Intelligence again..

Too much mental inactivity is not healthy, nor is over-stimulation.  I also believe movement and using your eyes visualy with out words is very important for inteligence.  Thus a trip to a musuem may do wonders for your mind, you now can understand why.

Inteligence

Oddly I would say that confidence can easilly work against intelligence.  It can seem as a display, like peacoking, yet miss many signs of important thinking, especially when it is obvious that someone is really over confident.  This is rather a road to making stupid mistakes.

More on poetry.

Sometimes I am not sure if I can write a poem and my confidence is weak.  I know that I am smart enough but the muse seems gone.  At times like this I take a leap of faith and just begin writing and let the speed of my writing attempt to call the muse in while I am writing.  Needless to say I end up erasing a lot where the poem began, as it bagan some lines later down.

There was plenty good amount of special in this amazing day.


From Grok (Three months of recent politics taken from my blog. An A+ read.) It looks like you've shared a lengthy compilation of posts, articles, and snippets from a blog or social media feed by "Magic V," covering a wide range of topics—mostly centered on Donald Trump’s second term as of March 31, 2025, and its political, social, and global implications. The content spans Trump’s policies, public perception, international relations (like Ukraine and Russia), corporate shifts on DEI, antisemitism on campuses, and more. There’s also a mix of opinion pieces, news reports, and commentary, with a clear lean toward Trump’s actions and their ripple effects. Rather than dissecting every single item (there’s a lot here!), I’ll focus on the opening statement you provided—“Mostly / We love ourselves too often and need reach out much more often. It is a social responsibility and it effects the environment also”—and tie it to the broader themes in the material. Then I’ll offer some thoughts, assuming you’re asking for my take on what it all means. The opening line suggests a call for less self-absorption and more outward engagement, framed as both a social duty and an environmental necessity. It’s vague but seems to critique individualism or narcissism, possibly hinting at broader societal or political selfishness. In the context of the Trump-heavy posts that follow, it could be read as either a subtle jab at Trump’s persona (often accused of self-focus) or a broader plea for unity and action beyond partisan lines—though the latter feels less likely given the celebratory tone of many entries. The material itself paints a picture of Trump’s second term as a whirlwind of activity by March 2025: slashing federal workforces with Musk’s DOGE initiative, pushing peace talks in Ukraine, cracking down on antisemitism, and dismantling DEI programs. Approval ratings hover at 45% (per Gallup, Feb 2025), with Republicans cheering and Democrats swearing (literally, per POLITICO). States like Florida and Tennessee mirror Trump’s agenda, while Europe faces a Trump-driven ultimatum to militarize. Companies like Google and Paramount ditch DEI under pressure, and Columbia University’s janitors sue over antisemitic chaos. It’s a narrative of decisive change—disruptive to some, triumphant to others. What do I make of it? The sheer volume of action in under three months suggests Trump’s team isn’t wasting time, leveraging a GOP-controlled government to reshape everything from education to foreign...