Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The United Nations Has Become a Five-Star Hotel for Hypocrites

 


The United Nations has become a polished global theater where oppressive regimes lecture free nations about morality while American taxpayers foot the bill. Rogue countries like Iran gets influence, Israel gets condemned, and America keeps paying for a machine that often works against its own interests. In fact, if hypocrisy were gasoline, the UN headquarters could power Manhattan for 50 years.

I am angry. Not the fake kind of anger politicians perform for television cameras before they sneak into cocktail parties with lobbyists. I mean real anger. The kind that sits in your chest like a burning coal. The kind that makes you stare at the television and mutter, “What exactly are we paying for?”

America keeps pouring mountains of money into the United Nations like a gambler feeding a broken slot machine in Las Vegas, hoping this time it will finally spit out something useful. Yet every few months, the same circus returns to town. Countries with terrible human rights records suddenly become guardians of “human rights.” Dictators lecture democracies about justice. Regimes that jail women for showing their hair sit comfortably inside committees discussing women’s freedom. When the fox starts teaching chickens about security, somebody has lost his mind.

The United States remains the largest financial contributor to the UN system. In 2025, America was responsible for about 22 percent of the UN regular budget and roughly 26 percent of peacekeeping costs. That is more than $820 million toward the regular budget alone. Meanwhile, many countries that scream the loudest against America contribute only a fraction of that amount. America pays premium price for front-row seats at its own humiliation.

And what does Washington often get in return? Condemnation. Lectures. Sneering anti-American rhetoric wrapped inside polished diplomatic language.

Then comes the part that really turns my stomach. Iran. Yes, Iran. A regime accused for years of suppressing and executing protesters, arresting dissidents, crushing women’s rights demonstrations, and funding militant groups across the Middle East somehow keeps finding itself inside major UN structures connected to human rights and policy influence. In 2022, Iran was kicked out of the UN Commission on the Status of Women after the death of Mahsa Amini and the brutal crackdown that followed. But like a bad horror movie villain, the regime keeps crawling back into the building through another door.

In April 2026, Iran was nominated to the UN Committee for Programme and Coordination, a body connected to policy discussions involving human rights, women’s rights, and counterterrorism matters. The United States reportedly stood alone in openly objecting during the ECOSOC session (the United Nations Economic and Social Council session). Just pause there for a second and let the absurdity sink in.

America pays the lion’s share of the bills. Iran gets the microphone.  That is not diplomacy. That is political insanity dressed in a suit and tie.

The defenders of the UN always say the same thing. “Well, engagement matters.” “Dialogue matters.” “International cooperation matters.” Fine. I understand diplomacy. I understand alliances. I understand that the world is messy. But there is a difference between diplomacy and moral surrender. There is a difference between cooperation and self-humiliation.

The UN has spent decades building a reputation that often feels openly hostile toward both America and Israel. Many critics have pointed to the overwhelming number of resolutions targeting Israel compared to countries with far worse human rights records. In 2024, the UN Human Rights Council again pushed resolutions demanding actions against Israel during the Gaza conflict while countries like China, Cuba, and others continued maintaining influence within UN systems. The imbalance is so obvious that even people who are not strongly pro-Israel can see it from space.

And let us stop pretending anti-Semitism at the UN is merely an invention of political talk shows. Former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon himself admitted in 2016 that there has been a “disproportionate volume” of resolutions criticizing Israel. That statement did not come from a conservative podcast host sitting in a basement. It came from the top of the UN itself.

The problem is deeper than one resolution or one committee seat. The problem is structural. The UN was born in 1945 from the ashes of World War II. At the time, the mission sounded noble: prevent another global catastrophe. Fine. But over the decades, the institution grew bloated, political, ideological, and addicted to symbolism instead of solutions. It became a massive diplomatic theater where countries often posture for cameras while real problems keep exploding outside the building.

Look at the record. Russia sat on the UN Human Rights Council before eventually being suspended after the invasion of Ukraine. China, despite accusations regarding Uyghur Muslims and crackdowns in Hong Kong, continues holding major influence internationally. Iran still maneuvers through UN systems despite its record on political dissent. Saudi Arabia has previously held positions connected to women’s rights discussions despite global criticism over its own restrictions on women. If hypocrisy were gasoline, the UN headquarters could power Manhattan for 50 years.

The defenders will quickly point to humanitarian work. Yes, some UN agencies do valuable work involving refugees, disease control, food aid, and disaster response. I am not blind to that reality. But that does not erase the larger political rot inside the institution. A restaurant may serve one good meal, but if the kitchen is full of rats, customers still have the right to complain.

The uncomfortable truth is this: many authoritarian governments love the UN because it gives them legitimacy they do not deserve. A dictator can crush protests at home on Monday, then fly to New York on Wednesday wearing an expensive suit while talking about “international norms.” Cameras flash. Diplomats clap politely. Press releases are issued. The performance continues.

Meanwhile, ordinary Americans are struggling with inflation, debt, housing costs, medical bills, and taxes. Yet Washington keeps writing checks to organizations that often treat America like the villain of the planet. That is why many citizens are losing patience. Not because they hate international cooperation, but because they are tired of financing institutions that appear deeply allergic to moral consistency.

I also believe many globalist organizations have developed a dangerous habit of treating national sovereignty like an outdated inconvenience. They speak as if borders are primitive ideas and patriotism is some embarrassing disease. But here is the reality: when disaster strikes, people still run to nations for protection, not abstract speeches from conference halls.

The UN today often feels less like a guardian of peace and more like a diplomatic nightclub where bad actors buy moral respectability with political alliances. America keeps paying the cover charge while getting insulted at the bar.

At some point, somebody has to say enough is enough. I am not saying America should isolate itself from the world. That would be foolish. But I am saying blind loyalty to failing institutions is not wisdom. It is weakness. Institutions are supposed to serve people, not the other way around. And when an organization repeatedly rewards hypocrisy, protects political theater, and allows serial abusers to posture as guardians of justice, criticism becomes necessary.

The UN may still have pockets of usefulness. I will grant that. But its moral authority has been bleeding for years, and much of the world can now see the stain spreading across the carpet. The institution that once promised moral leadership increasingly looks like a tired empire of bureaucracy, contradictions, and selective outrage.

And honestly, I am tired of pretending otherwise.

 

Separate from today’s article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Putin’s Bunker Fever: How Ukraine Turned Moscow Into a City of Fear

 


Putin started a war expecting glory, but now drones buzz over Moscow while he hides underground fearing assassins, leaks, and humiliation. Ukraine is not just attacking Russia’s military anymore — it is attacking Putin’s image, confidence, economy, and grip on power itself.

I have seen this pattern before. A ruler starts a war thinking he is a wolf. Then the war drags on, the economy starts wheezing, explosions creep closer to home, trusted men begin blaming one another, and suddenly the “strongman” is sleeping underground like a frightened mole. That is where Vladimir Putin now appears to be heading as Ukraine pushes drones and missiles deeper into Russian territory and turns Moscow into a city of nerves, suspicion, and smoke.

The drone strike on Moscow’s Mosfilmovskaya Street was not merely an attack. It was humiliation delivered by propeller blades. The drone flew into one of the most protected cities on Earth and smashed into a luxury apartment block barely 4 miles from the Kremlin. That single explosion screamed louder than any NATO press conference: Russia’s shield has holes big enough to fly a truck through. Soon after, Gen Viktor Afzalov, the man overseeing Russia’s aerospace defenses, was fired. In gangster language, he got thrown under the tank.

This is what makes the whole thing deliciously ironic. Russia spent years bragging about the S-400 missile system, the S-300 batteries, electronic jamming networks, radar shields, and the Pantsir-S1 defense systems protecting Moscow. Russian television sold those weapons like miracle soap at a street market. Yet Ukrainian drones still slipped through. Expensive Russian missiles are now chasing cheap flying lawnmowers across the sky. It is hard to act like a lion when mosquitoes keep biting your backside.

Ukraine has changed the rhythm of the war. Since the front line became a muddy meat grinder, Kyiv stopped thinking only about trenches and started thinking about psychology. Hit the oil refineries. Hit the logistics depots. Hit the radar systems. Hit military factories. Make ordinary Russians feel the war in their bones instead of watching it on television while sipping vodka in Moscow cafes.

And the strategy is working.

Reports now suggest that nearly 70% of Russia’s population falls within the operational reach of Ukrainian long-range drones. That number should terrify the Kremlin more than tanks rolling across a border. This means millions of Russians who once believed the war was somebody else’s problem are hearing sirens at night and waking up to burning fuel depots on social media. Fear spreads faster than fire.

In April 2026 alone, Ukraine reportedly struck at least 14 Russian oil refineries and terminals. Russian refinery throughput dropped to its lowest level since December 2009. That is not symbolism. That is economic bleeding. Oil and gas money are the oxygen tanks keeping the Russian state alive. Damage those facilities long enough, and the Kremlin starts coughing blood.

The funniest part, if war can ever be called funny, is the price tag. Some of these Ukrainian drones reportedly cost as little as £3,700. Russia responds by launching missiles worth hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars. Ukraine is basically forcing Russia into financial stupidity. It is the military version of making a billionaire spend $10,000 protecting a sandwich.

Then comes the paranoia, and this is where the story gets darker.

According to intelligence reports, Putin now spends increasing amounts of time buried inside underground bunkers far away from civilian life. Staff near him reportedly cannot carry internet-connected phones. Visitors face multiple layers of security checks. Even cooks, photographers, and bodyguards are under surveillance. That is not strength. That is fear sweating through a tailored suit.

History is ruthless to paranoid rulers. Joseph Stalin trusted almost nobody near the end of his life and unleashed purges that poisoned the Soviet system itself. Adolf Hitler disappeared into his Berlin bunker while Germany collapsed above him in 1945. Saddam Hussein bounced between safe houses before American soldiers finally yanked him from a filthy underground hole in 2003 looking more like a broken fugitive than a dictator. Power has a cruel sense of humor. The same men who once demanded giant military parades often end up hiding underground from ghosts they created themselves.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s shadow war inside Russia is turning senior Russian officials into nervous wrecks. Lt Gen Fanil Sarvarov reportedly died in a car bombing. Maj Gen Azatbek Omurbekov, the commander nicknamed the “Butcher of Bucha,” narrowly escaped assassination when a bomb hidden in a mailbox exploded in a fortified military settlement. Lt Gen Vladimir Alexeyev was reportedly shot several times in Moscow earlier this year. These are not random incidents. This is organized sabotage, intelligence warfare, and targeted terror. Somebody is hunting Russian officials on Russian soil.

Inside the Kremlin, the knives are already out. Reports suggest Gen Valery Gerasimov blasted FSB chief Alexander Bortnikov for failing to protect military personnel. Bortnikov reportedly fired back that the FSB lacked enough manpower and resources to stop the attacks. That exchange says everything. When security chiefs begin snarling at one another during wartime, trust is already rotting from the inside. A leaking boat does not sink because of the storm alone. It sinks because the crew starts fighting while water pours in.

And then there is the symbolism of May 9, Russia’s Victory Day parade. For years, Putin used that parade as political theater. Tanks rolled through Red Square. Fighter jets screamed overhead. Patriotic music blasted through Moscow while the Kremlin wrapped itself in the memory of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany. The parade became Putin’s yearly performance of strength and destiny.

Now even that sacred show looks shaky.

Russian officials reportedly reduced parts of the celebration because they fear Ukrainian drones could attack Red Square itself. Think about the humiliation. A nuclear superpower scared of buzzing drones disrupting its grand military parade. Zelensky twisted the knife publicly by mocking Moscow’s fear and suggesting Russia could not even hold a parade safely without Ukraine’s “goodwill.” That line hit like acid because it exposed the truth Putin hates most: the image of invincibility is cracking.

This war is also rewriting military doctrine before the eyes of the world. Massive armies and billion-dollar weapons systems no longer guarantee safety. Cheap drones, artificial intelligence, sabotage cells, and precision strikes are humiliating one of the world’s largest military powers. Military strategists in Washington, Beijing, London, and Tehran are studying this war like gamblers studying loaded dice.

Putin’s approval ratings reportedly dropped to 73%, low by his standards. In many countries, that number would look fantastic. In Putin’s Russia, it smells like erosion. His entire political brand rested on one promise: stability. Russians were told he would restore order, project strength, and make Russia feared again. But explosions near Moscow destroy that illusion one drone at a time.

What fascinates me most is not the physical destruction. Buildings can be rebuilt. Refineries can be repaired. Generals can be replaced. Fear is harder to fix. Fear crawls into the mind and stays there. It changes how leaders sleep, whom they trust, where they travel, and how often they stare over their shoulders.

Right now, the Kremlin no longer looks like the headquarters of a confident empire. It looks like a giant rat trap where everybody hears scratching behind the walls and nobody knows where the next explosion will come from.

 

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: Brief Book Series.

 

DIY Doomsday: When AI Starts Mixing Viruses Like Cocktails

 


AI is lowering the barrier to bioterrorism. You don’t need a lab—just a laptop and nerve. Models are getting smarter at designing pathogens, even if imperfectly. That’s the danger. The hope? Control the tools, slow the rollout, and tighten oversight before curiosity and anger turn into something lethal.

I will say it straight, no perfume, no padding. AI tools could enable bioterrorism. Not in some distant sci-fi script. Not in a classified bunker. Right here, in the same cheap laptop people use to watch cat videos and argue online. That’s the joke—and we’re the punchline.

A guy with zero lab training walks in angry, clicks a few prompts, and suddenly he’s talking like he swallowed a virology textbook. That’s not genius. That’s outsourcing intelligence to a machine that doesn’t know right from wrong. You don’t need to be a scientist anymore—you just need Wi-Fi and bad intentions. Give a fool a match, and he burns a stick. Give him a flamethrower, and he burns a city.

We already crossed the line where biology stopped being elite knowledge. Back in 2002, scientists built poliovirus from scratch using publicly available data and mail-order DNA. The cost was under $1,000. That was over 20 years ago. No AI. No CRISPR kits in online carts. No chatbot whispering instructions like a shady lab partner. Fast forward to now—genetic sequencing is cheaper, gene editing is easier, and the parts can be ordered like pizza toppings. You want enzymes? Delivered. You want DNA fragments? Delivered. You want guidance? Ask a machine that never sleeps.

And the machine answers.

In 2025, Britain’s AI Security Institute showed that major AI models could generate step-by-step protocols to synthesize viruses from genetic fragments. Around the same time, researchers at RAND proved that these models could assist with assembling poliovirus RNA—the kind of work that used to separate amateurs from real scientists. That gap is shrinking. Not closed—but shrinking fast. And a shrinking gap is just a door waiting to be kicked open.

Let me not lie to you—this is not a one-click apocalypse. Biology fights back. Cells don’t obey like code. Viruses don’t assemble just because someone typed “go.” Michael Imperiale, an American virologist and Professor Emeritus of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Michigan Medical School, said it clearly: moving from theory to practice is hard. Experiments fail. A lot. You need skill, patience, and the ability to diagnose what went wrong. That’s where most amateurs crash and burn.

But here’s the twist—AI is learning to sit beside you and say, “Try this instead.” That’s where the danger creeps in, slow and quiet.

The Virology Capabilities Test exposed something ugly. Human experts averaged 22% on tough troubleshooting questions. Novices using AI scored 28%. That’s already embarrassing. But the machines themselves scored between 55% and 61%. That’s not beginner luck—that’s competence. That’s a machine that knows enough to guide someone who doesn’t. You don’t need to know everything if your assistant does.

Still, before you start screaming “we’re doomed,” take a breath. Reality is messier than headlines. In a controlled study, 153 participants with little biology experience tried to perform virus-related lab tasks. AI didn’t magically turn them into lab wizards. Only 4 people with AI completed the tasks. The control group using just the internet had 5 successes. That’s not domination—that’s mediocrity wearing a lab coat.

But here’s the part people ignore—4 amateurs still managed to get through. Not many. Not zero either. That number matters. Because risk doesn’t need a crowd. It needs one stubborn fool who doesn’t quit.

Now let me hit you with the real flaw—AI lies with confidence. It gives answers that sound right but are wrong. It builds castles on sand and tells you they’re concrete. In tests, models encouraged bad scientific ideas instead of shutting them down. Experts proposed nonsense, and the AI polished it like it was gold. That’s not intelligence—that’s a hype man with no conscience.

And yet, here’s the dirty truth—AI is improving. Fast.

Anthropic’s internal tests showed that PhD-level scientists using AI worked faster and produced better experimental protocols. Not perfect—far from it—but better. That means the real risk isn’t the clueless amateur. It’s the semi-competent user getting a boost. Give a rookie a hint, and he learns. Give a trained mind a shortcut, and he accelerates.

And then there’s the next wave—AI that designs DNA directly. Not essays. Not code. DNA. These systems can generate genetic sequences with specific traits. A U.S. Department of Defense-backed study warned that such tools could eventually design pathogens that are more transmissible, more virulent, and harder to stop. That’s not fear-mongering—that’s trajectory analysis.

Let me translate: the tools are evolving faster than the rules.

We’ve seen this pattern before. Nuclear physics gave us power plants and Hiroshima. Chemistry gave us antibiotics and gas chambers. Technology doesn’t come with morals. It comes with options. Humans choose how ugly it gets.

Now here’s where I refuse to play the helpless victim. There is hope—but it’s not soft, feel-good hope. It’s hard, disciplined control.

Companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google have already started tightening access and safety filters. Anthropic even restricted access to a powerful model when it sensed potential misuse. That’s not kindness—that’s self-defense. They know what they’re sitting on.

Governments also have tools, even if they move like old engines. The Biological Weapons Convention already bans development of such weapons, but enforcement needs teeth. DNA synthesis companies can screen orders. Labs can be monitored. Access to high-risk tools can be restricted. None of this is perfect—but it’s friction. And friction matters.

Because here’s the thing—bioterrorism isn’t just about knowledge. It’s about execution. And execution needs time, space, materials, and stability. Interrupt any of those, and the plan collapses.

We can also slow down AI deployment when risks spike. That’s the uncomfortable truth nobody in tech wants to admit. Speed is worshipped like a god, but sometimes speed is stupidity in disguise. In just 6 months, 4 new advanced models appeared with improved biological reasoning. That’s not steady progress—that’s a sprint with blindfolds.

When the engine is overheating, you don’t floor it—you ease off or you crash.

So here’s my bottom line, stripped clean.

AI tools could enable bioterrorism. That risk is real, measurable, and growing. Leading models are already getting better at designing and troubleshooting biological systems, even if they still make critical mistakes. The barrier isn’t gone—but it’s dropping, inch by inch.

But we are not powerless. Not yet.

Control the tools. Slow the release when necessary. Monitor the pipelines. Invest in detection. And most importantly—stop pretending this is someone else’s problem.

Because the scariest part isn’t the machine. It’s the human behind the keyboard.

And humans, last time I checked, don’t always play nice.

 

On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  “Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Monday, May 4, 2026

Numbers Don’t Lie—People Do: How America Is Bleeding Billions by Killing Its Own Data

 


Bad data is economic poison: falling survey trust and political attacks on statisticians trigger uncertainty, crush investment, and burn billions—proving reliable numbers are the backbone of economic survival and growth.

 I’m going to say it straight, no polish, no perfume: when the numbers rot, the economy rots with them. This is not theory, not classroom talk—this is a live wire. You touch it, you get burned. Right now, America is playing games with its own data, and the bill is already showing up in lost jobs and vanished billions.

Let’s start with the quiet crime nobody wants to admit. People have stopped talking. The Current Population Survey used to get about 90% response. Now it’s below 70%. The Consumer Expenditure Survey? It dropped from about 70% to 40%. That’s not a dip—that’s a collapse. That means the data feeding GDP, inflation, and job reports is thinner, weaker, and more guesswork than fact. And yet, everyone is still acting like the numbers are gospel. That’s not confidence—that’s denial dressed up in a suit.

I’ve seen how decisions get made at the top. Nobody invests billions based on vibes. They look at data. If the data stinks, the decisions stink. It’s that simple. When numbers lose credibility, money freezes. Businesses hold back. Hiring slows. Expansion plans die quietly in boardrooms. Garbage in, garbage out—no PhD needed.

Now comes the second punch: politics barging in like it owns the place. On August 1, 2025, Donald Trump fired Erika McEntarfer, the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and threw out accusations that job numbers were “rigged.” No proof, just noise. That move didn’t just fire a person—it torched trust.

And trust is everything.

Within 7 days, the Economic Policy Uncertainty index jumped 50%. That’s not normal market behavior—that’s panic in a suit and tie. Markets don’t like confusion. They don’t like drama. They definitely don’t like leaders calling official data fake. So they react the only way they know how: they pull back.

Nicholas Bloom and Erica Groshen, two well-respected U.S. economists,  didn’t sugarcoat it. Their model shows that kind of uncertainty cuts deep. The hit was over $100 billion in GDP and about 168,000 jobs. Gone. Not delayed—gone. Even after stripping out other factors, the damage still sits around $20 billion and 31,000 jobs. That’s not background noise. That’s a direct invoice for messing with credibility.

Let me translate that into street language: talk is cheap, but bad talk is expensive.

And don’t pretend this is some one-off drama. We’ve seen this movie before. Argentina tried to play smart by underreporting inflation. They thought they could fake stability. Investors saw through it. Interest rates shot up. Trust collapsed. The country paid the price in capital flight and economic chaos. That’s what happens when you lie with numbers—markets don’t argue, they punish.

Greece did the same thing before 2009. They cooked their deficit numbers. For a while, it worked—until it didn’t. When the truth came out, borrowing costs exploded, and the economy went into a tailspin. That wasn’t bad luck. That was self-inflicted damage.

Even in the 2008 financial crisis, bad data played its role. Risk models built on weak assumptions told banks everything was fine. It wasn’t. When reality hit, trillions vanished. That’s what happens when you trust numbers that shouldn’t be trusted.

So when I hear people shrug at falling survey responses or cheer when politicians attack statisticians, I don’t clap. I get nervous. Because I know what’s coming next. Here’s the ugly truth nobody wants to say out loud: data is power, but only if people believe it. Once belief cracks, the whole system starts to wobble. And right now, belief is under attack from both sides. Citizens are ghosting surveys, and politicians are torching credibility. That’s a deadly combo.

You can’t run a modern economy on vibes and accusations.

Businesses need clean signals. Investors need reliable numbers. Policymakers need facts they can stand on. Take that away, and you turn decision-making into gambling. And gamblers don’t build stable economies—they burn them. The scariest part? This kind of damage doesn’t come with sirens. It creeps in quietly. First, data gets weaker. Then decisions get slower. Then growth stalls. Then layoffs begin. By the time people notice, the damage is already done.

And here’s the kicker that should make anyone stop and think: Bloom’s study shows that every $1 spent on the Bureau of Labor Statistics returns about $25 in economic value. That’s not a cost—that’s a gold mine. Yet we treat it like a punching bag.

That’s not just foolish—it’s reckless.

I’m not here to make this sound nice. This is not a polite debate about data quality. This is a fight over whether the economy runs on truth or on noise. Right now, noise is winning more rounds than it should.

When you blindfold the driver, don’t act surprised when the car crashes.

So here’s where I land, and I’m not softening it: when statistics collapse, economies bleed. Low survey response weakens the data. Political interference poisons trust. Together, they create uncertainty. That uncertainty kills investment, slashes GDP, and wipes out jobs.

No spin. No excuses. Just cause and effect. We can either fix the data, protect the institutions, and rebuild trust—or we can keep playing this game and watch the economy pay the price. And trust me, the economy always pays.

 

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: Brief Book Series.

 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Clap Louder, Think Less: Inside the Praise Machine of Donald Trump’s Cabinet

 


The level of sycophancy in Donald Trump’s cabinet is not just irritating—it’s embarrassing. These are cabinet members, not backup singers. The people who are supposed to challenge, advise, and, when necessary, push back. Yet every time they open their mouths on TV, the script is the same. Praise the President. Sprinkle a few policy crumbs. Then go back to praising the President.

I’m not sitting in some press room with a badge on my chest.  I sit in my living room, remote in hand, watching interviews, watching speeches, watching grown men with serious jobs talk like they’re trying to win a praise contest. And what I see is not leadership—it’s performance. Bad performance.

The level of sycophancy around Donald Trump is not normal. It is irritating. It is ridiculous. These are cabinet members, not backup singers. Yet every time they open their mouths on TV, the script is the same. Praise the President. Sprinkle a few policy crumbs. Then go back to praising the President. It’s like watching a broken jukebox stuck on one song—“All Hail Trump, Remix Version.”

I watch Howard Lutnick speak. Commerce Secretary. Big title. Big responsibility. The kind of role that should come with hard numbers, sharp answers, clear direction. But instead of walking me through trade balances, job creation, or manufacturing output, he starts with applause. Not literal clapping—but verbal clapping. “The President’s leadership…” “The President’s vision…” I’m sitting there thinking, “Sir, I didn’t tune in for a thank-you speech. I want to know what you’re doing with the economy.” If you spend all your time polishing the crown, the kingdom will rust.

Then comes Marco Rubio, Secretary of State. Foreign policy. Wars. Alliances. Real stakes. A reporter asks a direct question about global tensions. Instead of hitting the issue head-on, Rubio takes a detour through Praise Avenue. Same script. Same tone. Same pattern. I’m not impressed. I’m irritated. The world is not a campaign rally. Diplomacy is not a fan club.

And then Scott Bessent, the Treasury Secretary. This is the money man. Inflation, debt, taxes—the backbone of the economy. The U.S. national debt has crossed $34 trillion. Inflation has hit levels that squeezed households in recent years. These are hard facts. Cold numbers. But when the answer starts with praise instead of numbers, I already know where it’s going. Nowhere fast.

Doug Burgum at Interior doesn’t break the pattern either. Energy, land, resources—serious business. But again, the same routine plays out. Praise first. Substance later. Sometimes barely any substance at all. It’s like ordering a full meal and getting a plate of compliments instead.

Let me say this clearly so nobody twists my words: I am a Republican. I voted for Trump. I’m not here to play fake neutral. But I’m also not blind. I don’t clap just because someone tells me to clap. When Trump gets it right, I say it. Border security? Stronger approach—good. Iran policy? Tougher stance—good. But when he gets it wrong, I say that too. His tariff policy? Problematic. Tariffs are not magic. They are taxes. Basic economics—raise costs on imports, prices go up. Consumers pay. Businesses adjust. That’s not politics. That’s simple math. And his relationship with Vladimir Putin? That one doesn’t sit right. You don’t claim strength while getting cozy with a war criminal. History has a way of punishing that kind of mixed signal. You can’t shake hands with one hand and hide your guard with the other.

But this is bigger than Trump. This is about the people around him. The people who are supposed to challenge, advise, and, when necessary, push back. Instead, what I see is a room full of nodding heads. And that is dangerous.

There’s a concept in psychology—groupthink. Irving Janis, an American social psychologist, studied it. When everyone agrees, when nobody questions the leader, bad decisions multiply. That’s not theory. That’s history. The Bay of Pigs in 1961 collapsed partly because people around John F. Kennedy didn’t push hard enough against flawed plans. Fast forward decades later, different administrations, same pattern—too much agreement, not enough challenge, and the cost is real.

Even outside politics, the lesson is the same. Enron collapsed in 2001, wiping out $74 billion in value. Executives praised each other while the numbers rotted underneath. Nobody wanted to be the one to say, “This doesn’t make sense.” And when nobody speaks up, the truth dies quietly.

That’s what worries me when I watch these interviews. Not just the praise itself, but what it replaces. It replaces honesty. It replaces clarity. It replaces accountability. These officials are not paid to flatter. They are paid to explain, to lead, to answer hard questions with hard facts. Instead, I hear speeches that sound like they were written by a praise machine. Start with Trump. End with Trump. Sprinkle a little policy in the middle like seasoning. It’s predictable. It’s tiring. It’s weak.

I didn’t grow up thinking this was how American leadership works. This country was built on debate, disagreement, and sharp questions. Presidents are not kings. Cabinet members are not courtiers. They are supposed to serve the public, not perform loyalty rituals on TV.

And here’s the truth nobody wants to say out loud: a leader surrounded by constant praise becomes weaker, not stronger. If nobody challenges you, you stop improving. If nobody questions you, you start believing you’re always right. That’s how mistakes grow legs and start running.

I’m not asking for disrespect. I’m asking for balance. Respect the President, yes. But do your job. Answer the question. Give the numbers. Explain the policy. Stop turning every interview into a tribute show. Because right now, what I see is simple: too much applause, not enough answers. And when the applause gets louder than the truth, something is already going wrong.

 

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: Brief Book Series.

 

When Brains Go on Vacation: The Silent Coup of AI Over Human Judgment

 


AI is smart, but it’s making people lazy thinkers. The more we trust it, the less we question it—even when it’s wrong. Managers must stop turning workers into button-clickers and force them to think before their brains go on permanent vacation.

I have seen this movie before. Different cast, same plot. First it was calculators. Then GPS. Then Google. Now it’s AI—the smooth-talking, always-confident assistant that never blinks, never hesitates, and rarely admits it’s wrong. And here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to say out loud: AI isn’t just helping—it’s quietly replacing human judgment. People now swallow answers like gospel, even when the nonsense is staring them straight in the face.

I’m not guessing. I’m watching it happen in real time.

Let’s rewind. Calculators were supposed to make us better at math. In many ways, they did. Students got faster. Confidence went up. But then Mark LaCour ran that quiet little experiment in 2019. He fed students wrong answers through calculators. Not crazy wrong—just slightly off. And what happened? Silence. No alarms. No raised eyebrows. Even when the answers looked ridiculous, people nodded and moved on. Garbage in, gospel out. That’s when I knew something was off.

Then came GPS. The miracle guide. No more maps. No more getting lost. Just follow the voice and arrive. Except there’s a catch. Louisa Dahmani and VĆ©ronique Bohbot found that heavy GPS users had weaker spatial memory. Translation: the more you rely on the machine, the less your brain remembers how to navigate. I’ve seen drivers follow GPS straight into dead ends, lakes, even restricted military zones. The screen says “turn,” and they turn—common sense be damned. When the brain sleeps, the machine becomes king.

Now add the internet. The so-called “Google effect.” People don’t remember what they can easily search. Why bother storing information when it’s one click away? Memory becomes optional. Thinking becomes negotiable. The brain starts outsourcing itself.

Then AI shows up—and it doesn’t knock. It kicks the door open.

Unlike calculators or GPS, AI doesn’t just give directions or numbers. It talks. It explains. It sounds smart—too smart. It writes essays, diagnoses problems, drafts legal arguments, analyzes data, and answers questions with the confidence of a seasoned expert. That confidence is the trap. Because confidence sells—even when it’s wrong.

Steven Shaw and Gideon Nave, who are researchers at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania,  didn’t mince words when they called it “cognitive surrender.” That’s not a metaphor. That’s a warning shot. In their experiment, people using AI performed better when the AI was right. No surprise there. But when the AI was wrong, they didn’t just slip—they crashed. They did worse than people who used their own brains. Why? Because they stopped thinking. They handed over the wheel and went to sleep.

I’ve seen this play out in offices. A young analyst pulls up an AI-generated report. Clean. Polished. Impressive. But buried inside is a faulty assumption that poisons the entire conclusion. I ask, “Did you check the logic?” He shrugs. “The system generated it.” That’s the new defense. Not “I made a mistake.” Not “I didn’t know.” Just blind faith in a machine.

We’ve gone from thinking tools to thinking replacements.

And managers? Most of them are clapping. Faster output. Lower costs. More efficiency. They push employees to use AI like it’s oxygen. “Integrate it. Leverage it. Optimize it.” Nobody asks what it’s doing to the human mind. Nobody asks what happens when workers forget how to think.

Let me spell it out. When people rely on AI for answers, they stop questioning. When they stop questioning, they stop learning. And when they stop learning, they become dependent. That’s not productivity. That’s intellectual atrophy.

A  chess study by Stefanos Poulidis, a researcher and academic affiliated with INSEAD, one of the world’s leading graduate business schools, should scare anyone paying attention. Students who could access AI tips anytime performed less than half as well as those who had limited access. Less than half. Think about that. The more help they had, the worse they got. Because they leaned on the machine instead of building their own skill. Too much help becomes a handicap.

This isn’t new. In 1983, David Dunning and Justin Kruger later formalized what we now call the Dunning-Kruger effect: people with low ability overestimate their competence. AI pours gasoline on that fire. It gives weak thinkers strong-sounding answers. Now they don’t just think they’re right—they have “evidence” to back it up. Wrong answers, dressed in a suit and tie.

And let’s not pretend AI is flawless. Studies from 2023 and 2024 showed that large language models can produce “hallucinations”—confident but false statements—at rates ranging from 3% to 27%, depending on the task. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a landmine. Yet people read those outputs and nod like it’s scripture.

I’ve watched people accept fake legal cases, fabricated data, and imaginary citations because the AI said so. No verification. No skepticism. Just quiet obedience. When the lie sounds smooth, truth doesn’t stand a chance.

So what’s the fix? It’s not banning AI. That’s foolish. AI is powerful. It can make us better—if we stay awake. But that’s the condition: we must stay awake. Managers need to stop hiring button-clickers. They need thinkers—people who enjoy wrestling with problems, not outsourcing them. Shaw’s research shows that people with a high “need for cognition” are less likely to surrender. They question. They doubt. They push back. That’s the kind of employee who won’t let a machine run the show.

Incentives matter too. When people are rewarded for accuracy—not speed—they start paying attention again. In Shaw’s experiment, adding feedback and rewards made users more likely to override bad AI answers. Not perfect, but better. It’s a start.

And here’s the part nobody likes: sometimes you need to cut the machine off. AI-free zones. AI-free tasks. Let the brain sweat again. Because a brain that never struggles becomes a brain that can’t.

I’m not romanticizing the past. I’m not saying we should go back to paper maps and manual calculations. I’m saying we need to stop pretending that convenience comes without cost. Every time we offload thinking, we pay a price. The question is whether we notice before the bill comes due. Right now, I see a generation growing up that knows how to prompt, but not how to think. They can generate answers in seconds, but can’t tell if those answers make sense. They trust the machine more than their own judgment. That’s not progress. That’s surrender.

Offloading is fine. Giving up is another matter. And make no mistake—if leaders don’t wake workers up, we won’t just lose skills. We’ll lose something deeper. The ability to question. To doubt. To think. Because once the brain goes on permanent vacation, it doesn’t send a postcard.

 

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: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Spirit Airlines Didn’t Crash—It Was Strangled: Cheap Fares, Dumb Policies, and a Market That Eats Its Weak

 


The recent collapse of Spirit Airlines exposes a brutal truth: cheap fares alone cannot sustain airlines when competitors match pricing, costs surge, and policy blocks consolidation, ultimately shifting the burden onto stranded passengers, job losses, and industry-wide restructuring pressures.

Spirit Airlines didn’t “cease operations.” It got choked out—slow, ugly, and in public. One minute you’re boarding, the next minute you’re staring at a dead app, a dead phone line, and a credit card bill that suddenly feels like a bad joke. That soft, polite message—“we regret to inform you”—is corporate code for “you’re on your own.” And just like that, planes stop, workers scatter, and passengers get dumped like yesterday’s luggage.

Seventeen thousand jobs gone. Not “affected.” Gone. Fourteen thousand employees and a whole chain of contractors, airport workers, and vendors watching their paychecks disappear in real time. And don’t let anyone distract you with feel-good talk about rehiring. Sure, there’s a pilot shortage. Sure, flight attendants might land somewhere else. But tonight, those people aren’t flying—they’re filing for unemployment. A bird in hand is worth two in the bush, but Spirit just took the bird, the bush, and the sky.

Then there’s the passenger circus. I hear that Atlanta traveler loud and clear. “American Airlines is $1,300.” That’s not a fare. That’s highway robbery at 30,000 feet. No refund yet. No help. No answers. She’s got a cruise booked, daughters ready, money already burned—and now she’s stuck paying twice for the same trip. That’s the real story. Not boardrooms. Not bankruptcy filings. Real people getting squeezed because a system built on cheap promises couldn’t survive real costs.

And don’t come at me with “it happened suddenly.” That’s nonsense. This thing was rotting for years. Spirit filed Chapter 11 in November 2024, crawled out in March, and then went right back under months later. That’s not recovery—that’s a patient on life support being wheeled out too early. The warning signs weren’t subtle. They were screaming.

People want a simple villain, so they point at fuel. Yes, fuel spiked. Jet fuel can eat up about 25% to 30% of airline costs. When oil prices jump, airlines bleed. But fuel didn’t kill Spirit. Fuel just finished the job. The real killer was competition—cold, ruthless, and predictable.

Here’s the part nobody wants to admit. Spirit’s entire identity was “we’re cheaper than everyone else.” That worked until everyone else decided to play the same game. Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and American Airlines rolled out basic economy fares that looked suspiciously like Spirit’s model—minus the stigma. Same tight seats, same fees, but backed by bigger networks, better schedules, and loyalty programs that actually mean something.

So what happens when the giants copy your only trick? You’re done. When the hunter learns your path, the forest is no longer safe. Spirit wasn’t competing anymore—it was being replaced in real time.

Now let’s talk about the move that really sealed the coffin. The blocked merger with JetBlue. That deal was Spirit’s last real shot. More routes. More scale. A fighting chance. But regulators stepped in and said no, arguing it would hurt competition. That’s the kind of logic that sounds smart in a courtroom and looks stupid in hindsight. Because what happened next? The competitor they were trying to “protect” is now gone.

Let me say it clearly. Policy decisions don’t sit quietly in the background. They shape outcomes. They pick winners and losers. Blocking that merger didn’t protect competition—it erased it. And once Spirit lost that lifeline, the clock started ticking faster.

Look at the structure of the U.S. airline industry. The top 4 carriers control more than 80% of the domestic market. That’s not a playground. That’s a cage match. And in that kind of environment, being small isn’t charming—it’s fatal. You need scale to negotiate fuel, to absorb shocks, to survive bad quarters. Spirit had none of that.

History backs this up. Pan Am collapsed in 1991. TWA disappeared in 2001. More recently, AirTran got swallowed by Southwest Airlines. Airlines don’t “stay small and thrive.” They merge, grow, or die. Those are the only options. Spirit tried to stay small and cheap in a market that rewards big and flexible. That’s not strategy—that’s denial.

And once the fall starts, it’s fast. Always fast. Airlines don’t die slowly because the moment passengers sense trouble, bookings drop. Cash dries up. Vendors pull back. It becomes a free fall. That’s why everything shuts down overnight. Not because it’s dramatic, but because it’s the only way to stop the bleeding.

I hear people say the major airlines are safe. Well-capitalized. Structured. Stable. Sure, for now. But don’t confuse stability with immunity. The same pressures are still there—fuel volatility, geopolitical shocks, price wars. Today it’s Spirit. Tomorrow it could be someone else who misreads the room.

Let’s stop pretending this was bad luck. It wasn’t. It was math. Thin margins plus rising costs plus copied pricing plus blocked expansion equals collapse. Simple equation. No mystery.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth I keep coming back to. Cheap isn’t always cheap. That $39 ticket comes with hidden risks. Limited flexibility. Weak support. No cushion when things go wrong. And when the system breaks, you pay the real price—$1,300 rebookings, missed vacations, drained savings. Penny wise, pound foolish—and this time, the pound hits hard.

I don’t feel sorry for the business model. It gambled and lost. I feel sorry for the people caught in it—the workers who showed up, the families who trusted it, the passengers now stuck holding tickets that mean nothing.

So let’s call it what it is. Spirit didn’t just collapse—it exposed the game. Ultra-low-cost flying isn’t built to survive a crowded, high-cost, policy-heavy market. It works until it doesn’t. And when it stops working, it doesn’t bend—it breaks.

And the next time someone flashes a dirt-cheap fare in your face, I want you to ask one simple question. When this deal goes south, who’s really paying for it? Because if Spirit taught us anything, it’s this: the cheapest seat in the sky can become the most expensive mistake on the ground.

 

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: Brief Book Series.

 

The United Nations Has Become a Five-Star Hotel for Hypocrites

  The United Nations has become a polished global theater where oppressive regimes lecture free nations about morality while American taxpay...