The easiest person to deceive is one’s own self.
Edward Bulwer-Lytton, The Disowned (1828).
Bulwer-Lytton
The easiest person to deceive is one’s own self.
Edward Bulwer-Lytton, The Disowned (1828).
On January 19, 1795, the Batavian Republic was proclaimed in the Netherlands, replacing the Dutch Republic.
In early January, Paul Jacob discussed the Maduro capture story, noting its unconstitutionality and the likely political irrelevance of that unconstitutionality.
What has happened since then?
Well, a lot; or not much at all — depending on how you look at it!
No man thinks there is much ado about nothing when the ado is about himself.
Anthony Trollope, The Bertrams (1859).
On January 18, 1919, Ignacy Jan Paderewski — an internationally famous pianist and composer — became newly independent Poland’s first prime minister.
“President Donald Trump on Jan. 15 released his administration’s new health care affordability plan, which aims,” says The Epoch Times, “to lower prices through marketplace reforms that include price negotiation, increased competition, and greater price transparency.”
The White House has provided an announcement and a fact sheet as well as a PDF of the plan itself. It’s called The Great Health Care Plan, and the White House urges Congress to make it a key piece of legislation, to make up for the lapse in the failing ObamaCare scheme. Touted features include:
January 17, 1918: The first serious battles take place between the Red Guards and the White Guard in the Finnish Civil War.
There is no society, however free and democratic, where wealth will not create an aristocracy.
Edward Bulwer-Lytton, The Disowned (1828).
The current stage of the U.S. assault on the social media platform formerly known as Twitter takes the form of senatorial demands that X be removed from iOS and Android app stores.
Why the enmity?
Well, under the ownership of Elon Musk, X lets people say and write stuff that Democrats dislike. Such as criticism of Democratic policies and politicians, just the kind of speech the First Amendment was drafted to protect. (Criticism of Republican, Libertarian, communist, and anarchist policies and politicians? Also protected.)
The rationalization for the proposed ban is that X’s AI software, Grok, can generate pictures of nude or nearly nude people.
The ability to generate such images is hardly unique to this particular chatbot. If X is to be banned from app stores because of the possibility that users may post generated nudes on the platform, many more social media platforms would, logically, also have to be snared by the censorship net.
Yet, reports Reclaim the Net, the letter sent to the CEOs of Apple and Google “by Senators Ron Wyden, Ben Ray Luján, and Ed Markey asked the tech giants only about X and demanded that the companies remove X from their app stores entirely.”
Unsurprisingly, X has announced that the nude-ifying feature of Grok has been limited. I asked Grok, and it said that “there is now a taboo/restriction on generating or editing nudes (or near-nudes/revealing attire) of real, existing people from photos. It will refuse prompts to digitally ‘undress’ or sexualize identifiable real individuals. Attempts often result in refusal, blurring, or error messages.”
Fixed?
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
Illustration created with Nano Banana
See all recent commentary
(simplified and organized)
See recent popular posts
If printing money would end poverty, printing diplomas would end stupidity.
Argentine President Javier Milei, quoted by Rebecca Weisser, “Don’t Cry for Milei, Argentina,” Spectator Australia (December 2023).