever. That is exactly where we are now. And unless journalism rediscovers that old-fashioned addiction to accuracy over applause, future generations may remember Walter Cronkite not merely as the most trusted man in America, but as the last one.

 

This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Friday, June 26, 2026

Study Longer, Fail Smarter: The NCLEX Doesn't Fail Students—Bad Study Habits Do

 


Every wasted study hour quietly pushes failure closer. Learn the science of studying before the NCLEX teaches you the lesson the hard way.

I have watched this academic circus for years, and the script never changes. Nursing students proudly announce that they studied for 12 hours, slept for 3, drank enough coffee to keep a power plant running, and still failed the exam. Then they blame the professor, the textbook, the examination, or the moon. Almost nobody blames the real culprit: a terrible study strategy. Nursing school has quietly sold generations of students one of the biggest lies in higher education—that the longer they study, the more they learn. That lie deserves to be thrown into the nearest medical waste container because it has wasted countless hours, destroyed confidence, and convinced hardworking students that exhaustion is the same thing as education. It is not. If sitting in front of a textbook automatically produced competent nurses, every librarian would be performing open-heart surgery. Time is a clock. Learning is a brain. The two are not married.

I refuse to glorify marathon study sessions because evidence refuses to glorify them. More than 130 years ago, German psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus demonstrated that people rapidly forget newly learned information unless they review it repeatedly over time. His Forgetting Curve has survived generations of scientific scrutiny because the human brain has not suddenly changed its mind. Modern research in cognitive psychology continues reaching the same conclusion. Reading the same chapter repeatedly creates familiarity, but familiarity is not memory. A student may recognize every sentence on the page and still fail to explain the concept during an examination. That is like recognizing every face in a police lineup without identifying the criminal. Recognition impresses nobody. Recall wins examinations.

The biggest victims of this academic fairy tale are hardworking nursing students who honestly believe they are doing everything right. They buy every NCLEX review book they can afford. They highlight nearly every sentence until the textbook resembles a rainbow after a chemical explosion. They rewrite lecture notes, copy PowerPoint slides, watch endless study videos, and spend entire weekends parked behind a desk. Then examination day arrives, and the brain suddenly behaves like a witness who has conveniently forgotten everything. The problem is not laziness. The problem is strategy. A monkey can spend the whole day climbing the wrong tree, but sunset will never reward it with bananas. Hard work pointing in the wrong direction is still the wrong direction.

Many nursing students also worship the dangerous religion of all-night studying. They proudly announce that they survived on coffee, energy drinks, and panic before a major examination, expecting admiration for their sacrifice. That logic collapses under the slightest pressure. Nobody would willingly board an airplane after hearing the pilot announce that he had not slept for 24 hours because he was busy reviewing aviation manuals all night. Nobody would celebrate an exhausted pharmacist calculating medication dosages after staying awake until dawn. Yet countless nursing students deliberately deprive their brains of sleep immediately before asking those same brains to perform complex clinical reasoning. Biology does not negotiate with wishful thinking. Researchers have repeatedly shown that sleep plays a major role in memory consolidation, allowing newly learned information to move into longer-term storage. Sleeping less to study more is like deleting a patient's medical chart before morning rounds and then wondering why nobody knows the treatment plan.

Another mistake quietly ambushes nursing students every semester. Too many memorize facts without understanding the story behind those facts. They memorize symptoms of heart failure, diabetic ketoacidosis, liver cirrhosis, chronic kidney disease, and pneumonia the way children memorize song lyrics. That strategy may survive a pop quiz, but it often collapses when examination questions demand clinical judgment. A student who understands why heart failure produces pulmonary edema will usually recognize related complications, assessment findings, and treatment priorities without memorizing endless disconnected lists. Understanding builds bridges. Memorization builds piles. Bridges carry traffic. Piles simply occupy space.

That reality explains why nursing education has steadily moved toward clinical simulations, unfolding patient cases, and scenario-based learning. Hospitals are not looking for graduates who can recite textbook paragraphs while standing beside a deteriorating patient. They need graduates who can recognize patterns, connect symptoms, identify priorities, and make safe decisions under pressure. Real patients never arrive carrying chapter numbers. They arrive carrying uncertainty. Nursing is not a spelling contest. It is structured problem-solving performed against the clock. Every symptom becomes evidence. Every laboratory value becomes a clue. Every intervention becomes a calculated decision. Students who study disconnected facts often discover too late that the examination is asking them to solve a puzzle instead of recite a dictionary.

The same lesson appears repeatedly in educational research. Active recall consistently outperforms passive rereading because the brain strengthens information it must retrieve instead of information it merely recognizes. Practice testing produces stronger long-term retention than repeatedly reading notes because every question forces the brain to work instead of simply watching words pass across a page. Spaced repetition succeeds because it reviews information just before memory begins fading instead of waiting until everything has already been forgotten. None of these strategies is fashionable because they demand effort. Thinking has always been harder than highlighting. Unfortunately for lazy study habits, examinations reward thinking instead of decoration.

Technology has only made this difference more obvious. Nursing students now have access to sophisticated flashcard systems, adaptive learning platforms, artificial intelligence, video libraries, question banks, and digital simulations that previous generations could only dream about. Yet technology cannot rescue poor habits. Buying another NCLEX review course while refusing to change ineffective study methods resembles buying expensive running shoes while refusing to leave the couch. The equipment is not the problem. The operator is. A sharper scalpel never made an untrained surgeon competent, and another study app will never rescue a student who mistakes activity for learning.

History offers another uncomfortable lesson. Florence Nightingale transformed modern nursing by questioning accepted practices and following evidence wherever it led. During the Crimean War, her use of statistical analysis and sanitary reforms dramatically reduced mortality among wounded soldiers. She challenged tradition because evidence demanded it. Nursing students should treat their own study habits with the same skepticism. If decades of educational research consistently show that active recall, spaced repetition, adequate sleep, and concept-based learning outperform marathon rereading sessions, then refusing to change is not discipline. It is academic stubbornness dressed in scrubs.

I continue hearing students ask the wrong question. They ask, "How many hours should I study?" That question sounds reasonable, but it misses the target completely. The better question is, "What should my brain be doing during those hours?" Two focused hours spent retrieving information, solving clinical problems, answering practice questions, and connecting concepts will often accomplish more than 10 distracted hours spent rereading highlighted pages. A stopwatch cannot measure understanding. It merely measures attendance.

The uncomfortable truth is that nursing school does not reward the student who suffers the most. It rewards the student who learns the most efficiently. Patients will never ask a nurse how many sleepless nights were spent studying pharmacology. They will never ask how many highlighters were emptied before graduation. They will never ask how many cups of coffee fueled examination week. They will care about one thing only: whether the nurse standing beside the hospital bed recognizes danger before danger recognizes the patient. That is why the smartest nursing students are rarely the ones chained to a desk the longest. They are the ones who make every study session count, who stop confusing exhaustion with education, who abandon outdated habits when evidence proves them wrong, and who understand a simple truth that too many students discover after failing an examination: studying harder may impress classmates, but studying smarter is what earns the license.

 

This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Biting the Hands That Freed You: South Africa's Shameful Anti-Migrant Protests

 

 

Many South Africans appear to have forgotten the African nations and people who stood with them during their struggle against apartheid. Today, they repay that solidarity with anti-immigrant protests directed at their fellow Africans.

In South Africa today, you've got a bunch of self-appointed border guards calling themselves "March and March," strutting through poor neighborhoods like they're the fashion police of immigration. They're demanding papers from terrified families, looting foreign-owned shops, and slapping a "deadline" on every undocumented immigrant as though it's a clearance sale at the department store of hate. And the choir sings "Abahambe! Sekwanele!" They must go! Enough! And I’m sitting here thinking, enough of what exactly? Enough of the people who actually showed up when your house was on fire? Because that’s the part that makes me want to laugh until I cry, this whole spectacle is the theatrical masterpiece of historical amnesia, a tragicomedy where the lead actor forgot his own origin story and now wants to kick the scriptwriters off the stage.

Let’s talk facts because feelings are clearly running on empty here. The Human Sciences Research Council says 42% of South Africans now want zero immigrants, and 74% of you genuinely believe that a Nigerian with a small grocery store is the reason you’re not driving a BMW. But here’s the punchline that hurts: the World Bank and the OECD have crunched the numbers and found that foreigners are net job creators, not job snatchers. They start businesses, they hire locals, they pump cash into a dying economy like a defibrillator on a flatline. And crime? Census data shows foreigners commit fewer offenses per capita than South Africans. So who’s the real criminal here? The guy selling tomatoes or the politician selling you a fantasy that your problems have a foreign accent? The math doesn't lie, but your politicians sure do, and you’re buying every syllable like it’s gospel at a fire-and-brimstone revival.

Now here’s where it gets greasy, slippery, and downright disgusting. You’re out here pushing away the very nations that carried your freedom fighters on their backs like pack mules. Do you honestly think Nelson Mandela just waltzed out of prison because the universe felt generous? No, that man walked free because the entire African continent put its money, its blood, and its international reputation on the line while you were still learning to chant liberation songs in youth leagues. Nigeria alone kissed goodbye to an estimated $45 billion in oil revenue, refusing to sell a single drop to the apartheid regime, strangling their economy like a python with a grudge. They didn't just send thoughts and prayers; they sent cash, they set up the Southern African Relief Fund in 1976, they squeezed their own students and civil servants  with a  2% "Mandela Tax" to bankroll education programs for Black South Africans. Also in 1976, Nigeria boycotted the Olympics, sacrificing global prestige to protest your oppression, and here you are in 2026 treating a Nigerian shopkeeper like he’s the enemy. That’s not irony, that’s a circus, and you’re the clown.

And let's expand the guest list of your forgotten saviors. Where did “Umkhonto weSizwe”  train and find refuge? Zambia. Tanzania. Mozambique. The unsung heroes of the Frontline States paid in blood. In Angola, they faced the South African Defence Force in battles that made the apartheid regime tremble. Zimbabwe was bombed for daring to support the ANC. And all of it happened while much of the world conveniently looked the other way.

Your freedom was a group project—a continental potluck where everyone brought their best dish. And now you're telling the guests to leave because they're eating too much of your food? That's the highest level of disrespect since someone named their child "Apology" and never actually said sorry.

So the same Black South Africans who chanted for liberation, who waved the ANC flag, who praised Mandela like a demigod, are now leading these anti-migrant mobs, adopting the exact same tactics of exclusion and violence that were once used against them. They’ve traded the oppressor’s uniform for a new one, and it fits them so well it’s almost like they were born to wear it. And for what? Because a Nigerian managed to open a shop while 61% of South African youth are unemployed and busy waiting for the government to save them? The real enemy is corruption, the 1.5 trillion rand that vanished into thin air, the failing schools, the crumbling hospitals, the politicians who siphon money while you siphon hate. But blaming a migrant is easier than blaming a minister, right? It’s cheaper to shout at a foreigner than to march to Parliament and demand accountability. You’ve become the bully you used to hate, and the mirror must be a painful sight.

And the funniest part, the part that makes me cackle like a hyena on caffeine, is that South Africa now needs repatriation flights for scared migrants while the rest of Africa watches and shakes its head. A Kenyan posted on X that maybe South Africa should blame African migrants for their World Cup loss too, and honestly, that joke landed harder than any protest slogan you’ve cooked up. You’ve gone from being the "Rainbow Nation" to being the "Get Off My Lawn Republic," and you wonder why tourists and investors are running for the hills. You’re not just tarnishing your brand; you’re torching it, dousing it in petrol, and handing the matches to the very people you claim are the problem.

When you chase away every Nigerian, every Zimbabwean, every Malawian who dared to dream in your backyard, you won’t just be isolated, you’ll be a monument to ingratitude, a statue made of hypocrisy and amnesia, standing tall as a warning to every oppressed people that freedom doesn’t come with a morality guarantee. South Africa, you are a disgrace, a beautiful country with an ugly heart, and the saddest part is that you don’t even see the irony because you’re too busy sharpening your pitchforks and forgetting that those same pitchforks were once used to dig your grave, and your neighbors came running with shovels to save you. Now you’re biting those hands, and I hope you choke on the fingers.

 

An update for those who follow my work: My Brief Book Series titles are now available on Google Play Books. You can also read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

 

 

Thursday, June 25, 2026

They Didn't Steal Your Smartphone. They Stole Your Entire Life.

Your smartphone is no longer a phone. It is your bank, your identity, and your life. Lose it to the wrong thief, and you may lose far more than money. The truth is clear: Yesterday's pickpocket stole wallets. Today's digital predator steals identities. Your smartphone is the new vault, and criminals already know the combination is watching your fingers.


Josh, a science teacher in New York, lost far more than a smartphone. After thieves watched him enter his passcode and stole his iPhone, they reportedly took control of his digital accounts and stole about $10,000. The phone was bait. Josh's digital life was the real prize.


London's streets prove this is no isolated nightmare. Police recorded more than 70,000 reported phone thefts during 2024, showing that smartphone snatching has become a thriving criminal business where thieves often want the data inside the phone more than the phone itself.


The biggest mistake happens before the theft. People casually expose their passcodes in bars, restaurants, airports, and train stations. A thief does not need hacking skills when a victim willingly gives away the combination to the vault with every careless tap.


Smartphones quietly became our wallets, passports, filing cabinets, and family albums. Criminals simply followed the money. Yesterday's pickpocket stole leather wallets. Today's digital predator steals the device that unlocks an entire financial life. That is evolution with a criminal twist.


The smartest defense is old-fashioned caution. Shield your passcode from wandering eyes, turn on stronger security features, and remember this hard truth: a smartphone is no longer just a phone. It is the front door to your identity, and criminals are already trying the handle.


This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief BookSeries.

















Tuesday, June 23, 2026

MBA Students Are Falling for an AI Trap They Never See Coming: 3 Costly Mistakes AI Is Helping Students Make Faster

 


MBA students are letting AI think for them. That shortcut is turning future executives into data parrots who can generate reports but cannot recognize a disaster until it destroys their careers. Let me say it as politely as I can:  Yes, AI can produce a flawless statistical report in seconds. One wrong assumption can still wipe out millions, sink companies, and expose who never understood statistics in the first place. 

I have taught business statistics for years, and if there is one thing I have learned, it is this: technology changes, software changes, and now artificial intelligence (AI)  changes almost everything. But student mistakes? Those stay stubbornly alive. They simply put on new clothes.

The arrival of AI was supposed to make MBA students smarter, faster, and more productive. Instead, I often see the opposite. AI has become a sports car handed to people who never learned how to drive. They move faster, but they crash harder.

The first mistake MBA students make is treating statistics as a calculator problem instead of a thinking problem. I see it every semester. A student dumps numbers into Excel, SPSS, R, Python, ChatGPT, or some AI-powered analytics platform. A few seconds later, a beautiful output appears on the screen. Tables. Charts. P-values. Confidence intervals. Regression coefficients. Everything looks professional.

Then I ask a simple question.

“What does it mean?”

Silence.

The room suddenly becomes a cemetery.

Many students believe statistics is about producing answers. It is not. Statistics is about understanding reality through data. The formulas are merely tools. The famous statistician George Box once said that all models are wrong, but some are useful. MBA students often forget the second half of that truth. A model is only useful when the user understands its limitations.

History provides painful examples. During the 2008 financial crisis, many banks relied heavily on sophisticated statistical models to evaluate mortgage-backed securities. The models looked impressive. The spreadsheets were beautiful. The assumptions were deadly. Financial institutions such as Lehman Brothers and others trusted mathematical outputs that underestimated risk. When reality arrived, trillions of dollars evaporated.

The lesson was simple. A spreadsheet cannot save a person from bad judgment.

Today AI makes this problem worse. Students can generate statistical analyses in seconds without understanding the underlying concepts. The machine delivers an answer before the student has even learned the question.

The second mistake MBA students make is confusing correlation with causation. This mistake is older than the automobile, yet it survives every generation.

A student discovers that two variables move together. Sales rise when advertising increases. Employee productivity rises when training hours increase. Customer satisfaction rises when app usage increases.

Then comes the dangerous leap.

“Aha! One caused the other.”

Maybe.

Maybe not.

The graveyard of business failures is filled with executives who confused correlation with causation. Researchers have published countless examples of absurd correlations. Data once showed a strong relationship between per capita cheese consumption and deaths caused by people becoming tangled in bedsheets. Nobody with common sense believes cheese kills people through bedding accidents. Yet statistically, the numbers moved together.

The point is not that statistics is wrong. The point is that statistics without critical thinking becomes a weapon of self-deception.

In business, this mistake costs real money.

Consider the retail industry. Many companies spend millions on marketing campaigns because statistical reports show positive relationships between advertising and sales. Later, deeper analysis reveals that seasonal demand, economic conditions, or competitor behavior played major roles. What looked like causation was often a complicated web of interacting factors.

AI can identify patterns at astonishing speed. However, pattern recognition is not proof of cause and effect. AI is a bloodhound. It can sniff out relationships. It cannot automatically explain why those relationships exist.

I tell students that finding a correlation is like finding fingerprints at a crime scene. Fingerprints may identify a suspect. They do not automatically prove murder. Yet many MBA students treat statistical associations like courtroom convictions. That is not analysis. That is intellectual gambling.

The third mistake MBA students make is blindly trusting AI-generated statistical interpretations. This is the newest mistake and perhaps the most dangerous. AI systems are incredibly persuasive. They speak with confidence. They explain complex topics in smooth language. They rarely hesitate.

Unfortunately, confidence and accuracy are not the same thing. A well-dressed liar is still a liar.

Several studies have documented that large language models sometimes generate false information, misinterpret data, invent sources, or produce flawed statistical explanations. Researchers continue improving these systems, but the problem remains.

I recently saw an example where an AI system confidently interpreted a regression model while completely misunderstanding the meaning of an interaction effect. The explanation sounded intelligent. It was also wrong.

Many MBA students never verify the output. Why would they? The answer looks professional. The wording sounds academic. The confidence feels reassuring. That is exactly why it becomes dangerous.

During the early days of calculators, teachers worried students would stop learning arithmetic. The concern was partly justified. Today the same danger exists with AI and statistical reasoning. Students increasingly outsource thinking itself. The machine calculates. The machine interprets. The machine writes the report. The student merely copies and pastes.

Then graduation arrives. Then the real world arrives. Then a boardroom asks questions that AI cannot answer because the human being operating the technology never learned the fundamentals.

Business history repeatedly punishes blind trust. The collapse of the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998 remains one of the most famous examples. The firm employed brilliant minds, including Nobel Prize winners. Their statistical models appeared sophisticated and powerful. Yet real-world market behavior eventually shattered their assumptions. The fund lost billions and required a rescue effort to prevent wider financial disruption.

The models were not evil. The people were not stupid. The problem was excessive faith in mathematical certainty.

MBA students today face a similar temptation with AI. The machine produces an answer, and they treat it like scripture. That is a mistake. Statistics has never been about worshipping numbers. It has always been about questioning them. Whenever I teach business statistics, as I am doing now, I remind my students that data does not speak for itself. People speak. Data must be interpreted, challenged, tested, and understood.

The dirty little secret of modern business education is that AI has made it easier than ever to appear intelligent while remaining statistically illiterate. That illusion works in the classroom for a while. It may even work during job interviews.

But eventually reality shows up carrying a baseball bat. Markets do not care about polished reports. Investors do not care about fancy dashboards. Customers do not care about AI-generated summaries. Reality only cares whether the conclusion is right.

That is why the smartest MBA students are not the ones who rely most heavily on AI. They are the ones who know when not to trust it.

In statistics, as in life, the most expensive mistakes are often made by people who think they already have all the answers.

 

 

This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Monday, June 22, 2026

Gen-Z Socialism: A Parade of Economic Clowns Marching Straight Into a Brick Wall

 


Gen-Z socialists think they are fighting billionaires, but their policies could destroy jobs, choke housing, cripple innovation, and leave everyone poorer than before.  The scary truth: every major Gen-Z socialist idea has already failed somewhere—and history says the bill always arrives after the applause ends. Rent freezes, AI crackdowns, and billionaire taxes sound heroic until they trigger shortages, fleeing investment, and an economy running on fumes.

I understand why Gen-Z socialism is becoming popular. Rent is expensive. Groceries cost a small fortune. Child care can drain a paycheck faster than a leaky bucket drains water. Many young people feel as if they are running on a treadmill that keeps speeding up while the finish line moves farther away. I get the frustration. What I do not get is how so many intelligent young people have convinced themselves that bad economics suddenly becomes good economics simply because it sounds compassionate.

That is the dirty little secret behind Gen-Z socialism. Most of its proposals are not new. They are recycled ideas pulled from the economic graveyard, dusted off, repainted, and presented as revolutionary breakthroughs. The packaging is new. The product is old.

I hear politicians such as Zohran Mamdani, Zack Polanski, and their ideological cousins promise rent freezes, government grocery stores, free transportation, free child care, restrictions on AI, millionaire taxes, and government efficiency commissions. The crowd cheers. Social media explodes. Young voters nod approvingly.

Then I ask a simple question.

"Who pays for all this?"

Suddenly the room becomes quieter than a church mouse.

The first problem is rent control. Gen-Z socialists love rent controls the way children love candy. The trouble is that economics is not a fairy tale. When governments artificially suppress rents, developers build fewer apartments because profits shrink. Investors take their money elsewhere. Existing landlords spend less on maintenance. Housing supply tightens.

The result is painfully predictable. A famous study by economists Rebecca Diamond, Tim McQuade, and Franklin Qian found that San Francisco's rent-control expansion reduced the supply of rental housing by roughly 15% over time. Less supply eventually pushed rents higher for everyone else. It is the economic equivalent of trying to cure a headache by smashing your foot with a hammer.

The second problem is price controls on goods and services. Some Gen-Z socialists dream about government-owned grocery stores selling cheap food. It sounds wonderful until reality arrives carrying a baseball bat. History is littered with examples. During the 1970s, President Richard Nixon imposed wage and price controls to combat inflation. The controls temporarily suppressed prices but eventually created shortages and market distortions. Venezuela took the idea even further under Hugo ChƔvez and NicolƔs Maduro. Government-imposed price controls produced shortages so severe that people struggled to find basic necessities.

Economics has a nasty habit of ignoring political slogans.

If a loaf of bread costs more to produce than the government allows sellers to charge, eventually somebody stops baking bread. That is not greed. That is arithmetic.

The third problem is the crusade against artificial intelligence. Many Gen-Z socialists want restrictions on AI, data centers, and workplace automation. They fear job losses. The fear is understandable. The solution is absurd. Imagine if politicians had halted automobiles to protect horse-carriage drivers. Imagine if governments had banned computers to protect typewriter manufacturers. Imagine if they had outlawed tractors to protect farm laborers.

We would all be poorer today.

Economic history shows that technological revolutions destroy some jobs while creating others. According to research from the World Economic Forum, automation may eliminate millions of positions, but it is also expected to create millions of new ones. The challenge is adaptation, not prohibition.

Trying to stop AI is like standing on a beach and ordering the tide not to come in. The tide wins. Every single time.

The fourth problem is the fantasy that taxing billionaires will fund everything forever. This is perhaps my favorite economic fairy tale because it collapses under the weight of elementary math. Many Gen-Z socialists talk as if there are endless vaults of billionaire money waiting to be raided. There are not. Britain has roughly 100 billionaires. America has more, but even here the numbers are small relative to the size of government spending. Wealth taxes often collect far less revenue than promised because wealthy individuals relocate, restructure assets, or reduce taxable exposure.

France learned this lesson the hard way. Its wealth tax drove many wealthy residents abroad and ultimately generated disappointing revenue relative to expectations. Eventually the policy was substantially revised.

The socialists keep counting chickens before they hatch. The chickens keep leaving the farm.

The fifth problem is the belief that government efficiency programs can magically pay for everything. Every politician in history has promised to eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse. Every politician discovers that finding major savings is harder than finding a snowball in a furnace.

Even Elon Musk's highly publicized efforts to identify government inefficiencies produced far less than many supporters expected. Bureaucracies are messy. Waste exists, certainly. But the notion that efficiency alone can finance massive new social programs belongs in the same category as unicorns and perpetual-motion machines.

The sixth problem is the growing popularity of degrowth economics. Thinkers such as Jason Hickel and Kohei Saito argue that endless GDP growth is harmful and that societies should slow down economic expansion.

That idea sounds sophisticated until one asks another simple question. Where does rising living standards come from?

Historically, economic growth has lifted billions of people out of extreme poverty. According to World Bank data, global extreme poverty rates fell dramatically over recent decades largely because economies expanded, businesses invested, productivity improved, and incomes increased. Economic growth is not perfect. It creates winners and losers. It can produce inequality. But without growth, there is less wealth to distribute, fewer jobs to create, and fewer resources available for education, healthcare, infrastructure, and innovation.

A shrinking pie does not feed more people. It simply creates more people fighting over smaller slices.

What fascinates me most about Gen-Z socialism is not its economics. It is its psychology. Many young voters are not embracing these ideas because they studied economic history. They are embracing them because they are angry.

And honestly, they have reasons to be angry. Housing costs are brutal. Student debt remains burdensome. Inflation has battered household budgets. Wages often fail to keep pace with expectations. Social mobility feels weaker than it once did.

But anger is not an economic model. Frustration is not a fiscal policy. Resentment is not a growth strategy. The tragedy is that many Gen-Z socialists correctly identify genuine problems while proposing solutions that would make those problems worse. They see high rents and prescribe rent controls. They see technological disruption and prescribe technological stagnation. They see government waste and prescribe larger government. They see expensive living costs and prescribe policies that often reduce supply and investment.

That is like diagnosing a patient correctly and then prescribing poison.

I do not doubt their intentions. I doubt their economics.

The economy is not a morality play where good intentions automatically produce good outcomes. It is a machine driven by incentives, investment, productivity, risk, innovation, and human behavior. Ignore those realities and the machine eventually breaks.

Gen-Z socialism is selling a free lunch. History keeps sending back the bill.

And history, unlike politicians, never forgets to collect.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, June 20, 2026

The Fatal Mistake That Is Killing MBA Case Studies Everywhere

 


Most MBA students don't write case studies—they write corporate obituaries. Misidentify the problem, and your analysis dies before it reaches the boardroom. The truth is,  MBA students lose grades and credibility when they confuse symptoms with causes. Business rewards problem-solvers, not professional note-takers.

If there is one assignment that separates MBA students from ordinary college students, it is the case study. Unfortunately, most MBA students approach a case study the same way a tourist approaches a crime scene. They stand around, stare at the evidence, describe what happened, and then walk away feeling accomplished. That is not a case study. That is an autopsy report.

I have read enough MBA case studies to notice a pattern. Many students spend page after page retelling facts already provided in the case. They summarize the company’s history. They repeat the financial numbers. They describe the executives. They tell me what happened. Then they stop. The problem is that nobody pays MBA graduates to explain yesterday. Companies pay them to fix tomorrow.

That is why a properly structured MBA case study must resemble a detective investigation mixed with a battlefield briefing. The goal is not to admire the wreckage. The goal is to figure out who crashed the car, why it crashed, and how to prevent the next collision.

Whenever I begin a case study, I start with the situation. I identify the company, the industry, the competitive environment, and the major events that brought the organization to its current position. This section should be brief and sharp. I am not writing a corporate biography. I am setting the stage. Think of it as the opening scene of a movie. The audience needs enough information to understand the conflict, but not so much that they fall asleep before the action begins.

Once the background is established, I move directly to the central problem. This is where many MBA students get lost. They mistake symptoms for problems. A decline in sales is not necessarily the problem. It may be a symptom. Low employee morale is not necessarily the problem. It may be another symptom. The real problem often hides beneath the surface like a shark beneath dark water.

Consider the collapse of the once-dominant video rental giant Blockbuster. Many observers pointed to declining store traffic as the problem. That was merely the symptom. The actual problem was management's failure to adapt to digital distribution and changing consumer behavior. By the time leadership recognized the threat posed by Netflix, the ship had already struck the iceberg.

The next section should identify the root causes. This is where MBA students earn their tuition money. Instead of repeating facts, I analyze why the problem exists. Perhaps leadership made poor strategic decisions. Perhaps the company ignored technological change. Perhaps competitors exploited weaknesses. Perhaps the organizational culture discouraged innovation.

The famous downfall of Kodak illustrates this point perfectly. Kodak actually invented one of the earliest digital cameras in 1975. Yet leadership feared that digital technology would cannibalize its profitable film business. The result was strategic paralysis. The company saw the future coming and still stepped into traffic. That was not a technology problem. It was a management problem.

After identifying root causes, I evaluate alternatives. This is the section that separates serious analysis from amateur storytelling. Every major business problem has multiple possible solutions. A company may cut costs, expand internationally, launch new products, acquire competitors, restructure operations, or invest in technology.

The key is to examine each alternative honestly. Every option creates winners and losers. Every strategy has risks. MBA students often fall into the trap of presenting their preferred solution as flawless. Real business does not work that way.

During the financial crisis of 2008, many banks faced impossible choices. Raise capital and dilute shareholders. Cut lending and slow growth. Merge with competitors and sacrifice independence. None of these options was attractive. Leadership often had to choose the least painful path rather than the perfect one. Business is frequently less about finding a hero and more about selecting the villain you can survive.

Once alternatives are evaluated, I present my recommendation. This recommendation must be specific. Vague statements such as “the company should improve communication” are useless. Every struggling company on Earth could improve communication.

A strong recommendation sounds different. It identifies exactly what should be done, who should do it, when it should happen, and how success will be measured. Precision matters. If a surgeon walked into an operating room and announced, “I recommend improving the patient,” nobody would feel reassured. Business recommendations deserve the same level of clarity.

The recommendation should also be supported by evidence. According to research frequently cited by management scholars, organizations that effectively align strategy with execution consistently outperform competitors in revenue growth and profitability. Evidence transforms an opinion into a business argument.

After the recommendation comes implementation. This is another area where MBA students often stumble. They assume that announcing a strategy automatically makes it reality. It does not.

History is filled with brilliant strategies destroyed by terrible execution. During the early 2000s, many corporations invested billions in digital transformation projects. Numerous initiatives failed not because the strategies were wrong but because implementation was weak. Employees resisted change. Systems were incompatible. Leaders underestimated complexity.

That is why implementation must include timelines, resource requirements, performance metrics, responsibilities, and risk management plans. If a recommendation cannot be implemented, it belongs in a fantasy novel, not a business case study.

Finally, every MBA case study should conclude by connecting the recommendation back to the original problem. The conclusion is not a place for new ideas. It is the closing argument before the jury. I remind readers of the problem, summarize the analysis, and reinforce why the proposed solution offers the strongest path forward.

The irony is that many MBA students spend thousands of dollars learning management, finance, marketing, operations, and strategy, only to produce case studies that read like encyclopedia entries. They become historians when they should be acting like consultants.

The marketplace does not reward people who merely describe problems. It rewards people who solve them. Executives are drowning in information. What they desperately need is judgment.

That is the true purpose of the MBA case study. It is not a writing exercise. It is a decision-making exercise. Every paragraph should move closer to answering one question: “What should be done next?”

When I structure a case study correctly, I move from background, to problem identification, to root-cause analysis, to alternative solutions, to recommendation, to implementation, and finally to conclusion. Each section performs a specific job. Together they create a logical chain of reasoning that transforms raw information into actionable insight.

In the end, the best MBA case study is not the one that tells the longest story. It is the one that solves the biggest problem. Everything else is just expensive decoration.

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

America Doesn't Trust the News Anymore—Here's Why

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