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 Chávez and Nicolás 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.

 

The Most Dangerous Thing in America Isn't a Gun—It's a Mouth

 


The day Americans stop defending free speech is the day freedom starts dying—and most people won't notice until they are afraid to speak their own minds. America’s  freedom of speech protects idiots, geniuses, rebels, and critics alike. Kill it, and everyone eventually gets gagged. Hence, if free speech dies, truth goes underground, fear takes over, and power becomes the only voice left standing.

Freedom is America's favorite drug. It always has been. Americans breathe it, worship it, sue over it, protest for it, and sometimes torch entire city blocks while arguing about it. Freedom is the national religion that pretends it isn't a religion. Strip away the flags, the slogans, the campaign speeches, and the chest-thumping patriotism, and you eventually arrive at a single piece of constitutional real estate that carries more weight than its modest size suggests: the First Amendment.

Just 45 words.

That is it.

Forty-five words standing between a free society and a society where powerful people decide what everyone else is allowed to think, say, read, hear, publish, or believe.

As an immigrant from Nigeria and a college professor in America, I find that remarkable.

In many countries, including my country of origin Nigeria, people speak carefully because they fear consequences. They lower their voices. They look over their shoulders. They master the art of saying something without actually saying it. They become political acrobats, balancing truth and survival on the same tightrope.

America is different. Here, people do not merely speak. They roar. Sometimes they roar intelligently. Sometimes they roar stupidly. Sometimes they roar like a drunk man arguing with a parking meter. The point is that they are allowed to roar. That freedom drives many Americans crazy.

Freedom of speech is probably the most irritating freedom ever invented because it protects speech we hate just as much as speech we love. If freedom only protected popular opinions, it would not be freedom. It would be customer service.

The true test of free speech is not whether you support the opinions you like. The true test is whether you can tolerate the opinions that make your blood pressure climb faster than a rocket launch.

History proves this point.

During the colonial era, criticism of government could land people in serious trouble. In 1735, printer John Peter Zenger was charged with seditious libel after criticizing New York's colonial governor. His eventual acquittal became an early symbol of press freedom in America. Long before the Constitution existed, Americans were already fighting over who had the right to criticize authority.

Nothing has changed. Only the technology has. The battlefield moved from pamphlets to newspapers, from newspapers to radio, from radio to television, and from television to social media. The weapons changed, but the war remained the same.

Who gets to speak?

Who gets silenced?

Who decides?

Every generation fights the same ugly family argument.

The First Amendment protects freedom of religion because government should not be in the business of picking winners and losers in matters of faith. It protects freedom of the press because politicians naturally dislike journalists who expose their mistakes. It protects peaceful assembly because people occasionally need to gather and tell their leaders that they are making a complete mess of things. It protects petition because citizens must be able to demand change without asking permission from the very people they are criticizing.

And then there is freedom of speech. The troublemaker. The loudmouth. The constitutional equivalent of that relative who says exactly what everyone else is afraid to say at Thanksgiving dinner.

Americans often claim to love free speech until someone actually uses it. Then suddenly everyone starts searching for exceptions.

History is littered with examples. During World War I, thousands of Americans faced legal consequences for anti-war speech. During the Cold War, accusations and blacklists destroyed careers. During various periods of social unrest, governments, universities, corporations, and activist groups have all attempted, at one time or another, to limit speech they viewed as dangerous.

Notice something? The attackers come from every direction. The threat is never owned by one political tribe. Sometimes the pressure comes from government. Sometimes it comes from corporations. Sometimes it comes from activists. Sometimes it comes from angry mobs.

Everyone wants free speech for themselves. Many people become far less enthusiastic when free speech protects their opponents. That is where the hypocrisy enters the room. It strolls in wearing expensive shoes and pretending not to be hypocrisy.

According to surveys conducted by the Pew Research Center over the years, substantial numbers of Americans have expressed concern that people are increasingly afraid to say what they truly believe because of potential social, professional, or political consequences. Whether those fears are justified in every case is beside the point. The fear itself matters. A society does not need formal censorship to create silence. Sometimes social punishment does the job just fine.

I tell my students that freedom is like a muscle. Use it or lose it. A right that sits unused eventually becomes a museum exhibit. People admire it. People photograph it. People talk about how important it once was. But nobody actually exercises it. That is dangerous.

The beauty of America is not that everyone agrees. The beauty is that they do not. The country was born arguing. It remains alive arguing. Americans argue about religion, race, taxes, immigration, education, abortion, guns, foreign policy, climate change, and who should be blamed for the price of eggs. The arguments never stop.

Good.

That is exactly how a free society is supposed to sound. Freedom is noisy. Freedom is inconvenient. Freedom is messy. Freedom occasionally says things that are offensive, foolish, ignorant, arrogant, and flat-out ridiculous.

The alternative is worse. Far worse.

As someone who grew up in Nigeria and later built a life in America, I recognize something many native-born Americans sometimes overlook. The freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment are not normal throughout human history. They are unusual. They are fragile. They are expensive. Generations of Americans fought political battles, legal battles, and cultural battles to preserve them.

That is why I smile whenever someone complains that America has "too much freedom." Too much freedom? That is like complaining that a parachute has too much fabric while falling from an airplane.

The truth is simpler. Freedom is not America's weakness. It is America's superpower. It attracts dreamers, entrepreneurs, dissidents, refugees, inventors, artists, and loudmouth professors from every corner of the planet. It attracts people who want the opportunity to think for themselves and speak for themselves.

Including me.

After all, I am an immigrant from Nigeria who came to America, became a college professor, and now gets paid to express opinions that some people love and others cannot stand.

That is not a bug in the American system. That is the system working exactly as intended. And if that occasionally annoys people?

Good.

Freedom was never designed to make us comfortable.

It was designed to keep us free.

 

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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

The Yahoo Boys' Gold Rush: Why do Westerners Keep Falling for Love Scams?

 


The Yahoo Boys have discovered the world's most profitable gold mine: lonely hearts. They don't dig for gold—they mine affection, and the payouts can be worth millions. In plain terms, Cupid has a new business partner: the Yahoo Boys. One shoots arrows, the other sends invoices. Together, they built a billion-dollar heartbreak factory.

Why do Westerners keep falling for love scams? The answer is so simple that many people refuse to accept it. Romance fraud is driven by poverty in West Africa and loneliness in the West. That's it. No grand conspiracy. No army of criminal geniuses with IQs higher than rocket scientists. No secret psychological formula stolen from a government laboratory. Just poor people chasing money and lonely people chasing affection. Put them together on the internet and you have one of the most profitable businesses on earth.

As the old saying goes, a hungry man will eat anything, and a lonely heart will believe almost anything. The modern romance scam is simply that proverb wearing Wi-Fi.

Carlos Barragán's book The Yahoo Boys shines a flashlight into a dark alley many people would rather not walk through. His mother, Silvia, a Spanish dentist, met a handsome American soldier named Brian on Tinder. Brian sent sweet messages. Brian talked about love. Brian talked about the future. Brian painted pictures of romance so thick you could spread them on toast. Silvia believed him. She even bought wedding rings.

There was only one problem. Brian did not exist.

The brave American soldier was actually a scammer sitting in Lagos, Nigeria. The romance was fake. The future was fake. The soldier was fake. The only thing that was real was the money that would eventually be requested.

People hear stories like this and immediately ask the wrong question. They ask, "How can anyone be that stupid?" That question misses the point entirely. The better question is, "How lonely must someone be to believe this?" There is a difference.

According to the Federal Trade Commission, Americans lost nearly $1.5 billion to romance scams in 2025 alone. Read that figure again. Nearly $1.5 billion. That is not a side hustle. That is an industry. In Britain, reports of romance fraud jumped by almost 33% in a single year. Some victims lost as much as £1 million. At that point, Cupid is not carrying arrows anymore. He is carrying a cash register.

The uncomfortable truth is that millions of people in the West are starving emotionally. They have smartphones, streaming services, grocery stores packed with food, heated homes, air conditioning, and enough entertainment to last several lifetimes. Yet many cannot find somebody to genuinely care about them. They scroll through social media watching other people's vacations, weddings, anniversaries, and smiling family photographs. They have hundreds of online connections and nobody to call when life falls apart. They are drowning in communication and dying of loneliness.

Then comes a message.

"Good morning, beautiful."

Three words.

That is all it takes.

Not because the message is brilliant. Not because the scammer is clever. Because the target is hungry.

A starving man does not inspect bread very carefully.

Barragán expected to find sophisticated criminal organizations in Nigeria. Instead, he found something much uglier and much simpler. He found poverty. He found young men with few opportunities and fewer prospects. He found teenagers staring at computers in rough neighborhoods, hunting for dollars the same way fishermen hunt for fish.

In Lagos, many of these fraudsters are known as Yahoo Boys, a nickname born from the Yahoo email accounts they once used. Some work alone. Some copy scripts from friends. Some barely finish school. Many spend entire nights online while their parents sleep. They are not financial wizards. They are not criminal masterminds. They are salesmen selling fantasy.

And business is booming.

Barragán met a 14-year-old tailor's apprentice named Azeez. For him, a $10 gift card from a British victim was worth more than his family's monthly rent. Think about that. A Western victim may spend $10 on coffee without remembering it an hour later. For a struggling teenager in Lagos, that same $10 can feel like a winning lottery ticket.

This does not excuse the fraud. A thief is a thief. A scammer is a scammer. Calling a victim a "client" does not magically transform theft into customer service. If I pick your pocket, I am not conducting a financial transaction. I am stealing your money. Yet human beings have always been masters of self-deception. The Yahoo Boys call victims "clients" because criminals prefer mirrors that flatter them.

The irony is thick enough to choke on. The lonely widow in Ohio wants companionship. The unemployed teenager in Lagos wants money. One logs in searching for love. The other logs in searching for rent money. Both are desperate. One sells fantasy. The other buys it. The internet simply acts as the cashier.

What shocked Barragán most was not the sophistication of the scams. It was their simplicity. Many Yahoo Boys recycle the same tired stories. They pretend to be soldiers. Doctors. Engineers. Widowers. Single fathers. Humanitarian workers. Their scripts are often as predictable as daytime television. A sick child suddenly appears. A bank account gets frozen. A shipment gets delayed. A medical emergency emerges from nowhere. Money is needed immediately.

Yet these stories continue to work.

Why?

Because lonely people are not conducting criminal investigations. They are conducting emotional rescue missions. They desperately want the story to be true. Hope blinds faster than darkness.

The internet did not create this weakness. Human nature did. Long before dating apps existed, con artists sold fake gold mines, fake investments, fake miracle cures, and fake religions. The product changes. The customer does not. Human beings remain vulnerable to promises that soothe their fears and feed their desires.

Artificial intelligence is about to make this entire mess even worse. A human scammer gets tired. AI does not. A human scammer can juggle a few victims. AI can juggle thousands. AI can write personalized messages, generate convincing photographs, imitate voices, and manufacture affection twenty-four hours a day. The future scammer may not need charm. He may need software.

Yet the greatest joke may be on the scammers themselves. AI companions are already becoming digital boyfriends and girlfriends for millions of users. These virtual partners never ask for wire transfers. They never invent sick children. They never claim to have discovered gold bars in Syria. They simply provide attention on demand.

Think about how bizarre this is. Humanity may soon replace fake human relationships with fake computer relationships because the fake computer relationships are more honest.

That sounds like satire, but it is rapidly becoming reality.

The final lesson here is brutally simple. Romance scams are not primarily a technology problem. They are not primarily a Nigerian problem. They are not primarily a dating-app problem. They are a human problem. As long as poverty creates people desperate for money, scammers will exist. As long as loneliness creates people desperate for affection, victims will exist.

One side is hungry for cash.

The other side is hungry for love.

The internet merely arranges the blind date.

And every day, somewhere in the world, another lonely heart swipes right while another empty pocket waits patiently on the other side of the screen.

 

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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Friday, June 19, 2026

Peace Deal—or Strategic Surrender? The Biggest Blunder of Trump’s Presidency

 


President Trump's latest peace deal with Iran may have traded American leverage for empty promises, handing a dangerous regime cash, legitimacy, and time while leaving the world exposed to an even bigger future crisis. To me, this peace deal stinks.

I have watched politicians sell bad deals before. They usually wrap them in shiny paper, slap the word “peace” on the box, and hope nobody opens it until after the cameras leave. This latest peace deal between President Donald Trump and Iran feels exactly like that. The ribbon is red, white, and blue. The box says “peace.” But when I shake it, I hear the same old rattling sound coming from Tehran.

To me, this deal stinks.

It smells like capitulation. It smells like appeasement. Worst of all, it makes America look stupid enough to believe that a blood-thirsty regime with a long history of hostility can suddenly be transformed by cash, investment, and promises scribbled on paper.

The theory behind the deal is simple. Iran gets access to money. Lots of money. Frozen assets get released. Sanctions get lifted. Oil exports flow again. Reconstruction funds begin piling up. In exchange, Iran supposedly abandons its ambitions for a nuclear weapon.

That sounds wonderful—if you believe every snake becomes a garden hose after a good meal.

I don't.

The entire agreement appears built on one dangerous assumption: that Iran wants money more than power.

That assumption is the crack in the foundation.

For decades, the Iranian regime has demonstrated that power, ideology, regional influence, and survival matter far more than economic comfort. If money alone changed governments, Iran would have transformed years ago. The country has endured sanctions, inflation, international isolation, and economic pain while continuing to fund regional proxies and pursue strategic ambitions. That is not the behavior of a government obsessed primarily with prosperity. That is the behavior of a government obsessed with power.

History is littered with leaders who convinced themselves that hostile regimes could be bought off. Sometimes it worked temporarily. Often it failed spectacularly.

The ghost of British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain still haunts every serious discussion about appeasement. In 1938, Chamberlain returned from Munich waving a piece of paper and proclaiming "peace for our time." Less than a year later, Europe was marching toward catastrophe.

I am not comparing today's Iran directly to Nazi Germany. History never repeats itself exactly. But human nature repeats itself all the time. One recurring mistake is believing that concessions will satisfy an ambitious adversary when those concessions actually convince him to demand more.

That lesson never grows old.

The supporters of this deal argue that Iran's leaders need economic relief. Fair enough. They probably do. Iran's economy has suffered tremendously. Inflation has repeatedly battered ordinary citizens. Youth unemployment has remained a persistent challenge. The regime needs breathing room.

But here's the question nobody seems eager to answer. What happens if Tehran takes the money and keeps pursuing influence anyway? What happens if inspectors encounter delays? What happens if negotiations drag on for years? What happens if promises become discussions, discussions become committees, and committees become endless diplomatic theater?

Iran has been accused repeatedly over the years of exploiting complexity, delays, loopholes, and verification disputes during nuclear negotiations. Critics have long argued that Tehran excels at buying time while extracting concessions.

This new deal appears to hand Iran a giant stack of poker chips before the cards have even been dealt.

Imagine walking into a casino.

The dealer slides $300 billion worth of chips across the table.

You haven't proven anything yet.

You haven't shown your hand.

You haven't even sat down.

That is roughly how this agreement looks from a strategic perspective. Meanwhile, what exactly did America gain? The regime stays. Its missile programs remain largely untouched. Its regional proxies and network, including Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis in Yemen remains largely untouched. Its political structure remains untouched.  Its ambitions remain uncertain. Its promises remain promises.

Yet sanctions relief starts flowing. That is not hard bargaining. That is negotiating like a man so eager to leave the room that he forgets why he entered it.

The irony here is thick enough to cut with a chainsaw. President Trump built his political reputation partly on being a tough negotiator. He marketed himself as the man who would never accept weak deals. He blasted previous administrations for agreements he considered soft, lopsided, or foolish.

Now critics can legitimately ask whether he has produced something even weaker.

The contradiction is stunning. The message being sent across the Middle East is equally troubling. America fought. America pressured. America threatened. America negotiated. And then America opened the checkbook.

What lesson are rival regimes supposed to learn from that sequence? The lesson is not strength. The lesson is endurance. Hang around long enough. Cause enough trouble. Create enough instability. Eventually somebody may decide paying you is easier than confronting you.

That is not deterrence.

That is incentive.

The situation becomes even murkier when viewed from the perspective of America's traditional partners. Israel, which has long viewed Iran's nuclear ambitions as an existential threat, now finds itself watching from the sidelines. Gulf states are left wondering how dependable Washington will be when the next crisis erupts. Confidence is a fragile currency. Once lost, it is expensive to recover.

Supporters of the agreement insist that peace is better than war. Of course it is. Nobody with a functioning brain wants endless conflict. War is expensive. War is deadly. War creates widows, orphans, refugees, and graveyards. But peace is not simply the absence of shooting. Real peace requires durable incentives, credible enforcement, and mutual trust. Trust is precisely what is missing here. The Iranian leadership does not trust America. Many Americans do not trust the Iranian leadership. Regional allies do not trust the arrangement. Even some supporters of the agreement admit enforcement will be difficult.

That is not a foundation. That is quicksand.

The most dangerous words in foreign policy are often these: "What could go wrong?" History usually answers that question with enthusiasm.

I keep coming back to one brutal reality. The Iranian regime did not suddenly become a different regime because diplomats signed a document. Governments do not shed decades of behavior overnight. Incentives matter, but so do ideology, prestige, survival instincts, and geopolitical ambition.

Money changes many things. It does not change everything. That is why I believe this deal represents the biggest mistake of President Trump's presidency. Not because peace is undesirable. Not because diplomacy is wrong. Not because war should continue forever. It is a mistake because it appears to reward a regime before meaningful proof has been delivered. It is a mistake because it assumes economic incentives can overpower strategic ambition. It is a mistake because it projects impatience where strength should exist. Most of all, it is a mistake because it sends a dangerous signal to the world.

If your adversary learns that enough pressure eventually unlocks America's wallet, then the next crisis becomes more likely, not less.

The old saying warns us not to feed crocodiles in the hope that they will eat us last.

Looking at this agreement, I cannot shake the feeling that Washington has just delivered the crocodile a bigger steak.

 

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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Ukraine's Revenge: Why Moscow Is Suddenly Nervous

 


Putin invaded expecting surrender. Instead, Ukraine brought the war to Moscow's doorstep, proving that bullies grow bolder when feared—and start sweating when somebody finally punches back. In plain terms, every bully looks unbeatable until the victim fights back. Ukraine's drones over Moscow prove that courage can force even giants to start looking over their shoulders.

For years, I have listened to people, including President Trump,  explain why Ukraine should just give up. They say Russia is bigger. Russia is stronger. Russia has more men, more missiles, more money, and more machinery. According to this logic, Ukraine should have rolled over, waved a white flag, and accepted whatever scraps Moscow decided to leave on the table.

That argument sounds clever until you remember one stubborn fact: bullies love surrender because it saves them the trouble of earning victory.

The latest Ukrainian drone strikes on Moscow expose a truth that many people do not want to admit. In this war, Ukraine has proven beyond any reasonable doubt that the only reliable way to deter bullying is to stand up to it—even when standing up gets your nose bloodied.

The evidence is now floating over Moscow in the form of black smoke. Ukraine recently struck the Moscow Oil Refinery, one of the most important fuel facilities serving the Russian capital. Videos showed flames chewing through the night sky while smoke rolled over the city like a giant middle finger from the battlefield. Residents who once watched the war from the comfort of their apartments suddenly discovered that wars have a nasty habit of traveling both ways.

For more than 4 years, Russia has been launching missiles, drones, and bombs into Ukrainian cities. Apartment buildings collapsed. Power stations burned. Families ran to shelters. Moscow's message was simple: "We can hurt you whenever we want."

Ukraine's answer was even simpler.

"Fine. Two can play that game."

Now Muscovites are waking up to explosions. Airports are being disrupted. Fuel infrastructure is being targeted. Security forces are scrambling around landmarks once considered untouchable. The war that Moscow exported is now arriving back with return postage attached.

The funniest part—if there is anything funny about war—is watching shock spread across Russian society.

Shock?

Really?

That is like a man throwing rocks through his neighbor's windows for 4 years and then calling the police because somebody finally threw one back. One Moscow resident reportedly called the experience "pure hell." Another reportedly asked why the war had not ended. That question deserves an answer.

The war has not ended because aggression is addictive when it is cheap. Bullies rarely stop because somebody politely asks them to stop. Bullies stop when the bill arrives.

And Ukraine has been delivering invoices.

According to published evidence, Ukraine carried out 658 deep strikes inside Russia during 2025 alone. Analysts suggest the number could exceed 800 in 2026 if the pace continues. Think about that for a moment. The country that many experts predicted would collapse in days is now repeatedly striking targets hundreds of kilometers inside the territory of one of the world's largest military powers.

That is not symbolism. That is economics. A tank runs on fuel, not patriotic speeches. A bomber runs on fuel, not television propaganda. A military machine runs on money, not chest-thumping.

Ukraine understands this perfectly. That is why it keeps hitting refineries, ports, supply routes, and energy infrastructure. The goal is obvious. If Russia wants to keep feeding its war machine, make the feeding process painful, expensive, and unpredictable.

The strategy appears to be working. Several media reports revealed that Russian refinery production fell by 15% in 2026 compared with the previous year. Estimates also suggest Russia's fossil-fuel revenues have been falling below expected levels despite favorable oil prices. Billions of dollars are disappearing into repairs, defenses, and disruptions.

That is where the real damage occurs. A missile destroys a building. A successful economic strike destroys a budget. The first creates headlines. The second creates headaches.

History is full of examples proving that resistance matters.

When Nazi Germany bombed Britain during World War II, many expected British morale to collapse. It did not. When the Soviet Union invaded Finland in 1939, many expected Finland to disappear. It did not. When American colonists challenged the British Empire, many expected rebellion to fail. It did not.

Again and again, powerful aggressors make the same mistake. They assume size automatically creates submission. They confuse fear with obedience. They mistake patience for weakness.

Then reality punches them in the mouth.

Russia made exactly that mistake.

The Kremlin expected a quick campaign that will last for 3 days. Instead, it got a grinding war. It expected Kyiv to fall. Kyiv survived. It expected Ukrainians to panic. Ukrainians adapted. It expected the fighting to remain far away from ordinary Russians. Now smoke rises over Moscow itself.

That is why this war has become such an uncomfortable lesson for every bully on Earth.

Strength matters.

Weapons matter.

Money matters.

But determination matters too.

A bully wants an easy victim. A bully wants fear. A bully wants surrender. The moment the target refuses to cooperate, everything becomes more expensive.

Suddenly, every attack requires more resources. Suddenly, every victory costs more. Suddenly, every assumption must be reconsidered. That is exactly what Ukraine has forced Russia to do. The country has paid a horrific price for its resistance. Cities have been shattered. Soldiers and civilians have died. Entire communities have been scarred. Nobody should romanticize that suffering. But nobody should ignore the lesson either.

If Ukraine had surrendered in 2022, the message to the world would have been crystal clear: military aggression works. Instead, Ukraine chose another message. Hit us, and we will hit back. Push us, and we will push back. Invade us, and sooner or later your own people will be asking why smoke is rising over your capital.

That is the ugly truth many diplomats hate saying out loud. Peace is wonderful. Negotiation is necessary. Diplomacy is important. But diplomacy without deterrence is often just begging with better grammar.

The reason bullies hate resistance is simple.

Resistance works.

And today, the smoke over Moscow is the proof.

 

I couldn’t let this go. I had earlier  wrote a brief book on this issue, Putin’s Dangerous Gamble”,  to work through it honestly and completely. Read it here on Google Play: "Putin’s Dangerous Gamble."

 

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