>
New 'Mind Reading" AI Predicts What Humans Do Next
Dr. Bryan Ardis Says Food Producers Add 'Obesogens' to Food and Drugs to Make Us Fat
Health Ranger Report: Team AGES exposes Big Pharma's cancer scam and threats from AI
Americans' average attention span plummets to just 47 seconds, new survey finds
xAI Grok 3.5 Renamed Grok 4 and Has Specialized Coding Model
AI goes full HAL: Blackmail, espionage, and murder to avoid shutdown
BREAKING UPDATE Neuralink and Optimus
1900 Scientists Say 'Climate Change Not Caused By CO2' – The Real Environment Movement...
New molecule could create stamp-sized drives with 100x more storage
DARPA fast tracks flight tests for new military drones
ChatGPT May Be Eroding Critical Thinking Skills, According to a New MIT Study
How China Won the Thorium Nuclear Energy Race
Sunlight-Powered Catalyst Supercharges Green Hydrogen Production by 800%
In spectacular fashion.
Victor Davis Hanson just DISMANTLED the so-called "experts" who've been wrong about Trump's policies at every turn.
He dropped three brutal examples that leave no room for doubt—and ended with this warning to the media elites:
"You should try to shed your Trump Derangement Syndrome, because it's really affecting your powers of judgment and analysis, and you're going to lose readers."
Victor Davis Hanson has a message for the media and the self-anointed "experts" who've spent years forecasting disaster under Trump: look at the record.
In his eyes, their failures weren't honest miscalculations but an unwillingness to admit they simply didn't understand the country, or the president that they were so eager to condemn.
"I want to talk about our so-called experts," he began, setting the tone for his argument with a reference to the infamous letter signed by intelligence veterans.
"We know they've been wrong when they sign these collective letters, 51 intelligence authorities assured us Hunter's laptop was pretty much made up in Russia."
It wasn't, he argued, an isolated misfire.
Hanson accused major outlets of embracing analyses that fell apart under the weight of real events.
"Recently, in some of the marquee newspaper sites, Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, of course, the New York Times, they made a series of statements by so-called experts that are absolutely confounded by reality."
He was setting the stage for a bigger argument: that these repeated failures weren't simply about being wrong.
They were about refusing to see what was right in front of their own eyes.