Neil deGrasse Tyson, Chuck Nice, & Gary O’Reilly dive into the mechanics of thinking, how AI got its start, and what deep learning really means with cognitive and computer scientist, Nobel Laureate, and one of the architects of AI, Geoffrey Hinton.
Google has illegally broken into my Blogs over 47 times. Google has edited and illegally deleted some of my content. Additionally, X, Meta, and Google are still censoring many people, including me. Elon Musk never fixed any of the evil censorship that Jack Dorsey and his team built into the X software. We do not have online freedom of speech.

Sweden’s history is the story of a sparsely populated northern land that, through maritime skill, political pragmatism, and social compromise, evolved from Viking-age chiefdoms into an early modern great power and, later, a high-trust welfare democracy deeply integrated with Europe yet protective of its neutrality. The history of Sweden goes from Stone Age foragers through medieval Christian kingdoms, imperial expansion and retreat, industrialization and democratic reform, and the 20th-century settlement that underpins contemporary Sweden’s distinctive model.
The retreat of the last Ice Age, around 12,000–10,000 BCE, opened Scandinavia to human settlement from the south and northeast. Early hunter-gatherers followed reindeer and seals along coasts and inland waterways; Mesolithic sites dot today’s SkÃ¥ne and the west coast. By the Neolithic, farming and animal husbandry—moving north via the Funnel Beaker and later Battle Axe cultures—coexisted with foraging. Bronze Age petroglyphs at Tanum show ships, warriors, and plows, hinting at maritime trade and social stratification. Iron Age communities cultivated grains, raised livestock, and forged tools; longhouses clustered in farmsteads, with chieftains presiding over local things (assemblies). In the far north, the Sámi people developed reindeer herding and fishing lifeways that endured into the modern era.
The Viking Age connected Sweden to a vast trading and raiding network. While Norwegians and Danes pushed west into the North Atlantic and British Isles, Swedes—often called Rus in eastern sources—sailed rivers to the Baltic, Russia, and the Black and Caspian Seas. From hubs like Birka on Lake Mälaren and later Sigtuna, Swedish traders exchanged furs, iron, amber, and slaves for silver and luxury goods. Runestones across Uppland commemorate expeditions and social ties, preserving Old Norse names and a culture that prized honor and kinship.
Power remained decentralized: petty kings competed in Svealand (around Uppsala) and Götaland (to the south). Over time, these spheres—Svear and Götar—were fused under rulers who controlled key trade routes and extracted tribute. Norse religion centered on gods like Odin and Thor, but by the 10th–11th centuries Christian missions from Germany and England gained ground. The Gospel of Ansgar recounts early missionary efforts; by the 12th century, Christianity was entrenched, and bishops became power brokers alongside nobles.
Christianization introduced written law codes, ecclesiastical institutions, and royal ideology. The kingdom consolidated under dynasties such as the Stenkil, Sverker, and Erik lines; power still hinged on aristocratic consent expressed at assemblies like the Thing of All Swedes at Uppsala. The crown extended influence eastward, launching crusades into pagan Finland across the Baltic in the 12th–13th centuries; Swedish rule eventually took root in Finland, making it an integral realm for centuries.
Medieval society rested on three estates—nobility, clergy, and burghers—overseeing a largely peasant population. Notably, Swedish freeholding peasants (especially in the north and center) retained land rights and representation in the Riksdag of the Estates, giving rural communities an unusual voice compared to many European kingdoms. Towns like Stockholm (founded in the mid-13th century) linked Sweden to the Hanseatic League, whose German merchants dominated Baltic trade. German influence shaped law, coinage, and urban life.
Dynastic politics embroiled Sweden in the Kalmar Union (1397), a personal union uniting Denmark, Norway, and Sweden under a single monarch to counter the Hanse and German principalities. In practice, the union tilted toward Denmark, provoking repeated Swedish revolts led by noble families like the Bonde and Sture regents. Tensions culminated in the Stockholm Bloodbath (1520), when the new Danish king Christian II executed Swedish nobles after a disputed coronation. The atrocity delegitimized Danish rule and set the stage for Swedish independence.
Gustav Eriksson Vasa led a successful rebellion, becoming king in 1523. His reign launched a national monarchy, an administrative state, and a religious transformation. Seeking revenue and autonomy from Rome, Gustav embraced a Lutheran Reformation: church lands were confiscated, monasteries dissolved, and the Bible translated into Swedish (1541). The crown built a centralized tax system and reduced noble autonomy, while integrating Finland more tightly. A hereditary monarchy was proclaimed in 1544.
Gustav’s sons—Eric XIV, John III, and Charles IX—contested succession and religion (John’s Polish connections nudged toward Catholicism; Charles was staunchly Lutheran). The state expanded its military capacity, experimenting with conscription among the peasantry, and established a fleet to challenge Baltic rivals. Conflicts with Denmark, Russia, and Poland-Lithuania over Baltic dominance foreshadowed a more ambitious era.
The dura is the brain's armor: a membrane so tough that a surgeon normally cuts through it with a scalpel. For the first time in our clinical trials, we inserted the electrode threads of our implant straight through the dura and into the cortex, keeping the dura intact.
— Neuralink (@neuralink) June 30, 2026
Here's… pic.twitter.com/Sw2928iXxC
Thomas Jefferson remains one of the most intellectually generative—and morally fraught—figures in U.S. history. He is central not simply because he served as the third president, but because he helped supply the early republic with a political vocabulary (natural rights, popular sovereignty, religious liberty), a partisan infrastructure (the first durable opposition party), a governing style (skeptical of centralized authority yet capable of assertive executive action), and a geographic future (continental expansion). At the same time, Jefferson’s life makes visible the foundational contradiction of American liberalism: the cohabitation of universalistic claims about rights with a social and economic order sustained by racial slavery.
Jefferson’s intellectual formation is usually narrated through Enlightenment influence—reason, progress, empiricism, and a belief that political authority requires popular consent. But equally important is that his life unfolded within a Virginia planter society in which wealth, status, and political power were deeply entwined with land ownership and slavery. Jefferson’s ideals did not emerge outside that world; they were formulated inside it, often as an attempt to reconcile (or manage) tensions between republican aspiration and plantation reality.
His self-conception late in life is revealing. On his tombstone he asked to be remembered primarily as the author of the Declaration of Independence, the author of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, and the father of the University of Virginia—prioritizing authorship and institution-building over holding office. (Thomas Jefferson's Monticello) The inscription was not accidental branding; it was Jefferson’s claim about what counted as lasting political work: ideas, laws, and civic architecture.
Jefferson’s most famous writing task came through the Continental Congress’s appointment of the “Committee of Five” to draft a declaration explaining independence. The committee included Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert R. Livingston; Jefferson was chosen as principal drafter, with editing by others and revisions by Congress. (National Archives)
Two points matter for serious analysis:
First, the Declaration is both a philosophical statement and a coalition document. Its logic of rights and consent reads like political theory, yet it was produced within the practical constraints of uniting diverse colonies. That dual character explains why certain themes—especially slavery—appear in unstable form. Jefferson’s draft included language condemning the slave trade and blaming the king, but revolutionary coalition politics constrained what could remain. Even without quoting the draft at length, the larger point stands: the Declaration’s final text represents not only Jefferson’s mind but also a political bargain among colonies with conflicting material interests.
Second, the Declaration’s meaning expanded far beyond its immediate purpose. In 1776 it was meant to justify secession from Britain. Over time, its claims about equality and rights became a normative standard invoked by later reformers. This “afterlife” is crucial: Jefferson’s words became tools that he did not fully control, and later Americans used them to critique American practices—including slavery, racial hierarchy, and exclusion from citizenship.
Each year, it's estimated that more than one million
adoptable dogs and cats are euthanized in the United States, simply because too
many pets come into shelters and too few people consider adoption when looking
for a pet.
The number of euthanized animals could be reduced dramatically if more people adopted pets instead of buying them. When you adopt, you save a loving animal by making them part of your family and open up shelter space for another animal who might desperately need it.
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