Newsweek: The Ex-Journalist Declaring War on AI Slop : The 1600 Bring Back Critical Thinking

GPTZero CEO and Co-Founder Edward Tian envisions a future where AI and critical thinking can exist in harmony. GPTZero: https://gptzero.me/ Is the internet AI?: https://gptzero.me/ai-vision0:00 – Intro 2:00 – GPT Zero 3:17 – How much internet is AI? 7:00 – Detecting AI agents 10:20 – AI images vs. AI text 16:04 – LinkedIn is mostly AI 19:29 – AI detection in schools 24:09 – AI and student writing 29:32 – AI and the job market 36:45 – Future of work in the GPT era

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Sam Altman “I know some AI” … let’s look to what is the positive going forward

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Sky latest news topic: Time now as fascism takes hold to engage with Bertolt Brecht’s The Resistable Rise of Arturo Ui. Contemporary Relevance (Current): A 2026 production by the Royal Shakespeare Company featuring Mark Gatiss demonstrated the play’s ongoing relevance, using themes of “restoring order” by breaking the law and incorporating modern imagery (e.g., references to ICE agents).

The most significant play written in 1941 that directly satirizes the rise of Adolf Hitler, often revived with contemporary staging, is Bertolt Brecht’s The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui.

While written in 1941, it is frequently staged today as a “current” play to comment on modern populism, fascism, and politics.

The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (1941)

  • Context: Brecht wrote this play while in exile in Finland, waiting to escape to the USA, as Nazi Germany’s power was reaching its zenith.
  • Plot: It is a satirical allegory that transposes Hitler’s rise to power in Germany (1930s) onto a fictional 1930s Chicago gangster named Arturo Ui, who seeks to control the cauliflower racket.
  • Allegory Details:
    • Arturo Ui represents Adolf Hitler.
    • The Cauliflower Trust represents the German industrialists who supported the Nazis.
    • The burning of a warehouse represents the Reichstag fire.
    • The takeover of Cicero represents the annexation of Austria.
  • Contemporary Relevance (Current): A 2026 production by the Royal Shakespeare Company featuring Mark Gatiss demonstrated the play’s ongoing relevance, using themes of “restoring order” by breaking the law and incorporating modern imagery (e.g., references to ICE agents).

Why it fits “Current but 1941”

The play was written to warn people that the rise of fascists is not inevitable, but “resistible”.

  • Current Production Aesthetics: Modern stagings often use burlesque or clowning techniques (reminiscent of Charlie Chaplin’s The Great Dictator).
  • “The Bitch is in Heat Again”: The play ends with a famous warning from the main character, breaking the fourth wall, warning that while the world stopped the “bastard,” the circumstances that created him can easily happen again.

Alternative 1941 Drama

  • Watch on the Rhine (1941): A Broadway play by Lillian Hellman, premiered in 1941, focusing on an anti-Nazi German living in the U.S. trying to expose a Nazi spy, bringing the European conflict into an American setting.

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What AI reports

AI Overview

Bertolt Brecht, a fierce critic of fascism, famously did not quote Hitler to praise him, but rather used his plays and poems to mock, satirize, and expose the criminality of the Nazi regime. His most notable work directly addressing Hitler is “The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui,” which parallels Hitler’s rise to power with a Chicago gangster, emphasizing that the “bitch that bore him is in heat again”. Goodreads +2

  • “The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui” (1941): Brecht satirizes Hitler as Arturo Ui, a racketeer. The notes for this play state, “The failure of his enterprise does not indicate that Hitler was an idiot,” highlighting that treating him as such overlooks the danger, according to Hannah Arendt’s analysis of Brecht
  • “The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui” Closing Lines: A frequently cited warning from this play is: “Don’t yet rejoice in his defeat, you men! Although the world stood up and stopped the bastard, The bitch that bore him is in heat again”. Goodreads +1
  • “The German War Primer” (Kriegsfibel): Brecht uses this collection of poems to juxtapose photos of Nazi destruction with critical poems. One poem reads: “The house-painter speaks of great times to come” (referring to Hitler) while noting the workers are hungry and making shells. 
  • “When the Fascists Kept Getting Stronger”: In this poem, Brecht reflects on the resistance, saying “We said to ourselves: We fought the wrong way” regarding the rise of Nazis, according to Socialism.com

Brecht’s style was to expose the Nazi leadership as cruel criminals rather than grand, mythic figures, aiming to dispel the aura of greatness around them. Hannah Arendt Center for Politics and Humanities

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Dan O’Brien on X: Wisdom eventually prevails. “Put Bono in charge of Ireland’s overseas development aid”

Dan O’Brien

@danobrien20

Put Bono in charge of Ireland’s overseas development aid.

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Axios: Run an AI first business

usiness
Animated illustration of an org chart against a pixelated background. The nodes below the CEO level all turn into glowing neon green sparkles.
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
 
Congrats! You started a business using AI. Now, you’ve got to run it. AI can help with that, too, Axios’ Jim VandeHei writes.

The old rule: After launch, the hiring surge and spiral begins. Every hire slows the business down before it runs.

The new rule: The next generation of companies will be designed before they’re staffed. You can use AI agents to execute a lot of the work. You supervise outcomes, not big teams of people, until business is rolling in.🚀 

Why it matters: This could be the real jobs story of the decade — perhaps even bigger than “AI takes your job.” The same technology that threatens millions of existing roles can create a wave of small, profitable, lower-headcount companies that couldn’t have existed five years ago.

Our guess is both happen at once: an explosion of new startups alongside the destruction of millions of existing white-collar jobs.

The loss will likely be more acute than the gain — at least in the short run. But if startups truly surge and operate at lower costs and higher margins, this would be a huge win.

Remember the three buckets. Every business, regardless of model, breaks into them. AI will soon handle all three better, faster and cheaper than a generalist team.
These buckets go beyond the research, design and analysis that AI does quite well already.

📞 The front office handles external engagement.

The picture: 6:47 a.m. Monday. The AI agent has already pulled the weekend’s inbound leads, enriched each from LinkedIn and their company site, and drafted personalized follow-ups in your voice. By the time you open your laptop, three are flagged as worth a personal call.

Your job: Review the 10 emails the agent almost sent to your top accounts. 15 minutes, not a headcount.

⚖️ The back office manages internal friction.

The picture: A client signs. The agent triggers the onboarding packet, generates the first invoice, books the kickoff call and adds the project to your management to-do list. If something stalls, it pings Slack. Month-end books close themselves, with a memo flagging the three anomalies you actually need to look at.
Your job: Design the workflow once, then only touch the exceptions.

🧠 The intelligence layer is where decisions are made.

The picture: Sales data and customer feedback flow into one place. Every Monday, you review real-time dashboards and you get a one-page memo: “Two power users went cold last week. Three accounts spiked. Here’s what I’d test.

Your job: Decide if the pattern the AI spotted actually matters to where you’re taking the business.

Everything described here can be done with agents that most people can utilize with a small amount of training and draft off Claude, ChatGPT and Gemini, as well as much cheaper-to-run open-source AI tools.

What doesn’t change: You don’t lose value when machines do the work. You migrate it. You stop being a “manager of do-ers” and become an “architect of systems.” The humans who win excel at the four things machines can’t touch:

🧭 Judgment: Knowing what’s worth building, selling or shutting down.

🤝 Relationships: The human-to-human trust that customers won’t give a bot.🧩 Synthesis: Spotting the edge cases and knowing which are signals and which are noise.

🪄 Taste: Separating “good enough to ship” from “this will embarrass us.”Share this story.If you consider yourself a systems architect and think we missed something, shoot Jim a note: finishline@axios.com.📈 If you’re a CEO or on a CEO’s team: Ask to join Jim’s new weekly Axios C-Suite newsletter.
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Wake up: The U.S. government is draining Strategic Petroleum Reserves to keep oil prices (artificially) low, while diminishing the emergency supply that will be needed more dearly in the months ahead… not good!

HealthRanger

@HealthRanger

The U.S. government is draining Strategic Petroleum Reserves to keep oil prices (artificially) low, while diminishing the emergency supply that will be needed more dearly in the months ahead… not good!

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Universal Basic Income … AI is here: change is faster than ever expected

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DD Geopolitics: A Russian nuclear-powered submarine has just arrived in Havana, Cuba Today, just 90 miles from the United States …

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Iran is Desperate, but Regime Won’t Change … Ian Bremmer, Bloomberg Television

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Did you know that the grandmother, on Prince Philip’s side, of King Charles III, became a nun in the 1930’s. This ensures that the lineage comparison with President Donald Trump is even more intriguing.

The Royal Butler

@TheRoyalButler

Did you know, after years of personal hardship and exile, Princess Alice of Battenberg chose to become a nun in the 1930s, but she didn’t simply join an existing order… She actually founded her own religious sisterhood, called the Christian Sisterhood of Martha and Mary, in Athens. What’s remarkable is that she continued wearing a simple grey nun’s habit even when attending royal occasions, including family events with the British royal family. Imagine that contrast, a royal princess, mother to Prince Philip, moving between palaces and public duties dressed as a humble nun. Quite extraordinary and very much her own path. #royal #princess

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