I was going to wait until 24 Feb, which is two weeks after Pey's birthday though not two weeks after I said I would wait two weeks, and then probably start checking your Twitch channel and YouTube channels again, but it seems like such a waste of time to wait another two days.
Today's award winners for "videos that I would actually want to watch now", after clicking on a few dozen videos, deciding that about two dozen of them were interesting enough to bookmark and then never return to, and leaving these open as tabs:
How Modern Schools Make Terrible Writers (Deliberately)
Luxury Beliefs: The New Status Symbol That’s Ruining Entertainment
A Selfish Argument for Making the World a Better Place – Egoistic Altruism
The 7 Deadly Sins of Millennial Writing
Selected comments:
This is so valid. I'll never forget asking for additional children's books from the school library in grade 1 and being told by the teacher "you can't have more books because we can't have you getting ahead of the other children with your reading."
Let's goo luxury beliefs - a beautiful phrase coined by Rob Henderson (who was a foster kid adopted and raised by incredibly poor parents and ultimately went to Yale where he found himself bewildered by his privileged colleagues ability to make themselves seem like victims)
Great video, Greg! My favorite example of luxury beliefs was Leonardo DiCaprio flying on his private jet across the world to conferences where he would preach that we (the common people) should walk to work instead of drive in order to save the environment. Not only can we (the common people) not always afford to work within walking distance (or in cities where public transpo is nearly non-existent), but there's the joyful hypocrisy of it too, where WE should walk while YOU fly.
Millennials love trying out the ‘new and creative’ idea of saying “what if the bad guys were actually the good guys” while completely failing to understand the source material that showed exactly why they were bad guys
I have had to unlearn my generation’s overly ironic manner of speech and presentation when I wanted genuine relationships. The full suite of millennialism ultimately boils down to a way to shield yourself from being scrutinized/ as a way to hide being talentless and uninteresting.
Deadly sin No1: The assumption that the audience is stupid.
I'm often reminded of a quote attributed to Abraham Lincoln.
You can fool all of the people some of time, you can fool some of the people all of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.
I'm still stuck on "1 of 4 American adults read at a kindergarten level." Those people have the right to vote. Ponder that for a moment.
On the topic of comments, I also bookmarked these comments yesterday (the reason I was recommended more videos from the same channel today, although I watched little or none of these videos):
(Excerpt from long comment) [...] They said they were discussing that topic with a coworker who told them that the kids nowadays only want to read fully illustrated books because they struggle to mentally visualize what they are reading so they just want to be shown what it is. This, to me, relates to kids being raised on YouTube and TikTok who are used to everything they consume being visual media so they don't have to leave anything to their imagination.
I understand character arc but I dont actually believe it. The idea that people change is a farce. People are the same, they just lie about who they are because they have to operate in society. If they dont conform, if they do not perform, they cannot get what they want or need.
People dont change, they get better at lying.
And the whole ' people said horrid things at 15 but they have made strides to blah blah blah.' No. Teens know right from wrong. What they said then, they meant it and are only covering up so they dont get in trouble. we were all 15 once but not all of us were spewing the n word or using other slurs
Obviously I had no intention of sharing this comment when I bookmarked it, and had no idea what it was before I just visited it right now with the intention of copying it no matter what it said. It just shows how some people think. Looking at this comment now, the first part of it makes me think of the ending of Person of Interest S01 Ep04, Cura Te Ipsum. Though that article, with its summary of the final scene, misses an important detail: the character Reese begins with his eyes closed, perhaps half asleep after a long wait. The audience does not know whether it was a test, or whether the gun was loaded and functional. Reese's behavior suggests that the gun is loaded; that Reese was giving Benton an opportunity to kill Reese, if Benton was the type of person who would kill another person. Because just as Reese does not know if Benton can change from a 'bad' person to a 'good' person, Reese does not know if he himself can be a 'good' person, after killing many people, some of whom might have been 'good', during his previous employment.
That article says,
But much like the Sixth Sense that only became the classic that it did because of its ending, Cura Te Ipsum became one of the penultimate episodes of POI because of its powerful conclusion…or lack of conclusion.
(penultimate: 4. (proscribed) pre-eminent, ultimate, best; par excellence, top-quality)
This is wrong. It only has the conclusion that it does because people cannot agree on whether 'bad' people can become 'good' people. Just like a politician avoiding a question about a sensitive issue, the show avoids giving an answer to this question, because of people who would misinterpret or misapply that answer.
The YouTube comment shows how some people — not necessarily this specific commenter — would think that the correct thing for Reese to do in this situation would be to murder Benton and dispose of his body.
Also while looking up that comment, I saw this video: Dance Central | Maneater (Hard - Gold Stars - 100%)
More so than the body tracking (15+ years old and used in games like BeatSaber and BeatSaber), what's interesting is the standardization of moves, by giving them names. It's a lot different than a game just scoring a player based on whether they step on floor panels at the right time, which could look like a dance but doesn't have to. I mention it because I was thinking of listening to this song earlier today, but decided it would send the wrong message. (Do I have to mention that this song was used in Polzie - The True Story?)
Also I just clicked on Why I fear for the future of mankind, which has a climate change info panel but based on comments is not just about climate change.
This is a lot of videos which I might want to watch, but have not watched. And I can't ask anyone to watch a video I haven't watched. But don't they look like interesting videos?
If I was trying to get you to share this idea, maybe I could justify waiting. But, like, your recent TikTok video was filmed in China, and maybe within the past day or two. Either you are flying around excessively, or I am bad at guessing where you are in the world based on the videos you post. It doesn't seem like you would mind if I stopped paying attention to you. So if you do anything that would make a reasonable person, of average intelligence, think that you don't read this and don't care about the idea, on any platform excluding Facebook, then I will stop checking your accounts (but might still visit them in the future if people link to content on them or an algorithm recommends them, etc.).
I am not currently checking your Twitch and YouTube accounts, but I intend to do so as soon as I check all the moments on Pey's videos that I meant to check.
I was thinking of switching to the goal of 'trying to get you to advocate for certain changes in WoW', which might start with me editing the thoughts I previously had about stats and so on into a long explanation, but honestly that would be a goal with zero chance of success and it would just be delaying the inevitable. And I think I need to make a few polls first.
Did I already say this? From 06 Feb 2026:
answering the question, 'why do people hurt people they care about?'
Poll: Which would you rather live in? A world in which falling in love with someone increases the chance you will hurt them; a world in which falling in love with someone decreases the chance you will hurt them
This, from 02 Feb 2026?
Poll: "Would it be bad if everyone who can only do tasks that 3 billion other people can also do made enough money to support themselves and another person?"
From the really long thoughts I had on 14 Jan 2026:
Poll: if you were designing WoW 1 to 80 all in one go, with pauses for ~2 years at the 60 and 70 level caps, how much health and damage would a fresh lvl 80 character have compared to a fresh lvl 40 character? From 2x to 20x as much.
Which is better: an MMO in which most characters at the level cap are less than 30% stronger than a character one level below the level cap, or one in which the average character at level cap is three times stronger (200% stronger) than characters one level below?
If power inflation is limited, then need for big changes that limit mana-pool inflation might go away.
I can't answer these questions without asking other people.