Review of ‘Chat’ AI’s responses to the Question:

Instruct me on the European Elections ongoing now? What power is at stake? Who are the players?

Gemini could not answer the question at all.

Perplexity gave us a 6 out of 10 response with no current info.

Chat GPT 4o announces that it only has knowledge to October 2021. It is June 2024. A lot has happened.
However the background and structural information was great. 7 out of 10.

Meta llama 3.70b  had the best out of this list for readability and completeness of information. 8 out of 10.

The European Elections! A crucial event that shapes the future of the European Union and its 508 million citizens. Here’s a comprehensive guide to help you understand what’s at stake, who the key players are, and what’s happening:

What’s at stake:

The European Parliament (EP) is the directly elected parliamentary institution of the European Union (EU). The EP has three main powers:

  1. Legislative power: The EP, together with the Council of the European Union, adopts EU laws and policies.
  2. Budgetary power: The EP has the authority to approve or reject the EU’s budget.
  3. Supervisory power: The EP exercises democratic oversight of the European Commission, the EU’s executive body.

The European Elections will determine the composition of the EP for the next five years, influencing the direction of EU policies, laws, and budgets.

Who are the players:

  1. Political groups: The EP is composed of eight political groups, each representing a different ideology:
    • European People’s Party (EPP): Center-right, conservative
    • Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D): Center-left, social democratic
    • Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE): Liberal
    • European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR): Conservative, eurosceptic
    • European United Left–Nordic Green Left (GUE/NGL): Left-wing, socialist
    • Greens/European Free Alliance (Greens/EFA): Environmentalist, regionalist
    • Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy (EFDD): Eurosceptic, populist
    • Non-Inscrits (NI): Independents, nationalists
  2. National parties: Each EU member state has its own national parties, which often affiliate with one of the EP’s political groups.
  3. Leading candidates (Spitzenkandidaten): Each political group has a lead candidate, who may become the President of the European Commission if their group wins the most seats.

Key players:

  1. Manfred Weber (EPP): Current leader of the EPP group and a strong contender for the European Commission presidency.
  2. Frans Timmermans (S&D): Current First Vice-President of the European Commission and lead candidate for the S&D group.
  3. Margrethe Vestager (ALDE): Current European Commissioner for Competition and lead candidate for the ALDE group.
  4. Nigel Farage (EFDD): Leader of the Brexit Party and a prominent eurosceptic voice.

Election process:

  1. Voting: Citizens of EU member states vote for their preferred national parties or candidates.
  2. Seat allocation: The number of seats each country has in the EP is determined by its population. The seats are then allocated to the national parties based on their performance in the elections.
  3. Formation of the EP: The elected MEPs (Members of the European Parliament) will form the new EP, which will hold its first plenary session in July 2019.

Timeline:

  • May 23-26, 2019: Voting takes place in different EU member states.
  • May 27, 2019: Results are announced, and the composition of the new EP is determined.
  • July 2019: The new EP holds its first plenary session, and the President of the European Commission is elected.

Stay tuned for the results, and get ready to see how the European Elections will shape the future of the EU!

MAGA Like Me

Undercover journalist goes deep undercover in Trump country and asks questions on spy camera.

Based on famous “Black Like Me” undercover journalism, the idea is to attempt to understand the feelings and motivations of those people who identify as ardent Trump supporters.

If you are not familiar with “Black Like Me”, the groundbreaking book and film, please check out this link: “Black Like Me”

Never flinching from radical ideas and self-supporting logic the journalist must go to the heart of why people support Trump and overlook his traditionally unsavoury past exploits.

This is the challenge of a young aspiring journalist to make the most explosive revealing documentary seen since “Black Like Me”.

#JustDoIt

“customer behaviour science”

The genius of modern day guilt based marketing and basis of  “customer behaviour science”.

This from Seth Godin:

Comfort and convenience
For the last thirty years, the easiest shortcut has been convenience.

If a marketer or a politician or an institution wants to gain acceptance, make it convenient. Tim Wu has pointed out that we’ll trade almost anything to save a few moments of hassle or thought.

But that doesn’t mean we’ve been spending our time and money on comfort.

They’re not the same.

Convenience in the short run often comes at the expense of comfort. The comfort of resilience, of kindness, of long-term satisfaction. The comfort of offering someone dignity, a hand up or knowing that we put our effort into something useful.

Perhaps the next cycle of our cultural development will be to find the courage to walk away from convenience and find comfort instead.

How to criticize something you disagree with

How to criticize something you disagree with,
Here are social psychologist Anatol Rapoport’s rules for criticizing something:

  1. You should attempt to re-express your target’s position so clearly, vividly, and fairly that your target says, “Thanks, I wish I’d thought of putting it that way.”
  2. You should list any points of agreement (especially if they are not matters of general or widespread agreement).
  3. You should mention anything you have learned from your target.
  4. Only then are you permitted to say so much as a word of rebuttal or criticism.

Try this simple strategy to feel organized – Thanks Recomendo

Simple strategy for cleaning

The next time you have a big mess to clean up try “the pile method”. The pile method is when you collect all the stuff that needs to be put away in one giant pile, and then sort those things — like with like — into smaller piles, and put those piles away one by one. At first it felt counterintuitive to make one giant mess, but it really does speed up the process and it’s so satisfying to be efficient and tidy.