Wednesday, August 27
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> "KPop Demon Hunters" charts four songs in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100, the first time four songs from the same film soundtrack have simultaneously been in the top 10 of the chart (More)
> NFL rosters must be trimmed from 90 players to the active roster max of 53 by 4 pm ET today; see tracker of roster cuts for all 32 teams (More)
> Rapper Lil Nas X charged with four felonies, including battery against a police officer, following his arrest and hospitalization Thursday; he pleaded not guilty to the charges (More)
Science & Technology
> SpaceX scrubs second attempt at the 10th test launch of its massive Starship space vehicle, citing unfavorable weather; next launch window yet to be announced (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> Heat wave exposure can accelerate biological aging, new study reveals; each four-day exposure to prolonged heat was roughly correlated with nine days of accelerated aging (More) | Aging at the cellular level (1440 Topics)
> First human US case of a New World screwworm parasite following travel reported in Maryland; eradicated in the US in 1966, larvae of the insect devastate livestock and have been reappearing in Central America and Mexico (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower (S&P 500 -0.4%, Dow -0.8%, Nasdaq -0.2%) as investors await Nvidia's earnings report tomorrow and digest federal government's 10% stake in Intel, announced Friday (More) | President Donald Trump fires Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook amid mortgage fraud accusations (More)
> Elon Musk's xAI sues Apple and OpenAI for an alleged anticompetitive scheme favoring OpenAI's ChatGPT in Apple's App Store; company says they're colluding to maintain their respective monopolies in the smartphone and generative AI markets (More)
> US consumers with the highest credit scores are falling behind on debt repayments, with 90+ day delinquencies up 109% year over year; signals possible budget strains among historically financially secure shoppers (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President Donald Trump signs executive order seeking to penalize people for burning American flags, characterizing the practice as incitement to rioting, violence (More) | Trump also signs executive order eliminating cashless bail across the country amid crackdown on Washington, DC, crime (More)
> Israeli strikes on Gaza hospital kill at least 20 people, including five journalists, per local health workers; Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls the attack a mishap, says military will investigate (More)
> President Donald Trump meets with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, discusses trade and possible collaboration on shipbuilding (More)
SOURCE: 1440 NEWS
Change can only Accelerate
This was the same price I paid for a pack of 20 cigarettes, 2 McDonald's hamburgers, one ticket for a seat in a movie theater.
In 1966, I had graduated from high school and was getting to attend my first semester of college in North Carolina where the tuition + books + room/board was $1,500... Yes, this was the amount for TWO SEMESTERS.
It is also true that this was almost 60 YEARS AGO and there has been a lot of changes in a HALF CENTURY.
Now, think this through if you don't mind...
I have shared with you some changes from 1966-2026...
Imagine what the changes might be from 2026-2086...
Consider these possibilities:
- Flying vehicles
- Three-dimensional travel in urban areas
- Robot sex toys for adults
- Smart house with robots
- No more cancer deaths
- Bio-engineered children
- Food replicators
- Miniature computers implanted in wrists
- Vacations on Mars
- Education infused into our brains instead of HS or colleges
- Robot law enforcement/soldiers
- Space stations orbiting the earth housing a million residents instead of living on earth
Technological change is taking place quicker and quicker and sixty years from 2026, our technological change could possibly be happening every month or sooner. You will be inundated with change.
I thought change from 1966-2026 was happening quick... almost too quick for many of us... but a piece of cake for those in their teens or early twenties... how will they cope with change when they reach their 60s/70s?
Ants Are 'Superefficient' at Teamwork, Scientists Discover
Have you ever been part of a large group project? You might assume that with more people involved, the work gets done better and faster.
However, as more team members join the group, the effectiveness of each individual doesn't increase. It doesn't even stay constant – it gets worse. Many hands may make light work, but too many cooks spoil the broth.
This paradox is known as the Ringelmann effect, named after French engineer Max Ringelmann who discovered it in the late 19th century.
Tuesday, August 26
Headlines
SAUL LOEB / AFP
Robert Reich
Trump’s downfall
Fascist capitalism will do him in
Friends,
I’m old enough to remember when American politics was divided between those who wanted less government (they were called “conservatives,” or the Right) and those who wanted more social safety nets (called “progressives,” or the Left).
It’s hard to find Right or Left these days. Instead we have something no one has ever seen in America — a personal takeover of nearly all the institutions of government and, increasingly, the private sector, by a would-be dictator.
Trump is on the way to occupying Democratic-led cities with the Army, National Guard, and ICE — in what appears to be a dress rehearsal for the 2026 midterms.
He is telling Republican states to super-gerrymander in order to squeeze out more Republican seats in Congress, to help retain Republican control of the House after the 2026 midterm elections.
Fascist capitalism will do him in
Friends,
I’m old enough to remember when American politics was divided between those who wanted less government (they were called “conservatives,” or the Right) and those who wanted more social safety nets (called “progressives,” or the Left).
It’s hard to find Right or Left these days. Instead we have something no one has ever seen in America — a personal takeover of nearly all the institutions of government and, increasingly, the private sector, by a would-be dictator.
Trump is on the way to occupying Democratic-led cities with the Army, National Guard, and ICE — in what appears to be a dress rehearsal for the 2026 midterms.
He is telling Republican states to super-gerrymander in order to squeeze out more Republican seats in Congress, to help retain Republican control of the House after the 2026 midterm elections.
At A Glance
Starbucks' Pumpkin Spice Latte returns today.
... and Spain's "Tomatina" street fight turns 80 tomorrow.
A woman tried to get an AI chatbot to break up with her.
After the kiss cam scandal, Coldplay aids a proposal. (w/video)
NFL calls are about to get more precise.
These features could be coming to your iPhone soon.
Welcome to America's most expensive house.
Netflix recommends shows based on your zodiac sign.
Clickbait: That's how bald eagles really sound? (w/audio)
Historybook: Mother Teresa born (1910); 19th Amendment, granting US women right to vote, takes effect (1920); First televised Major League Baseball game (1939); 13 US military personnel, more than 169 Afghans killed during suicide bombing at Kabul airport (2021); Television host Bob Barker dies (2023).
A woman tried to get an AI chatbot to break up with her.
After the kiss cam scandal, Coldplay aids a proposal. (w/video)
NFL calls are about to get more precise.
These features could be coming to your iPhone soon.
Welcome to America's most expensive house.
Netflix recommends shows based on your zodiac sign.
Clickbait: That's how bald eagles really sound? (w/audio)
Historybook: Mother Teresa born (1910); 19th Amendment, granting US women right to vote, takes effect (1920); First televised Major League Baseball game (1939); 13 US military personnel, more than 169 Afghans killed during suicide bombing at Kabul airport (2021); Television host Bob Barker dies (2023).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Tommy Fleetwood wins 2025 PGA Tour Championship to take FedEx Cup title and $10M top prize (More)
> Jerry Adler, actor best known for starring role in "The Sopranos," dies at age 96 (More)
> Chinese Taipei tops Nevada 7-0 to win first Little League World Series title since 2017 (More)
Science & Technology
> Meta to partner with AI startup Midjourney to license the company's image and video generation technology (More) | What is generative AI good for? (1440 Topics)
> Researchers discover deep sea microbes that collaborate via electrical signals to consume methane seeping from the ocean floor; neither of the two microbe species can break down the molecule on their own (More)
> New study reveals random and inherited genetic mutations can interact to raise the risk of developing blood cancers; findings may lead to new early detection methods (More) | The difference between healthy and cancerous cells (1440 Topics)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close higher Friday (S&P 500 +1.5%, Dow +1.9%, Nasdaq +1.9%), with Dow closing at record high following Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's comments seeming to signal lower interest rates (More) | How raising rates can help fight inflation (1440 Topics)
> European and Asian postal services suspend service to the US ahead of the expiration of "de minimis" this Friday; the tariff exemption for packages valued below $800 allowed 1.4 billion packages to enter the US duty-free last year (More) | The early 20th century era of tariffs (1440 Topics)
> Waymo gets approval to test self-driving vehicles in New York City, with trained safety officer in the front seat; won't pick up passengers yet (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> US immigration officials plan to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Uganda if he rejects plea deal on human smuggling charges, refuses deportation to Costa Rica (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> Russia accuses Ukraine of launching a drone that causes a fire at Kursk Nuclear Power Plant; Russia launched over 70 drones, one ballistic missile at Ukraine as the country celebrated its 34th Independence Day (More)
> More than 30 million people in the US have been under extreme weather and heat alerts over the weekend, including in California, Oregon, and Washington (More)
SOURCE: 1440 NEWS
AI/Robots & Job Replacement
It is painfully obvious that when robots start replacing human jobs, the entire world will get a chance to experience unintended consequences.
By 2030 (just a little over 4 years from now), 92 million jobs will be lost due to AI and robots... However, 170 million jobs COULD BE created by AI and robots. When AI is asked what's the probability that those 170 million new jobs could be filled by robots as well....
The answer is, that's the real question, isn't it. Adding, these numbers are being generated by leaders in the AI/Robot industry...
So, what that tells me is that these leaders DO NOT WANT TO GENERAL PUBLIC TO PANIC UNTIL THE LAST MINUTE...
These same industry leaders told us back in 2020 that 92 million jobs would not be lost until 2040 or later...
WTF???
Did they LIE?
Did they INTENTIONALLY MISLEAD?
What are some of the unintended consequences of AI/Robots replacing job?
- A strain on unemployment insurance
- Who pays after the unemployment insurance runs out
- Who finances the debt that cannot be paid off
- Who buys the products that robots make
- What are the costs of retraining
- What happens to those who cannot be retrained
- Will the idle mind create more crime
- What will happen to the drug industry
- Will there be a guaranteed annual income
- Who foots the bill for a guaranteed annual income
- What will happen to military recruitment
- Will wars be fought by robot soldiers
Obviously, the powers that be, and the industry leaders, have not THOUGHT THROUGH all the unintended consequences that AI/Robots replacing human workers will generate.
I'm just glad I'm retired!!!!!
Forget materialism, a simple life is happier, research shows
In an age where billionaires and conspicuous consumption are increasingly on display, new Otago-led research shows a simple life really is a happier life.
The study led by the University of Otago—Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka Department of Marketing researchers has been published in the Journal of Macromarketing.
After setting out to understand the relationship between consumption and well-being, the researchers found people are happier and more satisfied when adopting sustainable lifestyles and resisting the temptations of consumerism.
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