Today’s Main Course is a piece I probably should not have written in an issue you probably will not read. It will not in any way improve your day. And it will certainly not improve your impression of me.

Apart from that, I’ve got three updates for you: one on AI, another on vaccine mandates, and another on the dismal state of education in this country. Plus, a report on another 9/11 disbeliever, a short piece on the source of some interesting English language idioms, and a spoof commercial starring Steve Buscemi called “Scamageddon.”

Our Brave New Digital World 

There is no doubt that, thanks to the digital information revolution (which in my view really began at the turn of the century), the world of information – from the daily news to education and to personal communication – has completely changed.

When I’m with my grandkids, I sometimes wonder how the world seems to them as children that live in a world in which access to virtually everything you might want to read about or watch is not just available, but available from hundreds of content providers in dozens of different formats – and all in a matter of seconds.

There have been hundreds of essays and books written about this topic, most of them exploring the most obvious opportunities and problems. There is no doubt that digital media can be enormously useful in facilitating the amount of information easily available to us. But in recent years, we’ve also become acutely aware of problems with the quality and dependability of that information, the algorithms that control what users are “fed,” and, with the onset of AI, how easy it is to create and generate fake news and forgeries, including avatars – dead-ringer images of real people that can be made to do and say anything the programmer wants.

These big problems, I believe, will soon put us into an entirely new world where nothing generated by digital media will be trusted. Our knowledge systems have already been compromised by the algorithms in a pleasing but addictive way. Before long, our belief systems will change entirely, too, with trust becoming a very rare resource that few people or social media outlets will have.

But there are also all sorts of smaller problems, which might, in one’s personal life, be disturbing or disrupting in a large way. Take attention span, for instance. One of the most-documented effects of social media is a shortened attention span among those that use it for more than, say, an hour a day.

I can relate to that. Ever since I stopped watching network TV – which must be at least 10 years ago – I’ve been getting all my news from digital sources. And what I’ve noticed is that my attention span for acquiring information has shortened from about an hour to about 11 minutes – which is about my limit when it comes to clicking on a YouTube link.

What’s worse, I don’t have the patience for full-length movies or long books anymore. I still watch movies and read books, but I do it almost out of obligation these days. My instinct is always to get on YouTube or some other streaming service and click away.

I wonder how my new habits are affecting my brain. I wonder if I’m getting more or less informed, smarter or dumber, more or less socially responsible and empathetic.

AI Update: Will Your Thermostat Belong to Your State Government? 

Ohio is fast becoming a hub for massive data centers to deal with AI and other digital demands. These data centers use an immense amount of power and water to function. Some people are justifiably concerned about the load on US energy providers in the coming years, including some lawmakers.

In Ohio, Congresspeople are promoting a bill that would let utilities lock you out of your own thermostat during times of “high demand.” House Bill 427, backed by Rep. Roy Klopfenstein, is being sold as a money saver.

Right now, he and those supporting the bill say not to worry. Compliance will be voluntary. But, according to one source I read, it’s a ruse: “In Australia, the same promise ended with 170,000 families stripped of air conditioning in the middle of a brutal summer. In truth, once you give up that control, it’s gone. What begins as optional quickly turns mandatory, leaving families powerless while utilities decide when you sweat or freeze…. This isn’t about lowering bills – it’s about who controls your home.”

What do you think?

 

COVID Update: Florida Ends Vaccine Mandates 

Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo announced that Florida is dropping vaccine mandates. Talking to CNN, he said that mandates are acts of coercion – that they work “only when the public has faith in the government that issues them, and the COVID mandates put an end to that.”

Twenty other states are said to be considering similar bills.

After years of questioning the COVID mandates, President Trump responded cautiously. On Truth Social, he wrote, “I think you have to be very careful when you say that some people don’t have to be vaccinated.”

 

Education Update: American High School Seniors Are Stupider Than at Any Time in History 

According to results released Sept. 9 by the US Education Department, American high school seniors’ scores on major math and reading tests fell to their lowest levels on record. The number of 12th graders who were proficient slid by two percentage points between 2019 and 2024 – to 35% in reading and 22% in math.

The results are from tests administered to tens of thousands of students in early 2024 as part of the National Assessment of Educational Progress.

Confessions of a YouTube Addict 

I admit it. I’ve become addicted to YouTube.

Not exclusively. I occasionally snort another short-form content platform. But I mainline YouTube.

I don’t indulge myself during the day. I know how self-destructive that would be. But after dinner, and after my evening job of trying to finish half the work I assigned myself in the morning, usually about 10:00 pm, I close my laptop and open my iPad and hit the Red Box.

I tell myself that I’ve worked a long, hard day. I deserve a little relaxation. And anyway, it’s not like I’m having fun. I’m doing research for my blog and books. And that’s true. Sort of.

The Serious Stuff

I spend about an hour of my YouTube time researching topics and fodder for my writing. These typically include clips about:

* The Fragile Position of the Dollar as the World’s Reserve Currency
* The Decline and Fall of Post-Modern Thinking in America
* Facts About the Israel-Arab Conflict
* Facts About the Russia-Ukraine War and What It Means to the US
* The COVID Scam – the Virus and the Vaccines
* The Threat and Promise of Artificial Intelligence
* The Disintegration of Free Speech and Common Sense in Europe
* The End of Enlightenment and the Decline of Western Civilization
* Donald Trump: His Wins. His Losses. His Chances of Winning.
* US Debt and the End of the Dollar as the World’s Reserve Currency
* Racism and Racial Politics in the US
* The Reinvention of Words and the Destruction of Meaning by Leftist Ideologs
* The Russian Collusion Hoax and the Jan. 6 Fraternity Party
* The Utter Hypocrisy of Progressives in Every Area of Politics

The Rabbit Holes 

At about 11:00 pm, I tell myself that I will go inside and upstairs and get into bed. But then I give myself permission to spend just another half-hour – an hour, at the very most – watching YouTube for Addicts.

That’s what I call the rabbit holes I find myself going into. I should be embarrassed to admit this to you – but at my age, having divulged so much personal information in my 25 years of writing, my embarrassment instinct no longer functions.

Some of my favorite rabbit holes:

* Karens Gone Wild
* Wild Karens Getting Their Just Deserts
* Idiot Drivers Endangering Others
* Assholes Talking Shit to Cops
* Asshole Cops Bullying Black and Brown Drivers
* Black and Brown Young People Vandalizing Department Stores
* Middle-Aged White Women Stealing
* Amazingly Gifted Young People (Mostly Asian) Playing Piano
* Constitutionalists Refusing to Stop Videotaping Public Buildings
* College Kids Unable to Answer Grammar School-Level Questions
* Progressive People Unable to Define What a Woman Is
* Kids Succeeding at Insane Stunts
* Kids Failing at Insane Stunts
* Human Beings Reunited with Animals After Years of Separation
* Hurricanes and Tsunamis Destroying Valuable Property
* Cute Animals Being Cute and Cuddly
* Great Mixed Martial Arts Fights
* Package Thieves Being Surprised

 

A Typical Binge 

The First Hour 

* Bill Clinton Shocks Muslim Crowd with Facts About Palestine

* Ted Cruz Confronts Judge About Putting Child Rapist in Women’s Prison

* Sometimes you know how the story ends, but are still moved by it.

* When Teenagers Should Be Tried as Adults

* India May Have Made a Huge Mistake

* Coleman Hughes on the Palestinian Movement

* Looters “Wipe Out” 47 DC Stores… Mayor Panics

* Former Democrat Batya Ungar-Sargon Just Cooked the Entire CNN Panel

* Pro-Muslim Trans Advocate Hears the Truth About Islam

* UK Reform Party Leader Nigel Farage Likens UK to North Korea

* Bill Maher Defends COVID Vaccine and RFK Jr. Humiliates Him

* Tommy Robinson Educates TV Hosts on What the Quran Really Says

* The Feds are raiding Chicago: Here’s why…

* How Richard Branson Started Virgin Airlines with Zero Capital

* Christianity has a basic flaw. This shows it.

* Israel-Hamas War: A Two-on-Two Debate 

* Hamas Sympathizer Gets Furious with Israeli Activist

* Jew Reads Quran

* Adam Schiff Faces a Firestorm

* IDF Soldier Has Brutally Honest Message for Palestinian

* In Georgia, it’s illegal for judges to meet with one side of a dispute. Does this judge look guilty?

 * How Insurance Companies Get Extra Rich

 

The Second Hour 

* Amazing Drummer

* This man knows bulls. 

* When your dad is Nigerian…

* 60 Animals Reunited with Their Owners 

* Last Ride in Horse Elevator

*  Another Thing About Men and Women

* When Package Thieves Get Caught by Booby Traps!

* Christmas in July

* Great Fight: Movsar Evloev vs. Aljamain Sterling

* Cops Freaked Out by What Was in the Woman’s Trunk

* Another example of why being a cop is difficult.

* Piglet Befriends Lamb

* Are true crime stories like this better than movies?

* Stephen A. Smith on the Big Secret About Angel Reese

* He lays it down about first-generation LA immigrants.

* We need more cops like this. 

* Home Decorating Hero

* Sunny Hostin Humiliated After Getting Fact-Checked

* Nicholas De Santo: Women Hate Accountability!

* Copywriting Masterclass

* I don’t know. Did he target her because she was Black? Maybe.

The Origins of Some Old English Language Idioms 

“Gideon” of LetThemTalkTV goes back into linguistic history to uncover some of the oldest idioms in the English language. Click here.

Yet Another 9/11 Conspiracy Theorist? 

In the Sept. 8 issue, I included a short video about 9/11, pointing out the difficulty of believing that the three buildings – the North Tower, the South Tower, and Building 7 – were taken down by the planes that flew into them.

I just learned that Sen. Ron Johnson has taken up the cause. His version is more moderate than the one I showed you. His problem is with Building 7. He said, “It sure looks like controlled demolition to me.”

Johnson told James Corbett that asking legitimate questions results in instant backlash, which he said just raises his “suspicion level.”

“The Richard Gages of the world, the structural engineers, the firefighters who know the history of these steel buildings not coming down because of basic fires – you need something else,” he said.

Hints: Yes, they are animals. Animals with horns. They are running. They do this every year. And there are millions of them.

Answer: It’s called “The Great Nile Migration” – six million antelope storming through a pocket of Africa in the world’s largest land animal migration. Watch it here.

From AS: “The news seeps into my house via internet and streaming. It leaves me in fear.” 

“For quite a while, I have been avoiding the news and watching sports. Now I’m sick of sports because it seems to be more about business, contracts, and reports on injured athletes. There are extensive detailed reports of injuries incurred by athletes. It’s like watching that old hospital show ER.

“Sports also follows stories that should be in the Metro section of the news. An athlete punches his girlfriend in the jaw and knocks her out or is caught driving 110 miles an hour with an ounce of cocaine and an automatic weapon under the seat. He gets suspended from his team for two games, four games, or maybe more. If he worked for IBM or Google, he would no longer have a job.

“The news seeps into my house via internet and streaming. It leaves me in fear.

“Illegal aliens who run amok in the streets of America are going to rob and kill me.

“I won’t swim in the ocean ever again, because either sharks or riptides will kill me.

“Every night, before I fall asleep, my last thought is, ‘I hope my house doesn’t explode!’

“I also worry about masked marauders storming my house and taking my wife away because she speaks fluent Spanish. Maybe not, because I have yet to see a single illegal alien being arrested who has blonde hair and blue eyes.

“Every time it rains, I envision my house floating down a torrent river that appeared in a few short moments.

“When the stock market falls to record lows, I immediately see myself sitting on a cold sidewalk in the city with a sign that says, ‘Money for the poor.’ Then I remember that I, along with 48% of Americans, don’t own any stocks. And the stock market is not directly related to the economy anyway.

“Trees, beautiful, majestic trees are killing people. They wipe out countless numbers because of winds blowing them down on top of cars and homes.

“Can’t go to Target or Walmart because a mass shooter lurks in the shadows waiting to kill me and maybe 11 more people before he turns the gun on himself. I wonder, does each shooter decide how many people they are going to kill before they kill themselves? Why don’t they just shoot themselves and avoid driving to the store and circling the lot several times before finding a good parking space?

“Going to school is like being deployed to a combat zone.

“I can’t open emails because I’ll end up selling all my Crypto Currency and sending the money via the US Mail in the form of gift cards. I don’t own any Crypto Currency.

“I have children and I may get an email from one of them telling me to send money because they have been mugged in Barcelona and need a passport and an airline ticket to return home.

“My texts are often job offers where I can earn $200 to $300 a day. No age limit, it’s easy, and I can work from home. All I must do is send them a few thousand dollars for the equipment I’ll need to get started.

“I get texts from unidentified numbers which simply say things like, ‘Hi, haven’t heard from you in a while,’ or ‘I changed my phone number, here’s my new number.’

“Long ago, I responded to one of those. I wrote, ‘You must have the wrong number.’ Moments later, a picture of a sexy, scantily clad 21-year-old woman appeared with the caption, ‘I’m sorry, but do you have time to chat anyway?’

“I thought, ‘What a great idea to start a relationship with picture of a girl 55 years younger than me. I can’t wait to tell my wife and kids about my new friend! Should I send her a picture of me in a Speedo?’

“Much of our food contains broken glass or other foreign objects. Produce has E. coli and meat has salmonella. Water has plastic in it and our cars are being recalled in droves.

“Earthquakes, tornados, hurricanes, forest fires, tsunamis, mudslides are heading our way daily. Hikers are getting raped and killed or just not returning from their hikes. The ones who don’t return probably died from Lyme disease.

“If you are flying somewhere and are lucky enough to board the plane the same day your tickets say, it’s almost a sure thing a drunken unruly passenger will beat up a flight attendant and you will have an unscheduled emergency landing in a town you never heard of and possibly be stranded there long enough to establish residency.

“No unruly passenger? Don’t worry, a door could blow off or an engine might catch fire, and you may land in that same small town you never heard of. Wheels are falling off planes, too.

“It seems like once a week a family is killed in a house fire. If that’s not enough, the on-the-scene reporter always asks the surviving family member, ‘Your entire family was killed in that house fire. How does that make you feel?’

“Who writes those questions for the reporters?

“Edwin Starr sang, ‘War, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing, say it again.’ There are 56 wars going on in the world now. That’s the most since WWII. Thirty-five of them are in Africa. Can you name even one of those wars? I doubt it, because western news doesn’t report on Africa.

“In the wars our news does cover, you can watch homes, hospitals, and apartment buildings being blown up every day. In the following weeks, stories are told of injured and dead children and families who lost everything, including loved ones. The reporters are there, on the spot, to ask survivors, ‘How does that make you feel?’

“Here is a hypothetical question. Let’s say a fictitious country, we will call it Ukraine, is invaded by another country, we’ll call it Russia. The president of the United States, we’ll call him Trump, is trying to negotiate peace. Russia wants the president of Ukraine to relinquish the land Russia is occupying now, but not for a peace treaty. Simply for a ceasefire. Trump and most of the rest of the world is against giving up land to the invader. After meeting with the leader of Russia, Trump is now in favor of Ukraine giving up that land, and only for a ceasefire, not peace.

“The question is, if Russia invaded the US and was occupying New Jersey and Pennsylvania, would Trump give those lands to Russia for nothing more than a ceasefire?

“Every summer, reports of children left in hot cars often lead the news. It breaks my heart. I always think, ‘If they went to the grocery store and bought ice cream, there is no way they would leave that in a hot car.’

“Almost every week, a young woman goes missing. It’s incredible! Thank goodness I didn’t have a daughter. They get stalked, battered, raped, and murdered. Often by a man they had a restraining order against. Do those even help? It doesn’t seem so.

“I was with an attractive woman I knew a long time ago on her 35th birthday. I asked her how she felt about being 35.

“She said, ‘I feel like I’m getting old and I haven’t accomplished some of the things I set out to do. The bright side is, I think I have aged out of the getting abducted, raped, and murdered phase.’ Sad.

“I wonder how many open cases of missing women and girls there are in our country. I’m too lazy to look it up, but you can. I’ll bet you will be astounded!

“Men can’t imagine the fear women feel merely walking to the store. They must be constantly aware because the fear is real.

“Husbands killing wives and wives killing husbands. Just get a divorce!

“The war on crime, the war against drugs, the war on educating youth, now it seems like we are attacking common sense. ‘The war against common sense,’ seems like the only one of those wars we will win.

“Nonsensical decisions are being made unilaterally by one individual in a government which used to be a democracy. Even when the decision is warranted, its application is horrendous.

“Not a day goes by when something so petty and ridiculous is presented by those in power who vow to make it law. This minutia comes at us in droves. The plan is to wear us down, make us numb, and eventually not see it as an absurd notion. People go into an uproar, but then the next insane idea is put forth and we forget about the last thing we were so angry about.

“A man lost his wallet 11 years ago. He worked in Michigan on an assembly line building cars. He is retired now. Yesterday, he received a call from the man who found his wallet. This man was a mechanic and was working on a car with 150,000 miles on it. He couldn’t quite get one part to fit properly. He moved it around and a wallet fell out. The wallet contained the driver’s license and work ID card.

“The news showed the man, retired now, who got his wallet back, smiling ear to ear.

“I want to start a news channel that only reports ‘Happy News.’

“Would anyone want to watch it? We are all so jaded now, I doubt it.”

“Scamageddon” 

In this wonderful little video – an ad for Telstra, the Australian telecommunications provider – the great Steve Buscemi plays an evil overlord who commands his crew to conquer “Oostralia” through a massive cyberattack.