
I think I’ve shared this before but I still smile when I see it. Hope you do too!
Click to view the video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/MEemlp8CLzw

Tom's Blog on Life and Livingness

I think I’ve shared this before but I still smile when I see it. Hope you do too!
Click to view the video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/MEemlp8CLzw
Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft has evolved into a high-stakes dispute over whether OpenAI stayed true to the mission it was founded on or quietly outgrew it while relying on that original promise.
Musk is seeking between $79 billion and $134 billion in damages, a figure derived from an expert valuation that treats his early funding and contributions as foundational to what OpenAI later became. While the number is enormous, the heart of the case is simpler: Musk argues he helped create and fund a nonprofit dedicated to AI for the public good, and that OpenAI later abandoned that commitment in a way that amounted to fraud.
According to Musk’s filings, his roughly $38 million in early funding was not just a donation but the financial backbone of OpenAI’s formative years, supplemented by recruiting help, strategic guidance, and credibility. His damages theory, prepared by financial economist C. Paul Wazzan, ties those early inputs to OpenAI’s current valuation of around $500 billion.
The claim is framed as disgorgement rather than repayment, with Musk arguing that the vast gains realized by OpenAI and Microsoft flowed from a nonprofit story that attracted support and trust, only to be discarded once the company reached scale, according to TechCrunch.
Finish reading: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/134-billion-betrayal-inside-elon-musks-explosive-lawsuit-openai
“We have in our body a gene called p53 that actually prevents cancer from occurring.”
“Guess what COVID does? It knocks down p53.”
Were we all deliberately poisoned?
View video: https://x.com/iluminatibot/status/2012610968962965912?s=20

They:
1. Increase your risk of 7 major cancers
2. Disrupt THOUSANDS of critical genes
3. Integrate into human genomes
4. Drive genome instability
5. Enable tumor immune escape
6. Suppress DNA repair mechanisms
7. Drive chronic inflammation
8. Cause immune dysregulation (?T-cells, ?type I IFN)
9. Disrupt microRNA networks controlling growth/apoptosis
10. Activate oncogenic signaling (MAPK, PI3K/AKT/mTOR)
11. Remodel the tumor microenvironment
12. Reactivate dormant cancers
13. Block innate immune sensing (TLR inhibition)
14. Produce aberrant proteins (frameshift errors)
15. Induce immune exhaustion
16. Promote IgG4 class switching
17. Contain plasmid DNA including SV40
18. Disrupt RAS signaling ? oxidative stress + proliferation
19. Damage the microbiome(loss of immune balance)
20. Increase treatment resistance
Video: https://x.com/NicHulscher/status/2012589278836978121?s=20

Every bite you take,
every thought you make,
every minute of HIIT
is building it.
Your future.
Build wisely.

Ingredients:
Patties:
1 kg Beef mince
2 Eggs
250 g Butter
1 Potato
1 Onion
1 Carrot
1 Red Pepper
250 g Cream Cheese
Head of Garlic
Parsley
Cheddar cheese
Mozzarella Cheese
Black Pepper
Salt
Paprika
Salad:
Lettuce
Avocado
Yellow Capsicum
Red onion
Cannced corn
Sauce:
Yogurt
Honey
Lime vinegar
Lemon juice
Mustard
Black Pepper
Salt
Instructions:
Poor a cup of very hot water over minced meat
put meat on bench or into a large mixing bowl
make indentation in centre
Add the two eggs
Add 250 g Butter pieces
Peel and grate Potato
Peel and grate Onion
Peel and grate Carrot
Remove seeds and cube the red Capsicum
Finely chop Garlic
Wash, paper towel dry and finely chop Parsley
Add vegetables and greens to meat
Add cream cheese to meat
Grate Cheddar cheese and put into clean bowl
Grate Mozzarella cheese and put into same bowl
Rinse cheeses with water
Drain and add to meat and veggies
Season with salt, pepper and paprika to meat
Mix well
Flatten to 1.5 cm with potato masher
Form into patties
Put patties on lined tray
Make indentations with a spoon
Bake at 180 degrees C/256 degrees F for an hour
Cut lettuce leaves
Add yellow bell pepper cut into cubes
Cut cucumber into pieces
Remove pit from and peel Avocado
Chop into pieces
Peel and finely chop a red onion
Put veggies on bowl
Add canned corn
Mix the sauce ingredients in a bowl and pour over salad veggies.
Click to view the video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ZgLVA4sRaY0

Ingredients:
A whole cabbage
2 carrots
1 Onion
1 Zucchini
2 Eggs
Head of Garlic
Half cup Grated Cheese
Two tablespoons of flour
Coconut or Olive oil
Salt
Pepper
Oregano
Instructions:
Finely chop an onion
Brown in the oil
While it is browning…
Into a large frypan add 3 or 4 cm of water and bring to boil
Slice a whole cabbage into 2 cm slices
Place it in the boiling water and cover
Boil for 15 minutes
While it is boiling…
Grate two carrots
Add carrot to onion in pan
Grate a Zucchini
Add Zucchini to pan
Season with salt and black pepper
When the cabbage is done, drain and chop finely
Mix cabbage and sauteed vegetables
Add flour
Add grated cheese
Add crushed garlic
Add two eggs
Season with salt, pepper and oregano
Add a cm of oil to frypan and place on heat
While the oil is heating…
Mix the vegetables well
Shape into croquettes
When the oil is hot…
Cook the croquettes in oil on each side for 4 minutes.
Click to view the video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ivn-hW6_d2o

William Osler, often referred to as the father of modern medicine, believed in the importance of educating patients on prevention rather than simply treating symptoms. His famous quote, “One of the first duties of the physician is to educate the masses not to take medicine,” serves as a reminder that true health lies in prevention and lifestyle changes rather than relying on medication alone.
This perspective calls for a shift in how we view healthcare. Instead of seeking quick fixes for health problems, Osler advocated for a focus on building healthy habits through diet, exercise, and mental well-being. In today’s world, where prescription medication is often over-prescribed, we need to pay attention to preventative health measures to avoid long-term reliance on medication.
Osler’s words still resonate today, encouraging us to take charge of our health and make mindful choices that benefit our long-term well-being. Rather than seeing health as something that can be treated by doctors alone, we should view it as an ongoing journey where prevention and education are just as important as treatment.

Everyone knows her as the giggling ’dumb blonde’ from the 1960s who won an Oscar at 23—but almost nobody knows she quietly built a brain science program that’s now taught emotional resilience to 6 million children in 48 countries.
In 1968, when Goldie Hawn appeared on TV covered in body paint and a bikini, giggling her way through comedy sketches as the show’s ditzy blonde, a women’s magazine editor confronted her. “Don’t you feel terrible that you’re playing a dumb blonde?” the editor asked.
“While women are fighting for liberation, you’re reinforcing every stereotype. ”
Goldie’s response was immediate: “I don’t understand that question because I’m already liberated. Liberation comes from the inside.”
At twenty-two, Goldie Hawn understood something that would define her entire life: you don’t have to play by anyone else’s rules to be free. You just have to know who you are. And she did.
Born in Washington, D.C., Goldie grew up training seriously as a ballet dancer—a discipline requiring precision, control, and relentless self-awareness. When she transitioned to comedy, those skills came with her. Her persona on Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In was carefully crafted: the giggling go-go dancer delivering punchlines through high-pitched laughter.
She became a 1960s “It Girl” almost overnight. But what looked like spontaneous silliness was actually masterful comedic craft. Her giggle wasn’t random—it was strategic. Her wide-eyed innocence wasn’t naivete—it was performance. She played the dumb blonde so well that people missed the intelligence underneath. And that was exactly the point. In 1969, Goldie won both the Academy Award and Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress for Cactus Flower.
She was twenty-three years old. Her film career exploded. But by the late 1970s, Goldie recognized an uncomfortable truth: actresses, no matter how successful, rarely controlled their own narratives.
So she became a producer. In 1980, she co-produced Private Benjamin with friend Nancy Meyers. Studios dismissed it as “too female,“ predicting audiences wouldn’t pay to see a woman’s story about independence. Goldie ignored them.
Private Benjamin became a massive box office hit and earned three Oscar nominations. She continued producing and starring in successful comedies throughout the 1980s and 1990s, crafting characters who laughed at their own pain and weaponized humor against aging and sexism.
But offscreen, something even more remarkable was happening. While her peers chased youth through surgery and desperate career moves, Goldie turned inward. She’d been meditating since the 1970s, long before mindfulness became trendy.
She studied neuroscience, positive psychology, and how the brain works. This wasn’t celebrity dabbling. This was serious, sustained study. And in 2003, it led to what might be Goldie’s most important work.
Alarmed by increases in school violence, youth depression and suicide, Goldie founded The Goldie Hawn Foundation. Working with leading neuroscientists and educators, the foundation developed MindUP—an evidence-based curriculum teaching children social-emotional skills and mindfulness.
MindUP teaches children how their brains work, how to manage stress through “brain breaks,“ how to regulate emotions, build empathy, and develop resilience.
The program is based on actual neuroscience. Research has shown that students using MindUP demonstrate improved focus, increased empathy, better academic performance, and higher levels of optimism.
“If students take two minutes for a brain break three times a day,” Goldie explained, “optimism in the classroom goes up almost 80 percent. ”The program has now served over 6 million children in 48 countries. Read that again: 6 million children.
48 countries. The “dumb blonde” from the 1960s quietly built a global program that’s teaching emotional resilience to millions of kids—many of whom have no idea who Goldie Hawn even is.
This work—sustained, focused on children most people in Hollywood never think about—might be Goldie’s most enduring legacy. Throughout all of this, she’s maintained remarkable stability.
She’s been with Kurt Russell since 1983—over forty years together without marrying. She raised four children who’ve pursued their own careers with her support.
Now in her late seventies, Goldie remains selective about her projects. She took a fifteen-year break from film, returning in 2017 for Snatched with Amy Schumer—who had grown up watching Goldie’s films and wanted to work with her. When asked about ageism in Hollywood, Goldie’s response was characteristically pragmatic: “You think you’re going to fight the system? Anger doesn’t get you anywhere. It’s not productive.”
Instead of fighting battles she couldn’t win, she changed the battlefield. She produced. She built a foundation. She taught millions of children. She lived life on her own terms.
Looking back, Goldie Hawn’s life reveals a consistent pattern: she never let anyone else define her worth. When critics dismissed her as a dumb blonde, she won an Oscar. When Hollywood tried to limit her to acting, she became a producer.
When fame threatened to consume her, she turned to meditation and neuroscience. When she saw children struggling, she built a global program to help them.
The giggle that made her famous was never the whole story. It was the disguise that let her do everything else. Goldie Hawn proved that you don’t have to shout to be powerful. You don’t have to reject femininity to be feminist.
And you don’t have to choose between success and substance—you can have both, as long as you know who you are. She smiled her way through a system designed to limit her, then quietly built an empire that had nothing to do with that system’s approval.
6 million children in 48 countries have learned emotional resilience from a program created by the woman America knew as the giggling blonde in a bikini. That’s not just a career. That’s a masterclass in playing the long game.
Because the greatest act of resistance isn’t fighting the stereotype. It’s using it as cover while you do the real work. And Goldie Hawn has been doing the real work for more than fifty years.

(Tom: We all owe this being a debt of thanks!)
He discovered how old the Earth was. Then he discovered something that could destroy us all.
For thousands of years, humanity wondered about the age of our planet. Religious texts offered one answer. Philosophers debated another. Scientists made educated guesses based on fossils and rock layers. But nobody actually knew.
Until a quiet scientist named Clair Patterson figured it out in 1953.
He should have become instantly famous. His name should have appeared in every textbook. Instead, what he discovered next turned him into a target. He found himself standing alone against one of the most powerful industries on Earth, fighting a battle that would determine whether millions of children would grow up with damaged minds.
And for decades, almost nobody knew his name.
Patterson’s journey began in the late 1940s at the University of Chicago. He was a young geochemist with an impossible assignment: measure the precise amount of lead isotopes in a meteorite fragment called Canyon Diablo.
The theory was elegant—if he could measure these specific lead ratios accurately, he could calculate when the solar system formed, and therefore, when Earth was born.
But there was a problem that nearly broke him.
Every time he tried to measure the lead in his samples, the numbers were wildly inconsistent. One day high, the next day higher, never stable. His equipment seemed fine. His calculations were correct. Yet the data was chaos.
Most scientists would have given up or blamed the methodology. Patterson was different. He possessed an almost obsessive attention to detail and patience that bordered on stubborn madness.
One day, he realized something shocking: the problem wasn’t his rock sample. The problem was everything else.
There was lead everywhere. On the lab benches. In the air. Tracking in on people’s shoes. Floating as invisible dust particles. The entire world was contaminated, and it was sabotaging his measurements.
So Patterson did something unprecedented. He built the world’s first ultra-clean laboratory.
He scrubbed every surface until his hands bled. He sealed cracks in walls with tape. He installed specialized air filters. He made his assistants wear protective suits and wash repeatedly before entering. For years, he cleaned and refined and eliminated every possible source of contamination.
Finally, in 1953, he achieved it. He got a clean reading. He ran the numbers through a mass spectrometer, performed the calculations, and suddenly held an answer that no human in history had ever known:
4.55 billion years.
The Earth was 4.55 billion years old.
It’s said that in his excitement, he drove straight to his mother’s house in Iowa and told her he’d solved one of humanity’s oldest mysteries. The weight of not knowing had finally lifted.
But while building his clean room, Patterson had stumbled onto something far more disturbing.
Where was all this lead coming from?
Lead is naturally rare on Earth’s surface. It stays locked deep underground in mineral deposits. It doesn’t float freely in the air. It doesn’t coat laboratory tables. Yet it was everywhere—in quantities that made no sense.
Patterson began testing the world outside his lab. Ocean water. Mountain snow. Everywhere he looked, lead levels were hundreds of times higher than natural background levels.
And then he understood.
Since the 1920s, oil companies had been adding a compound called tetraethyl lead to gasoline. It prevented engine knock and made cars run smoother. But every car on every road was functioning as a poison dispersal system, spraying microscopic lead particles into the air with every mile driven.
Lead is a neurotoxin. It damages developing brains. It lowers IQ. It causes behavioral problems, aggression, and cognitive impairment. And an entire generation of children was breathing it every single day.
Patterson had to make a choice.
He was a geochemist. His job was studying rocks and isotopes, not fighting corporations or advocating for public health. He had stable funding and a promising academic career. He could have simply published his Earth-age discovery and moved on to the next project.
But he couldn’t unsee what he’d found.
In the mid-1960s, he published papers warning that industrial lead contamination was poisoning the environment and harming human health.
The response was swift and brutal.
The lead industry was massive, wealthy, and had no intention of losing billions in revenue. Their chief scientific defender was Dr. Robert Kehoe, who had spent decades assuring the public that environmental lead was natural and harmless. Kehoe was polished, well-funded, and had the backing of powerful corporations.
When Patterson challenged this narrative, the industry attempted to buy his silence. Representatives visited him offering generous research grants and institutional support. All he had to do was redirect his focus elsewhere.
Patterson refused.
So they tried to destroy him professionally.
His funding from petroleum-connected sources was immediately cut. The industry pressured his university to dismiss him. They used their influence to block his papers from peer-reviewed journals. They publicly dismissed him as an overzealous geologist stepping outside his expertise.
For years, it worked. Patterson was marginalized, labeled an alarmist, and isolated from mainstream scientific discussions.
But Patterson had something the industry couldn’t counter: evidence from before the contamination began.
He realized he needed a time machine—a way to prove what Earth’s atmosphere was like before automobiles. So he traveled to one of the most remote places on the planet: Greenland.
In brutal, freezing conditions, Patterson and his team drilled deep into ancient glaciers, extracting long cylinders of ice. These ice cores were frozen time capsules. Snow that fell in 1700 was preserved deep in the ice. Snow from 1900 was higher up. Snow from the 1950s was near the surface.
Back in his clean lab, Patterson carefully melted layers of ice from different time periods and measured their lead content.
The results were devastating to the industry’s claims.
For thousands of years, atmospheric lead levels were essentially zero. Then, starting precisely in the 1920s—exactly when leaded gasoline was introduced—the levels shot upward like a rocket. The graph was unmistakable. The contamination wasn’t natural. It was recent, man-made, and accelerating.
Armed with this irrefutable proof, Patterson returned to the fight.
He testified before congressional committees, sitting across from industry lawyers who tried to confuse the science. He wasn’t comfortable with public speaking.
He was nervous, awkward, and preferred the quiet predictability of his laboratory. But he refused to back down.
He told legislators they were poisoning their own children. He showed them the ice core data. He made the invisible visible.
Slowly, reluctantly, the truth broke through.
Other scientists began supporting his findings. Public health advocates took notice. Parents started demanding action. The tide turned.
In the 1970s, the United States passed the Clean Air Act and began the slow process of removing lead from gasoline. It took years of regulatory battles, but eventually, unleaded gasoline became the standard.
The results were nothing short of miraculous.
Within years, blood lead levels in American children dropped by nearly 80%. An entire generation was saved from cognitive impairment, behavioral disorders, and reduced intelligence. Millions of lives were protected from lead-related health problems.
Clair Patterson had won.
Yet when he died in 1995, few outside the scientific community knew his name. He never received a Nobel Prize. He never became wealthy. He simply returned to his laboratory and continued studying the chemistry of the oceans and the history of the Earth.
Patterson’s story is a reminder of what integrity looks like when nobody’s watching.
It’s easy to do the right thing when the crowd is cheering. It’s infinitely harder when powerful interests are trying to ruin you, when your career is threatened, when taking the money would be so much easier.
He could have stayed silent. He could have enjoyed a comfortable, well-funded career studying rocks while children’s minds were damaged. He could have said, “Not my problem.”
But he looked at the data, looked at the world, and decided truth mattered more than comfort.
He gave us the age of the Earth—a number that changed our understanding of time itself.
And then he gave us a future—a world where children could grow up without poison in their lungs.
We often imagine heroes as soldiers, activists, or celebrities. But sometimes a hero is just a stubborn man in a white lab coat, scrubbing a floor over and over, refusing to accept a convenient lie.
He cleaned the room.
And then he cleaned the world.