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Read more about American Exceptionalism Is Not a Slogan. It Is a Behavioral Record.
Read more about American Exceptionalism Is Not a Slogan. It Is a Behavioral Record.

American Exceptionalism Is Not a Slogan. It Is a Behavioral Record.

Apr 18, 2026
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Read more about American Exceptionalism Is Not a Slogan. It Is a Behavioral Record.
Read more about American Exceptionalism Is Not a Slogan. It Is a Behavioral Record.
I asked four AI systems the same question. Not a softball. A stress test. Compare the United States to at least ten other nations across both world wars. Look at how we police our own military. Look at how we treat defeated enemies. Look at how we behave toward our neighbors compared to how China behaves toward the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore, Australia, and Vietnam. Look at Venezuela. Strip away rhetoric. Look only at behavior. Then tell me whether American exceptionalism is real. Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Grok each produced independent analyses. They disagreed on emphasis. They disagreed on causation. They did not disagree on the data. And the data settles the question.
Read more about Chemistry Is Not a Code
Read more about Chemistry Is Not a Code

Chemistry Is Not a Code

Apr 18, 2026
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Read more about Chemistry Is Not a Code
Read more about Chemistry Is Not a Code
There is a move that gets made repeatedly in origin-of-life research, and once you see it, you cannot stop seeing it. It goes like this: acknowledge that something is chemically hard, propose a speculative mechanism as the workaround, and then continue talking as if the workaround solved the problem it was introduced to avoid.
Read more about When Jargon Replaces Judgment: The Real Problem with the MICE Reply
Read more about When Jargon Replaces Judgment: The Real Problem with the MICE Reply

When Jargon Replaces Judgment: The Real Problem with the MICE Reply

Apr 16, 2026
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Read more about When Jargon Replaces Judgment: The Real Problem with the MICE Reply
Read more about When Jargon Replaces Judgment: The Real Problem with the MICE Reply
Dr. Neville Buch and the Management Institute for Contributory Economy did not answer my forensic critique with evidence. They answered it with vocabulary. That is the heart of the problem.
Read more about Common Objections Answered
Read more about Common Objections Answered

Common Objections Answered

Apr 15, 2026
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Read more about Common Objections Answered
Read more about Common Objections Answered
A follow-up to "The Hidden Creed of Darwinian Naturalism." The first article made a simple claim: when naturalism merges with Darwinism, the result is not neutral science but a functional theology. It answers the same questions religion answers. It just answers them in the opposite direction. The response was predictable. Some readers saw the structure immediately. Others pushed back. This follow-up addresses the most common objections. Not to win arguments, but to sharpen the distinctions. If the original piece gave you language, this one stress-tests it.
Read more about I Asked Four AI Systems to Evaluate an Origins of Life Paper.
Read more about I Asked Four AI Systems to Evaluate an Origins of Life Paper.

I Asked Four AI Systems to Evaluate an Origins of Life Paper.

Apr 15, 2026
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Read more about I Asked Four AI Systems to Evaluate an Origins of Life Paper.
Read more about I Asked Four AI Systems to Evaluate an Origins of Life Paper.
There is a standard argument you hear whenever someone challenges the chemical evolution story, the idea that life originated from unguided chemistry on the early Earth. The argument goes something like this: the science is settled, the evidence is overwhelming, and anyone who questions it is either ignorant of the research or pushing a religious agenda. I decided to test that claim. Not with theology. Not with scripture. With the forensic method.
Read more about Why are there two different Creation accounts in Genesis chapters 1-2?
Read more about Why are there two different Creation accounts in Genesis chapters 1-2?

Why are there two different Creation accounts in Genesis chapters 1-2?

Apr 14, 2026
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Read more about Why are there two different Creation accounts in Genesis chapters 1-2?
Read more about Why are there two different Creation accounts in Genesis chapters 1-2?
Genesis 1:1 says, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” Later, in Genesis 2:4, it seems that a second, different story of creation begins. The idea of two differing creation accounts is a common misinterpretation of these two passages, which, in fact, describe the same creation event. They do not disagree as to the order in which things were created and do not contradict one another. Genesis 1 describes the “six days of creation” (and a seventh day of rest); Genesis 2 covers only one day of that creation week—the sixth day—and there is no contradiction.
Read more about Why was Laconia ruled by two kings at a time?
Read more about Why was Laconia ruled by two kings at a time?

Why was Laconia ruled by two kings at a time?

Apr 12, 2026
Read more about Why was Laconia ruled by two kings at a time?
Read more about Why was Laconia ruled by two kings at a time?
Who was Leonidas I's mate during Persian invasion? Although resilient, the Spartan oligarchic system lacked the long-term perspective.
Read more about Why Japan’s Indigenous Jōmon Women Preferred “Immigrant” Yayoi Men
Read more about Why Japan’s Indigenous Jōmon Women Preferred “Immigrant” Yayoi Men

Why Japan’s Indigenous Jōmon Women Preferred “Immigrant” Yayoi Men

Apr 12, 2026
Read more about Why Japan’s Indigenous Jōmon Women Preferred “Immigrant” Yayoi Men
Read more about Why Japan’s Indigenous Jōmon Women Preferred “Immigrant” Yayoi Men
A historical account of demographic and technological drivers behind the forging of modern Japan. How had the two cultures lived for centuries?
Read more about The Black Box: Faded Glory
Read more about The Black Box: Faded Glory

The Black Box: Faded Glory

Apr 11, 2026
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Read more about The Black Box: Faded Glory
Read more about The Black Box: Faded Glory
The lab sat beneath a stretch of desert that never made the news. No signs. No maps. Just heat above and silence below. Commander Carlos leaned over the glass partition, staring into the chamber. “Why do they call it the Black Box?” Rachel asked. Carlos didn’t look away. “Because no one knows how it thinks anymore.”
Read more about The Indifference of the Void
Read more about The Indifference of the Void

The Indifference of the Void

Apr 11, 2026
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Read more about The Indifference of the Void
Read more about The Indifference of the Void
"What do you think is in there, really?" Elias whispered, his eyes never leaving the monolithic slab of matte-black carbon fiber that dominated the center of the subterranean server farm. It didn't hum or whir. It just existed, a perfect, absorbing void. Sarah adjusted her technician's headset. "A neural network that can predict corn futures in 2042 down to the bushel. Why?"
Read more about When Did Respect Become Optional? Navigating Motherhood in a Child-Free World
Read more about When Did Respect Become Optional? Navigating Motherhood in a Child-Free World

When Did Respect Become Optional? Navigating Motherhood in a Child-Free World

Apr 10, 2026
Read more about When Did Respect Become Optional? Navigating Motherhood in a Child-Free World
Read more about When Did Respect Become Optional? Navigating Motherhood in a Child-Free World
I respect people choosing not to have kids—but the growing negativity toward children and moms feels excessive. Different life choices shouldn’t come with disrespect but support to each. :)
Read more about  Talking to another smart atheist.
Read more about  Talking to another smart atheist.

Talking to another smart atheist.

Apr 10, 2026
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Read more about  Talking to another smart atheist.
Read more about  Talking to another smart atheist.
Hello everyone, Dan Mason here. Talking to another smart atheist. This time it is Aljay. Lets us begin. Aljay, your response sounds tolerant, but it blurs several different issues. First, from a biblical standpoint, the question is not whether every atheist walks around feeling emotional rage toward a being he thinks is real. The deeper issue is whether man resists the true God, suppresses truth about Him, and rejects His authority. Scripture frames the problem that way.
Read more about The Code Before the Chemistry
Read more about The Code Before the Chemistry

The Code Before the Chemistry

Apr 06, 2026
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Read more about The Code Before the Chemistry
Read more about The Code Before the Chemistry
Why Self-Replicating RNA Cannot Specify a Living Cell Dan Mason, Ph.D. The Mason Brief 2026 I want to walk you through a thought experiment that has occupied me for several months. It concerns the origin of life, but not in the way most people discuss it. The usual debate is about whether life could have arisen naturally or whether it required a Creator. That debate has its place. But before we can answer it, we need to understand what the question actually is. The question is not: "How did molecules start copying themselves?" The question is: "How did chemistry come under the rule of a code?" These are not the same question. And once you see the difference, the origin-of-life problem looks very different than it does in most popular accounts.
Read more about What the DNA Remembers
Read more about What the DNA Remembers

What the DNA Remembers

Apr 05, 2026
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Read more about What the DNA Remembers
Read more about What the DNA Remembers
What the DNA Remembers Noah's Flood, the Y-Chromosome Bottleneck, and What Modern Genetics Cannot Explain Away Dan Mason, Ph.D. | The Mason Brief | 2026 The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. — Genesis 6:5 I want to start with something that happened in a genetics laboratory in Estonia, because it matters for what we believe happened on a mountain in Turkey. In 2015, a team of researchers sequenced 456 complete Y-chromosome profiles from 110 populations worldwide. They were looking for patterns in human paternal ancestry. What they found stopped them cold. The male line of humanity nearly vanished.
Read more about Paul Wallis lies and his Followers
Read more about Paul Wallis lies and his Followers

Paul Wallis lies and his Followers

Apr 04, 2026
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Read more about Paul Wallis lies and his Followers
Read more about Paul Wallis lies and his Followers
Paul Wallis lies and his Followers From mixla6590 ​​on YouTube to me... DanMason2025, she wrote… it's April 2026, the system is collapsing, the history is exposing, the truth is revealing, the mass awakening is accelerating, you're talking too much. Are you watching April 2026? it's very quick, bible, church religion, politics, medical, school, pharma is exposing so wild. I then responded…. You’re seeing a lot of noise and calling it a pattern.
Read more about What If They Are Reading the Evidence Wrong Again?
Read more about What If They Are Reading the Evidence Wrong Again?

What If They Are Reading the Evidence Wrong Again?

Apr 02, 2026
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Read more about What If They Are Reading the Evidence Wrong Again?
Read more about What If They Are Reading the Evidence Wrong Again?
There is a sentence buried in a 2026 paper published in the journal Geology that should have stopped the scientific community cold. Researchers from the University of Texas at Austin, using a new high-resolution method to date ancient sediment layers, found that microscopic ocean plankton began appearing as new species within less than 2,000 years after the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs. A geophysics professor on the team described the pace as “ridiculously fast.” The paper itself uses words like “extraordinary,” “shocking,” and “within a geologic heartbeat.”
Read more about Sweet Valley High: Secrets (and for an 80s YA there are a lot)
Read more about Sweet Valley High: Secrets (and for an 80s YA there are a lot)

Sweet Valley High: Secrets (and for an 80s YA there are a lot)

Apr 01, 2026
Read more about Sweet Valley High: Secrets (and for an 80s YA there are a lot)
Read more about Sweet Valley High: Secrets (and for an 80s YA there are a lot)
Enid did what with who? This is one of my favorites because its edgy for the time, especially if you were graduating out of the BSC books and moving on to more "mature" themes. It's still watered down in a "Jessi is hooked on caffeine pills and is so excited" sort of way but not so cringe that you set it aside and say "Not today PSA". I honestly wonder if this is a product of the "Just Say No" era that they shoved down our throats or a response to a sort of book version of the "After School Special". Either way not all is sweet in Sweet Valley...
Read more about A Look Back ar Sweet Valley High Double Love
Read more about A Look Back ar Sweet Valley High Double Love

A Look Back ar Sweet Valley High Double Love

Apr 01, 2026
Read more about A Look Back ar Sweet Valley High Double Love
Read more about A Look Back ar Sweet Valley High Double Love
Rereading YA as an adult is eye-opening and hilarious 😂 I will be posting my real life stories relating to the books on a separate post so if you choose to skip those you may.
Read more about The Blindness Problem
Read more about The Blindness Problem

The Blindness Problem

Mar 29, 2026
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Read more about The Blindness Problem
Read more about The Blindness Problem
Missing the Signal in Plain Sight Billions have been spent searching for intelligent life in the cosmos. We scan distant galaxies. We listen for faint signals. We analyze dust, gas, and rock for traces of meaning. We are looking for a message. And yet, the most complex, information-rich system we have ever encountered is not out there.
Read more about "Is there a purpose for atheism other than hating God?"
Read more about "Is there a purpose for atheism other than hating God?"

"Is there a purpose for atheism other than hating God?"

Mar 28, 2026
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Read more about "Is there a purpose for atheism other than hating God?"
Read more about "Is there a purpose for atheism other than hating God?"
My Response to Lowell Jackson, who answered the question. "Is there a purpose for atheism other than hating God?" Lowell, I do see a pattern, but it is not the one you think. Your argument assumes that all God-claims are the same kind of claim, dressed in different cultural language. Zeus, Odin, and the God of the Bible are treated as interchangeable entries on a menu, so rejecting one is supposed to be structurally identical to rejecting another. That is the heart of the argument. The problem is that these claims are not in the same category.