With some random SF covers thrown in.
In an age where AI and pay-to-play are screwing up online searches, Wikipedia looks like a much more reliable data source.
Paul Schrader, however, thinks AI writes better than people. I’d be more impressed if he’d offered examples of these brilliant script ideas he claims AI gave him. And of course, jumping from “that computer program writes better than me” to “that program writes better than anyone” is an old fallacy.
Oh, and UCLA is having AI create courses.
Trump supposedly wants us out of the World Health Organization because it’s controlled by China. His decision is bad for us, good for China.
We learned from the pandemic that handwashing can save lives. It’s a simple act that can make a huge difference.
Why “RFK has some good points about public health” is a bad argument. Especially when RFK makes money off being anti-vax.
The debate over fluoride in drinking water, for instance, is way more complex than we’re going to get out of Kennedy, who just wants to ban it.
Jay Bhattacharya, Trump’s nominee to head the National Institute of Health, predicted 5,000 deaths tops from covid before herd immunity saved us. His supporters are portraying him as (what else) a daring visionary who saw what orthodox medicine did not — but that’s a lie.

The kids are alright: a middle school student has stumbled upon a cancer-fighting compound in goose poop, and two black girls in New Orleans have made a mathematics breakthrough.
Art top to bottom by Gil Kane, Murphy Anderson (x2), Jack Kirby and Kane again. All rights to images remain with current holders.






