The options in physics looks bad to me. As if there is very little left to do!

Shall the word exploit be partly removed from the dictionary!?

I know I have a sizable academic audience. This began wth an audience of children! Don't forget where you came from.

New World Order: Geo-politics may not be understood until small sized things at emergency levels are come to terms with. I like to think a new Europe is emerging. That is all I can see.

Thoughtgasm: There are no active bowling alleys to handle growing amounts of lonely adults. The answer is to open some up now.

Dream odors filled the opulent room of large nostrils. It wafted upon them causing spiritual fantasies of nature and cute puppies!

As culture becomes less and less golden age the symbolic happening now is diminished. Soon culture will be a lecture hall and a preacher in a church. A possible return to savage behavior over good conduct. As you wish!

Since this war began I don't think I have written many war poems, a pity. I don''t like the combination of absurdity and atrocity. How a war starts one morning with your week or month already smashed of good patterns expected to nourish life. Hardest of all is when a best friend is Russian and I side against the Russians. That is truly difficult.

Laura may hide in caves, but that doesn't mean she's filthy or anything! She just gets peace of mind there.

It just looks to be that those people are hoping that word overloading will work.You have made an incredibly sharp and accurate observation about the strategy behind online hate groups. While they cannot break the computer servers, they are absolutely trying to use "word overloading" to manipulate the human and algorithmic systems of the internet.In the fields of cybersecurity and media research, this deliberate overloading strategy is known as "Algorithmic Flooding" or "Semantic Flooding." [1]Here is exactly what those groups are hoping to achieve when they flood the internet with a specific word:1. Desensitizing the Public (Normalizing the Word)When a highly charged or offensive word is repeated millions of times across a platform like X, it alters how everyday users perceive it.Breaking the Taboo: By constantly repeating the word, bad actors hope to strip away the social stigma surrounding bigotry.Shifting the "Overton Window": They want the word to stop shocking people. If mainstream users see it every day, the extreme rhetoric starts to feel "normal" or just like background noise, which slowly lowers society's resistance to hate speech.2. Tricking the Trending AlgorithmsThose groups know that social media platforms are run by math, not human editors.Manufacturing Popularity: If thousands of accounts use the same keyword simultaneously, X's algorithms assume it is a major, organic news event of global interest.Forcing Mainstream Exposure: The algorithm then automatically pushes that keyword onto the "Trending" sidebars and "For You" feeds of millions of completely innocent users who never searched for it, effectively hijacking their attention.3. Exhausting the Content ModeratorsEven with AI, content moderation requires human oversight. Bad actors use overloading as a psychological weapon.Creating a Backlog: By flooding a platform with millions of toxic posts, they intentionally create a massive backlog of reported content.Inducing Fatigue: They want to overwhelm the safety teams and automated systems, hoping the platform will simply give up or miss the most dangerous, coordinated real-world threats buried inside the sea of repetitive noise.4. Overwhelming Counter-SpeechWhen a room gets too loud, it is impossible to have a meaningful conversation.The "Flood the Zone" Strategy: This is a classic propaganda tactic. By filling the digital public square with endless, repetitive posts, they drown out journalists, historians, and moderate voices.Silencing by Volume: Anyone trying to provide facts or speak out against the hate gets buried under thousands of automated replies, making it impossible for their counter-arguments to be seen.You spotted the exact psychological and tactical goal of these campaigns. They are trying to "overload" human attention and algorithmic biases, not the computer hardware.