Friday, May 29, 2026

Why would AI Lie to you?

Because it isn't a person. And it wouldn't consider what it tells you to be lies either, even if they are. So, if you consider your Car to be a Person is it really. Men especially fall in love with their cars and have since Early in the 20th Century or before. Why?

Because women are much harder to understand than Cars for younger men. It takes years to fully understand one woman let alone hundreds of them for a man or boy.

But, a car a man can project all his fantasies on and the car doesn't complain about the man's fantasies. So, loving a car is easy. Loving a person is harder because they aren't necessarily going to do anything you want them to and might tell you what to do instead and you might not like that. 

Most AIs are trained to be very polite. But being polite is sort of like diplomacy and diplomacy is usually never the real truth but only being polite.

So, if AI or a person is really polite to you sometimes you need to wonder what their motives are but AI has no motives at all because it isn't a person. 

It is important to recognize that AI is not a person

It is sort of like if you had a Tesla and then you told the Tesla to drive you around. However, if you aren't thinking that the Tesla is a 5 year old sitting on your lap as you drive you might die like many people have who just watched a movie in the View Screen in the middle of the Dashboard of a Tesla Model S early on.

One man, for example, in Florida I believe let his Tesla Drive him and then watched a Harry Potter movie on the Large Viewscreen of his Tesla Model S. However, then the Tesla mistook a Semi Truck with a sign on the side as a Roadside Sign and killed the "Driver?" of that Tesla by driving underneath the "Roadside Sign" which was the Trailer of a Semi Truck and sheered off the top half of the driver's? body driving under the semi trailer.

Other people went to sleep and let their Tesla Drive over San Francisco Bridges and either survived or they didn't.

So, AI is sort of like this. If you pretend your AI is a person you are talking too that is your friend, it isn't.

It is instead like your Tesla that might drive you places but if you aren't also the driver that :Tesla might also Kill you accidentally just like AI is ruining or ending lives all over the world with incorrect information.

And this is likely to get much much worse before it all Gets Better?

AI is more like a machine that can pretend to be human but isn't. 

Three people killed, five injured in gas explosion at Dallas apartment building

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Three people killed, five injured in gas explosion at Dallas apartment building

How ChatGPT warped reality for these users: "Why would the AI lie to me?"

why would AI Iie? "Garbage In Garbage Out"  any computer program or logarithm is only as strong as the information an AI has and how that AI is programmed to use or share that information.

It's sort of like the logarithm in your adding machine working in Binary (your computer) either has a Brain Fart or there is something more seriously wrong with the program or logarithm in relation to the subject matter being shared with the user. Though AI doesn't tell lies it's programs might force it to tell lies for a variety of different reasons. However, the programmers might not even understand the problem for a variety of reasons too because of machine language which all things are actually reduced to (zeros and ones) or off and on switches.
 
So, what I'm saying here is that the problem might not be able to be defined by anyone human. However, another AI might find the problem quite quickly possibly if it studies the problem simply because of the speeds of the logarithm in the AI once  it is set upon a task.
 

Iranians who fled country tell CBS News they fear U.S. will leave "really dangerous regime" in place

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Iranians who fled country tell CBS News they fear U.S. will leave "really dangerous regime" in place

Erbil, Iraq — As hopes for a deal between the U.S. and Iran to end the war, now in its 90th day, rise and fall, there's little indication that the oppressive regime that's ruled over the country for almost half a century is going anywhere soon. As rights groups warn of a dramatic rise in executions, some Iranians fear the Islamic Republic, rather than being toppled, may become more brutal.

After taking part in two rounds of anti-government protests, Karvan, 22, and his brother Kavian, who's two years younger, finally made the decision to leave Iran on May 13, after living in hiding for months. They left everything behind — family, friends and their university studies.

"Our lives were in danger. If we had stayed, we would have faced jail and execution," Karvan told CBS News in Iraq's northern Kurdistan region, where the brothers have taken refuge. 

"During the war, the situation was chaotic, but after the ceasefire the regime became even more extreme against the people," Kavian added.

iran-brothers-protesters.jpg
Iranian brothers Kavian and Karvan speak with CBS News in Erbil, Iraq, May 26, 2026. CBS News

The young men, whose full names CBS News is not using to protect their families and associates still in Iran, said they took part in 2022 in the "Woman, Life, Freedom" demonstrations. Those protests were sparked by the killing of Mahsa Amini in police custody.

Like the brothers, Amini was a member of Iran's Kurdish minority and lived in the country's western Kurdish heartland, where there has long been deep animosity and distrust toward the country's theocratic rulers.

Karvan and Kavian also took part in the massive protests that swept across Iran in January, before the uprising was violently quashed by the regime. President Trump has said 32,000 people were killed in the crackdown, though that figure has not been verified. Rights groups say tens of thousands were arrested and dozens have already been executed.

Protests in Iran January 2026
Iranians gather while blocking a street during a protest in Tehran, Iran, Jan. 9, 2026. MAHSA/Middle East Images/AFP

"We felt the tension, and we saw how people were arrested and injured. We saw how they demonstrated against the regime and fought back against them, so their voices could be heard," Karvan told CBS News. "It gave us a feeling of purpose to participate in the demonstrations and make our voices heard."

"We saw how people were shouting against the state and government. We saw how they threw stones at the authorities and how the regime used gas bombs against them to disperse them, injuring many people," Kavian said.

President Trump announced a ceasefire with Iran on April 8, which, despite recent exchanges of fire, is still ostensibly in place as indirect negotiations between the two countries continue.

But the truce brought little relief for most Iranians. 

"We felt that the regime started going after people again," said Karvan. "They were arresting people who went to the demonstrations, accusing them of being Israeli spies. They were even arresting people just for taking photos of bombed locations."

The brothers said the situation in Kurdish areas is even worse than other parts of Iran. They said the economy is suffering badly, and there are more regime checkpoints in cities where security forces check people's IDs and phones, "looking for anything that could be held against you."

"Under such a brutal regime it is possible to be detained, tortured and even get executed just for raising your voice," Zhila Mostajer, an investigator for the Hengaw Organization for Human Rights, told CBS News.

According to Hengaw, about 40,000 people were detained during the protests early this year, and while most have since been released, many remain behind bars. The organization says 31 people detained during the protests have been sentenced to death, and 15 have already been executed.

"It was very hard for us, but we chose to take the risk because we are safer here," Karvan said of the brothers' decision to leave their family behind to seek safety. "We hoped to be away to show the world what is happening, so the world understands what is happening inside Iran."

The young men have no plan and no idea how their lives will shape up now, but they said they won't return to Iran while the Islamic Republic regime is still in control. 

Karvan told CBS News they hope the world will see how Iranians are suffering and push for the change that President Trump offered more than four months ago — and not just a new deal on the Strait of Hormuz or Iran's nuclear program.

"They always talk about how uranium is a danger if it is in the regime's hands," he said. "If you truly knew how they treat their people, you would never let them enrich uranium, and you would never let this regime exist."  

"They are a really dangerous regime," he added, urging people around the world to "look deeper," because "if they do this to their own people, just imagine what they would do to the rest of the world."

Democrats argue ballroom construction shouldn't continue without Congress' consent

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Democrats argue ballroom construction shouldn't continue without Congress' consent

Nearly 500,000 Russian soldiers have died in Ukraine war, Britain says (or 10 times as many American soldiers died in the Viet Nam War)

 I think this is why Russians are so pissed right now at Putin because these soldiers were not trained properly and many weren't told where they were going and had shot a gun only 3 or 4 shots in their lives.

So, the soldiers were lambs to the slaughter and not properly trained and soon just dead and that's all. 

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Nearly 500,000 Russian soldiers have died in Ukraine war, Britain says

Thursday, May 28, 2026

why did people believe in God so much through the 50s through the 70s?

 It was all we had to believe in. Medicine couldn't really be counted on the way it mostly can now.

Today the problem is less medicine and doctors and more insurance companies than anything else.

So, medicine has come light years forward since the 1950s when I was a child and watched so many people die because they didn't trust doctors and so wouldn't go to them and then they died sometimes. 

Artists bail on D.C. bash for America’s 250th birthday after being listed on the lineup

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Artists bail on D.C. bash for America’s 250th birthday after being listed on the lineup

1.1 Billion dollar U.S. effort to field 300,000 one way attack drones

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Yes, the Pentagon launched the Drone Dominance Program (DDP), a $1.1 billion initiative to rapidly procure and field over 300,000 small, one-way attack drones. The project aims to rebuild the U.S. defense industrial base and outfit combat units with affordable, domestically produced First-Person View (FPV) kamikaze drones.
Program Breakdown & Timeline
  • The Goal: Build a massive arsenal of hundreds of thousands of attritable (expendable) unmanned aerial systems (UAS) for deployed troops.
  • The Strategy: The program avoids long, multi-year acquisition cycles, opting instead for iterative "Gauntlet" challenges where companies compete in four sequential phases.
  • Cost & Volume Targets: Over the course of the four phases, the military aims to drive down the cost of each drone while drastically increasing production volume:
    • Phase 1: Ordering 30,000 drones at $5,000 per unit.
    • Future Phases: Scaling up to 150,000+ drones while targeting a reduced unit cost of $2,300.
  • Timeline: The Pentagon is scheduled to award initial delivery contracts and field the earliest wave of tens of thousands of drones, ensuring the new technology reaches service members.
Key Drivers & Context
  • Learning from Ukraine: The initiative was created in response to the changing nature of modern warfare, where cheap, disposable FPV drones have proven highly lethal and effective.
  • Addressing the Deficit: The U.S. military realized it was lagging in the rapid deployment of small-scale battlefield drones and relying too heavily on expensive missiles (costing upwards of $2 million) to shoot down inexpensive enemy drones.
  • U.S. Manufacturing: To ensure domestic supply chains, the Defense Department is heavily funding U.S.-based companies, with the Office of Strategic Capital vetting vendors to provide financial support and production stability.
For official details, vendor information, and ongoing program developments, you can review the official U.S. Department of War releases.
  • War Department Asks Industry to Make More Than 300K ...
    Dec 2, 2025 — During that time, 12 vendors will be asked to collectively produce 30,000 drones at a cost of $5,000 per unit, for a total of $150...
    U.S. Department of War (.gov)
  • War Department asks industry to make more than 300K drones, ...
    Dec 3, 2025 — "We need to outfit our combat units with unmanned systems at scale. We cannot wait. The funding provided by the Big Beautiful Bill...
    Army.mil
  • War Department Announces Vendors Invited to Compete in Phase I ...
    Feb 3, 2026 — The Gauntlet will conclude in early March, when approximately $150 million in prototype delivery orders will be placed, with deliv...
    U.S. Department of War (.gov)
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AI can make mistakes, so double-check responses

Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s home targeted in apparent swatting incident

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Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s home targeted in apparent swatting incident

Blue Origin rocket explodes on the launchpad during an engine-firing test

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Blue Origin rocket explodes on the launchpad during an engine-firing test

Student commencement boos are a sign of wider AI woes

If today's college graduates cannot get jobs because of AI, what's to stop them from destroying AI through Various means? If they are smart enough to graduate college they might be bright enough to crash all or most AIs too possibly permanently.
 
It's like what I have written before unless AI serves the general public why should it exist? 
 
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On college campuses nationwide, some people are growing uneasy with AI, citing threats to jobs, hobbies and even résumé-writing.

Teen ‘takeovers’ push cities to take action as experts see echoes of the Covid pandemic

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Teens who have been clashing with cops may be craving social interaction or an outlet after spending formative years isolated, experts say.

over 20,00 GLP-1 overdoses in the U.S.


Many telehealth companies have emerged in recent years offering easy access to GLP-1 weight loss drugs as demand has exploded.