John Robson: How ‘Rule of the Expert’ Is Displacing Genuine Self-Government in Canada | The Epoch Times
— Read on www.theepochtimes.com/opinion/john-robson-how-rule-of-the-expert-is-displacing-genuine-self-government-in-canada-5905815
Tag Archives: thinking outside the box
The Agenda: Their Vision – Your Future
The film “The Agenda: Their Vision | Your Future” is a 2025 independent documentary exploring claims that powerful global elites are using new technologies—such as surveillance, artificial intelligence, digital currencies, and digital identities—to increase social control and centralize power. It argues that these tools enable unprecedented monitoring and restriction of personal freedoms, potentially limiting access to essentials like food, energy, money, travel, and even the internet. The documentary links these developments to international initiatives like the United Nations’ Agenda 2030 and the push for Net Zero, questioning whether these are genuine efforts for good or steps toward what it describes as “totalitarian global control.” The film presents expert opinions from the UK, USA, and Europe, drawing parallels to dystopian works like Orwell’s “1984” and Huxley’s “Brave New World,” and warns of a “digital prison” if society does not resist these trends.
Vindication for the Unvaccinated?
BY DAVID MARKS JUNE 22, 2025 At a recent family gathering, I sat at the dinner table with a group of loved ones for the first time since the …
Vindication for the Unvaccinated?
When Smartphones Get Smarter, Do We Get Dumber?
https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/when-smartphones-get-smarter-do-we-get-dumber-5704863
September 17, 2024
As Mohamed Elmasry, emeritus professor of computer engineering at the University of Waterloo, watched his 11- and 10-year-old grandchildren tapping away on their smartphones, he posed a simple question: “What’s one-third of nine?”
Instead of taking a moment to think, they immediately opened their calculator apps, he wrote in his book “iMind Artificial and Real Intelligence.”
Later, fresh from a family vacation in Cuba, he asked them to name the island’s capital. Once again, their fingers flew to their devices, Googling the answer rather than recalling their recent experience.
With 60 percent of the global population—and 97 percent of those younger than 30—using smartphones, technology has inadvertently become an extension of our thinking process.
However, everything comes at a cost. Cognitive outsourcing, which involves relying on external systems to collect or process information, may increase one’s risk of cognitive decline.
Habitual GPS (global positioning system) use, for example, has been linked to a significant decrease in spatial memory, reducing one’s ability to navigate independently. As AI applications such as ChatGPT become a household norm—with 55 percent of Americans reporting regular AI use—recent studies found that it is resulting in impaired critical thinking skills, dependency, loss of decision-making, and laziness.
Experts emphasize cultivating and prioritizing innate human skills that technology cannot replicate.
Neglected Real Intelligence
Referring to his grandkids and their overreliance on technology, Elmasry explained that they are far from “stupid.”
The problem is that they are not using their real intelligence.
They—and the rest of their generation—have grown accustomed to using apps and digital devices—unconsciously defaulting to internet search engines such as Google rather than thinking something through.
Just as physical muscles atrophy without use, so too do our cognitive abilities weaken when we let technology think for us.
A telling case is now called the “Google effect,” or digital amnesia, as shown in a 2011 study from Columbia University.


Betsy Sparrow and colleagues at Columbia found that individuals tend to easily forget information that is readily available on the internet.
Their findings show that people are more likely to remember things they think are not available online. They are also better at recalling where to find information on the internet than recalling the information itself.
A 2021 study further tested the effects of Googling and found that participants who relied on search engines such as Google performed worse on learning assessments and memory recall than those who did not search online.
The study also shows that Googlers often had higher confidence that they had “mastered” the study material, indicating an overestimation in learning and ignorance of their learning deficit. Their overconfidence might be the result of having an “illusion of knowledge” bias—accessing information through search engines creates a false sense of personal expertise and diminishes people’s effort to learn.
Overreliance on technology is part of the problem, but having it around may be just as harmful. A study published in the Journal of the Association for Consumer Research discovered that “the mere presence” of a smartphone reduced “available cognitive capacity”—even if the phone was off or placed in a bag.

This “brain drain” effect likely occurs because the presence of a smartphone taps into our cognitive resources, subtly allocating our attention and making it harder to concentrate fully on the task at hand, researchers say. Not only does excessive tech use impair our cognition, but also, clinicians and researchers have noticed that it is linked to impaired social intelligence—the innate aspects that make us human.
Becoming Machine-Like
In the United States, children ages 8 to 12 typically spend four to six hours per day looking at screens, while teenagers may spend up to nine hours daily looking at screens. Further, 44 percent of teenagers feel anxious, and 39 percent feel lonely without their phones.
Excessive screen time reduces social interactions and emotional intelligence and has been linked to autistic-like symptoms, with longer durations of screen use correlated with more severe symptoms.
Dr. Jason Liu, a medical doctor who also has a doctorate in neuroscience, is a research scientist and founding president of the Mind-Body Science Institute International. Liu told The Epoch Times that he is particularly concerned about children’s use of digital media.
He said he has observed irregularities in his young patients who spend excessive time in the digital world—noticing their mechanical speech, lack of emotional expression, poor eye contact, and difficulty forming genuine human connections. Many exhibit attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms, responding with detachment and struggling with emotional fragility.
“We should not let technology replace our human nature,” Liu said.
Corroborating Liu’s observations, a JAMA studyfollowed about 3,000 adolescents with no prior ADHD symptoms over 24 months and found that a higher frequency of modern digital media use was associated with significantly higher odds of developing ADHD symptoms.

As early as 1998, scientists introduced the concept of the “Internet Paradox,” which is that the internet, despite being a “social tool,” leads to antisocial behavior.
Observing 73 households during their first years online, researchers noted that increased internet use was associated with reduced communication with family members, smaller social circles, and heightened depression and loneliness.
However, a three-year follow-up found that most of the adverse effects dissipated. The researcher explained this through a “rich get richer” model; introverts experienced more negative effects from the internet, while extroverts, with stronger social networks, benefited more and became more engaged in online communities, mitigating negative effects.
Manuel Garcia-Garcia, global lead of neuroscience at Ipsos, who holds a doctorate in neuroscience, told The Epoch Times that human-to-human connections are vital for building deeper connections and that while digital communication tools facilitate connectivity, they can lead to superficial interactions and impede social cues.
Supporting Liu’s observation of patients becoming “machine-like,” a Facebook emotional contagion experiment, conducted on nearly 700,000 users, manipulated news feeds to show more positive or negative posts. Users exposed to more positive content posted more positive updates, while those seeing more negative content posted more negative updates.
This demonstrated that technology can nudge human behavior in subtle yet systematic ways. This nudging, according to experts, can make our actions and emotions predictable, similar to programmed responses.
The Eureka Moment
“Sitting on your shoulders is the most complicated object in the known universe,” theoretical physicist Michio Kaku said.
While the most advanced technologies, including AI, may appear sophisticated, they are incommensurate with the human mind.
“AI is very smart, but not really,” Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, professor of psychology at Temple University and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, told The Epoch Times. “It’s a machine algorithm that’s really good at predicting the next word. Full stop.”
The human brain is constructed developmentally, and it’s “not just given to us like a computer is in a box,” Hirsh-Pasek said. Our environment and experiences shape the intricate web of neural connections, 100 billion neurons interconnected by 100 trillion synapses.
Human learning thrives on meaning, emotion, and social interaction. Hirsh-Pasek noted that computer systems such as AI are indifferent to these elements. Machines only “learn” with the data they are fed, optimizing for the best possible output.
A cornerstone of human intelligence is the ability to learn through our senses, Jessica Russo, a clinical psychologist, told The Epoch Times. When we interact with our environment, we process a large amount of data from what we see, hear, taste, and touch.
AI systems cannot go beyond the information they have been given, and they, therefore, cannot truly produce anything new, Hirsh-Pasek said.
“[AI] is an exquisitely good synthesizer. It’s not an exquisitely good thinker,” she said.

AI lacks the intuitive capabilities of humans to truly understand the depth and authenticity of emotions, Dr. Sai Zuo, a psychiatrist in medical anthropology and social medicine, told The Epoch Times.
She said that certain aspects of human intelligence transcend scientists’ current understanding, suggesting that concepts such as inspiration originate from “a higher level of the universe.”
Many moments of inspiration have yielded breakthroughs in science development. While taking a bath, the ancient Greek mathematician Archimedes realized that the volume of an object could be determined by the amount of water it displaces, leading him to shout “Eureka!”—a discovery that established the principle of buoyancy. While taking a break, Albert Einstein imagined an experiment involving two lightning bolts, which led to the theory of special relativity.
Modern entertainment and technology, however, obstruct the generation of new ideas by reducing creativity.
For example, in our continually stimulated world, there is no space or time for boredom. However, boredom increases creativity and allows one to think of novel solutions.
Fortunately, there are effective ways to counteract technology’s negative influences and nourish our innate human capabilities.
Regaining Human Intelligence
Experts suggest that screen fasting, during which technology is removed, can help cultivate more focused lives.
A study showed that sixth graders who spent five days at a nature camp without technology demonstrated significant improvements in nonverbal emotional cues, such as reading facial emotions, compared with their peers who did not go.
Even setting reasonable limits can mitigate the adverse effects.
Young adults whose social media use was limited to 30 minutes a day for two weeks experienced lowered smartphone addiction and improved sleep, life satisfaction, stress, and relationships. According to Hirsh-Pasek, the key is balance.
Additionally, recent research found that simple interventions such as disabling nonessential notifications, keeping the phone on silent, disabling Touch ID and Face ID, hiding social media apps, and changing the phone to grayscale help lower screen time.
If a digital detox is unfeasible, research shows there are other ways to help.
Sleep
Getting a good night’s sleep is essential for learning and memory consolidation. Even one night of sleep deficit can significantly impair the ability to commit things to memory.
Our brains engage in a vital cleaning process during sleep. Neurotoxic waste products accumulate throughout the day and are flushed out, contributing to the healthy function of brain cells.
Spirituality
Modern digital technology is synonymous with endless stimulation, separating us from important aspects of life, such as a peaceful mind.
“There’s really not much room to be spiritual when we’re so busy doing,” Russo said.
She noted that this culture is saddled with distractions—incessant emails, notifications, and news alerts. This causes our bodies to drown in dopamine.
This constant stimulation keeps us locked in a heightened stress response, the “fight or flight” response, flooding our systems with cortisol and adrenaline. Over time, this exhausts our minds and bodies, hindering our capacity for deeper thought and connection.
Spirituality, Russo said, is about rediscovering the meaning of “spirit”—derived from spiritus, the Latin word for “breath.” It’s about slowing down, taking a deep breath, and being fully present in each moment.
Spiritual practices encourage meaningful connections, including empathy and emotional intelligence.
They can also enhance cognitive abilities such as creativity, attention, meaning-making, and purpose. These practices engage our minds in ways that differ from and potentially complement the information retrieval common in our techno-centric world.
The Choice Before Us
We are standing at a precipice of technological advancement, according to Hirsh-Pasek, with things such as AI and the metaverse advancing daily. The challenge and the opportunity lie in ensuring that technology enhances rather than diminishes our humanity.
Technology can grant huge benefits, and in the future, “there will be many, many wonderful things,” Hirsh-Pasek said.
However, she said: “The human species [has] a social brain—that is who we are. The more we chip away at that social nature of humanity, the more we chip away at our possibilities as a species.”
Liu warns against placing blind faith in digital technology, including AI.
“We only know part of the universe’s unlimited intelligence,” he said, and an overreliance on digital technology risks limiting our pursuit of more profound, unexplainable, and inspired knowledge.
Humans possess a unique spirit, soul, morality, and heart that connect us to the divine. Overdependence on technology threatens to atrophy these aspects of our being, he said.
Moreover, Liu noted that if human morals are lost, we will inadvertently teach AI to do bad things and use technology for wrongdoing.
“Above all, the most important thing is for human beings to focus on their own cultivation—the improvement of [their] human nature,” he said.
This includes cultivating “human love, compassion, understanding of each other, and forgiveness.”
Liu said he believes that these values are humanity’s true strength and the keys to unlocking a future in which technology serves, rather than controls, our destiny. The choice, as always, is ours.
“How Dare You?” Alternative Perspectives on “Non-Existent” Human-Generated Climate Change – Global Research
“How Dare You?” Alternative Perspectives on “Non-Existent” Human-Generated Climate Change – Global Research
— Read on www.globalresearch.ca/how-dare-you-alternative-perspectives-on-non-existent-human-generated-climate-change/5855805
Leading Victoria Paper ‘Times Colonist ‘ Shows All Why Science And Human Rights Are Waning In Our Country !!!Their Editorial , My Response .
Editorial: It’s beyond dispute — vaccines protect us The underlying factor in the rejection of vaccination is a growing disbelief in the science …
Leading Victoria Paper ‘Times Colonist ‘ Shows All Why Science And Human Rights Are Waning In Our Country !!!Their Editorial , My Response .
Why The War On Food?
By Terry Burton In the world of virtue signalling and climate change buffoonery, there are many clear developments that affirm that food battle lines…
Why The War On Food?
Who Are the Lockdown Deniers?
Who Are the Lockdown Deniers?
— Read on us6.campaign-archive.com/
‘We didn’t force you; we just took away everything until you consented’
KURT MAHLBURG September 11, 2023 We didn’t force you; we just took away everything until you consented The Prime Ministers of Canada and, most …
‘We didn’t force you; we just took away everything until you consented’
I’ve Never Wanted To Talk About It: After All, I Did It To Myself by Albert A. Ruel
September 1, 2023
Some ears ago while working in the blindness rehabilitation field as a tech trainer, tech presenter and peer mentor the unspeakable happened, and this is my first time talking about it publicly. To this day it brings up feelings of anxiety, shame and embarrassment, and sometimes it even wakes me up in the night with a mild panic attack. Although it was fixed so that no lasting ramifications have resulted, nothing removes my shame for having done what I did to myself on that day, and what’s worse is that I fell for it, not just once, but twice.
You see, I had recently started a minor part-time job working for someone I had never worked for or with previously, so didn’t know the individual’s working style, reactions to pressure or work-load capacity. I’ve long had a great gage for my own stress levels, which has always revealed itself in the form of Cold Sores – herpes simplex virus that begin to disappear as soon as the stressor has passed by, however wasn’t equipped with a gage to determine how the new boss dealt with issues related to work and timeline pressures.
So, what happened you ask? While working at my desk one day preparing a training lesson for a customer, writing an article for an upcoming agency newsletter, and researching and testing the features of an accessible app to be presented during the next weekly Zoom Tech Chat, the boss sent me an email while participating in a Committee meeting requesting that I go online and purchase a $500 Amazon Gift Card needed by the Committee. The message was apologetic and hurried, and as I was somewhat aware of the individual’s reluctance to engage in online commerce, I quickly fulfilled the request. Once the Gift Card was delivered, the boss asked if I could purchase a second one as the Committee through further deliberation wanted to present one more appreciation gift. Of course my reimbursement of these purchases was never an issue in my mind, so I merrily went along with the feel-good task of supporting the agency in this way.
Shortly thereafter my intuition, along with my partner told me that something wasn’t quite right about this request and the rushed nature with which it was made. That prompted me to look more closely at the email address from which the request was received, and that a third request for the same Gift Card had since arrived in my inbox, I finally got wise to the fraud being perpetrated on my person and bank account. By this time I had $1,000 worth of purchases sitting on my Credit Card for which there would be no reimbursement, and the feelings of anxiety and embarrassment from my having been financially violated started in earnest.
The physical feelings that my body experienced during the above noted fraud was eerily similar to the times when my radial arm saw was stolen from my carport and when our house was broken into and robbed, with one notable difference, this time I did it to myself, whereas those previous events I had no ability to prevent. I was able to replace those stolen items without ongoing stress or anxiety, however the anxiety, embarrassment and shame for the email fraud to which I had recently fallen victim just wouldn’t go away. It haunts me to this day, despite the $1,000 having been replaced by the Credit Card company after I filed a Fraud Report a few days after the event took place.
I guess what I’m saying through this story is that we must take personal responsibility for the decisions we make and the costs born by those decisions. Most recently I’ve watched many in my circles of friends, associates and family go through the fraud that was the illness of 2020 and the resulting unsafe and ineffective quickly rolled out magical cure. I think I recognize the feelings of anxiety, shame and embarrassment that many who fell for the fraud must be experiencing now that so much evidence has stacked up showing just how deep and broad were the propaganda, lies and deception on us all. Thankfully, I have never woken up wishing that I had taken part in this recent failed medical experiment, and remain ever appreciative for good health, a strong immunity and awake intuition to a narrative that sounded all sorts of wrong during the fear promotion stages of this fraud in early 2020. You see, I have long believed that corporations and governments that want me to fear something are nearly always doing some nasty deed in the background while I’m distracted in fear. Over the past few years in an effort to continue to reject big-pharma’s push to have us all on a list of pills to cover every medical symptom we might complain about, I have made the lifestyle changes to ensure I won’t need their over-prescribed Cholesterol medication, or any other medication aimed at remunerating life-style illnesses running rampant today. So far my anti-pharma strategies have included quitting smoking at age 42, starting on a weight loss journey at age 50, adopting a device to mitigate mild sleep apnea at age 65 and quitting drinking alcohol at age 67. I plan to live forever, and so far so good.
On a final note, I want to wrap this all up with a brief story about the last experimental drug I rejected and why. This story took place at the Mayo Clinic in January of 1979 when I was hard at work trying to sort out why my vision was failing, and what might be done to stop the regression that was first noticed in the spring of 1977. After 5 days of tests and examinations by many technicians, Doctors and researchers I sat down with the best retinal specialist in the world, Dr Brubaker to discuss his findings and potential medical strategies. Sadly, the only thing that could be determined is that my vision loss was likely caused by an autoimmune condition that was affecting the retinal blood vessels, and that I likely didn’t do anything to cause it and that nothing could be done to stop it that hadn’t already been tried by specialists on Canada’s west coast. He did however suggest that an experimental drug therapy could be tried that had a minor chance of helping the condition, and that carried a high probability of harming other organs in my body. I appreciated Dr Brubaker’s honesty in delivering the information I needed in order to make such a momentous decision about my vision and health. Informed consent has been so important to my being able to chart the course of my life, and I remain in gratitude to Dr Brubaker for having done nothing more or less than was absolutely necessary in that regard. At the end of the day, I intuitively knew that if I was to live the rest of my life without sight, I would fair much better doing it in a healthy body, so with little fanfare, discussion with loved ones or time with which to make the decision, I announced that I would maintain the healthy body I was blessed with and allow the “Universe” to organize how I would end up seeing the world going forward.
Low and behold, over the next 10 or so years vision did continue to fail to the point of total blindness, and to this day my health remains good, as do my natural immunity and intuition. I have so far lived a good life with many twists and turns, a few errors along the way that have taught me some very good lessons, and a 30-year career in the not-for-profit disability sector for which I am immensely proud. Through it all I have managed to participate in bringing into the world two fabulous sons who contribute to society, I have helped raise two step-children to adulthood, and have finally landed in the loving relationship that is meant to, and that will last until eternity.
I too bought into the fear propaganda in early 2020, and by May of that year it became evident to me that early treatment options were available, however big-pharma and big-government were hard at work promoting the narrative that they would alleviate their fear propaganda with a “Warp-Speed” cure. My mistrust of their narrative had me continuing to seek out the vast array of alternative resources, information and support, and I remain steadfast in my opposition to, and distrust of the lies and deceptions promoted by mainstream media, all three levels of government, Public Health and the Pharmaceutical Industrial Complex. This ridiculous situation became so dire that in February of 2022 I was fired from a virtual job as a result of my refusing to participate in a fraudulent drug experiment, and some personal relationships have been irreparably damaged along the way. I won’t miss that ill-informed employer, however hope that some of those who followed the guidance and leadership of our weak governments and captured Public Health “authorities” will eventually find the mental health supports needed for them to overcome the cognitive dissonance that has allowed them to participate, and worse, to shun those who wouldn’t.
They lied and people died.
Sincerely,
Albert A. Ruel
From An Island in the Pacific