Saturday, May 31
Writing is Pure Joy
This caricature while completed in 1977/78 by a local Alamance County, North Carolina artist, for an entirely different reason, still has relevance today since it symbolizes my desire to write. I supposed today, I would be sitting in front of a keyboard or a tablet instead of a typewriter.
I write about things that interest me when I write my essays or opinion pieces. My interest flow around politics, economics, education, philosophy, psychology, and memories
I write lines of poetry that started in high school but did not become full blown daily exercises until 1972 when I returned to college after being in the military for 21 months. My poetry is about things I see, I feel, I imagine, and that I project.
I write novels and this activity did not start until 2015 when I retired, and I wanted to make sure I had something to do. Ten years later, I have completed 15 novels with another five that I have started but got sidetracked on an idea for another novel. My novels are typically 100,000 to 150,000 words; however, my current novel is tentatively planned for 300,000 to 500,000 words.
My novels revolve around science fiction, spies, a variation on current events, futuristic novels, and fall from grace.
Finally, I maintain two blogs daily, REFLECTIONS: White Scorpion which is where I post my poetry, both current and poems written in the past. MY WRITTING JOURNAL which started out as a place to post only my current essays and opinions. However, over the years, I have transformed it into a blog that also posts almost anything I can think of including photos, items on health and fitness, other opinions, other articles, recipes, videos from places like rumble, etc.
My Writing Journal will continue to evolve as I continue to find things that I think readers will enjoy reading and/or knowing about.
Both my blogs will continue for as long as I have the ability to write. They will not continue because of the number of hits I receive each day. I write because I like to write, and I share because I like to share. What you do with it is your business.
CEO says AI could replace 50% of entry-level jobs
Surely a bot can’t spend a full morning deleting emails and call it a day by 3pm…or can it? The billionaire CEO of Anthropic, Dario Amodei, told Axios this week that AI could eliminate 50% of all white-collar, entry-level roles within the next one to five years, potentially pushing unemployment rates up 10% to 20%.
He even floated a “token tax” that would require AI companies to pay 3% of their revenue from each use of their models to the government, which could then reinvest it in some way, such as into retraining programs for workers.
Is he for real?
Critics immediately pointed out that “white-collar bloodbath” rhetoric is just as much a part of the AI hype machine as Studio Ghibli memes. Mark Cuban said Amodei needed to chill, pointing to past technological advancements and automation pushes that displaced workers like secretaries for a while, but ultimately created new industries and jobs.
Still, the fear of AI taking your job may be warranted…especially if you’re just entering the workforce. Recent college grad unemployment rose to 5.8% during Q1, the highest it’s been since 2021, according to a recent report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. And unemployment has spiked in technical fields that have seen rapid advancements in AI.Earlier this month, Microsoft announced it was laying off 3% of its staff, including many engineers.
Cybersecurity company CrowdStrike cut 5% of its workforce (500 jobs), saying AI was reshaping the industry.
But AI may not be ready for prime time. A few weeks ago, Klarna reversed course and started hiring humans again after pivoting to AI customer service agents.—MM
What if the truth offends? Publish it anyway
Are we protecting the vulnerable, or suppressing dissent? In an era marked by cancel culture, outrage cycles, and the censorship of opposing views, philosopher Peter Singer makes a powerful case for freedom of thought and expression. He argues that silencing uncomfortable ideas doesn’t make us safer, it makes us less capable of growing, reasoning, and addressing the pressing challenges of our time.
At A Glance
Bookkeeping
> 10.38 carats: The size of a rare kite-shaped pink diamond ring headed to auction, with ties to Queen Marie Antoinette.
> 8%: The number of fake reviews detected from 31.1 million reviews submitted on Tripadvisor in 2024.
Browse
> Mapping every understaffed US air traffic control tower.
> The benefits of having good posture.
> Margarita cocktail recipes for every mood.
> ... and how root beer got its name.
> When a tailless alligator crosses the road.
Listen
> The "planet hunter" searching for alien life.
> Could brain scans help us cure depression?
Watch
> How our age affects our decision-making on risks.
> Inside OpenAI's Stargate megafactory and the $500B bet on the future of AI.
> An investigation into why a Stradivarius violin costs $14M.
> Six Wienermobiles compete in the inaugural Oscar Mayer Wienie 500.
Long Read
> How millennials learned to sit at their desks and love the lunch bowl.
> A visual deep dive into drug and alcohol abuse among music stars.
> The history of how snails and oysters became luxury foods.
Most Clicked This Week: Toddler becomes youngest-ever Mensa member.
In The NEWS
> Music legend Smokey Robinson files $500M defamation lawsuit against four women who accused him in lawsuit of sexual assault (More) | Michael Sumler, member of iconic R&B band Kool & the Gang, dies in car crash at age 71 (More)
> Texas seventh grader Faizan Zaki spells "éclaircissement" correctly to win 97th Scripps National Spelling Bee after finishing runner-up last year (More)
> The 2025 NCAA baseball tournament kicks off today; see previews for all 16 regional sites (More) | MLB to invest in upstart women's professional softball league; Athletes Unlimited Softball League set to launch in June (More)
Science & Technology
> Leinweber Foundation makes largest philanthropic gift ever in the field of theoretical physics, granting a total of $90M to Princeton, MIT, and the universities of Michigan, Chicago, and California, Berkeley (More)
> Meta and Anduril to develop combat-ready virtual reality glasses and wearables for the US military; Anduril cofounder Palmer Luckey previously founded VR startup Oculus, acquired by Meta in 2014 (More)
> White-nose syndrome in bats can be traced to two separate strains of fungi originating from Ukrainian caves; an epidemic responsible for killing 90% of certain North American bat species likely brought over by cave explorers (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +0.4%, Dow +0.3%, Nasdaq +0.4%) (More) | Gap shares drop 15% in after-hours trading after retailer reports it expects tariffs to cost between $100M to $150M with mitigation efforts (More) | Dell shares rise in after-hours trading after raising full-year earnings outlook on AI demand (More)
> Ex-Goldman Sachs banker sentenced to two years in prison for role in taking more than $4.5B in kickbacks and stolen funds from a Malaysian sovereign wealth fund intended for energy and infrastructure projects (More)
> CEO compensation in 2024 for S&P 500 executives up nearly 10% over previous year to a median of $17.1M (More, w/chart)
Politics & World Affairs
> Health and Human Services cancels $766M award to pharmaceutical company Moderna to develop bird flu vaccine (More) | No H5N1 bird flu cases have been found in humans in three months (More)
> Supreme Court rules to greenlight 88-mile expansion of oil and gas railroad project in Utah, curbing judicial authority to block projects on environmental grounds (More)
> State Department notifies Congress of plan to reduce staff by 18%, above the 15% flagged weeks earlier; will also eliminate a division focused on resettling Afghan refugees (More) | Elon Musk ends tenure as chief operating officer at the Department of Government Efficiency, returns full time to businesses (More)
Peace of Mind
Yesterday, I wrote about the simplicity of life and happiness.
Let me share my personal story...
Facts:
- I am 77 years old and before 2025 ends, I will be 78.
- I have been constantly treated for one or two cancers since I was 60 (Lymphoma/Melanoma).
- At 60 I have a serious heart attack and had five stints inserted to avoid a triple bypass.
- At 74, I had L2-L3-L4-L5-S1 fused.
- At 75, I tore one tendon off my right rotator cuff and 2 tendons off my left rotator cuff.
- I do not have a company retirement program, nor a 401K - I can only rely on Social Security and what my wife and I have saved.
- I have never earned more than $50,000/year and that was only for one year.
- My wife has had both hips replaced and is currently living with a degenerative spine and could potentially be losing her eyesight.
- She has had cancer but has been in remission for 6 years (knock on wood).
Why Substack will be the intellectual engine of the 21st century
The last time humans created a new civilization was during The Enlightenment, the period of time from about 1680 to 1800 that gave birth to many of the core technologies, economic systems, and government institutions that led to the modern world.
My last essay laid out how the people of that time created six mega-inventions that changed the world in fundamental ways: mechanical engines, carbon energies, the Industrial Revolution, financial capitalism, representative democracy, and nation states.
Each of those mega-inventions has a direct parallel that has emerged or is emerging in our world today, as you can see in the graphic below. They are artificial intelligence, clean energies, the biological revolution, and what might soon come to be known as sustainable capitalism, digital democracy, and global governance.


















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