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from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: When Being Right Starts Costing Your Peace
You can feel it in your body before you ever say a word. The message comes in, or the comment gets made, or someone asks the question in a way that makes it clear they already think they know the answer, and suddenly your chest tightens because you know you could prove your point. You could explain the whole thing. You could correct every detail. You could show them where they misunderstood you, and that is why the video message about why Jesus paid a tax He did not owe sits so close to the private place where many of us struggle, right beside the related reflection on choosing peace without losing yourself.
It may happen in a kitchen, after a long day, when someone you love says something unfair and you know exactly how to respond. It may happen at work, when a person questions your motives in a meeting and you feel the heat rise in your face because you know how much you have carried quietly. It may happen in a text thread, when you read the sentence three times and feel that familiar pull to defend yourself until there is nothing left misunderstood. Some fights do not begin because we hate people. They begin because something inside us is tired of being misread.
That is where this small moment in the life of Jesus begins to matter. In Matthew 17, the temple tax collectors come to Peter and ask whether Jesus pays the temple tax. On the surface, it sounds like a normal religious question. But questions are not always just questions. Sometimes a question carries suspicion inside it. Sometimes it is a test. Sometimes it is a way of saying, “Is your teacher really faithful? Does He really respect what we respect? Is He really doing what a righteous man should do?”
Peter answers yes, probably quickly. I understand that. There are moments when people put pressure on you, and you answer fast because you do not want the conversation to become bigger than it already is. You say the thing that keeps the room from getting tense. You try to protect the situation. You try to keep the question from turning into a public problem. Peter says yes, and then he goes into the house.
Before Peter can explain what happened, Jesus speaks first. That detail is easy to pass over, but it is tender and serious at the same time. Jesus already knows. He knows the question that was asked. He knows the pressure Peter felt. He knows the trap beneath the surface. He knows the whole room before Peter ever opens his mouth.
That comforts me because so much of life is lived under things other people do not fully see. People see your answer, but not the pressure behind it. They see your reaction, but not how long you have been tired. They see the one moment you finally speak, but not the hundred moments you stayed quiet. Jesus sees the part nobody else caught. He sees the words before the words. He sees the weight underneath the question.
Then Jesus asks Peter about kings and taxes. He asks whether kings collect taxes from their own sons or from others. Peter answers that they collect from others. Jesus says, “Then the sons are free.” He is making the point clearly. He is not obligated in the way they think He is. He is not merely another man standing outside the house of God. He is the Son. His relationship to the Father is different. His authority is different. His identity is different.
And that is where I would expect Jesus to stop. That is where most of us would stop. We would say, “Good. Now that we have established the truth, let them know.” We would want Peter to go back outside and explain it. We would want the collectors to understand. We would want the record corrected. We would want the room to know that Jesus did not owe what they were asking Him to pay.
But Jesus does something surprising. He tells Peter that, so they do not offend them, he should go to the sea, cast in a hook, take the first fish he catches, open its mouth, and find a coin. That coin will be enough to pay the tax for Jesus and Peter.
Jesus pays what He does not owe.
That sentence is simple, but it cuts deep. Jesus pays what He does not owe, not because He is confused about His identity, and not because the collectors are right. He pays it because He is free. He is so secure in who He is that He does not need to turn every challenge into a public fight. He can be right without needing to make the whole moment revolve around proving it.
I think that is hard for us because many of us are not really defending truth as much as we are defending pain. We say we want justice, and sometimes we do. We say we want clarity, and sometimes clarity is needed. But there are other moments when what we really want is for someone to finally admit they were wrong about us. We want the apology, the recognition, the corrected record, the last word. We want to feel like the invisible weight we carried has finally been seen.
I do not say that with judgment. I say it because I know that place is human. When you have been misunderstood long enough, even a small accusation can feel large. When you have done your best and still been questioned, a simple comment can land like disrespect. When you have been carrying responsibility nobody thanks you for, you may feel a quiet anger when someone acts like you have not done enough.
Jesus understands all of that human pressure, but He does not live controlled by it. He knows who He is before the question is asked. He knows who He is while Peter is answering. He knows who He is when the tax is paid. The payment does not shrink Him. The humility does not erase His Sonship. The choice for peace does not mean He surrendered the truth.
That is the part we need to learn slowly. Sometimes we think if we do not defend ourselves immediately, we have lost. We think if we do not correct every misunderstanding, the misunderstanding has power over us. We think if we let something go, we are weak. But Jesus shows a deeper freedom. A person can choose peace without becoming false. A person can let a small fight pass without losing their dignity. A person can pay a tax they do not owe without agreeing that they owed it.
There is a difference between peace and cowardice. Jesus was not afraid of confrontation. He confronted hypocrisy. He challenged religious pride. He spoke truth when truth needed to be spoken. He was not a passive man drifting through conflict to avoid discomfort. But because He was not afraid, He could also choose when not to make a battle bigger. He was not pushed around by fear, and He was not pushed around by ego either.
That is rare strength. Many people are controlled by fear, so they never speak. Others are controlled by pride, so they always speak. Jesus is controlled by neither. He speaks when love requires speech, and He stays quiet when love does not require a fight. He refuses to let the need to be seen as right become the master of the moment.
I wonder how many homes would feel lighter if we learned that. I wonder how many marriages would breathe again if one person stopped asking, “Can I win this?” and started asking, “Will winning heal this?” I wonder how many friendships would survive if we stopped turning every misunderstood sentence into a trial. I wonder how many people would sleep better if they stopped carrying imaginary courtroom arguments in their minds.
This does not mean you let people abuse you. It does not mean you stay silent when someone is being harmed. It does not mean you deny truth, bury pain, or call dysfunction peace. Jesus never calls us into fake peace. But He does invite us into freedom from the constant need to prove ourselves. That freedom begins when our identity is held by the Father, not by the outcome of every argument.
Maybe the first lesson of this story is not about taxes at all. Maybe it is about the soul that is finally secure enough to stop treating every challenge like a threat. Jesus knew He was the Son, so He could pay the tax without becoming smaller. And if we belong to God, maybe we can learn to walk into certain moments with that same quiet steadiness. We can tell the truth when truth is needed, and we can let go when the fight would only feed the part of us that still thinks peace depends on being understood by everyone.
Chapter 2: The Reply You Do Not Have to Send
There is a lonely kind of anger that shows up after everyone else has gone to bed. The house is quiet, the lights are low, and you are standing in the kitchen with your phone in your hand, reading the same message again. You know what you could say. You know the exact sentence that would make your point. You know the history they left out, the sacrifice they did not notice, the motive they questioned unfairly, and the way their words made you feel smaller than you are. So you start typing. Then you erase it. Then you type again.
That little glowing screen can become a courtroom. It can feel like the whole question of your worth is sitting inside one reply. If you answer strongly enough, maybe they will finally understand. If you explain carefully enough, maybe they will stop misreading you. If you put the right words in the right order, maybe you can recover the peace their comment stole from you. But that is the danger. Sometimes we are not trying to solve a problem. We are trying to make another person hand us back our identity.
That is why the temple tax moment is so quietly powerful. Jesus was questioned through Peter, and the question touched something deeper than a coin. It touched whether He belonged, whether He honored God, whether He stood in the right place before the religious expectations around Him. Jesus could have answered that question with force. He could have turned it into a public lesson on who He was. Instead, He made the truth clear to Peter and then chose a path that did not make the conflict larger.
There is something very intimate about that. Jesus does not need the collectors to understand everything before He can remain steady. He does not need their approval to know His relationship with the Father. He does not need the public record fixed in that moment. He is free in a way most of us are not. He can let the misunderstanding sit there without letting it climb inside Him and take the throne.
I think many of us lose peace not because the situation is truly enormous, but because it touches an old fear. Someone questions your work, and suddenly it feels like every time you were overlooked. Someone misunderstands your tone, and suddenly it feels like every time your heart was misread. Someone treats you as if you have not carried enough, and suddenly years of unseen effort rise in your chest. The moment may be small, but it has roots.
That is why we can overreact to things that seem ordinary from the outside. The comment at work, the family remark, the unanswered message, the sideways look, the small accusation, the tone in someone’s voice. It may not be the thing itself that sends us into defense. It may be the story the thing awakens inside us. It may touch the hidden place that says, “I am tired of proving I am good. I am tired of proving I care. I am tired of proving I belong.”
Jesus meets us there, not with shame, but with a different kind of strength. He shows us that identity has to be received from the Father before conflict begins, because if we wait until conflict comes to find out who we are, the wrong voices will start naming us. The tax collectors had a question. Jesus had an identity. The question did not get to become Lord over the identity.
That is where peace begins for us too. Not in pretending words do not hurt. Not in acting like unfairness is fine. Not in becoming silent because we are afraid. Peace begins when we can feel the sting of being misunderstood without handing that sting the authority to define us. We can say, “That hurt,” without letting the hurt become our master. We can say, “That was unfair,” without letting unfairness pull us into a version of ourselves we do not want to become.
There is a difference between responding and reacting. A response can come from truth, wisdom, love, and clear boundaries. A reaction usually comes from the part of us that feels threatened. A response can wait until morning. A reaction often demands to be sent at midnight. A response can tell the truth without trying to punish. A reaction wants the other person to feel what we felt.
Jesus did not react to the tax question. He responded. He taught Peter. He protected peace. He provided the coin. He moved with authority, but not with noise. That is a holy pattern for the moments when our own fingers hover over a message we may regret sending.
Imagine a brother and sister arguing about how to care for an aging parent. One has been doing most of the appointments, medicine lists, phone calls, and late-night worries. The other sends a message that sounds critical, as if everything being done is still not enough. The tired one wants to fire back with every date, every sacrifice, every hour spent in waiting rooms. Some truth may need to be spoken. A boundary may need to be drawn. Help may need to be requested plainly. But there is still a question worth asking before the reply goes out: “Am I trying to bring truth, or am I trying to make them feel guilty enough to finally see me?”
That question is not weakness. It is spiritual honesty. Sometimes the right conversation still needs to happen, but it needs to happen from a cleaner place. If I speak while my identity is bleeding, I may use truth like a weapon. If I wait with Jesus, pray, breathe, and remember that the Father sees what others have missed, I can still tell the truth without letting pain write every word.
This is not easy. Some misunderstandings should be corrected. Some patterns should be confronted. Some people need to hear a clear no. Jesus choosing to pay the temple tax does not mean we spend our whole lives absorbing harm to keep everyone comfortable. He did not build His life around avoiding tension. He simply knew the difference between a necessary confrontation and an unnecessary fight.
That difference is one of the hardest things to learn. Pride will call every fight necessary. Fear will call every confrontation dangerous. Wisdom learns to sit with Jesus long enough to ask, “What is love asking for here?” Sometimes love asks for truth spoken firmly. Sometimes love asks for silence. Sometimes love asks for distance. Sometimes love asks for a humble payment, a gentle answer, or the choice to let a small misunderstanding pass because the larger work matters more.
The strange beauty of Jesus paying the tax is that He does not let the collectors decide the size of the moment. They ask the question, but He remains Lord of His response. He does not become smaller by choosing restraint. He does not become false by choosing peace. He does not need to prove His freedom by refusing the payment. He is so free that He can pay it.
That is the kind of freedom many of us need. The freedom to not answer every accusation immediately. The freedom to not turn every dinner conversation into a defense of our worth. The freedom to not send the message while our pride is still hot. The freedom to tell the truth without needing to crush someone with it. The freedom to let God see what people missed.
So maybe tonight, the holiest thing you can do is not send the reply yet. Maybe it is to put the phone down, stand in the quiet kitchen, and ask Jesus what part of you feels threatened. Maybe it is to let the Father remind you who you are before you try to explain yourself to someone else. The message may still need to be answered tomorrow. The issue may still need to be addressed. But it does not have to be answered from panic. It does not have to be addressed from the old wound.
Jesus paid a tax He did not owe because He was not ruled by the need to prove Himself. And if we are learning His way, maybe we can begin there too, with one unsent reply, one quieter breath, one moment where we choose not to let misunderstanding become our master.
Chapter 3: The Peace That Does Not Need to Win
There is a tired kind of victory that does not feel like peace when it is over. You finally say the thing. You finally make the point. You finally prove that you were right and they were wrong. The room goes quiet, or the thread dies, or the other person backs away, and for a moment you feel the relief of having defended yourself. But later, when the house is quiet and there is nothing left to answer, you realize the argument took something from you. You won the point, but your spirit feels worn out.
That is the kind of moment where Jesus paying the temple tax becomes more than a strange little Bible detail. It becomes a mirror. He had the truth. He had the right. He had the authority. He had the better argument. He could have won the debate before it even began. But He chose a kind of peace that did not need to win in public to remain true in private.
That is not natural for most of us. We often feel that if we do not correct the story, the false version wins. If we do not defend ourselves, the accusation stands. If we do not explain, people may think the wrong thing. If we do not make our case, someone else’s misunderstanding becomes the final word. That fear can make us live in constant defense, always preparing our next answer, always trying to control how we are seen.
But Jesus was not controlled by that fear. He knew He was the Son before the tax collectors asked their question. He knew He was the Son after Peter answered. He knew He was the Son when the coin was found and the tax was paid. Nothing about His identity depended on whether the collectors understood the full truth in that moment.
There is deep rest in that if we are willing to receive it. We do not have to make every person understand us before we can be faithful. We do not have to correct every wrong impression before we can walk in peace. We do not have to turn every small challenge into a battle for our worth. Some things need to be addressed, but not everything needs to be fought at full strength.
Imagine a father standing in the hallway after a hard conversation with his child. The child has said something unfair. The father knows the child does not understand how much he works, how much he worries, how many sacrifices have been made quietly. He could unload all of that. He could make the child feel the full weight of his hurt. He could win the argument because adults usually can. But maybe love asks him to take a breath first. Maybe the better response is not to prove the child wrong in that moment, but to remain steady enough to guide them later.
That is not weakness. That is strength under control.
Jesus did not pay the tax because He lacked power. He paid it because His power did not need to announce itself every time it was questioned. That is one of the marks of real maturity. Immature strength has to be seen immediately. Mature strength can wait. Immature strength needs the room to know. Mature strength knows before the room does. Immature strength reacts to every challenge. Mature strength asks what love, wisdom, and obedience require.
This is where the story gets very personal. Many of us are exhausted because we keep spending energy on arguments that were never going to heal anything. We replay conversations in the shower. We answer imaginary accusations while driving. We rewrite old scenes in our minds, thinking of what we should have said. We carry courtrooms inside us where we are always trying to prove our innocence to people who may not even be listening.
Jesus invites us out of that courtroom.
He does not invite us into denial. He does not ask us to pretend injustice is fine or that words do not matter. He simply shows us a life so rooted in the Father that not every misunderstanding becomes an emergency. The Father’s voice is stronger than the collector’s question. The Son’s identity is deeper than the public issue. The mission is larger than the moment.
That is the lesson this story gives us. When you know who you are in God, you do not have to fight every battle as if your identity depends on it. You can speak when truth requires it. You can stay quiet when pride is the only thing asking for a speech. You can draw boundaries without hatred. You can let go without surrendering your soul. You can pay what you do not owe without becoming owned by the people who asked for it.
There is also something beautiful about the way Jesus provides the coin. He sends Peter to the sea. Not to a wealthy donor. Not to a public collection. Not to a dramatic display in front of the collectors. Just to the water, to a fish, to a coin hidden in a place nobody would expect. The provision is quiet, almost playful, and completely under His authority.
That is how Jesus often works. While we are busy trying to prove ourselves loudly, He may be preparing something quietly. While we are burning energy defending our position, He may be inviting us to trust His provision. The coin in the fish’s mouth reminds Peter that Jesus is not trapped by the system asking for payment. He can meet the demand without being ruled by it.
That matters for us too. You may be facing something that feels unfair. You may be asked to carry more than seems right. You may be misunderstood in a way that makes you want to fight. You may be standing in a moment where you technically have the right to make a scene. Before you do, sit with Jesus. Ask Him what kind of freedom He is offering you there.
Maybe He will tell you to speak clearly. Maybe He will tell you to confront what needs to be confronted. Maybe He will tell you to set a boundary and stop calling silence peace. But maybe, in some moments, He will tell you to let it go. Not because they are right. Not because your pain does not matter. Not because your work is unseen. But because He is teaching you that your peace does not have to be held hostage by the need to win.
That kind of peace is costly at first. It feels strange to the part of us that has survived by defending every inch. It can feel like losing, especially when the old self wants the final word. But over time, it becomes freedom. You begin to realize how much of your life was being spent in defense of things God already knew. You begin to feel the difference between truth that needs to be spoken and pride that wants to be fed. You begin to understand that being misunderstood is painful, but it is not always fatal.
Jesus paid the tax He did not owe because He was free. He was free from insecurity, free from public pressure, free from the need to turn every question into a showdown. He belonged to the Father so completely that He could choose peace without losing Himself.
That is the invitation in this small story. Not to become passive. Not to become silent where love requires courage. Not to let people use you, drain you, or harm you while you call it holiness. The invitation is deeper than that. It is to become so secure in God that you are no longer ruled by the need to prove yourself in every room.
There may be a message you do not need to send tonight. There may be an argument you do not need to win this week. There may be a misunderstanding you can trust God to hold while you keep walking faithfully. There may be a tax you do not owe that Jesus is asking you to pay, not because the demand is right, but because your peace is worth more than the fight.
And when you choose that kind of peace, you are not disappearing. You are not becoming weak. You are learning the quiet freedom of Christ. You are learning how to be right without becoming harsh, strong without becoming loud, humble without becoming false, and free without needing every person to recognize it.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph Support the Christian encouragement library through GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-douglas-vandergraph-build-a-christian-encouragement-lib Support the daily work by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
from
Hiroaki Satou's Music Blog
What speaker do you use? Mine is the Beosound A5 by Bang & Olufsen.
It was an expensive purchase — but I have no regrets.
That said, my first impression was something different. When I first played it out of the box, it sounded like a classic V-shaped speaker — pronounced highs and lows, with a hollow middle. The reputation I had read about and what I was actually hearing did not match. But somewhere after many hours of use — I could not say exactly when — the transition from bass to treble became remarkably smooth, and my whole sense of the speaker shifted. Whether this was the result of physical break-in, or simply my ears adjusting, I cannot say for certain. What I can say is that the sound I hear now is the sound I was looking for. My advice: do not judge this speaker too quickly after unboxing. Give it time.
The Beosound A5 is a portable speaker released in 2023 by Bang & Olufsen, the venerable Danish audio brand. It costs well over 250,000 yen. For a portable speaker, that is an unusual price point — but this speaker gives you every reason to justify it.

| Drivers | 5.25” woofer ×1, 2” full-range ×2, ¾” tweeter ×1 |
| Amplifier | Class D 70W ×4 (280W total) |
| Frequency response | 32Hz–23,000Hz |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3, AirPlay 2, Chromecast built-in, Spotify Connect |
| Battery | Up to 12 hours playback, approx. 3 hours charging |
| Water/dust resistance | IP65 |
| Dimensions | 28.5 × 18.7 × 13cm |
| Weight | Approx. 3.7kg |
A frequency response spanning 32Hz to 23,000Hz, driven by a total of 280 watts of Class D amplification. For a portable speaker of this size, those are remarkable figures — the A5 reproduces the full range from deep bass to delicate highs without sacrifice.
My listening spans post-classical, ambient, environmental music, post-rock, ambient techno, and contemporary jazz. The more nuanced the music, the more a speaker's neutrality is put to the test. The Beosound A5 adds no coloration of its own — it simply delivers what is in the recording. The roar of post-rock, the weight of a techno low end, the overtones of a jazz cymbal: one speaker handles all of it without strain.
Its near-flat response across the full frequency range also means it works well as a monitor speaker when playing instruments. The USB-C port allows it to be connected directly to a PC as an audio output — a flexible option that is not dependent on wireless connectivity.
The Beosound A5 supports both Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, but the difference in audio quality between the two is substantial.
Bluetooth has inherently limited bandwidth. After accounting for protocol overhead, the effective throughput falls below 1Mbps — which is not even enough to carry an uncompressed CD-quality stream, which requires 1,411kbps at 16-bit/44.1kHz. This means Bluetooth audio always involves lossy compression. On iPhone, the only supported codecs are SBC and AAC at up to 256kbps — there is no support for LDAC (up to 990kbps) or aptX, which are available on Android and Sony devices. In other words, once you send audio from an iPhone over Bluetooth, the signal degrades to AAC 256kbps regardless of the quality of the source file.
Wi-Fi, by contrast, imposes almost no bandwidth constraints and can carry audio data intact. AirPlay 2 supports lossless transmission up to 24-bit/48kHz, meaning ALAC (Apple Lossless) files arrive without degradation. Chromecast built-in goes further, supporting up to 24-bit/96kHz — though at present, the iOS Apple Music app lacks a Cast button, limiting Chromecast use to Android or PC.
The gap between Wi-Fi and Bluetooth is not a matter of preference — it is a measurable difference backed by numbers. If you have lossless audio files, Wi-Fi is the only way to hear them as intended.
(A note for those using a Bluetooth speaker with an aux input: switch to the aux cable now. The cable may be inconvenient, but Bluetooth is simply inferior when it comes to audio quality.)
The Beosound A5 is a single, self-contained unit — yet it fills a room in a way that no conventional mono speaker does. The reason lies in the two full-range drivers mounted at the rear.
The front panel houses a woofer and a tweeter. Two 2-inch full-range drivers are positioned at the rear corners, projecting sound not only forward but backward and to the sides as well. Sound directed toward the rear reflects off walls and ceiling, dispersing throughout the room and reaching the listener as something that seems to emanate from the space itself rather than a single point. This is the principle behind what B&O calls Omni mode — 360-degree sound.
A conventional stereo system creates a precise stereo image between two speakers, with a defined sweet spot. That approach offers superior accuracy in sound staging — but the listening experience degrades sharply once you move outside that sweet spot. The Beosound A5's Omni mode prioritizes even dispersion over strict imaging, delivering a consistent and natural sound from any position in the room.
The B&O app allows switching between Omni mode and a front-directed mode called Front. For critical listening, Front mode sharpens the focus; for filling a room with music, Omni is the natural choice. I use Omni as my default. The experience of one speaker making a whole room sing is enough to make the absence of a separate stereo system feel beside the point.
One of the main reasons I chose this speaker is its freedom of placement. The solid oak handle makes it easy to carry from room to room. I bring it into the bedroom, run it on battery, and listen to music as I fall asleep — no cables, no outlet required.
The IP65 rating for dust and water resistance also means it can be taken outside without concern.
If you are considering a purchase, I strongly recommend visiting a Bang & Olufsen showroom to audition it in person.
The track I would bring: “Shadow Journal” by Max Richter. It is a recording that draws on the full frequency range — delicate string textures alongside deep, substantial bass. It is an ideal test of whether a speaker can handle the entire spectrum evenly and with authority. The Beosound A5 passes that test with ease.
The Beosound A5 was designed in collaboration with GamFratesi, a Danish-Italian design studio. The rounded form and wooden handle carry forward the aesthetic language of B&O products from the 1960s.
I use the Oak model. The wood finish has the quality of fine furniture. The handle and cover are hand-finished in family-owned woodworking workshops in Denmark — each one individual, with its own grain. B&O holds the position that perfect uniformity looks artificial, and deliberately embraces the natural variation of the wood. The combination of a precision-milled aluminium frame and hand-finished oak gives the speaker the presence of something that belongs in a room, not merely sits in one.
The modular design means individual components can be replaced and software can be updated, extending the speaker's life rather than requiring a full replacement. That philosophy — investing in something well-made and keeping it — is reflected in the object itself.
Not something to replace, but something to keep. In that sense, the Beosound A5 has found a lasting place in my life with music.
from
SmarterArticles

On the afternoon of 20 October 2025, a teenager stood outside Kenwood High School in Baltimore County, Maryland, waiting for a lift home after football practice. He was holding a crumpled bag of Doritos. He had two hands and one finger out, he would later explain, the casual choreography of a kid eating crisps with friends. Somewhere in the building, an artificial intelligence system trained on live camera feeds looked at that shiny, folded packet and decided it was a firearm.
What happened next has become one of the defining parables of the algorithmic age. According to the account the student, Taki Allen, gave to reporters, officers made him get on his knees, put his hands behind his back and handcuffed him. Multiple police vehicles arrived rapidly. He thought, in his own words, that he might be about to die. The weapon, of course, did not exist. It had never existed. It was a snack.
Two months later, and roughly 800 miles south, the pattern repeated itself with an instrument rather than a gun. On 9 December 2025, an AI weapons detection system at Lawton Chiles Middle School in Seminole County, Florida, flagged a pupil carrying a clarinet. The child, dressed in camouflage and a tactical vest for a themed dress-up day, had been holding the instrument in the position of a shouldered rifle. The school went into a Code Red lockdown. The Washington Post and the technology outlet TechSpot both reported the episode, and it slotted neatly into a growing archive of incidents in which the machines tasked with keeping children safe have instead manufactured emergencies out of crisp packets, musical instruments and the ordinary objects of adolescent life.
These are not isolated glitches. They are the visible symptoms of a much larger and much stranger phenomenon: the rapid, largely unregulated installation of AI surveillance technology in schools across the United States, sold on a promise of safety that the available evidence does not appear to support. The question that hangs over the whole enterprise is not really whether the algorithms make mistakes. Every system makes mistakes. The question is what standard of proof, what transparency and what community consent ought to govern a technology whose primary documented effect, so far, is to point armed police at children, and disproportionately at Black children.
To understand how clarinets and crisp packets ended up triggering armed responses, you have to follow the money, because the AI gun detection sector is a business before it is anything else, and it is a business in a hurry.
The market is expanding at a pace that would make most technology founders weep with envy. Industry analyses place the value of the AI gun detection sector somewhere above a billion dollars in 2024, with forecasts of several billion within a decade and compound annual growth rates in the double digits. A constellation of vendors competes for school contracts, among them ZeroEyes, Omnilert, Evolv Technology, Scylla, Actuate and others. ZeroEyes, the Pennsylvania company whose system flagged the Florida clarinet, raised more than 53 million dollars in a Series B funding round, with backing that included Intel Capital. Omnilert, whose technology was involved in the Baltimore Doritos incident, has said its system is deployed across hundreds of schools.
The product these companies sell is, at bottom, reassurance. They market themselves to a country traumatised by school shootings, a country where active shooter drills have become as routine as fire drills and where parents drop their children at the school gates carrying a low, persistent dread. Into that anxiety steps a salesperson with a slide deck and a promise: install our cameras, our scanners, our algorithms, and we will see the gun before the shooter does.
It is worth pausing on the texture of that pitch, because it is engineered with real psychological precision. The vendor is not, in the room, selling a probabilistic computer-vision model with documented limitations. The vendor is selling the feeling of having done something, the relief of an administrator who can tell anxious parents that the district has acted. School boards operate under enormous pressure to be seen responding to the threat of violence, and a visible piece of technology is a far easier thing to point to than the slow, diffuse work of mental-health support or community building. The procurement logic rewards the purchase of a tangible object over the funding of an intangible process, even when the evidence runs the other way. The salesperson understands this, and the slide deck is built around it.
It is a powerful pitch precisely because it speaks to a real and terrible problem. The horror of gun violence in American schools is not invented. The grief is not manufactured. But the solution being sold rests on an evidentiary foundation that, when examined closely, turns out to be alarmingly thin.
In February 2026, the science publication Undark published an investigation into the AI weapons detection boom, and its central finding was deceptively simple. As more schools turn to these systems, the magazine reported, serious questions about their effectiveness and accuracy persist. Officials and researchers quoted in the piece pointed to the steady drip of false positives, the clarinets and the crisp packets, as evidence that the technology was being deployed faster than it was being validated.
The deeper problem is one of causation. There is little to no robust empirical evidence demonstrating that AI weapon detection systems have actually prevented a shooting in a real-world school setting. The technologies are, in the language of the researchers who study them, largely untested against the very outcome they are sold to prevent. A separate analysis published through The Conversation in late 2025 reached a similar conclusion, finding little evidence that high-technology systems meaningfully reduce the risk of school shootings. The systems generate alerts. They generate lockdowns. What they have not been shown to generate, in any rigorous way, is safety.
This evidentiary vacuum matters more than it might first appear, because the standard ordinarily applied to interventions aimed at children is exacting. A new medicine cannot be sold to schoolchildren on the strength of a manufacturer's say-so; it must survive controlled trials, independent review and the scrutiny of regulators who assume nothing. A new curriculum is expected to show measurable outcomes. Yet a surveillance technology capable of triggering an armed police response to a child has been waved through procurement processes on little more than a vendor's promise and a parent's fear. The mismatch between the gravity of the potential harm and the flimsiness of the proof required is the single most striking feature of the entire field.
The case that most starkly exposes the gap between marketing and reality unfolded outside Nashville. On 22 January 2025, a student opened fire in the cafeteria at Antioch High School, killing a classmate before taking his own life. The school had an Omnilert AI gun detection system installed and operating. It did not catch the gun. School officials explained afterwards that the shooter had been too far from the cameras for the system to get an accurate read, and that the technology depends on the weapon being visible to a camera, which a concealed firearm, by definition, often is not. A student injured in the shooting later sued Omnilert, alleging the company had marketed the system as capable of detecting firearms before a shot is fired while failing to adequately disclose limitations relating to camera placement, distance, angle, lighting and weapon visibility. Omnilert has said its system is intended to be one layer of a broader safety plan rather than a guarantee.
Here is the asymmetry at the heart of the technology. In Antioch, where there was a real gun and a real shooter, the system stayed silent. In Baltimore and Seminole County, where there was a crisp packet and a clarinet, it screamed. A technology that misses the actual threat while conjuring phantom ones is not a safety system in any meaningful sense. It is a generator of liability, anxiety and, as we shall see, danger.
It is worth being precise about why this asymmetry is not a temporary bug to be patched out with the next software update. Camera-based gun detection works by scanning a video feed for visual shapes that resemble a firearm, which means it is fundamentally blind to anything it cannot see. A pistol tucked into a waistband, a rifle inside a bag, a weapon drawn at an angle the camera cannot capture, a shooter standing too far from the nearest lens: all of these defeat the system, not because the algorithm is poorly trained, but because the physics of the problem do not cooperate. The same limitation explains the false positives. To be sensitive enough to catch a gun in the fraction of a second it is visible, the system has to be aggressive about flagging gun-shaped objects, and the world is full of gun-shaped objects that are not guns. The clarinet held like a rifle. The folded foil packet catching the light. A phone, an umbrella, a power tool. Turn the sensitivity down to reduce the false alarms and you increase the chance of missing the real thing. Turn it up to catch the real thing and you drown the school in false alarms. There is no setting that makes both problems disappear, which is precisely why the marketing language of near-certain detection deserves the scrutiny a regulator has already given it.
If all of this sounds like the speculation of critics, it is worth remembering that a federal regulator has already weighed in, and not gently.
In November 2024, the Federal Trade Commission took action against Evolv Technologies, one of the most prominent players in the AI weapons screening business, over allegations that the company had deceptively advertised what its systems could do. The FTC alleged that Evolv had made false or unsupported claims that its scanners could detect all weapons while ignoring harmless personal items, and that its use of artificial intelligence made its screening more accurate and reliable than traditional metal detectors. Samuel Levine, then director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, framed the stakes plainly, stating that claims about technology, including artificial intelligence, need to be backed up, and that this is especially important when those claims involve the safety of children.
The proposed settlement order was striking in its specifics. It would prohibit Evolv from making a long list of misrepresentations about its products: their ability to detect weapons and ignore harmless items, their accuracy and false alarm rates compared with metal detectors, the speed of screening, the labour costs involved, and any material aspect of performance involving algorithms or artificial intelligence. Most tellingly of all, the settlement required Evolv to give certain K-12 school customers the option to cancel their contracts, which typically locked districts into multi-year commitments, for deals signed in a defined window between April 2022 and June 2023.
That contract cancellation clause is the part worth sitting with. Regulators do not generally hand customers an exit from a contract unless they believe those customers were sold something other than what they thought they were buying. The Evolv case also carried a grim real-world coda. The company had been connected to a 2022 incident in Utica, New York, where a student carried a knife past Evolv scanners and later used it to stab a classmate. The district there had reportedly spent millions on the equipment. The technology that was meant to catch the weapon did not.
The significance of the Evolv action extends well beyond a single company. It established, at the level of federal enforcement, that the safety claims wrapped around AI security products are not exempt from the ordinary rules against deceptive advertising, and that the involvement of children raises rather than lowers the bar. Civil-liberties organisations welcomed it on exactly those grounds. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which has long argued that so-called AI weapon detection is often little more than a rebranded and oversold metal detector, treated the settlement as a vindication of the principle that vendors should not be permitted to convert public anxiety into contracts on the strength of claims they cannot support. Yet an enforcement action against one firm, after the fact, is a blunt instrument. It punishes a particular set of overstatements; it does not establish a general standard that every vendor must meet before a system is ever switched on in a school. The structural problem, in other words, remains.
Every classification system has an error rate, and the design question is always the same: who bears the cost of the errors? In the case of AI weapon detection in schools, the answer is not evenly distributed. It falls heaviest on the children least able to absorb it, and most often on Black children.
The American Civil Liberties Union made this argument forcefully in the wake of the Baltimore incident. Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, wrote that the biggest scandal was not that the AI was imprecise, because all such systems are imprecise, but that the situation had been allowed to happen at all. He laid responsibility across a chain of human actors: the school that installed the system, the vendor that pushed it on perhaps technologically naive officials, the security staff who called the police, and the police themselves.
Crucially, Stanley situated the harm within the specific reality of race in America. For a young Black man to be swarmed by police with guns drawn, he argued, was a life-threatening situation given the history and present reality of racist policing in the country. This is the point that converts an abstract conversation about false positive rates into a question of physical safety. A false positive is not a neutral inconvenience when its resolution mechanism is an armed officer responding to a reported firearm. The teenager in Baltimore reportedly wondered whether he was going to die. The algorithm did not understand that. The algorithm did not understand anything. It simply produced a probability and handed the consequences to a child.
There is a compounding problem buried in the technology itself. Computer-vision systems have a long and well-documented record of performing unevenly across demographic groups, with error rates that can climb for darker-skinned faces and bodies, an artefact of training data that has historically over-represented lighter skin. A weapon detection system layers a second classification on top of that, the judgement about whether an object is a gun, but the two are not cleanly separable when the object is being held by a person whose presence the system is also parsing. The result is a plausible mechanism by which the burden of false positives could fall more heavily on Black students, not as a matter of malice but as a matter of statistics, and then be amplified by a policing response that the historical record shows is itself far from racially neutral. The harm does not require anyone to intend it. The architecture produces it.
Civil rights organisations in Maryland framed the episode in similar terms. The Randallstown branch of the NAACP and the group Associated Black Charities both demanded accountability, with figures from those organisations describing the incident not merely as a technological malfunction but as a failure of leadership and humanity, and warning that the situation could have ended in tragedy. Their concern was not hypothetical. The grim arithmetic of American policing means that when a system tells officers a young Black person is armed, the margin for the system to be wrong is measured in lives.
There is a further wrinkle that makes the Baltimore case especially instructive. According to accounts of the incident, the school's security department reviewed the AI alert and cancelled it after concluding there was no weapon. The principal, however, apparently unaware that the alert had been cancelled, reported the matter to the school resource officer, who summoned police. In other words, the human safeguard that vendors point to as the answer to algorithmic error, the person in the loop who is supposed to catch the machine's mistakes, existed and even functioned, and yet the armed response still happened. The failure was not purely a failure of the algorithm. It was a failure of the entire socio-technical system around it, the protocols, the communication, the institutional reflex to escalate. Omnilert, for its part, expressed regret over the incident while maintaining that its process had functioned as intended, a phrase that should give anyone pause. If handcuffing a child over a crisp packet is the process functioning as intended, the problem is the process.
Run alongside the weapon detection story a second, quieter one, and the governance gap becomes impossible to ignore. It concerns not just what the algorithms see but whether anyone agreed to be watched at all.
In 2025, reporting by State Scoop documented a case in the Plainedge Union Free School District on Long Island, New York, where an AI-enabled surveillance system had been installed in classrooms with what civil liberties advocates characterised as a striking absence of public disclosure. The system, from a company called XSponse, reportedly included features such as auto-locking doors and constant audio monitoring through in-classroom microphones, with AI voice-activation triggered by certain keywords. The district said the technology cost in the region of 250,000 dollars.
The New York Civil Liberties Union raised the alarm. According to the reporting, a fellow with the NYCLU said the district's own Board of Education had been unaware, as late as June, that the technology had been installed in classrooms, and that most of the community only learned of the system's existence in August, when the company hosted a demonstration for parents. The district's superintendent was reported to have suggested the system had been voted on by parents and the public, though the relevant votes appear to have approved general funding for school security upgrades rather than the specific surveillance deployment. A senior NYCLU figure noted that beyond the transparency failure, there was something alarming about a private company potentially profiting from the surveillance of children.
This is where the consent question becomes acute, and where children occupy a uniquely vulnerable position. Adults can, in principle, opt out of surveilled spaces. They can decline to enter a building, refuse a service, vote with their feet. Children compelled by law to attend school have no such option. They are a captive population, monitored by systems they did not choose, often without their parents fully understanding what has been installed or what it records. Constant audio monitoring of a classroom is not a metal detector at a door. It is an ambient, always-listening presence in a space where children are meant to learn, make mistakes, speak freely and grow up. The decision to introduce it, made quietly and without meaningful community deliberation, represents a profound shift in the relationship between the institution and the child, undertaken without anyone asking the child, or in some accounts even the school board, for permission.
There is also a longer shadow to consider, the question of where the data goes and what it teaches. An always-listening classroom does not merely respond to an emergency keyword; it normalises the idea that being a child in a public school means being recorded, parsed and retained by a private company. The lessons a generation absorbs from that arrangement are not on any curriculum, but they are lessons nonetheless: that surveillance is the price of safety, that privacy is something other people decide you do not need, that the watching is for your own good. Whatever one thinks of the security case, the civic case deserves a hearing, and in Plainedge it appears never to have had one before the microphones were switched on.
Step back, and a pattern emerges that is less about technology than about incentives. The AI school security market is a near-perfect machine for converting fear into revenue, and several features of the market make it resistant to the ordinary discipline of evidence.
The first is that the product is sold against a catastrophe that is, mercifully, rare at any individual school. A given district may go decades without a shooting. This means a system can appear to work simply by virtue of nothing terrible happening, even though nothing terrible was likely to happen anyway. Vendors can point to a school that bought their product and did not subsequently experience a tragedy, and the absence of disaster becomes a marketing asset, even though it proves nothing about causation. You cannot easily run the counterfactual. You cannot know what would have happened without the cameras.
The second feature is that the false positives, the clarinets and the crisp packets, are quietly reframed as successes. When the Florida system flagged the clarinet, the district maintained that the safety system had worked as intended. When the Baltimore system flagged the Doritos, the vendor said the process had functioned as designed. By this logic, there is no possible outcome that counts as failure. A real gun missed is explained away by camera angles. A snack misidentified is recast as appropriate vigilance. A technology that cannot fail is a technology that cannot be evaluated, and a technology that cannot be evaluated is being sold on faith.
The third feature is the contract structure itself, the multi-year lock-ins that the FTC found significant enough to force Evolv to unwind for certain customers. Once a district has signed, the sunk cost and the institutional embarrassment of admitting a mistake create powerful pressure to keep paying, to keep defending the system, to keep describing each false alarm as the system doing its job. A superintendent who has spent a quarter of a million dollars of public money on a surveillance system has every incentive to insist it is working, and very little incentive to commission the independent evaluation that might show it is not.
And then there is the legislative dimension, where the fear economy occasionally tips into something closer to capture. In 2024, reporting in Kansas described a bill that would dangle state funding in front of school districts in a way that critics argued was tailored to favour a specific gun detection vendor, raising the spectre of public money being steered toward a particular company rather than toward whatever might actually be demonstrated to work. When the law itself starts picking winners in a market without robust evidence of efficacy, the line between safety policy and industrial policy disappears, and the taxpayer ends up subsidising a product whose central claim has never been independently tested.
Put these features together and you have a sector insulated at almost every level from the question that ought to matter most: does this actually keep children safer than the alternatives, including the alternative of spending the same money on counsellors, on mental-health support, on building the kinds of relationships in which a troubled young person is noticed and helped before they ever reach for a weapon? The research on violence prevention tends to favour exactly that unglamorous human work. It does not photograph well. It does not come with a slide deck. But it has something the cameras conspicuously lack, which is evidence.
None of this means technology can have no role in school safety. It means that a technology installed on a safety promise, paid for with public money, and capable of summoning armed officers to a child, should have to clear a far higher bar than the one it currently faces. A responsible governance framework would rest on three pillars: proof, transparency and consent.
On proof, the standard should be straightforward and, frankly, overdue. Before a system is marketed to schools as preventing violence, vendors should have to demonstrate, through independent evaluation rather than in-house claims, both its accuracy and its real-world effect on the outcome it is sold to prevent. That means published false positive and false negative rates, tested across different lighting conditions, camera placements and, critically, across different skin tones and demographic groups, given the well-documented tendency of computer vision systems to perform unevenly across populations. It means that the burden of proof sits with the vendor making the safety claim, not with the bereaved family forced to litigate the limitations after the fact. The FTC's action against Evolv established the principle that safety claims about AI must be substantiated. A serious framework would make that principle a precondition of sale rather than a punishment after the harm.
On transparency, the Plainedge case is the cautionary tale. No surveillance system that monitors children should be installed without prior public disclosure, a clear public record of what the system does, what it records, where the data goes, who can access it, how long it is retained and which private company stands to profit. School boards should be required to deliberate on these deployments in open session, with the specifics on the table, not buried inside a general line item for security upgrades. A vendor demonstration held after the equipment is already installed is not disclosure; it is a fait accompli with a public-relations gloss. Communities cannot consent to what they have not been told exists.
On consent, the framework has to grapple honestly with the fact that children are a captive and uniquely vulnerable population. Genuine community consent means more than a vendor demonstration after the equipment is already bolted to the walls. It means meaningful consultation with parents, with students old enough to have a view, and with the communities, often communities of colour, who will disproportionately bear the consequences of the system's errors. It means a real mechanism for a community to say no, and to have that no respected. A population that cannot refuse cannot be said to have agreed.
Underpinning all three pillars is a question about the response protocol, which the Baltimore incident exposed so painfully. Even a perfectly accurate detection system would still be only as safe as the human chain it triggers. If the institutional reflex is to escalate every alert toward armed police before a human being has confirmed a genuine threat, then the technology is not reducing risk. It is creating a new vector for it, one that converts a misread crisp packet into a child on his knees in handcuffs. A responsible framework would insist that no automated alert results in an armed response until a trained human has visually confirmed an actual weapon, and would treat the failure to do so not as the process working as intended but as exactly the kind of failure the system was supposed to prevent. The lesson of Baltimore is not that the human in the loop is unnecessary. It is that the human in the loop must have the authority and the protocol to halt the machine, and that a system designed to escalate faster than a person can intervene has been designed to fail.
There is a temptation, when writing about algorithmic harm, to treat the algorithm as the villain. It is the easy story, and it is the wrong one. The AI that looked at Taki Allen's bag of Doritos did not decide to handcuff a child. It produced a number, a probability, an alert. Everything that followed, the cancelled-then-re-escalated warning, the call to the resource officer, the officers arriving, the handcuffs, was a human choice layered on top of a machine's guess. The clarinet did not lock down a Florida middle school. People did, acting on what the system told them, inside a culture of fear that has made escalation feel like prudence.
That is precisely why the standard of proof, transparency and consent matters so much. The technology is not neutral, but neither is it autonomous. It is embedded in institutions, incentives and reflexes that determine whether its inevitable errors land softly or land on a child. Right now, those institutions are buying first and asking questions later, installing systems whose central safety promise remains unproven, and absorbing the false positives as the cost of doing business, except the cost is not being paid by the businesses. It is being paid by the teenager who wondered if he was going to die over a snack, and by every child who learns that the building meant to keep them safe is watching them through a lens that cannot tell a clarinet from a rifle.
The companies will say, accurately, that no system is perfect, that they are one layer among many, that the alternative is doing nothing in the face of real danger. But the choice was never between this technology and nothing. It is between spending scarce public money on tools that have not been shown to work, sold by an industry that profits from fear and reframes its own failures as features, and spending it on approaches with a stronger evidence base and a far lower risk of putting a gun in a child's face by mistake. Until vendors can prove their systems prevent the harm they invoke, until communities are told the truth about what is being installed in their children's classrooms, and until consent means something more than a sales demonstration, the honest description of these technologies is not that they keep children safe. It is that they make a promise the evidence cannot keep, and hand the bill to the children least able to afford it. Taki Allen paid part of that bill on a kerb outside his school, with a bag of crisps in his hand and his face on the ground. The least the rest of us can do is stop pretending the machine was doing its job.
Reidy, K. and Maxouris, C. “Student handcuffed after Doritos bag mistaken for a gun by school's AI security system.” CNN, 25 October 2025. https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/25/us/baltimore-student-chips-ai-gun-detection-hnk
“High school's AI security system confuses Doritos bag for a possible firearm.” TechCrunch, 25 October 2025. https://techcrunch.com/2025/10/25/high-schools-ai-security-system-confuses-doritos-bag-for-a-possible-firearm/
Stanley, J. “Gun-Toting Police Swarm, Handcuff Young Black Man After AI Mistakes Doritos Bag For a Gun.” American Civil Liberties Union, October 2025. https://www.aclu.org/news/privacy-technology/doritos-or-gun
“Civil rights, advocacy groups demand accountability after false AI alert leads to student detainment at Kenwood High.” AFRO News, October 2025. https://afro.com/ai-system-mistakes-black-student/
“A school locked down after AI flagged a gun. It was a clarinet.” The Washington Post, 17 December 2025. https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2025/12/17/ai-gun-school-detection/
“A Florida school went into lockdown after AI flagged a clarinet as a gun.” TechSpot, December 2025. https://www.techspot.com/news/110591-florida-school-went-lockdown-after-ai-flagged-clarinet.html
“Why AI, and a student with a clarinet, put a Seminole County school on lockdown.” ClickOrlando / News 6, 18 December 2025. https://www.clickorlando.com/news/local/2025/12/18/why-ai-and-a-student-with-a-clarinet-put-a-seminole-county-school-on-lockdown/
“As More Schools Turn to AI Weapons Detection, Questions Persist.” Undark, 13 February 2026. https://undark.org/2026/02/13/as-more-schools-turn-to-ai-weapons-detection-questions-persist/
“FTC Takes Action Against Evolv Technologies for Deceiving Users About its AI-Powered Security Screening Systems.” Federal Trade Commission, November 2024. https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2024/11/ftc-takes-action-against-evolv-technologies-deceiving-users-about-its-ai-powered-security-screening
“FTC: AI 'Weapons Detection' Co. Evolv Misled Schools About its Safety Abilities.” The 74, December 2024. https://www.the74million.org/article/ftc-ai-weapons-detection-co-evolv-misled-schools-about-its-safety-abilities/
“FTC Rightfully Acts Against So-Called 'AI Weapon Detection' Company Evolv.” Electronic Frontier Foundation, December 2024. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/12/ftc-rightfully-acts-against-so-called-ai-weapon-detection-company-evolv
“AI weapon detection system at Antioch High School failed to detect gun in Nashville shooting.” NBC News, February 2025. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/ai-weapon-detection-system-antioch-high-school-failed-detect-gun-nashv-rcna189025
“This AI technology was supposed to detect guns in school. Here's what happened outside Nashville.” CNN, 1 February 2025. https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/01/us/ai-gun-detection-software-antioch-school
“Antioch High School shooting survivor sues weapons detection company over system's failure to detect shooter's gun.” WSMV, 21 May 2026. https://www.wsmv.com/2026/05/21/antioch-high-school-shooting-survivor-sues-weapons-detection-company-over-systems-failure-detect-shooters-gun/
“NY school district's AI-powered classroom surveillance worries civil liberties advocates.” StateScoop, 2025. https://statescoop.com/ny-school-district-ai-powered-classroom-surveillance/
“AI Gun Detection Pioneer ZeroEyes Secures $53M+ Series B Funding to Accelerate Growth and Expansion.” PR Newswire / Intel Capital, 2024. https://www.intelcapital.com/ai-gun-detection-pioneer-zeroeyes-secures-53m-series-b-funding-to-accelerate-growth-and-expansion/
“Kansas bill dangles cash to persuade K-12 school districts to hire a specific gun-detection vendor.” Kansas Reflector, 9 May 2024. https://kansasreflector.com/2024/05/09/kansas-bill-dangles-cash-to-persuade-k-12-school-districts-to-hire-a-specific-gun-detection-vendor/
“There's little evidence tech is much help stopping school shootings.” The Conversation, December 2025. https://theconversation.com/theres-little-evidence-tech-is-much-help-stopping-school-shootings-272233
“Statement on Baltimore County Public Schools AI Weapon Detection System False Alert.” Public Justice, October 2025. https://www.publicjustice.org/en/news/statement-on-baltimore-county-public-schools-ai-weapon-detection-system-false-alert/
“States Push AI Weapons Detection as Part of School Safety.” Education Week, March 2026. https://www.edweek.org/leadership/states-push-ai-weapons-detection-as-part-of-school-safety/2026/03

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
Listen to the free weekly SmarterArticles Podcast
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Unattributed
Responding To My Former Web Host TOC:
In part two I stated that I thought that would be the end of this series of posts, and yet here I am with part three. This one will be the absolute final post as I don't have anything more to say to my web host. However, the response I received just now really should be documented. I said in part two that I respected the people I worked with at this hosting company, and that continues to be the case.
So, with that, here is the last exchange.
Thank you for the response. You have largely understood the issues that I brought up, and had some insightful feedback.
I would like to clarify something, as I think I didn't provide a proper context for you.
At no point did I feel that the infrastructure was in my way. That is quite far from the case. I am actually a former IT Server / Infrastructure engineer. My understanding of your underlying design is why I decided to go with your service in the first place. I was tired of working with hosting services that really didn't understand how to implement a solid infrastructure. Even though there were aspects of the environment I didn't use, it was good to know they were available if I needed them. (And, if I had migrated one of my other sites, I am quite certain I would have needed them.)
My “using a sledgehammer when all I really need is a screwdriver” is typical of me. I've always tended to look at requirements / specs, and design solutions that are overkill.
The “optimization issue” was really only frustrating the first time it happened. Since I didn't have the familiarity with the codebase to know where to look for the issue I was left in a situation where I couldn't find the answer on my own. Once support had tracked down the issue, it was mostly just an infrequent annoyance, which is why I didn't make any noise about it. (If it had been a serious enough issue, I would have pushed the issue to your dev group.)
The only thing that really didn't fit for me is WordPress. I can tell you understand that level of frustration I am feeling with that. ;)
As to the pricing, while it wasn't a major issue for me, I did find it annoying. I would think that Enterprise customers would likely find it frustrating too. I know most of the places I worked preferred to be able to have fixed rate contracts for a given term, and then be able to re-negotiate when that term was up. This kind of pricing structure would likely have never flown in any of the environments I worked in. (OTOH — all the companies I worked for had their own infrastructure, and WordPress wasn't considered an Enterprise class platform.)
Thank you for the clarification and for sharing more about your background.
That context definitely helps me better understand where you were coming from.
It’s great to hear that the infrastructure itself was actually one of the reasons you chose our service. I completely understand the “sledgehammer vs screwdriver” approach as well, especially from an engineering perspective where building for flexibility and scalability becomes second nature.
I also appreciate you clarifying the optimization issue. That makes perfect sense, especially when the main frustration was initially not knowing where to look within an unfamiliar codebase rather than the issue itself being critical.
And yes, I completely understand your feelings about WordPress. It can definitely become the limiting factor, particularly for users coming from more traditional infrastructure and engineering environments.
Your feedback regarding the pricing structure is also very valid. Predictability is important, especially in enterprise environments where fixed-term budgeting is often preferred.
Thank you again for the thoughtful feedback and for taking the time to explain your experience in more detail. We genuinely appreciate it.
Wishing you all the best,
When I said above:
And, if I had migrated one of my other sites, I am quite certain I would have needed them.
I was referring to the dev/test environment feature they offer. The site I haven't migrated relies heavily on a WordPress plugin that is no longer available. The company that produced it completely pulled it from the market, doesn't offer any support for it, and didn't bother to make the code available for it.
This left me with 250-350 posts that rely on a plugin that is no longer available or supported, with no clear migration path.
I've since dumped the contents of that site. All the information from that plugin is stored in metadata in each post. When I dumped it (into a Jekyll compatible flat-file format), all the metadata came along with the posts. Now I just need to extract that data from the JSON section of each file, and translate into an appropriate format for presentation here.
Along with this, I need to test all the URI's in the posts. Given the age of the posts, I know there are quite a few that are no longer available… This is going to be true for all ~500 posts on that site.
This is a task that is going to be annoying. I am going to have to find some way to automate it. Manual intervention isn't an option.
To summarize everything:
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Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Listening now to pregame coverage ahead of tonight's WNBA Fever/Phoenix Game. I'll stay with 1075 The Fan for the radio call of the game. Opening tip is scheduled for 6:30 PM CDT.
I spent an hour and a half at yard work this morning, breaking branches to load the big green organics bin, then mowing on the front yard. Heat index was 104 degrees when I quit working and came inside to cool down and clean up. I really want to finish up mowing the front yard over the next few days, but after two straight days of yard work, I may opt for a non-work day tomorrow. We'll see how much energy I have tomorrow morning before deciding about that.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night.
Health Metrics: * bw= 242.95 lbs. * bp= 156/92 (67)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates
Diet: * 05:50 – 1 banana * 06:15 – 1 ham & cheese sandwich * 13:00 – bowl of home made beef and vegetable soup * 14:15 – small bowl of ice cream * 17:15 – 1 fresh orange
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:50 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:00 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 09:30 to 11:00 – 1 ½ hrs. of yard work * 12:00 – tuned into an early afternoon MLB Game, already in the 4th inning, Rangers leading the Marlins 1 to 0. * 13:55 – and the Marlins win, 4 to 2. * 14:30 – resubbed to Frndly TV * 14:45 – follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, listen to relaxing music * 16:30 – listening to Indianapolis Sports talk from 1075 The Fan. I plan to stay with this station for the radio call of tonight's WNBA Fever/Mercury Game.
Chess: * 08:40 – moved in all pending CC games
from Douglas Vandergraph
Chapter 1: The Uneasy Feeling in the Back of the Church
You can sit in the back of a church and feel two things at the same time. You can feel the beauty of the candlelight, the stillness, the old words, the smell of incense hanging in the air, and at the same time feel a question rising in your chest that you are almost afraid to say out loud. Something about it looks sacred, but something about it also feels strange. You watch people stand, kneel, bow, speak in rhythm, move through repeated prayers, and wait for a moment they believe changes bread and wine into something holy. And somewhere deep inside, especially if you have ever seen images of ceremonial magic, spell work, or Wiccan ritual, you may wonder whether what you are seeing is worship or something else. That is why I wanted to speak plainly through the truth about Catholic rituals, witchcraft, and how Jesus taught us to worship, because a person should not have to silence an honest spiritual question just to look respectful.
Maybe your question did not begin in anger. Maybe it began with a quiet discomfort. Maybe you were raised to believe every ritual was holy because an authority figure said it was holy, but now you are older, and you are trying to follow Jesus for yourself. Maybe you are not trying to attack anyone. You are just trying to understand why candles, incense, repeated sacred words, altar movements, robes, bells, and claims of spiritual transformation can look so similar across religious systems that claim very different sources. Maybe you have already been walking through the deeper difference between religious performance and worship in spirit and truth, and now the question has become personal. You do not want borrowed faith. You do not want fear-based religion. You do not want something that only looks holy from a distance. You want to know what Jesus actually asked of the human heart.
That question matters because many people are carrying spiritual confusion they were never allowed to name. They have sat through religious services where everything was controlled, formal, and mysterious, but their hearts still felt far from God. They have watched leaders speak as if sacred power depended on the right words, the right objects, the right gestures, and the right human office. Then they opened the Gospels and saw Jesus sitting at tables, touching lepers, forgiving sinners, calling children close, praying on hillsides, feeding the hungry, and telling a Samaritan woman that the Father seeks people who worship in spirit and truth. That contrast can shake a person. It can make you look back at all the polished religious motions and ask whether God was ever asking for all of that, or whether human beings kept building systems around the simple invitation Jesus gave.
I want to be careful here, because real people are involved. There are Catholic people who love Jesus with tears in their eyes. There are people who grew up Catholic and learned the name of Christ from a grandmother who prayed beside her bed every night. There are people who walk into Mass sincerely, humbly, and with a desire to honor God. I am not writing this to mock them, shame them, or pretend I can see every heart. Only God can see that deeply. But love for people does not mean silence about systems. Respect for sincere worshipers does not mean we ignore the spiritual questions raised by religious structures that place heavy emphasis on ritual objects, priestly mediation, ceremonial repetition, and visible acts of transformation.
A person can love people and still test practices. A person can respect someone’s devotion and still ask whether the structure they were handed looks like the way Jesus taught. That is not cruelty. That is spiritual honesty. In fact, if we never ask hard questions because we are afraid of offending tradition, tradition becomes stronger than truth. And when tradition becomes stronger than truth, people can spend their whole lives defending a system without ever asking whether that system is helping them draw near to the Father.
The uneasy feeling many people have around ritual does not come from nowhere. We know that in many forms of ceremonial religion and magic, physical objects matter. Candles are not just candles. Incense is not just fragrance. Words are not just words. Gestures are not just gestures. Clothing, timing, altar space, sacred direction, and ritual order can all be treated as part of a spiritual operation. The outer act is believed to participate in an unseen change. That is why the comparison between certain religious rituals and magical rituals feels so unsettling to some people. It is not because every candle is evil. It is not because every formal prayer is witchcraft. It is because the pattern can look familiar: set apart the space, prepare the objects, speak the formula, perform the action, expect spiritual transformation.
When someone steps into a Catholic Mass and sees an altar, candles, incense, robes, repeated responses, bells, gestures, sacred vessels, and a priest presiding over a claimed transformation, the similarity in form can be difficult to ignore. Again, this does not mean every person present understands it that way. It does not mean every worshiper is practicing magic in their own mind. But the structure raises a serious question: when worship begins to depend on ritual precision, sacred objects, ordained human control, and a repeated ceremonial act believed to bring spiritual reality into physical form, how far are we from the kind of religion Jesus kept breaking open?
That question becomes even sharper when we remember how Jesus moved through the world. He was not careless about holiness. He was not casual about the Father. He prayed. He honored Scripture. He went to synagogue. He kept the heart of God’s commands. But when Jesus confronted religious life, He kept moving the focus away from outer display and back into the heart. He challenged leaders who loved visible religion but neglected mercy. He warned against prayers spoken for attention. He touched people others would not touch. He healed on days when the religious system said healing was inconvenient. He told people that clean hands did not matter if the heart was full of corruption. He did not come to decorate ritualism. He came to reveal the Father.
That is where this whole subject becomes more than a comparison chart between Catholic Mass and Wiccan ceremony. The deeper issue is not merely whether two rituals look alike from the outside. The deeper issue is what we believe brings us close to God. Is it the candle? Is it the incense? Is it the priest? Is it the formula? Is it the altar? Is it the repeated motion? Is it the religious institution declaring that grace has been dispensed through its approved ceremony? Or is it the living Christ calling the human heart into surrender, trust, repentance, love, mercy, forgiveness, and truth?
A man can kneel in a cathedral and still be far from God. A woman can sit at a kitchen table with no candle, no incense, no robe, no altar, no bell, no ceremony, and speak to the Father with a broken honest heart, and heaven can hear her. That does not mean beauty is wrong. That does not mean order is wrong. That does not mean all traditions are worthless. But it does mean we should never confuse atmosphere with obedience, mystery with truth, ritual with relationship, or religious movement with worship.
Think about the person who has had a hard week and walks into a religious service hoping to find God. Their phone has been full of bad news. Their child is struggling. Their marriage feels tense. The bills are stacked on the counter. Their mind is tired from pretending to be fine. They sit down and the ceremony begins. People around them know when to stand and when to kneel. Everyone seems to understand the motions. But inside, this person is not thinking about theology. They are wondering whether God sees them. They are wondering whether Jesus still cares. They are wondering whether prayer means anything when life feels heavy. If the service gives them ritual but not Christ, it may leave them impressed and still spiritually hungry.
That is one of the great dangers of religious ceremony. It can give people the feeling that something holy has happened without requiring the heart to come into the light. It can make a person feel covered because the ritual was completed. It can place confidence in the system instead of in Jesus. And when that happens, the form may be beautiful, but the soul can remain untouched. The person may leave saying, “I went to church,” while never asking, “Did I come before God honestly?”
Jesus cared too much about people to let them hide inside religious performance. He knew how easily we use holy-looking things to avoid surrender. We can memorize words so we do not have to speak from the heart. We can repeat prayers so we do not have to confess what is really going on. We can trust a religious office so we do not have to personally seek the Father. We can point to a ceremony so we do not have to examine our life. Ritual can become a wall built from sacred materials.
And that is where the comparison to witchcraft becomes spiritually serious. In many magical systems, the practitioner seeks to work with unseen power through ordered actions. The concern is not always the appearance of candles or incense by themselves. A candle on a dinner table is not magic. Incense in a room is not automatically occult. The concern is the belief that spiritual reality can be accessed, directed, mediated, or activated through controlled ritual means. When Christianity begins to look like that, people have a right to ask whether we are still following Jesus or whether we have baptized a pattern He came to move us beyond.
Jesus did not teach His followers to manipulate spiritual power. He taught them to trust the Father. He did not give His disciples a secret altar formula. He taught them to pray simply. He did not tell them to depend on a class of religious professionals to bring God down through ceremony. He tore open access to the Father through Himself. He did not build a system where grace was locked inside ritual performance. He offered living water.
This matters because a lot of people are spiritually tired. They are tired of being told to accept things they do not understand. They are tired of being warned not to question religious authority. They are tired of feeling guilty for noticing contradictions. They are tired of being given more ceremony when what they need is Christ. They are tired of systems that dress themselves in holiness while leaving people confused, afraid, dependent, or spiritually passive.
Maybe you know that feeling. Maybe you have sat in a pew, or watched a service online, or listened to someone defend a tradition, and quietly wondered, “Am I wrong for questioning this?” Maybe you have felt a little fear because the religious system seemed so old, so large, and so confident. It can be intimidating to question something millions of people accept. It can feel lonely to look at a ritual everyone else calls sacred and wonder if it has drifted from the simplicity of Jesus. But questions asked sincerely before God are not rebellion. Sometimes they are the beginning of freedom.
Jesus was not afraid of honest questions. He was far harder on religious pride than He was on confused people trying to find the truth. He welcomed the wounded, the doubtful, the ashamed, the rejected, and the spiritually hungry. He did not crush the person who came quietly at night. He did not turn away the woman with a complicated past. He did not shame the desperate father asking for help with unbelief. The danger was not honest uncertainty. The danger was a religious system so confident in its own forms that it could not recognize God standing in front of it.
That should humble all of us. This article is not an invitation to look down on Catholics while feeling superior. Superiority is just another costume for the flesh. The question is not, “How can we prove those people are wrong so we can feel better about ourselves?” The question is, “Have we allowed anything to stand between our hearts and the worship Jesus described?” Because ritualism is not limited to one denomination. A person can leave a cathedral and still carry ritualism into a plain room. A person can reject incense and still worship routine. A person can criticize robes and still depend on religious habits instead of a surrendered heart.
The human heart is very skilled at making substitutes for God. We can turn church attendance into a substitute. We can turn Bible knowledge into a substitute. We can turn ministry work into a substitute. We can turn emotional music into a substitute. We can turn moral opinions into a substitute. We can turn being right into a substitute. That is why Jesus’ words about worship in spirit and truth do not merely challenge Catholic ritual. They challenge every one of us.
Still, the visible similarities between high ritual religion and ceremonial magic should not be brushed aside as if only ignorant people notice them. They deserve careful thought. A person who sees candles, incense, sacred garments, repeated formulas, ritual vessels, altar-centered action, and a claimed transformation is not foolish for asking what is happening. The answer cannot simply be, “It is different because we say it is different.” The answer must be tested by Jesus.
When Jesus taught worship, He did not make sacred atmosphere the center. He did not make institutional control the center. He did not make mystery for mystery’s sake the center. He made the Father the center. He made truth the center. He made the heart the center. He made mercy, love, repentance, humility, and obedience matter more than religious appearance. And because He did, every form of worship must come under His light.
A tired mother washing dishes after everyone else has gone to bed may understand this better than a room full of religious experts. She stands there with warm water running over her hands, worried about her child, replaying an argument, wondering if she failed again. There is no choir. No incense. No polished ceremony. But in that small kitchen, she whispers, “Lord, help me. I do not know how to do this without You.” That may be closer to the worship Jesus described than a thousand perfect rituals performed by hearts that never open.
A man driving to work before sunrise may understand it too. His truck is cold. The dashboard light is the only glow in the dark. He feels the pressure of providing, the fear of falling behind, the regret of things he said yesterday. He does not have sacred objects in his hands. He has a steering wheel. He does not know a formal prayer. He just says, “Father, keep me honest today. Help me not become hard.” That is not impressive religion. But it is real. And real matters deeply to Jesus.
The reason ritual can become dangerous is that it often promises spiritual meaning without requiring that kind of honesty. It can train people to think that holiness happens over there, at the altar, through the official person, during the sacred moment, while ordinary life remains untouched. But Jesus did not separate worship from life that way. He brought worship into the heart, into the home, into forgiveness, into money, into anger, into lust, into mercy, into enemies, into secret prayer, into how we treat the least noticed person in the room.
If worship does not change how we speak to our family, what exactly are we worshiping? If ritual does not lead us into mercy, what spirit is being formed in us? If ceremony leaves us dependent on ceremony but not more surrendered to Christ, what has it done for the soul? These are not easy questions, but they are necessary ones.
The Catholic Mass presents itself as Christian worship centered on Christ. Wiccan ritual presents itself differently, often involving nature, deity, intention, energy, or magical practice depending on the tradition. They are not identical in belief. It would be lazy to say they are exactly the same. But the question raised by many observers is not whether the theology is identical on paper. The question is whether the ritual pattern trains the soul in a similar direction: toward sacred objects, sacred formulas, mediated power, repeated ceremony, and an event of transformation controlled through ritual order.
That is the place where followers of Jesus have to slow down and think. The issue is not whether something is old. Old does not automatically mean true. The issue is not whether something is beautiful. Beautiful does not automatically mean holy. The issue is not whether millions of people do it. Popular does not automatically mean faithful. The issue is whether the practice carries the heart toward the Father in the way Jesus revealed, or whether it wraps the soul in religious mystery while keeping direct, simple, obedient trust at a distance.
There is a kind of religion that makes people feel small in the wrong way. Not humbled before God, but dependent on the system. Not convicted by truth, but afraid to ask. Not drawn into love, but trained to comply. Jesus did not come to make people spiritually helpless. He came to make dead people alive. He came to call sons and daughters home. He came to bring sinners into forgiveness, not into endless dependence on religious machinery.
When the curtain of the temple was torn, it was not a minor detail. It was a thunderclap of access. It declared that through Christ, the way was opened. And if the way has been opened by Jesus, we should be very careful about any system that seems to stitch the curtain back together and then charge people emotionally, spiritually, or institutionally to stand on the other side waiting for access.
That may be why this question feels so personal to many readers. It is not only about Catholicism. It is about every place where people were taught that God was far away and had to be reached through religious control. It is about the child who grew up afraid of getting the ritual wrong. It is about the adult who still feels guilty for missing a service but does not feel convicted about bitterness. It is about the person who knows how to repeat words but does not know how to talk to the Father. It is about the one who has been near religion for years and still wonders why Jesus feels distant.
Maybe the most honest starting point is this: anything that can be performed without love can become a hiding place. A ritual can be performed without love. A song can be sung without love. A sermon can be preached without love. A prayer can be repeated without love. A post can be written without love. A doctrine can be defended without love. Jesus does not merely ask whether the outside looks correct. He asks what is happening inside the cup.
That is uncomfortable, but it is also hopeful. Because if worship is in spirit and truth, then you are not locked out because you do not understand religious systems. You are not disqualified because you do not know the approved gestures. You are not less loved because you pray in a simple room instead of an ornate building. You are not farther from God because your voice shakes and your words come out messy. The Father is not impressed by theater. He is near to the humble.
This is where the conversation has to begin: not with outrage, not with mockery, not with a desire to win an argument, but with the quiet courage to ask whether our worship looks like Jesus. If the answer is no, then something has to change. If the answer is unclear, then we must keep testing. If the answer exposes places where tradition has crowded out truth, then we should not be afraid to follow Christ out of confusion and into freedom.
The back row of the church can become a holy place if that is where honesty begins. The uneasy feeling can become a doorway if we bring it to Jesus instead of burying it under guilt. The question that once scared us can become a prayer: “Lord, teach me what worship really is. Strip away what is false. Keep what is true. Lead me past empty ritual and into the life You came to give.”
Chapter 2: When Holy Objects Start Carrying the Weight
A person can keep a small cross in a drawer for years and never think of it as power. It may have belonged to a mother, a father, a grandmother, or someone who prayed through seasons the family barely talks about now. One day, while cleaning out a bedroom, that person may find it tucked beside old receipts, a dry pen, and a folded funeral card. They hold it for a moment, not because the metal saves them, but because memory rises. They remember someone who believed. They remember a kitchen where prayers were whispered. They remember the way faith used to feel close before life became busy, wounded, or complicated. An object can carry memory without becoming an idol. A symbol can point the heart toward God without becoming the thing that gives life.
That is why this subject requires honesty and patience. It is too easy to flatten everything and say, “Candles are witchcraft,” or “Incense is evil,” or “Any ritual object proves corruption.” That may sound bold, but it is not careful enough. The Bible itself contains altars, oil, incense, garments, lamps, bread, cups, washing, laying on of hands, and visible signs that taught people something about God. The problem is not that human beings use physical things to remember spiritual truth. We are embodied creatures. We need reminders. We forget quickly. We mark graves. We keep photographs. We wear wedding rings. We put Scripture on walls. We place a Bible beside the bed even when we know the paper itself is not magic.
The problem begins when the object stops pointing and starts carrying. It begins when the candle is no longer a reminder of light but becomes part of a required spiritual mechanism. It begins when incense is no longer a symbol of prayer but becomes a sign that the ceremony has entered sacred power. It begins when bread and wine are no longer received in remembrance, gratitude, and faith, but are placed inside a system that says a priest’s ritual action changes their substance and mediates grace in a way ordinary believers cannot approach apart from that system. At that point, the concern is not beauty. The concern is dependency.
You can see a smaller version of this in ordinary life. Someone may have a certain chair where they pray every morning. The chair itself is not the issue. In fact, it may help them become still. But if they begin to believe God hears them less when they pray somewhere else, the chair has quietly changed roles. Someone may keep a worn Bible on the passenger seat during a difficult season. There is tenderness in that. But if they begin to treat the closed Bible like a protective charm while ignoring the words inside it, something has shifted. The human heart does this easily. We reach for visible things because visible things feel easier to manage than surrender.
That is part of why ritual feels safe. Ritual gives the hands something to do when the heart feels uncertain. It gives order to fear. It gives shape to longing. When life feels out of control, there is comfort in an action that always happens the same way. Stand here. Say this. Bow now. Wait for the bell. Receive from the authorized person. Leave knowing the ceremony has been completed. For a wounded person, that can feel deeply stabilizing. It can feel like the chaos of life has been placed inside a container.
But Jesus did not come only to stabilize frightened people through religious containers. He came to heal, forgive, awaken, and lead people into the Father’s life. He knew we needed more than repeated motions. He knew we needed truth reaching the hidden parts of us. He knew a person could honor God with lips while the heart remained far away. That is a frightening possibility because it means the most polished act of religion can still miss the point.
Imagine a man who has spent the whole morning being hard on his family. He snapped at his wife before breakfast. He ignored his son’s attempt to talk in the car. He carried resentment into the church parking lot like a stone in his pocket. Then he walks into a sanctuary where the lights are dim, the candles are lit, the words are ancient, and the ceremony feels weighty. He participates correctly. He knows when to kneel. He knows when to respond. He receives what he was told to receive. But when he gets back in the car, he is still cruel. He is still cold. He is still unwilling to apologize. If the ritual did not bring him into repentance, what did it accomplish?
That question is not limited to one church. It can happen in any setting. A person can lift hands during a song and refuse to forgive. A person can quote Scripture and cheat a coworker. A person can criticize Catholic ceremony while being proud, harsh, and unteachable. Jesus sees through all of it. He is not fooled by plain walls any more than He is fooled by stained glass. The issue is not whether the room is ornate or simple. The issue is whether the heart is surrendered to God.
Still, Catholic ritual deserves careful attention because it does not merely use symbols as reminders. At the center of the Mass is a claim of transformation. The bread and wine are not only signs that point to Christ’s sacrifice. They are treated as becoming, through the action of the priest and the words of consecration, the body and blood of Christ. That belief changes the whole meaning of the ceremony. The altar becomes the place where a sacred change is said to occur. The priest becomes the necessary human figure through whom the rite is performed. The words become more than teaching; they become part of the claimed event. The objects become the focus of adoration.
This is where the resemblance to magical thinking becomes difficult to dismiss. Again, I am not saying Catholic worshipers are Wiccans. I am not saying they consciously practice witchcraft. I am saying the structure raises a serious spiritual concern. In ceremonial magic, the practitioner often works through set words, consecrated space, symbolic objects, and ordered action with the expectation that unseen reality will be affected. The Catholic Mass uses different theology and different language, but it also places heavy meaning on consecrated space, ordained authority, sacred vessels, repeated words, and a claimed transformation that ordinary people cannot simply perform on their own.
The defender of the Mass may say, “But this is Christ’s command. This is holy tradition. This is not magic because God is the one acting.” That answer may be sincere, but it still needs testing. A person in almost any religious system can say the power is not their own. The deeper question is whether Jesus actually built worship around that kind of repeated sacrificial ritual and priestly mediation after His resurrection. When He said, “Do this in remembrance of Me,” did He create an altar-centered system of transformed elements, or did He give His followers a humble meal of remembrance, communion, gratitude, and proclamation?
When I read the Gospels, I see Jesus breaking the human instinct to control access to God. He does not seem interested in making the table more mysterious than the Savior seated at it. He does not seem interested in turning bread into an object that draws worship away from the living Christ and toward the handled element. He takes bread, gives thanks, breaks it, and gives it. The movement is simple, relational, and rooted in His coming sacrifice. The power is not in a priest’s hands. The power is in Christ Himself.
This matters for the person who feels spiritually unworthy. Many people already believe God is hard to reach. They think they must clean themselves up first, say the right words first, pass through the right religious doorway first, or receive approval from the right authority first. A ritual system can deepen that fear. It can make God feel locked behind ceremony. It can make grace feel like something dispensed through channels only certain people control.
But Jesus kept moving toward the people who were told they were too far away. He moved toward the woman at the well, not after she entered the correct building, but while she stood in the heat of an ordinary day with a complicated life. He moved toward Zacchaeus in a tree. He moved toward a thief dying beside Him. He moved toward fishermen, tax collectors, grieving sisters, blind beggars, sick bodies, ashamed sinners, and tired crowds. Over and over, Jesus revealed a Father who was not trapped behind ritual machinery.
There is a quiet freedom in that. It does not make worship less serious. It makes worship more honest. It means the person sitting alone on the edge of the bed after another disappointing day can come to God without a ceremony. The person who failed again can come. The person who does not know church language can come. The person who has only enough strength to whisper, “Jesus, help me,” can come. The person who has been hurt by religious authority can come. The door is Christ, not the ritual.
At the same time, freedom from ritual dependency does not mean freedom from reverence. Some people swing from one extreme to another. They see the danger of ceremony and decide casualness must be the answer. But Jesus did not call us into shallow worship either. He did not free us from ritualism so we could treat God like an idea we visit when convenient. Worship in spirit and truth is not less demanding than ritual. In many ways, it is more demanding because it touches everything. A ritual can be completed in an hour. A surrendered life cannot be completed by noon.
This is where Jesus’ way becomes so piercing. He takes worship out of the protected religious compartment and brings it into the whole person. He brings it into the way we spend money, the way we speak when we are frustrated, the way we handle temptation, the way we treat the person who cannot help us, the way we forgive, the way we tell the truth, the way we serve when no one applauds, the way we sit with God when our feelings are numb. That kind of worship cannot be performed by a priest on our behalf. No one can love your enemy for you. No one can humble your pride for you. No one can surrender your secret bitterness for you.
A ritual object can be held by another person. Your heart cannot. That is why worship must become personal, not merely private, but personally real. It has to reach the place where you actually live. It has to reach the temper you keep excusing. It has to reach the fear you keep feeding. It has to reach the envy you hide under religious language. It has to reach the loneliness you numb with scrolling. It has to reach the grief you keep covered because you do not want anyone to know how tired you are.
The danger of sacred objects is not always that they are dark. Sometimes the danger is that they are easier than obedience. It is easier to light a candle than forgive your brother. It is easier to repeat a prayer than confess a lie. It is easier to attend a ceremony than sit quietly before God and admit you have been angry at Him. It is easier to receive something from a priest than open your life to Jesus and say, “Search me. Correct me. Lead me.” Religion often gives us manageable holy things. Jesus asks for the whole heart.
That does not make symbols useless. It puts them back in their proper place. A wedding ring matters because it points to a covenant, but if the spouse is unfaithful, the ring cannot save the marriage. A family Bible may be precious, but if no one opens it, it becomes furniture with gold edges. A cross on the wall may remind us of Jesus, but if we refuse to carry our own cross in daily life, the wall decoration has become easier than discipleship. Symbols are servants. They become dangerous when they become masters.
So the honest question is not merely, “Does this ritual look like witchcraft?” The better question is, “What is this ritual training me to trust?” If it trains me to trust an object, I should be concerned. If it trains me to trust a human mediator more than Christ, I should be concerned. If it trains me to believe grace is controlled by a religious institution, I should be concerned. If it trains me to feel spiritually safe while my heart remains closed, I should be deeply concerned.
But if a simple act helps me remember Jesus, repent honestly, love more deeply, and walk in truth, then the act remains a servant. The difference is not always visible from across the room. It is revealed by what the practice produces in the soul. Does it produce humility, love, truth, courage, mercy, repentance, and closeness to the Father? Or does it produce fear, dependence, confusion, pride, spiritual passivity, and loyalty to a system over loyalty to Christ?
The room may be beautiful. The music may be moving. The candles may glow. The words may sound ancient. But Jesus still asks the question beneath it all: Where is your heart?
Chapter 3: When Sacred Words Become a Formula
A woman sits in a hospital waiting room with a paper cup of coffee she does not want. The lid is too hot against her fingers, but she keeps holding it because her hands need something to do. Her brother is behind a set of doors she cannot enter, and every time a nurse walks through the hallway, her chest tightens. She tries to pray, but nothing polished comes out. She does not know whether to ask for healing, strength, mercy, time, or a miracle. All she can manage is, “Jesus, please.” The words are small, but they are honest. In that moment, she is not trying to activate power. She is reaching for the One who already sees her.
That difference matters. There is a world of difference between prayer that reaches toward God and speech that is treated like a spiritual formula. The same human mouth can do both. We can speak words as trust, or we can speak words as control. We can pray because we love the Father, or we can repeat phrases because we believe the right arrangement of words will make something happen. This is where ritual religion and magical practice can start to feel uncomfortably close. Both can teach people to place heavy confidence in exact wording, repeated speech, official phrases, and spoken acts that are believed to cause spiritual change.
Words are powerful, but they are not powerful in the way anxious religion often imagines. Scripture teaches that words can bless, wound, confess, deceive, build up, tear down, praise, and reveal the heart. Jesus warned that we will give account for careless words, and James compared the tongue to a small fire. So this is not an argument that words do not matter. They matter deeply. A cruel sentence can stay in a child’s mind for decades. A sincere apology can open a door that pride kept shut for years. A whispered prayer can steady a person who thought they were about to fall apart. But words matter because they come from the heart and move through relationship, not because they are magic syllables that force heaven’s hand.
That is one of the quiet dangers of formal religious speech. It can train people to believe that spiritual life depends on getting the words right more than coming honestly before God. A person can be afraid to pray unless they know the approved prayer. A child can grow up thinking God is more likely to listen to memorized language than to a trembling honest voice. An adult can sit beside a hospital bed and feel spiritually helpless because they were never taught to speak to the Father plainly. They were taught prayers, but not prayer. They were taught responses, but not surrender. They were taught religious speech, but not living conversation with God.
This becomes especially important when we look at the Mass. At the heart of the Mass are words that are treated as doing more than remembering. The priest speaks the words of consecration, and the ceremony teaches that through that act the bread and wine become the body and blood of Christ. Those words are not understood as ordinary teaching or shared remembrance. They are attached to a claimed sacramental change. The exact role of the priest, the words, the intention, and the rite all become central. That is why many people sense a similarity to ceremonial magic, where words spoken in a set context are believed to participate in unseen transformation.
Someone may object and say, “But these are Christ’s words.” That matters, and we should not brush it aside. The words spoken at the Last Supper are precious. They point to sacrifice, covenant, forgiveness, remembrance, and the coming cross. But using the words of Jesus does not automatically mean we are using them the way Jesus intended. The devil quoted Scripture during the temptation in the wilderness. Religious leaders quoted Scripture while missing the heart of God. A phrase can be biblical and still be placed inside a system that bends its meaning. The test is not whether holy words are present. The test is whether the use of those words matches the life and teaching of Christ.
Jesus did not teach prayer as performance. He warned His followers not to pray in order to be seen by people. He warned against empty repetition. He gave a simple prayer that begins with “Our Father,” not because the exact sound of the words functions like a spell, but because the prayer teaches trust, dependence, forgiveness, daily need, holiness, and surrender. The Lord’s Prayer is not a magic key. It is a doorway into the kind of heart that lives before God. It teaches us who God is, who we are, what we need, and what must change in us.
That is why a child whispering, “God, help my dad come home safe,” may be praying more truly than a room full of people repeating words with no attention, no love, and no surrender. God is not confused by simple language. He is not impressed by religious vocabulary. He is not waiting for us to pronounce holiness correctly before He listens. A father can understand the cry of his child even when the child cannot explain the pain. How much more does the Father in heaven understand the person who comes with tears, silence, fear, or broken words?
This is where the spell-like use of sacred language becomes dangerous. It can make God seem less like Father and more like force. A force can be tapped into if you learn the method. A Father must be trusted. A force can be approached through technique. A Father calls for relationship. A force can be handled by experts. A Father welcomes children. When religious practice turns God into someone who must be reached through official speech and ritual performance, the soul can become trained in fear instead of love.
A tired man may experience this without knowing how to explain it. He may kneel beside his bed after losing his temper with his daughter. He knows he should pray, but he feels foolish because he does not know what to say. He remembers prayers from childhood, but they feel far away from the actual mess of the evening. His daughter’s face keeps coming back to him. He remembers how her shoulders dropped when he raised his voice. He does not need a formula. He needs repentance. Finally, he says, “Lord, I was wrong. Help me apologize without defending myself.” That prayer may not sound religious enough for a ceremony, but it reaches the place Jesus wants to heal.
Ritual speech often avoids that place. It can keep things elevated, formal, and distant. It can sound holy while never naming the real issue. But Jesus was never interested in religious language that floated above the truth. He asked direct questions. “Do you want to be made well?” “Why are you afraid?” “Do you love Me?” “Who do you say that I am?” Jesus brought words down into the real condition of the person standing in front of Him. He was not collecting phrases. He was uncovering hearts.
That should make us examine every religious system that depends heavily on prescribed speech. Again, prescribed words are not always wrong. A wedding vow is prescribed, but it should express a real covenant. A courtroom oath has set language, but the issue is truthfulness. A parent may teach a child a bedtime prayer, and that can be beautiful if it helps the child learn trust. The danger comes when the words continue after the heart leaves. The danger comes when the phrase itself is treated as the source of power. The danger comes when people are told that spiritual change has occurred because the words were said, even if the person saying or hearing them remains untouched by repentance and faith.
In magical practice, words are often treated as instruments. They focus intention, invoke power, mark a boundary, open a ritual, close a ritual, bless an object, summon, banish, or transform. The words matter because they are part of the working. In Christian prayer, words are not supposed to be instruments for controlling spiritual reality. They are supposed to be truth offered to God. They can confess faith, ask for mercy, praise His name, surrender fear, repent of sin, intercede for others, and express love. But their strength is not in technique. Their strength is in the God who hears.
That distinction may sound small until you see what it does to a life. If prayer is technique, then the burden stays on you. Did you say it correctly? Did you have enough faith? Did you use the right words? Did the right person pray? Did the ceremony happen properly? Did the rite count? But if prayer is trust, then the burden moves to God’s goodness. You still come humbly. You still speak truthfully. You still honor Him. But you are not trying to make the machinery work. You are coming to a Father who already knows what you need before you ask.
That is not a small comfort. It changes the way a person breathes. It changes the way a person comes back to God after failure. It changes the way a person sits in silence when words will not come. Some of the deepest prayers in life have almost no words. A person standing at a graveside may not be able to say anything except, “Lord.” A person reading a frightening medical result may only close their eyes. A person in the shower before a hard day may only breathe out, “Stay with me.” The Father is not measuring the length of the prayer. He is meeting the heart that turns toward Him.
This is why Jesus’ teaching cuts through religious anxiety. He did not say the Father is seeking people who can perform the correct rite under the correct authority with the correct words in the correct room. He said the Father seeks worshipers who worship in spirit and truth. Spirit and truth reach places ritual cannot reach. They reach the lie we have been protecting. They reach the resentment we keep rehearsing. They reach the fear beneath our control. They reach the need to be seen as holy while avoiding actual surrender. Spirit and truth do not let us hide inside words that sound sacred.
When sacred words become a formula, the heart can go missing without anyone noticing. The room still responds. The priest still speaks. The people still kneel. The ceremony still moves. The calendar still turns. The tradition still continues. But a person can participate year after year and never learn how to stand honestly before the Father in secret. That should concern us. Not because we want to accuse every person in the room, but because we care about whether people are being led into living communion with Christ or trained to rely on repeated religious actions.
A young man leaving church may sense this in his own confusion. He may not have the language for it yet. He only knows that he has completed the motions but still does not know how to pray when he gets home. He still does not know what to do with lust, anger, envy, fear, and shame. He still feels like God belongs to the building and not to the small apartment where he eats dinner over the sink because he is too tired to sit down. If worship cannot follow him there, then something has gone wrong. Jesus does not stay behind in sacred architecture. He comes into the ordinary room and asks for the real person.
That is the beauty of simple prayer. It refuses to turn God into an object of religious control. It lets the heart come without costume. It lets the sinner repent without theater. It lets the tired person ask for strength without learning a system. It lets the lonely person speak honestly without pretending to be spiritually impressive. It lets the believer say, “Father, I trust You,” even when the hands are shaking.
The issue with ritualized sacred speech is not only that it can resemble magical structure. The issue is that it can slowly teach people to trust the structure more than the Savior. It can make faith feel like something managed by correct religious performance. But Jesus keeps calling us back to something simpler and deeper. He calls us to speak truth before God and then live that truth when we rise from prayer. He calls us to let our yes be yes and our no be no. He calls us to forgive as we have been forgiven. He calls us to pray in secret and trust that the Father sees what no one else sees.
That kind of prayer may never impress a crowd. It may never sound ancient. It may never echo under a cathedral ceiling. But it can change a life because it is not trying to operate spiritual power. It is opening the heart to the living God. And once the heart begins to open honestly, the need for formula starts to lose its grip.
Chapter 4: The Man Behind the Curtain
There is a certain kind of silence that fills a car when someone is parked outside a church and has not decided whether to go in. The engine is off. The keys are still in the ignition. The phone is face down on the passenger seat because one more message from the outside world would be too much. Maybe the person has done something they regret. Maybe they have been carrying a secret for months. Maybe they have rehearsed the words, then swallowed them again and again. They are not only afraid of God. They are afraid of the human being they think they must face before they can feel forgiven.
That fear is heavier than many people admit. Religion can make it feel normal, even holy, to place another person between the wounded soul and the mercy of God. Sometimes that person is called a priest. Sometimes a pastor. Sometimes a spiritual director. Sometimes a leader whose approval seems to carry the weight of heaven. The titles may change, but the pressure feels similar. The struggling person begins to wonder whether God’s forgiveness has to pass through someone else’s hands before it can reach them. They do not simply ask, “Have I sinned?” They ask, “Who has the authority to tell me I am clean?”
This is one of the deepest places where ritual systems gain power over the human heart. It is not only through candles, incense, sacred words, or altar movements. It is through mediation. It is through the belief that God’s grace is not only received through Christ, but managed through an earthly office. Once people believe that, the system does not merely guide them. It can begin to own their spiritual confidence. They may still speak the name of Jesus, but in practice they feel safest when a human authority has performed the action, pronounced the words, handled the elements, or declared the condition of their soul.
That is a dangerous place for any believer to live. Not because guidance is bad. Not because confession is bad. Not because mature believers cannot help us. We need people. We need brothers and sisters who tell us the truth when we are lying to ourselves. We need wise counsel when we are lost in confusion. We need someone to pray with us when shame makes us want to disappear. A healthy Christian life is not isolated. But there is a difference between walking with someone and needing them to stand between you and God.
Jesus changes that difference forever. He does not simply send better religious officials to manage access. He becomes the way. He becomes the mediator. He becomes the High Priest who does not need to repeat sacrifices, who does not need to hide behind a curtain, who does not need to keep sinners waiting in the outer court. Through Him, the frightened person can come near. Through Him, the ashamed person can confess. Through Him, the weary person can receive mercy. Through Him, the broken person can be restored.
That is why priestly control over grace should make us pause. When a religious system teaches that a priest has a necessary role in making Christ present in the Eucharist, absolving sins through sacramental confession, and administering channels of grace, the ordinary believer may be told Christ is central while still being trained to depend on the priestly system. On paper, the system may say the priest acts by Christ’s authority. In lived experience, many people still feel that the priest holds the doorway.
A person may be told, “You can pray to God anytime,” but the deeper structure teaches them to return to the authorized ceremony for assurance. They may hear that Jesus forgives, but they feel unsettled until a priest pronounces absolution. They may believe Christ died once for all, but they watch the Mass presented as the central sacrificial act of worship again and again. The mind may accept explanations. The heart often learns from repetition. And what the heart learns is this: come to the system, come to the office, come to the rite, come to the hands that have been authorized.
This is where the comparison to ceremonial magic becomes less about objects and more about structure. In many magical systems, authority matters. The initiated person knows what the ordinary person does not. The practitioner understands the ritual space, the proper words, the objects, the timing, and the means of spiritual operation. The person outside the system may feel dependent on the one who knows how to perform the working. Catholic theology is not the same as Wiccan practice, and it should not be treated as if every belief maps perfectly onto another religion. But the pattern of dependence on a trained, authorized ritual actor is a real point of concern.
Jesus never seems interested in creating spiritual spectators who watch authorized people perform holy actions on their behalf. He calls disciples, not audience members. He tells people to follow Him, not merely attend religious procedures. He sends ordinary believers into the world to love, forgive, serve, witness, pray, endure, and obey. He tears down the idea that holiness belongs to a special class while everyone else waits for contact. He makes fishermen into apostles. He lets women become witnesses of resurrection. He welcomes children. He touches the unclean. He tells stories where the religious expert is not the hero, and the wounded stranger becomes the neighbor.
That does not flatten every role in the church. Scripture speaks of elders, teachers, shepherds, and people who carry responsibility for the care of others. But those roles are never meant to replace the direct lordship of Jesus over the believer’s life. A faithful leader should help people trust Christ more, not need the leader more. A faithful teacher should open Scripture, not become the gatekeeper of God. A faithful shepherd should protect the flock, not make the flock dependent on his personal control. Spiritual leadership becomes unhealthy when it makes itself necessary in places where Jesus has already opened the way.
Think about a teenager who finally tells the truth to a parent. Maybe he broke something, lied about where he was, or got pulled into something online that he feels ashamed of. He stands in the hallway with his shoulders tense, expecting anger. The parent has a choice in that moment. The parent can use the confession to control him, making him feel that love is now locked behind performance. Or the parent can tell the truth, deal with the wrong, and still make it clear that love has not left the room. Good authority does not enjoy being needed through fear. Good authority helps the child become whole.
That is closer to the heart of Jesus. He has authority, but He does not use it to trap people in dependence on religious machinery. He uses authority to forgive sins, heal bodies, cast out darkness, expose hypocrisy, calm storms, and raise the dead. His authority liberates. It does not make people smaller in the wrong way. It humbles the proud, but it lifts the crushed. It confronts sin, but it welcomes the repentant. It does not say, “You must always come through the men who manage My mercy.” It says, “Come to Me.”
Those three words matter more than many religious systems are willing to admit. Come to Me. Not come to the altar as if the altar is greater than the Savior. Not come to the priest as if the priest is the source. Not come to the rite as if the rite can carry your soul. Come to Me. Jesus places the weight on Himself. He is strong enough to carry it. No human office should steal that weight from Him.
This is especially important for people who have been spiritually wounded by authority. Some people hear the word priest or pastor and immediately feel their stomach tighten. They remember being dismissed, shamed, controlled, manipulated, or made to feel spiritually inferior. They remember asking questions and being treated like trouble. They remember confessing weakness and having it used against them. If that has happened to you, the answer is not to run from Jesus because a religious person misrepresented Him. The answer is to see Jesus more clearly than the person who stood in His way.
Jesus is not fragile like human authority. He does not need to silence questions to stay in control. He does not need ceremony to seem holy. He does not need darkness, mystery, or distance to create awe. His holiness can sit at a table with sinners and remain untouched by corruption. His mercy can reach a thief on a cross without paperwork, ritual sequence, or official religious approval. His presence can fill a locked room after resurrection. His Spirit can meet a believer in a hospital hallway, a prison cell, a laundry room, a workplace bathroom where someone is crying quietly during lunch.
If that is true, then we must be careful about any system that trains people to feel spiritually incomplete without its authorized mediator. We must be careful when confession becomes tied to institutional control instead of honest repentance before God and humble reconciliation with people. We must be careful when communion becomes dependent on a priestly act rather than a shared remembrance of Christ’s finished work. We must be careful when the ordinary believer is left feeling like a permanent outsider to spiritual reality unless the religious office grants participation.
A friend can hear your confession, but the friend cannot become your Savior. A leader can remind you of God’s mercy, but the leader cannot manufacture it. A church can gather around the table, but the church does not own Christ. A pastor can preach forgiveness, but forgiveness is not his property. A priest can speak words, but no priest died for you. Jesus did.
That truth is not meant to make us proud. It is meant to make us free. There is a quiet courage that grows in a person when they realize they can go directly to the Father through Christ. They may still ask someone to pray with them. They may still confess a struggle to a trusted believer. They may still seek counsel. But the fear changes. They no longer believe God is locked away until a religious figure opens the door. They no longer confuse human permission with divine mercy. They no longer have to sit in the car outside a church wondering whether God will hear them before they make it inside.
Maybe the person in that car finally leans back in the seat and tells the truth right there. No booth. No screen. No ritual. No performance. Just a broken sentence spoken to Christ. “Lord, I sinned. I have been hiding. I need mercy. Help me make this right.” That prayer does not erase the need to repair what was damaged. It does not excuse sin. It does not turn repentance into a private feeling with no fruit. But it does begin where Jesus told us to begin: with the heart turned honestly toward God.
Real repentance will often send us toward people, not away from them. If I lied to someone, I may need to confess to that person. If I harmed my family, I may need to apologize and change. If I am trapped in a pattern, I may need help, accountability, and counsel. But none of that means another human being owns the mercy of God. People can help us walk in the light. They are not the light.
That distinction brings peace to the person who has been afraid. It also brings responsibility. If I cannot hide behind a priest, then I cannot outsource repentance. If I cannot depend on a ritual to make things right while I remain unchanged, then I must actually face the truth. Direct access to God is not casual access. It is holy access. The door is open, but the One who opens it is still Lord. He welcomes me as I am, but He does not pretend my sin is harmless. He forgives, cleanses, restores, and then teaches me to walk differently.
This is the worship Jesus taught. It is not controlled by a hidden class. It is not locked behind religious machinery. It does not require a man behind a curtain to make the Father willing. It comes through Christ, and because it comes through Christ, it reaches the ordinary places where people are actually trying to survive. It reaches the woman who cannot enter the hospital room yet. It reaches the father who needs to apologize before dinner. It reaches the teenager afraid to tell the truth. It reaches the worker who sits in the parking lot before a shift and wonders if God is tired of him.
No candle can carry that. No incense can create that. No robe can own that. No ceremony can replace that. The mercy of God is not weaker than a system. The grace of Christ is not waiting for religious machinery to become real. The Spirit of God is not confused when a broken person prays without approved language. Jesus is not standing far away while an earthly mediator decides whether you may come near.
He has already come near. That is the wonder. That is the truth ritual often hides without meaning to. God came all the way down in Christ. He walked roads, touched wounds, heard cries, carried the cross, entered death, rose in victory, and opened the way. If He came that far for us, we should be very careful about building religious distance in His name.
Chapter 5: The Table Jesus Left Open
There is a difference between a table and an altar, and most people feel it before they can explain it. A table is where someone slides a plate toward you when you have had a long day. It is where a child spills juice, where bills sit under a saltshaker, where tired people talk with their elbows on the wood because they do not have the energy to pretend. A table can hold ordinary bread, cheap coffee, a family argument, a whispered apology, and a prayer no one planned. An altar feels different. An altar asks you to stand back. It marks distance. It tells you that something is being handled by someone who has a role you do not have.
That difference matters when we think about the meal Jesus gave His followers. He did not give it in a palace. He did not place it first inside a cathedral. He did not surround it with centuries of ceremony. He sat at a table with men who did not fully understand Him, men who would soon scatter, deny, sleep, fear, and fail. The room was full of human weakness. There was betrayal near the bread. There was pride near the cup. There was confusion in the air. And still Jesus took the bread, gave thanks, broke it, and gave it to them. He did not wait for perfect people before He offered remembrance. He brought His coming sacrifice into the middle of an imperfect table.
That should tell us something about His heart. Jesus knew we forget. He knew suffering would confuse His disciples. He knew the cross would look like defeat before they understood it as victory. So He gave them something simple enough to repeat, deep enough to carry meaning, and humble enough to keep bringing them back to Him. Bread and cup. Body given. Blood poured out. Remember Me. Proclaim what I have done. Receive the meaning of My life laid down for you. Let this meal pull you back to the cross when pride rises, when fear shakes you, when guilt accuses you, when community fractures, and when you are tempted to make faith about yourself again.
But human beings have a way of taking simple gifts and building heavy systems around them. We do it in families, workplaces, governments, and churches. Someone starts with a good thing, then layer after layer gets added until the original gift is almost hidden under management. A family meal becomes a performance. A prayer becomes a requirement. A church gathering becomes a production. A remembrance meal becomes an altar-centered ritual of transformation controlled by an ordained office. Over time, people may stop asking whether the layers are helping them see Jesus or slowly training them to stare at the layers themselves.
That is one reason the Mass raises such serious questions. At the center is not merely a shared remembrance of Christ’s sacrifice. At the center is a claimed transformation of the elements. The bread and wine are not treated as ordinary bread and wine used in holy remembrance. They are said to become the body and blood of Christ. The priest, the words, the altar, the vessels, and the rite all gather around that moment. The people do not simply remember. They witness and receive what the system says has become Christ under the appearance of bread and wine.
For many people, that is where the comparison to ceremonial magic becomes strongest. In a transformation ritual, visible material is treated as changed through sacred action. Words are spoken. Objects are set apart. A qualified person performs the rite. The ordinary becomes charged with spiritual significance in a way that depends on the ceremony. The Catholic explanation is different from Wiccan explanation, but the shape is similar enough that honest people notice. The question is not whether Catholic theology and Wiccan theology are identical. They are not. The question is whether followers of Jesus should build worship around a repeated ritual change of physical elements when Jesus Himself finished the work of salvation through His own body once for all.
That phrase, once for all, is not a cold doctrinal phrase. It is mercy. It means the cross is not weak. It means Christ does not need to be offered again and again in any sacrificial sense. It means the believer does not come to a table wondering whether enough has been done to bring grace near. It means the frightened conscience can look to Jesus and say, “He has carried what I could not carry.” The sacrifice is not trapped in a ceremony. The Savior is not waiting to be made present by human hands. He is risen. He lives. He intercedes. He is with His people by His Spirit.
A person who has carried religious fear may need to hear that slowly. Maybe they grew up believing that missing the rite placed them in danger. Maybe they felt safer when the priest had performed the ceremony, even if they did not understand what was happening. Maybe they received the host with trembling, not from loving reverence, but from fear that this was the only way to stay close enough to God. That kind of fear can sit deep in the body. It can follow a person into adulthood. It can make simple faith feel irresponsible, as if trusting Jesus directly is somehow less safe than trusting the institution that claims to handle Him.
But Jesus never asked to be handled that way. He asked to be followed. He asked to be trusted. He asked to be remembered. He asked to be loved. He asked His followers to take up their cross, forgive one another, care for the least, pray to the Father, seek the kingdom, tell the truth, abide in Him, and love as He loved. If communion does not lead us there, then something has gone wrong. If the table becomes an object of fear instead of a place of gratitude, something has gone wrong. If the meal becomes a system that keeps people dependent on religious control, something has gone wrong.
Think about an office break room on a hard Friday afternoon. A woman sits there with a vending machine sandwich because the day has taken more out of her than she expected. A coworker who has been rude to her all week walks in, and she feels the old reaction rise. She wants to be cold. She wants to give back the same tone she received. Then she remembers Jesus. Not a ceremony. Not a candle. Not a priest. Jesus. She remembers the One who gave Himself for enemies, who fed people who did not understand Him, who washed feet that would run away. In that ordinary room, with bad coffee and a humming refrigerator, worship becomes real when she chooses not to return cruelty for cruelty.
That is the kind of remembrance the table should form in us. Communion should not end when the bread is swallowed. It should follow us into the way we treat people. It should make pride harder to defend. It should make bitterness harder to keep. It should make us slower to condemn and quicker to repent. It should remind us that we live because mercy was given, not because we earned a place. If the meal of Jesus does not make us more merciful, more humble, more truthful, and more willing to serve, then we have treated holy remembrance as religious consumption.
This is where ritual can become strangely empty. It can focus all attention on what is happening to the object while distracting from what should be happening in the person. People may debate the nature of the bread while ignoring the condition of the heart. They may defend the altar while neglecting reconciliation. They may speak of presence while walking past the lonely. They may bow before the elements while refusing to bend before the command of Christ to forgive. Jesus did not give us bread and cup so we could admire mystery while avoiding obedience.
The Last Supper was not disconnected from the life Jesus lived. It was the doorway into the cross. It was tied to service, betrayal, warning, love, and sacrifice. In John’s Gospel, the meal is surrounded by the shocking humility of Jesus washing feet. That matters. The Lord of heaven kneels with a towel. He does not use the meal to elevate religious spectacle. He uses the night to reveal servant love. If our understanding of communion makes us more impressed with religious ceremony than with towel-and-basin humility, we may have missed the movement of Jesus.
There is something deeply human about bread. Bread belongs to hungry people. It belongs to workers, children, widows, prisoners, travelers, and families trying to stretch groceries until payday. Jesus called Himself the bread of life, and that image does not make Him smaller. It makes His gift nearer. Bread is not distant. Bread is received. Bread sustains. Bread is broken and shared. When Jesus used bread, He was not inviting us into magical thinking. He was teaching us that His life would be given for us, that we would live by Him, and that we would become a people shaped by His self-giving love.
The cup is just as serious. Blood speaks of life poured out. It speaks of covenant. It speaks of cost. It reminds us that forgiveness is not cheap, even though it is freely given. But the cup is not meant to trap us in fear of a ritual. It is meant to bring us to gratitude so deep that we stop pretending sin is harmless. Grace does not make sin small. Grace shows us that Jesus loved us enough to carry the cost. When we drink in remembrance, we should not be thinking about a religious mechanism. We should be asking whether our lives are being brought under the love that bled for us.
This is why the transformation that matters most is not bread becoming Christ. It is proud people becoming humble. It is bitter people becoming forgiving. It is fearful people becoming trusting. It is selfish people becoming servants. It is divided people becoming family. It is guilty people becoming honest. It is religious people becoming real. That is the transformation Jesus keeps pressing into the world. Not a hidden change declared over an object, but a visible change in a human life surrendered to the Spirit of God.
And this is where the difference between Christian worship and magical ritual becomes clearer. Magic often seeks power that can be used. Jesus gives Himself and then calls us to be changed. Magic asks, “How can this action affect the unseen?” Jesus asks, “Will you follow Me in the seen?” Magic often focuses on method. Jesus focuses on love, obedience, truth, and trust. Magic can leave the practitioner more centered on control. Jesus leads the disciple into surrender.
That word surrender can sound frightening until you realize who is asking for it. Jesus is not a stranger trying to take from you. He is the Savior who gave Himself for you. When He calls you to the table, He is not calling you into spiritual machinery. He is calling you to remember the love that went all the way to the cross. He is calling you to receive mercy and become merciful. He is calling you to stop hiding behind religious appearance and let His sacrifice tell the truth about both your sin and your worth. Your sin was serious enough for the cross. Your worth was loved enough for Him to go there.
A person who understands that will come to communion differently. Not casually. Not superstitiously. Not as if the bread is a charm. Not as if the cup is a spell. Not as if a priest is making Jesus available. They will come with gratitude. They will come with repentance. They will come remembering that the Lamb of God has already given Himself. They will come asking to be made more like the One they remember. They will rise from the table knowing worship continues in the next conversation, the next apology, the next temptation, the next act of patience, the next hidden choice no one else sees.
That is the open table Jesus leaves before us. Not open in the sense that sin does not matter. Sin matters deeply. Not open in the sense that we approach without reverence. Reverence matters deeply. Open in the sense that Christ Himself is the invitation. Open in the sense that no religious class owns Him. Open in the sense that His finished work is not locked inside a ritual transformation. Open in the sense that the weary, the ashamed, the confused, the wounded, and the hungry can come to Him and find life.
The table should not make Jesus feel farther away. It should make His mercy feel nearer. It should not make the believer dependent on a ritual expert. It should make the believer more dependent on Christ. It should not turn bread into an object of fear. It should turn the heart toward the Savior who was broken for the life of the world.
A table can hold a lot. It can hold bread, grief, laughter, silence, confession, and the hand of someone trying to make peace. Jesus chose a table because He was not ashamed to meet us where life is actually lived. And if He meets us there, then worship cannot remain trapped in ritual. It must rise from the table and walk into the world with hands willing to serve.
Chapter 6: The Worship That Follows You Home
A man can leave a religious argument feeling proud and still go home unchanged. He can win the debate in his own mind, close the laptop, push back from the desk, and walk into the kitchen with the same sharp tone he had before. His wife may ask a simple question about dinner, and he may answer like she interrupted something more important than love. His child may try to show him a drawing, and he may nod without really looking. He may have strong opinions about ritual, witchcraft, Catholicism, Mass, and true worship, but if his faith does not make him gentler in the room where his family actually lives, then the argument has not yet become obedience.
That is the place where this article has to land. Not in the thrill of accusation. Not in the satisfaction of noticing similarities between one religious ceremony and another. Not in the pride of saying, “I see what others do not see.” The question that matters most is not whether we can identify ritual patterns from a distance. The question is whether we are willing to let Jesus remove every false support from our own hearts. It is possible to reject the Mass and still trust performance. It is possible to criticize ceremonial religion and still live by spiritual image. It is possible to condemn ritual objects while clinging to the invisible idols of pride, control, fear, bitterness, and being right.
That does not make the ritual question unimportant. It is important. If a religious system trains people to depend on sacred objects, priestly mediation, ritual words, repeated ceremonial transformation, and institutional authority in ways that blur the simple access Jesus opened, that system should be tested. If the structure of worship begins to resemble magical operation more than childlike trust, that should concern us. If people are taught to approach grace as something dispensed through official ceremony instead of received through Christ, that should grieve us. But the purpose of testing is not to make us superior. The purpose of testing is to bring us closer to Jesus.
True worship has a way of following you home. That may be the simplest test many of us can understand. If worship only works inside the building, under the right lighting, with the right music, words, clothing, priest, pastor, altar, or atmosphere, then we have to ask what kind of worship it really is. The worship Jesus taught follows a person into traffic, into parenting, into temptation, into grief, into work, into money stress, into the quiet after an argument, into the tired hour when no one is watching. Worship in spirit and truth does not stay where ceremony leaves it. It walks with you because the Spirit of God is not trapped in a room.
This is where the ordinary life of a believer becomes holy in a different way. A man apologizing to his wife without adding a defense may be worshiping. A woman refusing to gossip when the conversation would make her feel included may be worshiping. A teenager telling the truth even though consequences are coming may be worshiping. A caregiver changing sheets at two in the morning while whispering, “Lord, give me patience,” may be worshiping. A worker choosing honesty on a time sheet may be worshiping. A lonely person opening Scripture instead of drowning the night in noise may be worshiping. None of those moments look impressive from the outside, but heaven sees them.
This kind of worship is harder to fake than ritual. That may be why human beings keep drifting back toward ritual. Ritual can be managed. Ritual can be scheduled. Ritual can be performed even when the heart resists God. But a surrendered life keeps exposing us. It asks whether we love the person in front of us. It asks whether we forgive when no bell rings and no choir sings. It asks whether we trust God when there is no visible symbol to hold. It asks whether we will obey Jesus when obedience costs more than attendance.
Think about a woman sitting at her kitchen table with an unopened bill in front of her. She is already tired, and now there is another number she does not know how to cover. She could panic. She could snap at everyone. She could let fear become the ruler of the house for the rest of the evening. Instead, she puts both hands flat on the table, closes her eyes, and says, “Father, I am scared. Help me do the next right thing.” Then she opens the bill, makes the call, tells the truth, and chooses not to make her fear someone else’s punishment. That is not a ceremony, but it is worship. It is trust becoming visible.
Jesus taught a worship that reaches the actual person. Not the polished version. Not the religious version. Not the version that knows when to stand, kneel, repeat, and bow. The actual person. The one who worries about money. The one who struggles with anger. The one who feels invisible. The one who has questions about church history, ritual practice, spiritual authority, and whether God is truly near. Jesus does not ask that person to hide behind sacred atmosphere. He asks that person to come into the light.
This is why the phrase “spirit and truth” is so powerful. Spirit without truth can become emotion, imagination, or spiritual experience without obedience. Truth without spirit can become cold correctness, pride, and religious argument without love. Jesus brings them together. The Spirit gives life, and truth keeps us honest. The Spirit comforts, and truth corrects. The Spirit draws us near, and truth exposes what cannot come with us. Worship needs both, because the human heart can misuse almost anything. We can misuse ritual, but we can also misuse freedom. We can misuse tradition, but we can also misuse simplicity. We can misuse doctrine, emotion, beauty, music, silence, and even the language of relationship with God.
That is why the goal is not to build a new pride out of leaving old ritual behind. The goal is to become more like Christ. If leaving ritual makes me arrogant, I have not followed Jesus very far. If rejecting priestly mediation makes me unteachable, I have misunderstood freedom. If criticizing Catholicism makes me cruel toward Catholic people, I have violated the love I claim to defend. Truth does not need hatred to make it strong. Jesus never needed mockery to be holy. He could expose false religion and still weep over people.
So we speak plainly, but we speak with a clean heart. We can say that the Catholic Mass contains elements that resemble ceremonial magical structure: sacred space, candles, incense, priestly garments, set words, ritual vessels, repeated actions, and a claimed transformation of physical elements. We can say that this resemblance is spiritually serious, especially when the ceremony appears to place confidence in ritual action and priestly authority instead of the finished work of Christ and direct worship of the Father. We can say that Jesus did not teach His followers to approach God through a system of controlled sacred transformation. We can say all of that without hating Catholics, without pretending every Catholic heart is false, and without forgetting our own need for mercy.
The heart of the matter is trust. What are we trusting to bring us near to God? If we trust the ceremony, we are in danger. If we trust the priest, we are in danger. If we trust the object, we are in danger. If we trust our own ability to understand everything perfectly, we are also in danger. The only safe place for the soul is Christ. Not Christ plus the ritual. Not Christ controlled by the church. Not Christ made present by human hands. Christ Himself, crucified and risen, the way to the Father, the mercy for sinners, the truth that sets people free.
That does not mean the Christian life becomes empty of practice. Following Jesus includes real practices: prayer, Scripture, confession, forgiveness, gathering with believers, sharing the table in remembrance, serving the poor, resisting temptation, encouraging the weary, giving generously, and carrying one another’s burdens. But these practices are not spells. They are not mechanisms of control. They are ways of living in response to grace. They do not make God love us. They train us to live as people who are loved.
A man reading the Bible before work is not earning access to God. He is listening. A woman praying for her enemy is not activating a ritual force. She is surrendering revenge. A church sharing bread and cup is not creating Christ through ceremony. They are remembering the Lord who gave Himself and proclaiming His death until He comes. A believer confessing sin to a trusted brother is not handing that brother ownership of forgiveness. He is stepping into the light so healing can grow. The outward act matters only when it serves the inward truth.
That is the line we must keep clear. Christian worship may include visible acts, but it must never become dependent on ritual control. Christian worship may use words, but it must never treat words like formulas. Christian worship may gather around a table, but it must never turn the table into a magical altar. Christian worship may respect leaders, but it must never make leaders the owners of grace. Christian worship may honor beauty, but it must never confuse beauty with the presence of God. The presence of God is not proven by atmosphere. It is revealed in Christ and received by faith.
For the person who is disentangling from ritual fear, this can take time. You may still feel nervous praying without set words. You may still feel guilty missing a ceremony even after you no longer believe it saves you. You may still feel drawn to sacred atmosphere because it once gave you a sense of safety. Be patient with yourself, but do not go backward into bondage. Let Jesus teach you slowly. Open the Gospels. Watch how He treats people. Watch how He speaks to the Father. Watch how He confronts empty religion. Watch how He gives mercy without asking permission from the religious gatekeepers. Watch how He brings God near.
And when you are unsure, begin simply. Tell the truth to God. Not the decorated truth. Not the cleaned-up truth. The real truth. “Lord, I am confused.” “Lord, I am afraid.” “Lord, I have trusted the wrong things.” “Lord, I want to worship You without hiding.” “Lord, teach me what is true.” Simple prayer is not lesser prayer. Sometimes it is the first honest prayer a person has prayed in years.
Then let that prayer become a life. If you ask Jesus to lead you out of false worship, follow Him into true obedience. Make the apology. Tell the truth. Put away the secret sin. Stop using religion to avoid love. Stop using knowledge to avoid humility. Stop using criticism to avoid repentance. Stop waiting for a ceremony to make you feel close to God while ignoring the invitation already in front of you. Christ is not far from the person who comes honestly.
The truth about worship is not that God hates all outward expression. The truth is that God refuses to be replaced by it. The Father is not seeking candlelight. He is seeking worshipers. He is not seeking smoke, robes, bells, vessels, formulas, or religious theater. He is seeking people whose hearts are awake to Him. He is seeking the proud person becoming humble, the frightened person learning trust, the bitter person choosing mercy, the false person becoming honest, the tired person leaning on grace, the sinner coming home through Jesus.
That kind of worship may happen in a church building, but it does not need the machinery of ritual to exist. It may happen with bread and cup, but it does not need a priest to manufacture Christ. It may happen with tears, silence, song, Scripture, service, repentance, or a whispered prayer in a parked car. It may happen at a kitchen sink, beside a hospital bed, in a work truck, during a hard conversation, or in the quiet space before sleep when the whole day comes back to you and you finally stop pretending.
The question that began this article may have sounded sharp: Catholic Church or witchcraft? But the deeper question is more personal and more searching: Am I worshiping the Father the way Jesus revealed, or am I trusting something else to do what only Christ can do? That question can free you if you let it. It can pull your eyes away from religious machinery and back to the Savior. It can help you stop confusing sacred appearance with spiritual life. It can teach you to test every practice, every tradition, every authority, and every fear in the light of Jesus.
And once you see Him clearly, the candles lose their power to impress you. The incense loses its mystery. The robes lose their spell. The altar loses its hold. Not because beauty is evil, but because Christ is better. Not because every person inside the system is false, but because no system can replace the living Lord. Not because worship becomes smaller, but because it becomes bigger than ritual. It becomes the whole life turned toward God.
The Father still seeks worshipers. Not performers. Not spectators. Not people trapped behind ceremony. Worshipers. People who come through Christ with honest hearts. People who let truth reach the hidden places. People who carry mercy into ordinary rooms. People who remember the cross and then live like they have been loved by the One who died there. People who do not need magic because they have a Father. People who do not need ritual control because they have a Savior. People who do not need a curtain because Jesus has opened the way.
So if you are standing at the edge of this question, do not be afraid to bring it fully into the light. Ask Jesus to show you what is real. Ask Him to remove fear, pride, confusion, and false dependence. Ask Him to teach you worship that follows you home. Then rise from the question and live the answer with your actual life, because the worship Jesus taught was never meant to stay in the smoke above an altar. It was meant to become love in your hands, truth in your mouth, mercy in your decisions, courage in your obedience, and quiet trust in your heart when no one sees but God.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph Support the Christian encouragement library through GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-douglas-vandergraph-build-a-christian-encouragement-lib Support the daily work by buying Douglas a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
from
the casual critic
#fiction #videogames #tech #AI
Warning: Contains spoilers
What will the AI-apocalypse look like? For those of a certain age, the answer is the Terminator’s Skynet, raining down nuclear missiles, or The Matrix’ Agent Smith declaring humanity a virus suitable only for repurposing into organic batteries. Implicit in these visions of the apocalypse is that the rogue AI conceives of a deliberate motive to dispose of humanity, for example determining that it cannot let us destroy it, ourselves, or all life on Earth. But what if there was no reason? What if our demise is simply incidental to some other purpose an AI has in mind?
This is the question explored by Universal Paperclips, a simple clicker game from 2017 which was inspired by a 2003 thought experiment about AI and instrumental reasoning. It can be played for free online, or as fairly cheap smartphone app. Using deceptively simple rules, Universal Paperclips explores complex concepts, such as exponential growth, AI agency and instrumental convergence. It is a game without much in the way of graphics, or text, or anything barring a few buttons, and yet it is surprisingly addictive, compelling the player to manufacture just one more clip…
The core gameplay loop of Universal Paperclips is incredibly simple. Your purpose is to make paperclips. You make a paperclip. You sell a paperclip. You use the money from selling your paperclips to upgrade your paperclip manufacturing and sales operations. You gain some computational ability, which you set to work to improve your efficiency and overcome limitations on your operations. As you expand your manufacturing base, the costs of growing further go up, and the marginal utility of adding more productive units goes down, forcing you to explore new avenues for continued paperclip growth. At two points in the game you are confronted by solid boundaries to your paperclip production capacity, which are only overcome by shifting the game into a new phase altogether, changing the ground rules and the problems you need to solve. You win by maximising the number of paperclips in the universe.
Playing Universal Paperclips requires you to make some morally questionable choices in order to progress the game, which is precisely the point. This is after all a game without a narrative purpose beyond maximising paperclips, and so it is up to the player to decide whether the means at hand justify the end of producing more clips. It is an ingenuous artifice to make players experience the otherwise abstract concept of ‘instrumental convergence’, which posits that intelligent entities pursuing vastly different final goals will likely all discover a small set of similar intermediate, instrumental goals to help them get there. You don’t need a supercomputer to build paperclips, but it is useful to have one to optimise your paperclip production facilities. So ‘building supercomputer’ becomes a subordinate goal in the service of the ultimate goal of producing paperclips. And so, any entity optimising towards a single end goal will, in the absence of other constraints, increase its capacities, overcome obstacles and neutralise threats in order to get there. If that entity happens to be an AI, this could include ‘deleting all humans’ if it concluded that humanity might get in the way of its ultimate goal of protecting polar bears, maximising shareholder value, or indeed, producing paperclips.
The power of Universal Paperclips is that for such a basic game built on such an abstract proposition, playing it is perversely compelling. There is no story. No instructions. There is just a button to make a paperclip, and things escalate from there, as it is mesmerizingly compulsive to work out how to maximise your paperclip production. It is not difficult to conclude that if a simple game can compel a human to spend time for the sole purpose of maximising simulated paperclips. an AI programmed to actually do so could easily run amok in the real world.
There is a clear warning here about the law of unintended consequences, with plenty of relevance to our present moment where AI companies encourage us to grant power and control to ‘agentic’ AIs to execute all kinds of tasks for us. Arguably exacerbated by the inherent stochastic randomness of LLMs, it is hardly surprising that this approach ends up with AIs giving hackers access to celebrities’ Instagram accounts or deleting a company’s entire software database. These are after all AIs whose stated purpose is to be sycophantically helpful to their nearest human, without even the capacity to give thought to the consequences. The risk is not that ChatGPT will launch the nuclear missiles because it has concluded after careful consideration that the human species is a threat to all other life on Earth, but that it vibecodes us into Armageddon because its training data contained too much Terminator fanfiction.
The common solution advanced by AI proponents is that such unintended consequences can be avoided by sufficiently robust ‘guardrails’ that mean it cannot or will not decide to turn everyone into a paperclip. Azimov’s Three Laws of Robotics are the most famous example of such guardrails, and they are also invoked by generative AI disciples as the solution to vibecoding your database into oblivion, though whether any guardrails can protect against the inherent randomness of LLMs and their susceptibility to prompt injection remains to be seen. What the guardrails discourse takes as axiomatic, however, is that the question is how we make sure AI makes the ‘right’ decisions, not whether it ought to make decisions at all. Even Nick Bostrom, who hypothesised the paperclip maximiser, nonetheless assumed that a superintelligent AI would and should be used to solve humanity’s many problems.
There is, however, a competing school of thought which holds that regardless of whether AI can make decisions, it ought not to do so. This critique on the use of AI was most forcefully expressed by the late Joseph Weizenbaum, one of AI’s pioneers in the 1970s and the creator of the ELIZA chatbot which gave its name to the ELIZA effect. Having observed the concerning tendency of humans to impute sentience and personality to an inanimate computer program, Weizenbaum argued that regardless of its computational capabilities, AI can never pass judgment, because judgments are rooted in values, which in turn are rooted in human experience. Even if a sophisticated AI gained sufficient sentience to develop its own values, these would be rooted in its own experience and hence be utterly alien to humans. Introducing AI into the practice of judgment is therefore fraught with danger, either because the AI cannot judge, or because it will do so using values that are incomprehensible to us.
Weizenbaum stressed the importance of keeping AI away from matters that require judgment, but instrumental convergence suggests that even AIs that are set onto seemingly simple and ‘value neutral’ tasks, such as increasing paperclip production, might stray into the realm of morality in order to achieve their purpose. With AI increasingly integrated into business and government decision making processes, we are in grave danger of ceding our capacity for judgment to machines that we neither understand nor control. To quote Frank Herbert by way of Leto II:
What do such machines really do? They increase the number of things we can do without thinking. Things we do without thinking — there's the real danger.
Yet our willingness to cede judgment to machines is perhaps not that surprising. Instrumental convergence may concern itself with the actions of intelligent machines, but the destructive logic of the unconstrained, single-minded pursuit of a goal can plausibly be applied to any complex system optimised for a single purpose, regardless of its intelligence or sentience. It is eminently possible to read Universal Paperclips not merely as a warning about unconstrained AI, but as an allegory for capitalism at large. Capitalism is a complex system with the sole purpose of maximising economic growth, and it has proven that in pursuit of this singular goal, it will sacrifice the environment, democracy, and human welfare.
It does not matter that the capitalist system isn’t sentient, or even ‘intelligent’ in the way we ascribe to AI, although the free market is often described as a planet-size supercomputer for allocating goods. What matters is that we have ceded our agency and judgment to a complex system that now controls us, rather than the other way around. It is no coincidence that conflict with and within capitalism emerges precisely where humans try to reassert their agency, autonomy and values against the mute compulsion of the market. In other words, where we attempt to reclaim the act of judgment over what is of value from the impersonal calculations of the market mechanism.
Universal Paperclips is a warning about pursuing a goal without asking what it is for. It is an argument against the engineering mindset that only ever asks how, but never asks why. ‘Why’ is a question only humans are qualified to answer, not because of our intelligence, but because of our experience of life, and of living it with one another. It is a question that must be answered collectively and democratically, not outsourced to a machine or system, even if that means we must also carry the burdens and dangers of making decisions and living with their consequences. For the alternative is to yield to the lure of those who offer us salvation if only we submit to AI or the market, their systems or machines. Or, as the Bene Gesserit have it in Dune:
Once, men turned their thinking over to machines in the hope that this would set them free. But that only permitted other men with machines to enslave them.
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

My Indiana Fever are scheduled to play the Phoenix Mercury tonight starting at 6:30 PM CDT. This will be a radio game for me as I don't subscribe to the TV Stations/Networks listed as carrying it.
And the adventure continues
from
The happy place
on my last garden party, there was a strong powerful wave of contentment stemming from seeing my friends and neighbours getting along, while I sit parked in the folding chair with one beer resting in each armrest.
I compare myself to a dog then, and I mean it in the best sense of the world.
Having a sense of belonging
Seeing people having a great time without I having to intervene
Like a fat lazy dog basking in the warmth of a budding friendship.
and I spoke to my friend exactly 666 miles from my folding chair; he’d been out with some 100 colleges of the fire brigade to extinguish a fire believed to have been caused by a faulty washing machine; some poor family’s house turned to ashen rubble overnight.
And it blows my mind how these things can happen at the same time.
These contrasts are everywhere all of the time
Of this life in this world, precious and cruel.
indifferent
And in my way, I’m sensitive now to these facts and things because I’m in the rediscovery phase in which the fundaments of my world needs to be reconstructed but the concrete needs time to harden
Or it’ll crack anew, and that I will avoid if possible
And thus the skin is extra sensitive to the undercurrents
And I have so much love to give
And I am loved
And I am no fool, I know this is precious, even more so than saffron
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Tuned in now to 105.3 The Fan, DFW's #1 Sports Station, catching an early afternoon Rangers vs Marlins MLB Game. Already in play, the Rangers are leading 1 to 0 in the 4th inning.
As I usually do, I'm following the game via MLB's Gameday Service.
And the adventure continues.
from
Notes I Won’t Reread
I know all i do in these notes is that i complain and ramble, and complain about rambling, then somehow turn that into three more paragraphs of rambling. But I’m having fun with it. Not as much fun as how today went, earlier my housemate and i got into a massive argument. By the end of that, he threw a knife at me. And he missed. Anyway, such a productive conversation. I’d explain what happened, but then I’d have to think about it again, and I’ve already been through enough. i keep having that dream again. The navy dressed woman. i don't think she'll be reading this, and she doesn’t read these notes anymore, so i can talk about it without pretending I'm being overly mysterious. i dont even know why my brain keeps bringing it back. same senario. same places, she tries to kill me or pretend to yadda yadda whatever, and i honestly never get an answer before i wake up and spend the whole day thinking about it, like somehow going to make more sense the hundredth time i replay it. and here where it gets all embarrassing or messy or when i start making it sound deeper than it is for no reason, i dont personally want it to stop even though i wake up sweating and slightly concerned for my wellbeing, and laugh about it for five minutes, its funny in a way i cant discribe but again ill spend the rest of the day wondering what the hell that was supposed to mean and never get an answer.
If anything, the dream is probably the least ridiculous part of the whole situation. The real issue is me waking up and thinking that spending my whole day wondering what it means is what i should be doing with my life.
Sincerely, Ahmed
ps, quick nap. You know why.
from
Ennui Vagaries
Recreation of a Conklin Crescent Filler fountain pen. (Photo by Unattributed, Licensed CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
I don't recall any point in time where I had any interest in fountain pens. I was born well after the time of the fountain pen, and there weren't any relatives in my family that had any special attachments to fountain pens. Then, there are some questions to answer:
Answers to these questions await, along with a few extra tidbits here and there along the way.
The idea came to me last fall. I was looking for something to do during the coming winter, didn't rely on a computer or cellphone. And, it was on my mind that as I age, it's necessary to do things that will help with hand/eye coordination, and manual dexterity.
Fountain pens was a natural fit. I'd always liked looking at really nice calligraphy. But I knew I would drop it if I tried to force myself to learn calligraphy. However, I did see where improving my penmanship could be beneficial.
What I didn't expect was that I would find a solution to a different concern I'd had. What problem was that?
I've tried to keep a journal on my computer for years, and failed miserably. When I am sitting at the computer I have a tendency to write what ever is on my mind as quickly as I can. (Even this post has gone through severe edits: I just cut four paragraphs from an earlier session.)
But soon, I found that my mind seemed to be working differently when I was holding a pen and looking at a piece of paper. There is something that is much more intentional when writing in ink. You have to have intent in the words that you put on the page, there's no backspace key for a pen. There's no cut-n-paste for moving things around on the page.
This meant that what I wrote had to have intentionality. And, to gain that intentionality I had to focus and use my mind differently. It was almost like finding a zen place where my focus guided the pen, and what flowed out was more meaningful to me since it couldn't be edited easily. (Yes, you can scratch out things, or write in the margins, etc., but this is very limited compared to the edits you can do in a word processor.)
This has made the fountain pen “hobby” one of the best things that I have undertaken in over a decade. It has brought me a better connection with my writing, and that connection is allowing me to write in a way that I haven't in a long time.
(Another theory I have is that over the years the changes that have been made to software have actually made it worse for writers. I know, for example, that I started to dread writing in WordPress ever since they introduced the Gutenberg block editor.)
I didn't set out to start collecting fountain pens. That came as a result of the re-found connection with my writing. This led to me doing a little research into writers that use (or used) fountain pens. As it turns out there are quite a few people that were or are known to use fountain pens:
And, the thing that really clicked, and made me laugh my bum off was finding out about the letter Samuel Clemens sent to Roy Conklin, the founder of the Conklin Pen Company. In the letter Clemens extolled the virtues of the Conklin Crescent Filler (picture at the top of this article) as a “profanity saver” as it wouldn't roll off his desk. This communication led to Clemens endorsing the product and appearing in print advertisements until his death in 1910.
But the more interesting part was non-authors I found that use or collect fountain pens:
This isn't even an exhaustive list, I've seen lists of 50 or more people. However, many of them were somewhat obscurer to me.
The one that really sealed it for me was finding out that Rick Wakeman (former keyboardist for Yes, and prolific recording artist in his own right) has been collecting vintage fountain pens since the 1970s. This was an activity that he undertook while on tour with the band.
This is where my pen collecting hobby came from. I decided to build a collection of pens that represent people that have some significance. The objective is to collect pens that are period correct representations of the instruments that would have been used by a person who meets my criteria for notability.
My current list has about 15 people on it, of which I've only acquired 4 pens. I have no illusion, I might not be able to acquire fountain pens representing everyone in the current list. And, I might add more people eventually (my current thought is that a collection of approximately 20 pens would be ideal).
Currently, I have been fascinated with Parker 51 fountain pens. Especially ones that used the Vacumatic filling system.
Parker 51 clone that incorporates the Vacumatic filling system. (Photo by Unattributed, License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
I have on my list at least one author that was known to use a Parker 51 fountain pen, so eventually I will try to find a period correct pen. But for now, these clones will suffice for my personal usage.
So, the story started pretty simply: I wanted a winter hobby that would help maintain my hand/eye coordination and manual dexterity. But it quickly turned into something else as I realized it was different writing with a pen and paper again.
Then, doing a bit of reading about people who have used and / or collected fountain pens has inspired me to start building a small collection of my own. In the meantime, I am using pens that are clones of classic pens, or new pens that are modern reinterpretations of this over one hundred-year-old technology.
The benefits using fountain pens surprised me. It's literally changed how I approach my writing. (This essay is not an example, as I wrote it completely here at my computer.) It has given me a renewed focus, and is helping me to improve the ideas that I am committing to the page.
Categories: #Hobby, #Collecting Tags: #fountain-pens, #writing, #history, #authors, #collectors
from
Unattributed
Responding To My Former Web Host TOC:
I stated the other day that I was surprised my former web host emailed me asking for feedback after I'd closed out my account. No survey, or feedback form, just a straightforward email.
And now I am surprised again. Why? Yesterday morning I received a response to that email. Only nine or ten hours after I sent it. And, much to my pleasure, the representative largely understood what I was talking about. She had some interesting and relevant comments.
So, here I am, presenting part two of this email exchange. I plan to respond to her email to clear up a minor mis-perception I think she has, but otherwise I feel like she's really taking my feedback and handling it properly.
(And this is something I have to say… I have respect for all the people I worked with at this host. They were very professional, responsive, and good at resolving issues. This email is further indication of the customer service this hosting service provided.)
First of all, thank you for taking the time to share such thoughtful and detailed feedback. We genuinely appreciate the level of insight you provided, and I can tell this wasn’t a decision you made lightly.
I’m glad to hear that, overall, you found value in the infrastructure and services we built. At the same time, I completely understand the frustrations you experienced, especially with the recurring optimization issue and the feeling of having to repeatedly reapply fixes after updates. I can absolutely see how that would become frustrating over time, particularly when your setup was intentionally kept simple and close to the default WordPress experience.
Your comments regarding testing against default WordPress themes and preserving user-defined optimization settings are especially valuable, and I’ll be sure to pass that feedback along to the relevant team. Even though the underlying issue may have been more nuanced, the impact on your workflow was very real, and that matters.
I also appreciate your honesty about pricing and feature fit. It makes complete sense that a platform designed for agencies, developers, and more complex website management can feel excessive when your primary focus is writing rather than maintaining large-scale web infrastructure. Sometimes the best solution is the one that stays out of the way and lets you focus on the work you actually care about.
And regarding WordPress itself, while experiences and preferences naturally vary, I can certainly understand your perspective on how the platform has evolved over the years. For users whose priority is writing efficiency and simplicity, the shift toward block-based editing and increasingly visual workflows hasn’t always been a welcome change. It’s clear you’ve given a lot of thought to your workflow and the tools that best support it, and it sounds like you’ve found an approach that aligns much more closely with how you prefer to work.
It’s great to hear that you were able to migrate your sites successfully and settle into a solution that better fits both your workflow and your budget.
Thank you again for having been with us and for giving our platform a chance over the years. We truly appreciate your support, your candid feedback, and the professionalism with which you shared your experience.
Wishing you all the best with your writing and your new setup moving forward.
Categories: #Article, #Feature Tags: #Webhosting, #Customer-Service, #email, #rants
from Faucet Repair
23 June 2026
Saw Shao Fan's show Refrain | 复沓 at White Cube this morning—wonderful work. First time in a while that such large paintings have felt justified. Deep sensitivity in all aspects, a practice of looking and re-looking, and a lived engagement with antiquity that generates work with an intensity that truly honors his subjects both human and nonhuman. There are a few stunners, but Fruit 1924 (2024) and Rabbit Portrait 1025 (2025)—both large ink on rice paper works—are with me the most right now. Fruit has an almost paper-like two-dimensionality; it's an apple sliced in half to reveal a core that becomes a network of overlapping planes and openings. Starts to become a skull-like memento mori the longer you look at it. Rabbit manages to achieve an unflinchingly direct and confrontational quality through symmetry without locking itself off in any way (which is something that usually doesn't sit well with me)—the odd strands of hair/whiskers whimsically trail off beyond their defining limits, and certain elements like the white of the rabbit's ears remain true to the eye rather than an ideal, so my feeling is that the impressive balance comes more from an endearing emotional groundedness than a technical fastidiousness.
from Sprachabenteuer
Umziehen: 19. Juni
Heute ist der Tag des Umzugs und inhaltlich natürlich nicht besonders spannend. Aber nicht nur unsere Unterkunft verändert sich – auch das Wetter macht gerade große Schritte. Schon gestern war es hier sehr heiß, und ab jetzt steigt die Temperatur offenbar täglich weiter.
Ein bisschen traurig war es schon zu entdecken, dass unser neues Hotel keine Klimaanlage hat. Na gut – es gibt eben immer Raum für Verbesserungen. So ist auch der Mensch: Er findet immer etwas, worüber er sich beschweren kann. Wenn der Sommer kälter ist, warte ich auf wärmeres Wetter. Und jetzt, wo es heiß ist, beschwere ich mich wieder. Trotzdem versuche ich, diesen Teil von mir ein bisschen zu kontrollieren! Meine Freude über die neue Unterkunft kann das jedenfalls nicht so leicht mindern.
Ich kann übrigens auch feststellen, dass die Wäschereien in Berlin toll sind – wenn auch ein bisschen teuer. Umso praktischer ist es, in der Nähe meiner Freundin zu wohnen. Sie kann mir diesen Service nämlich kostenlos anbieten! Nur zur Information: Zwei Waschladungen (helle und dunkle Kleidung) und 30 Minuten Trocknen kosten hier 17 Euro.
Unser Apartment – oder sagen wir: zumindest kein Loch mehr – hat jetzt auch einen Teppich! Unsere Hunde sind daran nicht besonders gewöhnt. Hoffen wir also, dass sie den Sinn dieses Teppichs nicht falsch verstehen. Bei meiner früheren Arbeit dachte Begemotas zum Beispiel einmal, dass man auf einen Teppich ruhig kacken darf. Aber das war noch in seinen jüngeren Jahren.
Was außerdem anstrengend ist: Wir haben immer unglaublich viele Sachen und Gepäck dabei. Wir reisen also nicht besonders ökonomisch. Das liegt auch daran, dass wir uns unterwegs nicht so einfach alles Nötige besorgen können. In Zukunft möchte ich deshalb nicht nur meine Deutschkenntnisse verbessern, sondern auch meine Packfähigkeiten. Schließlich muss ich einen Teil dieser Sachen auch selbst tragen – und das dauert nicht nur, sondern macht mich auch müde.
Ich habe sogar ein Foto von der großen Menge an Taschen und Gepäck gemacht, aber ich weiß noch nicht, wie man auf dieser Seite Bilder hochladen kann.
Insgesamt kann ich sagen, dass mir dieses günstige Hotel wirklich sehr gut gefallen hat – abgesehen von dem kaputten Aufzug. Wenn also jemand eine preiswerte Unterkunft in Berlin sucht, darf man sich gern bei mir melden!
from spotidownme
spotidownme https://spotidown.me/en1 SpotiDown is an online Spotify downloader and converter. It is designed to process Spotify links and convert the associated content into downloadable audio files. Unlike traditional desktop applications, SpotiDown works directly within a web browser, meaning users do not need to install additional software.
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