Science versus Ignorance!

Power fears real education — because educated people ask questions. And when people start questioning, ignorance doesn’t stand a chance.

To Question or Not to QuestionThat Is the Question

The world we live in today is full of unknowns. It sounds complicated, I know. It’s actually very simple, though. Because at the heart of our confusion lies a single truth: We don’t know what we don’t know.
That’s why we must focus on what we DO know we don’t know — and use truth to dig deeper. Mind-blowing, right?

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Asking has always been the spine of progress. Every breakthrough, every discovery, every step forward more often than not happens only when someone with enough chutzpah asks WHY — someone who refuses to trade the truth for a made-up fairy tale because that’s how it is and decides to stand up and fight.

Listen, questioning isn’t rebellion. It’s responsibility. It’s the moment we choose understanding over obedience, curiosity over comfort. Because the day we stop questioning, ignorance wins by default.

Unfortunately, the same world that so badly needs to uproot its unknowns isn’t always built on honest inquiry. So, whoever dares to look for the real answers had better stay sharp and draw faster than Billy the Kid — or risk being outgunned by ignorance wearing a mask of truth.

So, let’s question a few questions — and the convenient answers pretending to be the truth.

Questioning the questions and the answers.

Not every question is born honest, and not every answer is meant to enlighten. Some - a lot, in fact - are engineered to mislead, to control thought, or to shut it down. That’s why real understanding begins when we question both the question and the answer.

Let’s take a look at a few of those questions that sound right, sell well, and travel fast — but collapse the moment truth kicks the door down.

If one of those tricky question is bothering you, feel free to send it to me. I may not be the truth owner or genius who will provide all the answers, but I'll do my best to show the right way towards the truth. Click the to ask!

Like with any other ill-intended, tricky question, the genius asking it is usually the genius answering it. This is the kind of question built to sound deep but meant to mislead — the quintessential polished half-truth which is more dangerous than any blatant lie.
It is the typical maneuver employed by individuals who make a living out of denying science, yet need to hide their denial behind sneaky, pseudo-scientific rhetoric.

Nov/2025

Why do centenarians live far and away from science and civilization? read

Really? This question sounds very profound — it's like it's trying to whisper some hidden truth in your ear. But, hey, it’s actually a bunch of five-star belloni.
The genius behind the inquiry is trying to tell you that the farther you are from science, the longer you live. That's the kind of bs question that sells a myth while pretending to seek wisdom.
It proposes centenarians live long because they’re far from science and civilization — when in reality, many of them thrive thanks to simple, science-backed habits: consistent routines, healthy diets, strong social ties, low stress. There’s nothing magical about being far away.
In fact, most of these so-called off-grid centenarians still benefit from modern medicine, vaccines, and basic infrastructure — products of the very science they’re supposedly far from.
The real secret isn’t distance. It’s alignment — with how our bodies actually work.
And guess what? That’s science.
Questions?
Want more truth?
Old and Healthy
WHO's work on the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021–2030)
Bluezones

Are aliens out there? Have they visited us? read

This is certainly the most asked question ever — and it comes with the most twisted answers ever.
Let’s untangle it.
Are aliens out there?
Yes, they are. Where? I have no idea, but I’ll bet whatever you want that they’re somewhere out there. And no, they’re not hiding — we just can’t and won’t find them. Because if a 0‑to‑10 Universal Scientific Development Scale existed, we’d rank about minus two or three... maybe minus one on a very lucky day.

Look, the same stuff you, your cat, the fish in your tank, and the flowers in your garden are made of — hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and amino acids— is everywhere in the universe. So, yes, there is alien life somewhere out there but that's the easy question.
The tough one? Do they look like you and me?
I would not bet my money on that one. Think, if they, by chance, rely on photosynthesis to survive, they are most probably as green as your guacamole.
Next one. Have they visited us?
That I don’t know either. They may have — but what we know today, and the tools we’ve got, don’t help us much in finding out.
One thing I know, though: alien handymen did not help the Egyptians build the pyramids.
Some fringe theories claim Giza pre-dates the pharaohs (Graham Hancock’s pre-dynastic lost civilization theory) — but radiocarbon, quarry marks, and written records all tie the pyramids firmly to the Fourth Dynasty.

Now, if aliens were to show up today, let’s imagine what that might really mean.

Say, E.T. lands in your backyard today — and their DNA is just 2% better than yours. Well... it is time for you to start praying to whatever you believe in. Because if you’re lucky — very lucky — perhaps they won’t lock you up in a zoo cage. Maybe you’ll just end up as their family pet... on a leash.
Listen carefully, if ET's DNA beats yours by the same percentage you beat the chimpanzees’ — and remember, chimps share 98% of your DNA and can’t even wipe their butts — you’ll be for E.T whatever a chimp is for you — cute, noisy, and definitely not the one running the lab.

In a few words, believing life exists elsewhere is a tangible, science-informed probability, but believing that aliens came here to stack rocks while we played with kitties in the desert? Bah, that’s just crappy fan fiction dressed up as a history-channel drama.

Questions?
Want more truth?
NASA Exoplanet Exploration
NASA Astrobiology
SETI Institute
Who built the pyramids?

If I don't believe in God, does that make me an atheist. read

Well, FYI — I don’t believe in #God, and I’m not an #atheist. Because an atheist, to me, falls into the same bucket as those who brag, pretend, claim to believe in God —their church and priest included— or anyone who tries to force you to believe the same crap. You know the type: Fidel Castro, Hugo Chávez, Donald Trump, and all the other arrogant know-it-alls of this world. Anyone?
Guaranteed. I, myself, do not belong there.
I do not belong where belief is king.
I belong where knowledge rules.
That makes me an agnostic. Do you know what the heck that is?
Well, that’s someone who loves knowledge and would convert and start praising God immediately, if a believer could provide a plausible explanation for a few questions.

Like, for instance?
Where was God on Saturday, November 1st, 1755, at 9:40 AM ? I hope He - Allmighty God- wasn’t in Lisbon. Because if He was there and did nothing, well… I honestly don’t know what to say.
Where was He when His disciples massacred the natives in America and everywhere else?
Where was He when His disciples accused women of witchcraft and burned them alive indiscriminately? Are you really going to tell me He isn’t responsible for what His Followers did in His Name? C’mon!
Well, my friend, I am not an atheist because I believe that you have a right to believe whatever you want.
I am a proud agnostic, ready to be convinced. Here I am. Try me!
Or try this, and I’ll convince you:
Godless Earthquake
His Disciples Murdering Natives Catholicly
His Disciples Burning Witches Who Did Not Fly a Broom
Agnostic or Atheist?
Questions for me?

🧠🔥 Masterpieces of Trumpist Medieval Thinking, Brought to You by Mr. Kennedy Jr.’s Biblical Ignorance. read

- Kids get the jab, that night they have a fever, they go to sleep, and three months later their brain is gone... - I overheard that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. once said and I don't really doubt it. Because, according to this enlightened prophet of spiritual Trumpism, vaccines are a kind of failed exorcism where the demon gets expelled, but walks away with the kid’s brain under its arm to resell it later at the Divine Flea Market.
When will Mr. Kennedy tell us about that mother who —according to his own most absurd mental distortions— called him at midnight because she needed to exorcise her daughter after a smallpox vaccine? If he’s going to give us fairy tales, he might as well tell all of them, right?

Oh, wait a second!
It couldn’t have been smallpox. That was eradicated back in the 70s thanks to… a vaccine. Come on!
It must’ve been something else: tetanus, diarrhea, lice, or some other medieval infection a Trumpist genius thinks is still cured with three or four holy passes of the cross and blessed water, instead of modern medicine.

It seems Mr. Kennedy Jr. and the pack of howling ignoramuses behind him never learned that in the era of the Founding Fathers, back in the 1700s, priests were on call 24 hours a day, ready to sprint over to exorcise and cast out the devil from any kid having an epileptic seizure — but that didn’t help much.
For 40% of newborns, reaching age ten was harder than winning the Florida Lottery next Saturday!
And if by some miracle of hydration, luck, genetics, or witchcraft the kid actually blew out candle number ten, another round of Russian roulette awaited: the teen years, when the dumbest infection — a cough, a small cut, childbirth, a rotten tooth — could send you to the afterlife before your first gray hair.

And don’t even talk about reaching thirty.

In the days of Jefferson and Adams, half of the kids who survived childhood didn’t live long enough to see their 30th birthday.

Zero antibiotics
Zero vaccines
Zero hygiene
But, yes, plenty of demons, witches, and priests splashing holy water to see if the patient got any better.
Out of every hundred babies born back then, only twenty or twenty-five reached fifty!
Yes, you read that right: 75–80% died before the midpoint of adult life!

That was the non-vaccine natural toxin-free paradise.
Meanwhile, today — with all the science Kennedy Jr. despises — over 90% of newborns in a developed country reach age fifty alive and well.
But no, according to the conspiracy prophet, it wasn’t medicine, hygiene, or vaccines that saved humanity. It was prayer, incense, and DIY exorcisms.

Give me a break, Bobby.!
And, don’t forget this: back in 1776, everybody went to church, prayed three times a day, and ate organic food — yes, fresh, local, pesticide-free, dye-free, GMO-free, and natural orgsnic food.
A Whole-Foods utopia! Half of people born died before learning basic math, though.
Yet, according to the Kennedy mythology, what made people sick wasn’t infections, lack of hygiene, infant mortality, or living without medicine. No, sir. It was that evil thing called a vaccine, which magically ruined the perfect colonial lifestyle of constant diarrhea, tetanus outbreaks, dysentery, smallpox, polio, puerperal fever, and epidemics of every shape and size.
... In a few words, if they ever open a church that includes Saint Edward Jenner among its divine saints, let me know — I’ll go pray every Sunday.
Questions for me?

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