12.08.2024

The Subscription Economy: Feeding the Machine of Greed


The world is no longer ours to own. Every corner of our lives, from music and movies to software and even heated car seats, has been transformed into a rented existence. Subscriptions, they call them. A gentle word for a system that bleeds the common person dry while lining the pockets of corporations with steady, unyielding streams of cash.

It wasn’t always like this. Once, you could buy a CD and listen to it forever. You could purchase software and use it until your computer finally gave up the ghost. Ownership meant freedom—control over what was yours. But that freedom has been sold off in tiny increments, replaced by “convenience.” Pay a little now, they said. A small monthly fee instead of one large purchase. Who wouldn’t prefer that?

But those small fees add up. They quietly multiply until, one day, you look at your bank account and realize hundreds of dollars are being siphoned off every month. Streaming services, cloud storage, fitness apps, food delivery memberships—it never ends. Each subscription is a chain, light enough not to notice at first, but together, they weigh you down.

This is not convenience. This is control.

Corporations have perfected the art of dependency. The tools you need to work—software, cloud services—are locked behind subscriptions. The entertainment that helps you unwind? Another subscription. Even the physical goods you own are incomplete without monthly payments. Car manufacturers now charge fees to unlock features already installed in your vehicle, as if selling you the car wasn’t enough.

This isn’t innovation; it’s exploitation. And it’s deliberate.

They know we don’t track these costs. Subscriptions are designed to be invisible, hidden in plain sight on our credit card statements. Auto-renewal ensures we keep paying, often without realizing it. Canceling is a maze of obscure menus and guilt-inducing prompts. They don’t want us to stop. Why would they, when we’re feeding their insatiable hunger for profit?

But this goes deeper than money. The subscription model represents a fundamental shift in power. When we no longer own what we use, we are at the mercy of those who do. Need access? Pay up. Fall behind? Lose it all. This dependency erodes autonomy, reducing us to perpetual renters in a world designed for corporate landlords.

The establishment feeds on this system, growing fatter while we grow poorer. It thrives on the myth that subscriptions are about choice and convenience, when in truth, they are about control and greed. It’s a slow, insidious process, one that preys on the common person’s trust and financial ignorance.

And yet, the tide is turning. People are beginning to wake up, to see the chains for what they are. Subscription fatigue is setting in, as individuals cancel services and demand alternatives. Open-source software, pay-as-you-go models, and outright ownership are becoming acts of rebellion against the establishment’s relentless grip.

This is not just about cutting costs. It’s about reclaiming what is ours—our money, our time, our freedom. It’s about resisting a system that sees us as nothing more than revenue streams. And it’s about holding corporations accountable for their role in perpetuating inequality and dependence.

The subscription economy is not sustainable, not for us and not for the world. It’s a model built on exploitation, and it’s time we tore it down. Because the only thing more dangerous than realizing you’ve been trapped is deciding to stay there.

We deserve better. We deserve freedom. And it starts by unsubscribing—from their services, from their lies, and from the system itself.


12.07.2024

The Handsome Avenger: Why No One’s Talking to the Cops About UnitedHealth CEO Killer

Brian Thompson, CEO of UnitedHealthcare, gunned down outside a Manhattan hotel. A tragic end? Maybe. A wake-up call? Absolutely. The real shock here isn’t the crime itself—it’s the roaring silence that followed. Witnesses, surveillance footage, and a masked shooter caught with his face exposed, but nobody’s talking. Why? Because for once, people feel like someone sent a message loud enough to shake the foundations of a system that has ignored their suffering for too long.

A Modern Robin Hood Without the Cash

The masked man who pulled the trigger isn’t stealing from the rich to give to the poor. He’s not refunding your wasted premiums or resurrecting loved ones denied treatment because of preexisting conditions. No, his actions won’t fix the ruined lives or the unpayable bills. But to the angry masses, that’s not the point.

This isn’t about getting their money back. It’s about making a statement—a brutal, unignorable message aimed at a system that has bled them dry while execs like Thompson raked in millions. The DOJ investigation into Thompson’s $15 million stock dump is just the latest chapter in a story people already know too well: profits before people, every damn time. And now, someone decided to write an ending that the public couldn’t ignore.

Why the Silence?

It’s not apathy—it’s protest. Why should anyone help the police when the system they represent is part of the problem? To many, Thompson wasn’t a victim—he was a symbol of everything wrong with healthcare in America. Over the past three years, he turned claim denials into a science and customer frustration into a business model. Meanwhile, patients who paid their premiums in good faith were left dying on hold with customer service.

So when the Handsome Avenger allegedly pulled the trigger, it wasn’t just an act of violence—it was a primal scream from a public that has been ignored, exploited, and betrayed. And let’s be real: the NYPD could offer front-row Yankees tickets, and no one would step up to name him. Not because people condone murder, but because they see this for what it is—a system finally being held accountable, in the only way anyone seems to notice anymore.

Profits Before People: A Legacy of Greed

Thompson’s reign at UnitedHealthcare was a masterclass in corporate cold-bloodedness. Claim denial rates skyrocketed. Algorithms were weaponized to reject care with surgical precision. Lives were destroyed—not metaphorically, but literally—all so Thompson could present glowing quarterly earnings to investors. His mantra? Screw the customers. Satisfy the shareholders.

When the DOJ launched its probe into insider trading, no one was surprised. Of course, he was selling millions in stock while his company faced federal scrutiny. That’s the playbook: bleed the system dry, take the money, and run. It wasn’t just greed—it was hubris, daring the world to catch him. But in the end, it wasn’t the law that stopped him; it was something far more primal: rage.

The Wake-Up Call America Didn’t Want But Needed

This wasn’t just about Thompson. It wasn’t even about UnitedHealthcare. It was about a broken healthcare system that has left people so angry, so desperate, that they’re ready to cheer on a vigilante with a gun. The Handsome Avenger doesn’t have to save anyone—he just has to remind the system that people are watching, and they’re done being ignored.

Think about it. How bad does it have to get for the public to rally behind a masked gunman? For people to refuse to cooperate with the police, not out of fear, but out of sheer defiance? The silence isn’t just deafening—it’s damning. It’s a message that no amount of PR spin or police investigations can drown out.

The tragedy here isn’t just the loss of a life—it’s the loss of faith. Faith that the system works. Faith that justice exists. Faith that the monthly premiums people scrape together will actually protect them when they need it most. That’s what’s been killed here, over decades of greed and indifference.

Brian Thompson didn’t just die; he became the face of a reckoning. And while the Handsome Avenger may not be a hero in the traditional sense, to the angry, grieving, and betrayed masses, he’s the only one who made the system listen. And that, more than anything, is why no one is talking.

TikTok: How to Ruin Lives in 60 Seconds or Less

 TikTok isn’t just a harmless time-suck filled with bad dance moves and avocado toast tutorials anymore. Nope, it’s officially evolved (or devolved?) into a cesspool of criminal masterminds disguised as "influencers," handing out step-by-step guides to wrecking other people’s lives. This isn’t innovation; it’s legalized chaos dressed up in quirky hashtags. And the platform? Oh, they love it. Viral videos equal ad dollars, and morality be damned.


Deadbeat Tenants: TikTok’s Rising Stars

Enter TikTok’s latest trend: the "How to Screw Your Landlord" movement. These freeloaders aren't just skipping rent—they’re making it a performance art. They're not stopping with the usual excuses like a lost job or bad credit; no, these keyboard anarchists are diving deep into the legal code to find every loophole possible to avoid paying. And they’ve got TikTok tutorials to guide them every step of the way.


And who’s their target? Evil corporate landlords? Fat cats twirling their mustaches while evicting orphans? Nope. It’s the little guys—retired couples renting out a spare property, single parents trying to make ends meet. These TikTok-inspired scumbags don’t care. They’ll squat for months, cost these families thousands, and then share a smug #RentFree post as if they’ve outsmarted the system rather than robbed someone blind.


Airbnb: Host Your Own Nightmare

Airbnb hosts are no safer from TikTok’s tidal wave of entitlement. “Just DM your host to ‘save on fees,’” they say. “Stay longer than planned and refuse to leave,” they advise. Oh, and don’t forget: “Cry discrimination if anyone challenges you!” TikTok influencers are handing out cheat codes to hijack people's homes like it's a game of Monopoly—but the stakes are real, and the victims are everyday people who dared to trust strangers.


Imagine investing your savings in a dream property, thinking you'll meet respectful travelers, only to end up battling a TikTok-educated squatter who turns your investment into their rent-free flop house. Good luck evicting them; by the time you’re done, your wallet will be as empty as their sense of decency.

Theft: Rebranded as “Life Hacks”

Let’s call this what it is: theft. These are not "life hacks." They’re not clever, they’re not inspiring, and they’re definitely not harmless. They’re the digital equivalent of smashing a car window and claiming the stereo because, "It wasn’t locked properly." The real kicker? TikTok isn’t just tolerating this; it’s rewarding it. The more outrageous the scam, the more the algorithm promotes it.

TikTok has made exploitation trendy. Destroy someone’s livelihood, but do it with a cute filter and catchy music, and you’re a hero to millions. Steal. Exploit. Manipulate. And don’t forget to tag your video with #SavvyNotSorry.

TikTok: The Chaos Cheerleader

TikTok loves to pretend it’s just the middleman, a neutral platform connecting people. Spoiler alert: TikTok is the arsonist handing out matches at a fireworks factory. They don’t just enable this madness; they thrive on it. Controversy equals clicks, clicks equal cash, and TikTok laughs all the way to the bank while landlords, Airbnb hosts, and regular people are left cleaning up the mess.

Enough is Enough

This needs to stop. TikTok’s influencers aren’t quirky creators; they’re modern-day parasites feeding off the good faith of others. And TikTok itself? It’s the ringleader of this circus of scumbaggery. At some point, we have to ask: When does a platform stop being a place for free expression and start being an accomplice to theft, fraud, and ruin?

It’s time to stop pretending TikTok is just a harmless app. It’s a monster in disguise, and the people promoting these schemes deserve every ounce of ridicule, legal action, and public shaming we can throw at them.

A Trojan Horse in Disguise

Let’s not mince words: TikTok, a Chinese-owned platform, isn’t just fumbling into chaos—it’s manufacturing it. Under the guise of a harmless social media app, TikTok is purposefully amplifying divisive content, encouraging lawlessness, and eroding trust within our society. It’s not just about videos; it’s about destabilizing a nation from the inside out. And we’re letting it happen, one “life hack” at a time.


12.03.2024

Limitless? Redefining Genius Beyond the Myths of Hawking, Sagan, and AI

This all started, as most of my deep dives into existential rabbit holes do, with a movie. I was watching Limitless again—the one where Bradley Cooper takes a magic pill and suddenly becomes the smartest guy in the room, the world, maybe the universe. It’s a thrilling concept, watching someone unlock the full potential of their brain. I always find it inspiring, this idea that the answers to everything—success, brilliance, solving the unsolvable—are just sitting there, waiting for the right push.

But then I started thinking: What does it really mean to be limitless? To be a genius? 

Genius, if we're going to keep throwing that word around, should be more than just a flash of brilliance or a knack for solving one type of puzzle. It should be the whole package: problem-solving, innovation, and creating something tangible. And now, here comes AI and its legion of algorithms, posing as the modern Prometheus, claiming to unlock the secrets of the universe and revolutionize everything. But let’s cut through the hype—shouldn't AI be the ultimate genius, capable of solving the world’s problems by now?

Here’s the thing. AI isn’t genius; it’s just a giant filing cabinet. Sure, it can cross-reference a billion pieces of information faster than you can microwave popcorn, but it doesn’t know anything. It doesn’t intuit. It doesn’t innovate. It connects dots already drawn by humans, like a hyperactive librarian pulling books off shelves and stacking them into neat piles. Impressive? Sure. Genius? Hardly.

True genius isn’t just rearranging information; it’s creating something completely new, often with nothing but raw materials and a bit of ingenuity. It’s the farmer who turns scrap into machinery that keeps their livelihood alive. It’s the mechanic who builds an engine from spare parts. It’s the musician who doesn’t need to read music because their fingers already know the story the piano keys are trying to tell. AI doesn’t have that spark. It can mimic creativity, but it doesn’t live it.

And this whole idea that AI should solve world hunger or climate change? It sounds nice, but let’s be real—AI isn’t going to step into a boardroom and negotiate with world leaders. It isn’t going to stand up to corrupt systems or navigate the tangled web of politics and greed that keeps solutions out of reach. It can model scenarios and predict outcomes, but it doesn’t have skin in the game. It doesn’t care. Genius, real genius, often comes with a deep, burning need to fix what’s broken. AI doesn’t burn—it computes.

Even the so-called geniuses of our time, Hawking and Sagan included, didn’t solve problems as much as they expanded the playground of ideas. They weren’t building rockets or fixing engines; they were theorizing, questioning, and inspiring others to take the baton. And that’s valuable, no doubt. But genius isn’t just about dreaming—it’s about doing.

So here’s where it gets messy. If genius isn’t just knowing, but doing, and AI isn’t doing much beyond rearranging human knowledge, then what are we left with? Maybe genius isn’t about being limitless at all. Maybe it’s about being human enough to take risks, to fail, to care about what comes next. AI might be fast, but it’s not fearless. It might be smart, but it’s not soulful. And if it can’t create or care, can we really call it genius?