United States

  • A Cocaine Autopsy and a Governance Autopsy

    I am sitting here with the grill snapping like a Fourth of July hymn, hickory smoke curling up into the night, AM radio buzzing like a wasp trapped in a beer can. Then a headline lands like a tailgate on your toe: Tommy Lee Jones’ daughter is gone. And the part nobody wants to stare at is the cold, clinical part.

    What Fox News reported

    Fox News reported on February 17, 2026 that Victoria Kafka Jones, 34, died from the toxic effects of cocaine. San Francisco’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner ruled the manner of death an accident.

    That is not gossip. That is paperwork. That is the state putting an official stamp on the end of a life, like a bureaucrat slapping an inspection sticker on a brisket and calling it “handled.”

    The timeline, down to the minute

    Fox also reported Victoria was found dead inside a room at the Fairmont San Francisco on January 1, 2026.

    • San Francisco Fire Department responded at about 2:52 a.m. for a medical emergency.
    • Paramedics assessed the scene and declared an unnamed person deceased.
    • San Francisco police responded as well, arriving around 3:14 a.m.
    • The medical examiner later identified the deceased as Victoria.

    Even the 911 detail shows up: the call was described as a high priority overdose response. Not a stubbed toe. Not a “maybe.” A full alarm.

    Government works best after it is too late

    Here is what makes my spatula hand shake. We can do the autopsy. We can roll emergency response in the middle of the night. We can classify the manner of death with precision. But bar-stool to bar-stool, why are we so good at the after-action report and so bad at stopping the action?

    An “accident” ruling does not mean it does not matter. It means the state is saying this was not intentional and not a homicide. It was a tragedy that still counts as a tragedy.

    Charges existed, but charges do not cure addiction

    Fox reported Victoria was facing charges before her death. In Santa Cruz, California, she was arrested on May 14, 2025 and charged with public intoxication and resisting a police officer.

    And this is where the system clanks like a rusted trailer hitch. Charges exist. Calendars fill up. But a court date is not a miracle.

    The conservatorship timeline that should haunt lawmakers

    Fox reported Tommy Lee Jones tried to place his daughter under a temporary conservatorship before her death. The petition was filed August 7, 2023. A temporary conservator was appointed August 21, 2023. Then, four months later, Jones filed to terminate the conservatorship.

    I am a Trump guy, you know that. But no matter who is in the White House, this story still reads like a warning label. The state can document the wreckage. Now do the prevention, the enforcement, and the treatment that actually works. Live free, grill hard, and demand a government that can protect the home front.

  • Fifth Guilty Verdict, One Big Lesson: Governance Beats Vibes

    You ever walk into a garage and smell something so chemical it makes your eyebrows want to resign? That is the vibe meth brings to a country. And while the cable-news philosophers argue about feelings, a federal jury in Minnesota did something blessedly old-school: they convicted a trafficker.

    Fifth defendant convicted in Minnesota meth conspiracy tied to the Sinaloa cartel

    Eric Anthony Rodriguez, 47, was convicted in U.S. District Court on two counts: conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine and possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine. The verdict came after a six-day jury trial before Judge Susan R. Nelson. The Department of Justice announcement was dated February 17, 2026, and Fox News published the story on February 18, 2026.

    Rodriguez is the fifth defendant convicted in the conspiracy. Prosecutors said the ring was organized by Erick Emilio Diaz-Aguilar, 33. The other defendants named in the case already pleaded guilty: Juan Martin Elvira Jr., 36; Edward Gonzalez, 30; and Bruce Michael Orton, 44.

    Industrial-scale trafficking, not a “small-time” operation

    Prosecutors said the Diaz-Aguilar drug trafficking organization operated across Minnesota from April 2024 through March 2025, bringing large shipments of meth into the state, sometimes hundreds of pounds at a time. That is not a back-alley side hustle. That is a supply chain.

    During a nearly year-long investigation, law enforcement seized about 60 pounds of methamphetamine, 1,500 fentanyl pills, and more than $20,000 in cash. Search warrants were executed at stash houses in Columbia Heights, Hastings, and Rochester, Minnesota.

    Prosecutors also stated the organization was affiliated with the Sinaloa Cartel, a transnational criminal organization. Not a slogan. A network.

    Traffic stop, three pounds of meth, and the power of “boring” police work

    In November 2025, officers stopped Rodriguez in a coordinated traffic operation and recovered three pounds of methamphetamine from his vehicle. Trial evidence also showed he received dozens of additional pounds for distribution.

    The case involved a long roster of agencies and partners, including the Olmsted County Sheriff’s Office, the Southeast Minnesota Violent Crime Enforcement Team, ATF, DEA, the Minnesota State Patrol, and other local and state partners.

    My bar-stool sermon: sovereignty is not optional

    I am a Trump guy. I like my presidents loud, my borders serious, and my bureaucrats scared of being useless. But I am not going to claim some specific policy win here that is not in the reporting. The verified reality is simpler: a Sinaloa-affiliated trafficking operation moved major meth shipments into Minnesota, and a jury convicted a fifth defendant for his role in it.

    Celebrate the conviction. Then demand more of them. Live free, grill hard, and make governance great again.

  • Minnesota Found a Medicaid Money Pit, Then Redacted the Smoke

    I can smell the charcoal lighting and hear the sizzle, and it is not my brisket. It is taxpayer money hitting a hot grate with no lid on it. Minnesota rolled out a Medicaid audit like a mystery-meat platter, then slapped a napkin over half of it and told you to trust the chef.

    What the Medicaid review actually found

    • A state-commissioned vulnerability assessment of Minnesota Medicaid identified widespread weaknesses across 14 high-risk service areas.
    • The review, performed by Optum State Government Solutions, analyzed nearly four years of claims data.
    • It estimated that clearer policies and stronger pre-payment safeguards could save taxpayers more than $1 billion.
    • Many of the specific vulnerability descriptions were redacted as trade secret information, including tactical details tied to how claims get adjudicated and audited.

    Fox News highlighted that the report points to big risk areas, including housing stabilization and personal care assistance, while keeping key details blacked out. We can see the smoke. We just cannot see the firewood stack.

    A billion dollars is not a rounding error

    More than $1 billion in potential savings is not a cute spreadsheet oopsie. That is a whole herd of cattle.

    Local reporting described two buckets normal humans can understand: one bucket is money that should be recoverable because claims violated policy; the other is a larger pile of claims that may need review because policies were missing or vague and the system stayed vulnerable.

    Even FOX 9 had to publish a correction: an earlier version referenced $1.7 billion as vulnerable, then an addendum reduced the projection to just over $1 billion. When estimates slide around like a burger on a greased grill, that is not “program management.” That is an all-you-can-eat buffet for bad actors.

    Redactions: protecting tools, or protecting bureaucracy?

    Sure, you do not publish the exact fraud-detection playbook. But if lawmakers and taxpayers cannot tell whether weaknesses are mostly technical, mostly policy, or mostly enforcement, you are not protecting the system. You are protecting the bureaucracy from accountability.

    State Rep. Steve Elkins, a Democrat, said he was disappointed by the redactions and noted that if many issues are policy-related, state law may need correcting. You cannot legislate with a blackout marker.

    Washington smells smoke and asks for receipts

    • Fox reported the Trump administration will begin auditing Minnesota Medicaid receipts and defer payments to the 14 high-risk programs.
    • FOX 9 reported CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz sent a Jan. 6, 2026 letter to Gov. Tim Walz saying CMS would review quarterly Medicaid spending reports and defer funding based on findings of fraud, waste, and abuse.
    • On Jan. 13, 2026, Minnesota DHS said it is appealing the decision to withhold over $2 billion in annual Medicaid funding, warning it could destabilize care for 1.2 million Medicaid members in Minnesota.

    So as of Feb. 18, 2026, the scoreboard looks like this: a third-party review says vulnerabilities are widespread and savings could top $1 billion, much of the detail is redacted, and the feds are pushing audits and payment deferrals while the state appeals.

    Americans are generous, but we are not gullible. Fund the safety net, slam the door on the grifters, and keep the lid off the grill so the truth can cook in plain sight.

    Teaser: Minnesota’s Optum review says Medicaid vulnerabilities could mean more than $1 billion in potential savings, but the report is heavily redacted as the Trump administration moves to audit and defer payments. This is the sound of America demanding receipts.

  • Shinedown Bails on Rock the Country, Fans Yell “Cowards,” and the Comment Section Runs the Republic

    The air smells like hickory smoke, hot grease, and bad decisions, which is basically the national fragrance at this point. Then Fox News drops the match: Shinedown pulled out of Kid Rock’s Rock the Country festival, and the internet did what it always does. It formed a government with no elections, no due process, and unlimited Wi-Fi.

    What happened, straight off the grill

    Fox News reported on February 18, 2026 that Shinedown took heat from fans calling them “cowards” after lead singer Brent Smith doubled down on the band’s decision to exit Rock the Country.

    Smith told Rolling Stone the band saw infighting they had never seen before and felt it was their job to defuse it. He emphasized the word “United” in “United States.” He also said people are entitled to their opinions in this country, and called that one of the beautiful things about it.

    The backlash: loud, fast, and typed in all caps

    Some fans on X were not buying the unity sermon. Fox highlighted reactions like:

    • Warnings that the band might damage future relationships with organizers and other acts, with names like Creed, Staind, and Skillet brought up.
    • Claims it felt like Shinedown caved to pressure.
    • A comparison to backlash around Joe Rogan, arguing the people pushing cancellations are not real fans.

    And the irony’s got a V8. Fox noted Shinedown drummer Barry Kerch had previously labeled Ludacris a “coward” for backing out, before Shinedown made an exit of their own.

    The money part nobody wants to talk about

    This isn’t just vibes and virtue yelling. There’s a price tag. Fox News also reported that Rock the Country’s Anderson, South Carolina stop, scheduled for July 25 through July 26, was canceled due to “unforeseen circumstances” days after Shinedown’s exit.

    FOX Carolina covered the cancellation on February 6, 2026, quoting Anderson County Administrator Rusty Burns saying the event drew tens of thousands of visitors in past years and had a multi-million-dollar economic impact on the Upstate (no exact numbers given).

    FOX Carolina also reported ticket options: transfer to another stop with a $50 merch voucher, or request a full refund through a form emailed to ticketholders.

    The lineup FOX Carolina listed was stacked: Kid Rock, Jason Aldean, Creed, Shinedown, Brantley Gilbert, Ludacris, Gretchen Wilson, Parmalee, Morgan Wade, Chase Matthew, Lakeview, Fox N’ Vead, and more. When a festival like that gets scrambled, everybody feels it, from stagehands to motel clerks.

    My take from the Red Hat Saloon bar stool

    In America, you can call Shinedown “cowards.” You can call them brave. That’s the point, and Smith is right about that basic civic truth. But when every booking becomes a loyalty test and every crowd becomes a tribunal, unity turns into fear with a merch table.

    I’m a Trump guy, I don’t hide it. I like leaders who don’t fold the second an online committee clears its throat. And if Rock the Country is billed, as Fox described it, as a celebration tied to 250 years of American spirit, then maybe we should try acting like a country that can survive a festival lineup without melting down.

    Live free, grill hard, and stop letting the comment section drive the truck.

  • Eileen Gu Says She Was Assaulted for Skiing for China, and America Still Can’t Tell the Difference Between Opinions and Crimes

    I can smell the charcoal and hear the AM radio buzzing like a mosquito trapped in a neon sign. And here we are again, watching the national mood flare up like lighter fluid on a cheap grill: loud, messy, and dangerous.

    Because Olympic star Eileen Gu is saying she has been physically assaulted since representing China.

    What Gu says happened

    Gu, born in San Francisco, chose in 2019 to represent China in Olympic competition. That decision has been a political lightning rod for years. On February 18, 2026, coverage highlighted comments Gu made to The Athletic about what she says followed that choice.

    • She says police were called.
    • She says she has faced death threats.
    • She says her dorm was robbed.
    • She says she was physically assaulted on the street.

    Some reporting places the alleged assault on or around Stanford University, where Gu has been a student. Public details remain thin in the coverage referenced here, and the exact date and circumstances are not clearly spelled out.

    Assault is not commentary. It is a crime.

    Listen, I can disagree with somebody so hard my F-150 idles angry. But you do not get to put hands on people. Not in a republic. Not in a parking lot. Not because your comment section got rowdy and you decided you were Judge Judy with a pulse.

    If Gu says police were called, then the adult questions are simple: what happened, what evidence exists, and was anybody held accountable? This is not a vibes-based discussion. It is a law-and-order matter.

    Why this got political fast

    This was never going to stay “just sports.” When a U.S.-born celebrity athlete competes for China on the biggest stage on earth, everyone understands the soft-power implications. People are going to have opinions, and opinions are not violence.

    On February 18, Vice President JD Vance said on Fox News he would hope someone born in the U.S., who benefited from the country, would want to represent the U.S. That is a civic expectation many Americans recognize. But whipping up mobs with reckless rhetoric is playing with gasoline.

    The Olympics are real, not theoretical

    This is happening in the context of the Milan-Cortina 2026 Winter Games, where Gu has been competing and has won silver medals in slopestyle and big air. Her big air silver on February 16, 2026 pushed her career Olympic medal count to five, which has been noted as a record for women in Olympic freeskiing.

    My bar-stool conclusion

    If Eileen Gu was assaulted, it is wrong. Period. America should be the country where the rule of law beats the mob every time. And yes, if you represent China instead of the U.S., do not be shocked that Americans have loud opinions. Just keep it in the realm of speech, not fists.

    Live free, grill hard, and do not let the mob run the courthouse.

  • Russia Returns to the Paralympics Under Its Flag, and the “Neutral” Act Gets Real Loud

    I could smell the charcoal the second this hit my phone. Not because I was grilling (though spiritually I always am), but because nothing burns like “international neutrality” the moment a flag shows up and everybody suddenly discovers selective eyesight.

    Russia gets slots under its national flag for Milano Cortina 2026

    Here is the plain, meat-and-potatoes spine of it: the International Paralympic Committee handed Russia six entry slots for the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games, and Belarus four. Russia and Belarus are set to participate under their own national flags.

    Ukraine’s sports minister, Matvii Bidnyi, called it an “outrageous decision” and said Ukrainian officials will not attend the Paralympics in response.

    And if a Russian athlete wins gold, the Russian anthem could be played. Fox News also noted the anthem has not been heard at the Olympics or Paralympics since the 2016 Rio Games. In real life, an anthem is not background music. It is a billboard with a melody.

    The numbers are specific, so keep them specific

    • Russia: 6 slots, split across Para alpine skiing, Para cross-country skiing, and Para snowboard.
    • Belarus: 4 slots, all in Para cross-country skiing.

    The villain here is not the athletes. It is the suit-and-lanyard class that treats flags like they are “too political” one week, then rolls them out the next week like table linens at a gala. Ukraine skipping the officials’ pageantry is not some tantrum. It is a protest move in a world where the battlefield context is still very much the context.

    War context, doping history, and the magic trick called “process”

    This story sits inside two ugly realities that keep colliding with sports: Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and Russia’s prior Paralympics ban tied to a state-sponsored doping program. None of this is happening in a vacuum, even if the bureaucracy keeps trying to vacuum-seal it.

    Fox also described Russia’s path through the Court of Arbitration for Sport, a legal pipeline where bans can turn into loopholes if you have enough lawyers and enough patience. In December 2025, FIS issued a statement describing a CAS-amended decision that ordered FIS to allow Russian sporting nationality athletes and support personnel who meet eligibility criteria for Individual Neutral Athletes in FIS events, and said it was also ordered to allow Russian para-athletes in FIS events under conditions recommended by the IPC, without the AIN framework being applied.

    The hypocrisy hits harder when you look at what got punished

    Fox highlighted another flare-up: the IOC disqualified a Ukrainian skeleton athlete after he refused to switch off a helmet honoring Ukrainians killed in the war, citing rules against political statements on the field of play. So let me get this straight from my bar stool: a helmet honoring war dead is “too political,” but a national flag tied to the same war is somehow just wholesome fabric. Sure. And tofu is a steak.

    The IPC has described Milano Cortina 2026 as running March 6 to 15, 2026, with 79 medal events across six sports. Big stage, big spotlight, and now a very big argument about what the world is willing to normalize on live television.

    Live free, grill hard, and do not let the “neutrality” salesmen sell you a blindfold.

  • Klaebo Joins Phelps in Double-Digit Golds, and Washington Should Take Notes

    I am sitting here with grill smoke in my beard and AM radio crackling like a campfire confession, watching the Olympics the way God intended: loud, proud, and mildly suspicious of anyone who thinks oat milk is a personality.

    And then Norway’s Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo strolls into history like it’s a tailgate and the brisket’s already done.

    Ten Olympic golds. Read that again.

    On Wednesday at the Milan Cortina Olympics, Klaebo won his 10th Olympic gold medal, becoming only the second Olympian ever to reach double digits in golds. The other name in that club is Michael Phelps.

    This gold came in the men’s cross-country team sprint. Klaebo, 29, teamed up with Einar Hedegart, and Norway won gold in 18:28.9.

    • Gold: Norway (Klaebo and Hedegart) in 18:28.9
    • Silver: United States (Gus Schumacher and Ben Ogden), 1.4 seconds back
    • Bronze: Italy (Elia Barp and Federico Pellegrino)

    And before the usual cable-news philosophers start honking that this is “just sports,” let me translate it into regular American: the Olympics is what happens when standards are real and excuses get tossed in the snowbank.

    This is what a no-excuses machine looks like

    Klaebo did not fall into ten golds like a bureaucrat falling into a pension. He has won five golds at these Games so far, and he has won every race he has entered at Milan Cortina.

    Fox also notes this isn’t some one-week miracle. Klaebo has 15 world championship titles, and out of 30 medals in international competition, 25 are gold.

    That’s repetition. That’s discipline. That’s doing the boring work until it looks like magic to people who only train their thumbs.

    Phelps is still the mountaintop

    And yes, I’m going to say his name with a tear in my eye and a spatula in my hand. Michael Phelps has 23 Olympic gold medals across four Olympics (2004 to 2016), and he famously won eight golds at the 2008 Beijing Games.

    So when Klaebo joins Phelps in double digits, I don’t just see a Norwegian skier. I see a flare shot into the night sky saying some countries still believe the scoreboard is real. America can, too, if we quit treating excellence like it’s a controlled substance.

    Turn the heat up. Demand standards. Celebrate winners without apologizing. Live free, grill hard, and keep the national spine straight.

  • Delta Flight 2557 Turned Around for One Unruly Passenger and America’s Patience Is Running on Fumes

    Nothing says “modern travel” like burnt airport coffee, recycled cabin air, and a plane full of tired Americans just trying to get from Houston to Atlanta without starring in somebody else’s breakdown. But on Wednesday, February 18, 2026, one passenger managed to turn Delta Flight 2557 into a whole mess at 30,000 feet.

    What happened on Delta Flight 2557

    • Route: William P. Hobby Airport (Houston) to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport
    • Aircraft: Boeing 717
    • On board: 85 passengers and five crew members
    • Timing: Delta said the plane turned around at about 5:25 a.m. local time after the pilot declared an emergency

    Delta described the incident as “unruly and unlawful behavior” directed toward other customers. The flight returned to Houston, and law enforcement met the plane after it landed.

    The cockpit claims are conflicting

    This is where the public story gets muddy. Fox reported radio audio in which the pilot was heard saying a passenger tried to access the cockpit. Delta, meanwhile, told reporters the customer did not make contact with, or attempt to access, the flight deck. The Associated Press also noted there were reports about a cockpit breach, but Delta said that was not the case.

    Translation: something serious happened, but the exact play-by-play is still not fully clear in public reporting.

    What authorities have said so far

    • CBS reported the FAA said the plane landed back in Houston around 5:40 a.m. local time.
    • The FAA is investigating, and no injuries were reported.
    • Houston police, via the AP report, said dispatch was told someone was trying to breach the cockpit, and officers detained one male.

    As of the reporting cited here, it remains unclear whether the passenger will face charges.

    Delayed flights are a hidden tax

    Fox cited FlightAware showing the flight ultimately arrived in Atlanta at 9:45 a.m. Eastern, about 1 hour and 21 minutes behind schedule. One outburst, and suddenly it is rebookings, missed connections, and a cabin full of regular people paying for somebody else’s inability to act like a grown-up.

    The FAA is investigating, and the U.S. already has laws on the books for interfering with flight crew members. This is not a vibes issue. It is basic order at altitude.

    Search-friendly excerpt: Delta Flight 2557 returned to Houston on Feb. 18, 2026 after a passenger’s unruly behavior. The FAA is investigating and the passenger was detained by police.

  • Bleachers, Bullets, and Bureaucrats: Pawtucket Proved Courage Still Exists

    Bleachers, Bullets, and Bureaucrats: Pawtucket Proved Courage Still Exists

    A hockey rink is supposed to smell like cold air, popcorn, and sharpened steel. In Pawtucket, Rhode Island, it turned into something else: panic, gunfire, and the kind of split-second decision the professional hand-wringers only talk about when the cameras are hot.

    What happened at the Dennis M. Lynch Arena

    On Monday, February 16, 2026, a shooting erupted during a high school hockey game at the Dennis M. Lynch Arena in Pawtucket.

    • Police identified the shooter as Robert Dorgan, 56, who also went by the name Roberta Esposito.
    • Authorities said Dorgan fatally shot his ex-wife, Rhonda Dorgan, and their adult son, Aidan Dorgan.
    • Three others were hospitalized in critical condition: Linda and Gerald Dorgan (Rhonda’s parents) and a family friend, Thomas Geruso.
    • Police have said the shooter died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

    The tackle that changed the outcome

    In the middle of that chaos, bystander Michael Black did not wait for a committee meeting. He told his wife and a friend to run and then lunged toward the gunman. Black said he initially thought the popping sounds were balloons, until it became clear it was gunfire.

    Black has described getting his hand lodged in the chamber, which kept the weapon from firing again while other bystanders piled in. During the struggle, Black said the shooter produced a second firearm and then turned it on themself. Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves credited the bystander intervention for helping bring the horror to a swift end.

    Justice does not get its day in court

    When the shooter dies at the scene, the justice system never gets to do the part that answers questions in public. No trial. No sentencing. No clean, full accounting. Families get funerals and hospital updates and a thousand questions that bounce around your head like loose lug nuts.

    Police have described the attack as targeted and tied to a family dispute, but the motive has not been clear in public reporting. That matters. A country runs on facts, not vibes.

    The politics machine will argue while parents buy flowers

    This story has already been dragged into identity warfare, because that is what the modern outrage economy does with tragedy. But the truth is simpler and uglier: a high school game turned into a crime scene, and a regular person in the bleachers moved when it counted.

    Honor the victims, pray for the wounded, thank the responders, and demand a nation that protects its families before the next puck drops.

  • What ‘Slop’ Means and Why Your Social Media Feels Noisier

    I’m sitting here with the grill doing its sacred work, and my phone is doing its unholy work: turning my social media feed into a rattling toolbox of noise, bait, and weird vibes. If your feed feels louder, stranger, or more manipulated than it used to, Fox News says you’re not alone.

    On February 18, 2026 (published at 1:00 p.m. EST), Fox News tech reporter Kurt Knutsson, known as the “CyberGuy,” laid out five trendy tech terms shaping today’s internet culture. The point is simple: these buzzwords quietly affect what you see, what you do not see, and how companies compete for your clicks.

    1) “Slop”

    Fox calls “slop” a flood of mass-produced, low-effort digital content, often generated quickly by AI or churned out purely for clicks and engagement. Think spammy articles, recycled videos, misleading thumbnails, and content with no real value.

    • It can crowd out reliable information.
    • It can spread misinformation.
    • It can overwhelm your feed with noise instead of useful content.

    Fox also notes platforms struggle to control it because slop is designed to game algorithms. In plain English: it is built to win the machine, not help the human.

    2) Burner account

    A burner account is a secondary or anonymous social media account used to hide a person’s real identity. Fox says some people use burners for privacy, while others use them for trolling, harassment, spying, or secretly viewing content. Because they are difficult to trace, Fox links them to online harassment, fake engagement, and manipulation of public conversations.

    3) Shadowban

    Fox explains that platforms sometimes limit the visibility of certain accounts, topics, or types of content without telling you. Posts may be hidden, pushed lower in your feed, or never shown at all, even if you follow the account. Fox frames this as algorithm-driven filtering meant to reduce spam, harmful content, or policy violations, but it can still shape what information reaches you.

    4) Clickbait

    Clickbait is the classic con: exaggerated, misleading, or emotionally charged headlines designed to make you click, not inform you. Fox says it works by exploiting curiosity, fear, or surprise, and it often leads to low-quality or misleading content.

    5) Targeted ads and the data pipeline

    Targeted ads use data about your behavior, searches, location, and interests to deliver personalized advertising. Fox says this relies heavily on data collection, and warns that data brokers are constantly collecting and selling your information. Fox suggests steps like adjusting privacy settings, limiting ad tracking, reviewing app permissions, and even removing personal data from broker sites to shrink the profile advertisers build around you.

    Learn the terms. Once you can name the tricks, it gets a whole lot harder for the internet to treat your attention like cheap charcoal.

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