Newsmax Host Picked The Wrong Guy To Debate Cuba With…

One thing that was not mentioned is the reason Cuba has such poverty is all the US sanctions over 60 years.ย  When Obama lifted sanctions things got much better for Cuba.ย  The Cuban government is not the problem and when there was less sanctions the people were happy with the government.ย  We are the bad guys in this.ย  We, the US government is refusing to let any other country send any supplies because we demand they have a capitalist oligarchy system of government mimicking the US one.ย  How is that working out for us?ย  Cuba has free universal medical.ย  Free education.ย  Do we?ย  But that is the old guy mentality that every country should / must do and be as the US and profit must be king.ย  All this reparation for what was nationalized?ย  Why?ย  US corporations and wealthy land owners were raping the land and hogging the profit and goods.ย  They had a better system if left alone.ย  But again the old red scare from the USSR days.ย  Remember “better off dead than red”?ย  The US must push democracy and oligarchy.ย  Venezuela was the same thing, we did not like that they had a government for the people, a socialistย  / communist one and they nationalized the oil systems because the profits were not going to the Venezuelan people but to western corporations.ย  Other countries have a right to their own resources.ย  But remember tRump demanding that Ukraine give up half of its mineral rights to the US / tRump family?ย  ย Hugs

THE GUARDIAN: Venezuelans deported by US detail fresh claims of torture and abuse at El Salvador mega-prison

Venezuelans deported by US detail fresh claims of torture and abuse at El Salvador mega-prison
Petition seeks accountability from Salvadorian authorities over human rights violations at notorious Cecot facility

Read in The Guardian: https://apple.news/A_lLtc8r9RAKrnkZrFzA7OQ

Shared from Apple News

Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

Banned Books

Site logo imageThe Bloggess

Read on blog or Reader

Today they banned my book. It was not the first. It wonโ€™t be the last. Hereโ€™s what I want you to know

.By thebloggess on March 25, 2026
This is not what I wanted to write. I wanted to write about how I’m about to go onย book tourย for my new book in a few days. Instead I am writing about the fact that I was just informed that my first bookย Let’s Pretend This Never Happenedย was banned from the high school library of a nearby town I love and visit often.

Honestly, I’m not that upset about my book being banned. I’ve had so many letters from young people who felt they’d been helped by my books but it does have some profanity and so I can understand the reasoning even if I disagree with it. What I am upset about isย the storiesย about how New Braunfels ISD has pulled more thatย 1,500 booksย from their school library shelves after the Texas’ Republican-backed book banning law (senate bill 13) passed. The bill ordered all public school libraries to review books for “profane” and “indecent” content and I guessย Let’s Pretend This Never Happenedย was deemed too dangerous for high schoolers.

Weirdly, my book was notย on the original list of the 1,500 books triggered for reviewย on March 13 but a week ago itย was added to the New Braunfels ISD website as being removed for being “non-compliant”. (I’ve been called worse.) I guess 1,500 books weren’t enough. But then, it’s never enough for book banners.This is going to happen more and more. It used to be a rarer thing…almost a badge of courage to have a book banned. Now? It’s everywhere…this war against books and ideas and people. Reading is how you fall in love with people different from you, and how you develop compassion for them…because if you love them, you want to protect them. But there are some people who don’t want you to love others. They need you to fear them.

Books save lives. They have saved mine. Books are safety nets for so many of us, and right now those nets are being cut.The list of banned books is incredible in lengthย and includesย so manyย that I adore. Equally upsetting is the fact that so many classics that shaped me have been pulled from the shelves and placed into restricted sections where they can only be accessed by students enrolled in Advanced Placement Literature, because God forbid a normal high school student would want to read the works of dangerous writers likeย *checks the list*ย Jane Austen and Emily Brontรซ (whose name they misspelled).

Sometimes it feels like we’re living inย A Brave New Worldย (restricted) and that the book burning ofย Fahrenheit 451ย (restricted) is closer than ever, with noย Sense and Sensibilityย (restricted) about what this will cost. It feels like we’re going throughย The Crucibleย (restricted) and are caught in aย Catch-22ย (restricted) where we can’t convince people how terrible it is to ban books because they either don’t know the power of books or they absolutely know it and fear it. It’sย An Absolutely Remarkable Thingย (banned) how book banners go out on some kind ofย A Discovery of Witchesย (banned) and fight againstย Acceptanceย (banned) and of diversity, while we are losingย All The Beauty in the Worldย (banned). America isย a Beautiful Countryย (banned) in so many ways, but we will lose so much of that beauty if we don’t makeย Changesย (banned) to cherish and embrace and grow what makes usย Educatedย (banned) and compassionate. The diversity of voices is necessary…it is a reflection of who we are and who we want to be. A plethora of ideas and voices and experiences…This Is What America Looks Likeย (banned). We can’t just pretend thatย Everything’s Fineย (banned) and that this is just an overreaction ofย Anxious Peopleย (banned). Do you think this is what the founding fathers likeย Alexander Hamiltonย (banned) envisioned?ย I’m going to stop here because I’m sure you can see that this dumb paragraph is WAY TOO EASY TO WRITE because there are so many books they have issues with and you probably get the picture already but y’all….Jane Eyre? The Color Purple? The Odyssey? Crime and Punishment??ย THIS IS WHAT WE’RE SAVING TEENAGERS FROM?

So what can you do? You can buy books that are being targeted, especially those written by the LGBTQ+ authors or authors of color because they are being targeted the most. Supporting those authors tells publishing to keep producing those books because they are needed. Publishers will lose money if libraries become afraid to purchase books and so we need to make sure that they know the audience is there and greedy for diverse voices. Get a library card and start checking out those books and more, to prove to the government that libraries need funding and that people care about reading. Read to your children. Read in front of your children. Talk online about the books that you love so that your passion ignites others. If you’re a parent you can get involved with your school to make sure this doesn’t happen in your school and you can protest it if it happens. You can vote out the people who seem to be obsessed with freedom, but mainly when it’s their freedom to take away yours and your children’s. You can run against school board members who are book banners and show up at the meetings. You can keep updated by following organizations likeย PEN AMERICA, or theย Texas Freedom to Read Projectย orย Authors Against Book Bans.

*deep breath*

This is probably filled with typos and is not really the sort of thing that I should be writing the day before I leave to start my book tour but it’s important. When books and thoughts and people are suppressed, we all lose. Keep fighting the good fight, friends. It’s worth it.


Comment

Trump Stooge Struggles To Answer Simple Question

Tracking Anti-Trans Bills | Erin Reed | TMR

And update on our appointment with the heart doctor and then Ron’s melt down. I am so tired and even more tired of trying to stay reasonable.

OK so we had the appointment with his new heart doctor.ย  I liked him he smiled a lot and was a genuinely happy man even though it was clear he had a bent spine and so was hunched over.ย  When Ron told him I was his spouse the doctor totally seemed OK.ย  I was wearing my white pride hat as usual.ย  He remembered Ron from the ICUs and asked if I was medical as well.ย  I replied no Ron was the doctor in our family which got a smile and chuckle from him as Ron tried to protest that which made the doctor smile more.ย  He said he would talk to both of us on my level, even if it was basic for Ron because he wanted me included.ย  When I had a question he would answer itย  and totally include me in all the discussion. Ron has one blockage they think is 80% and and at least two that are 70% and one that is just starting.

The plan is to do a heart catheterization.ย  They will go in through the wrist and prep the groin in case.ย  They feed a sleeve into the wrist then thread a wire all the way to the arteries around the heart.ย  They then open the blockage, put a stent surrounded by a balloon where the blockage was.ย  If a part of the blockage breaks they can introduce medication right then to stop it from doing any damage.ย ย 

Wow Ron and I had a huge argument.ย  I dislike it and he totally blames it on me.ย  But when the surgical center called to schedule him for the heart catheterization, and instead ofย  taking the first appointment he asked for one three weeks later.ย  I interrupted and said no you want it sooner if possible.ย ย 

He kept the appointment for nearly a month and a week out.ย  ย When he got off the phone I asked him to explain that.ย  Wellhe replied I have Diane flying in on 3-28, and we are scheduled to fly out april 2nd.ย  I was angry and argued with him that this same thing killed his sister’s husband and if he asked her she would agree he needs the early appointment.ย  Which was when he fucked around and after we had a huge fight where I told him that his sister could get her friends and her husband’s friends to do what she had wanted Ron to do.ย  She wants help with the moving company and then driving from Texas to here.ย  ย When he calmed down from our argument he called her and she agreed with me.ย  So then he was so angry that we had another exchange.ย  I was trying to stay calm but he was so upset he was almost out of control, throwing things.ย  I asked him to think of us.ย  If he suffered a heart attack on the road or moving around furniture at her house he could easily die.ย  I couldn’t keep or repair this house.ย  I would not be able to keep Tupac and no one else around us will let him live with them or pay the 75 dollars for his thyroid medication every 6 to 7 weeks.ย  He is incontinent and he leaves poops dropping out of his butt because he was hit by a golf cart and it damaged his spine and nerves.ย  So he would have to be set on the rainbow bridge.ย  I told him I would end up having to rent a room at Randy’s as he has offered it.ย  ย Ron was furious and said I was thinking only of myself and I replied he was thinking only of his sister.ย ย 

But by then it was too late to get in touch with the scheduling department.ย  ย The heart place is huge and they have their own surgical center there.ย  They only do six procedures on an operating day.ย  So he hopes they will call him today.ย  I worry that he will not be able to get a quicker date so I don’t know what will happen.ย  Hugs

Snips And Bits



(Just under an hour, so more than a snip or a bit, but it’s not only necessary, it’s fascinating. Or else I’m just that big a geek.)




How Angela Davis Predicted The Modern Face Of Fascism in 1971

Fifty years prior to rumors of fascism circling President Trump, activist and philosopher Angela Davis made a spooky prediction about dictatorship in the U.S.

By Phenix S Halley

President Donald Trumpโ€™s administration continues to stand on shaky ground amidย bombshell resignations and rumorsย of a dictatorship brewing. But in the midst of these unprecedented times, one Black political activistโ€™s warning could offer a shocking reality for Americansโ€ฆ even if the message came 55 years earlier.

Trumpโ€™s return to the White House was met with fierce criticism from leaders like former Vice President Kamala Harris and his own former chief of staff, John Kelly, who explicitly declared that Trump fits โ€œinto the general definition of fascist.โ€ But while terms like โ€œfascistโ€ and โ€œdictatorโ€ have found a comfortable place in American politics today, activists like Angela Davis were among the loudest opponents of fascism nearly six decades ago.

By the 1970s, the Cold War against the Soviet Union revamped fears of a possible fascist regime in the Statesโ€“ notably from many Black Panthers. While awaiting trial for murder, Davis spoke with filmmaker Peter Davis about the likelihood that America would be ruled by a dictator.

โ€œWe are closer to fascism than weโ€™ve ever been before,โ€ย Davis said from a California prison in 1971.ย But while the political activist stopped short of declaring fascism had officially made its mark in the U.S. then, her scary prediction has arguably taken a new light in 2026. (SNIP-click the title to read the rest; it’s not at all long)


Interesting How Things Work Out…

Despite state bans and restrictions, the number of abortions in the U.S. holds steady

March 24, 202612:01 AM ET Heard onย Morning Edition

Selena Simmons-Duffin

Since the reversal of Roe v. Wade in 2022, anti-abortion rights advocates have continuously pursued laws and court cases to make access to abortion more difficult.

report published Tuesday finds those efforts haven’t worked in one basic way: The number of abortions in the country hasn’t budged.

“There were an estimated 1,126,000 abortions provided by clinicians in the U.S. in 2025 โ€” that’s pretty much unchanged from 2024,” says Isaac Maddow-Zimet, data scientist at the Guttmacher Institute, a nonprofit research organization that supports abortion access.

A key way that abortions are now happening despite all of the state restrictions is through telemedicine. In 2023, the Food and Drug Administration under President Biden allowed mifepristone โ€” one of the medications used for abortion โ€” to be prescribed without an in-person appointment.

At the same time, states that support abortion access have passed shield laws, which protect health care providers from legal risks when they prescribe to patients in states with bans.

What that meant last year is that more people in states with restrictions had abortions through telemedicine, and fewer people traveled across state lines for abortion, according to the Guttmacher report.

“It makes sense that we’d see a decline in travel because people accessing abortion care through telehealth in general then no longer need to travel for care,” Maddow-Zimet says.

Medication by mail

When Viv found out she was pregnant last January, she was three days past Georgia’s ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy.

Viv is 27 years old and lives in Atlanta. NPR agreed not to use her last name because she fears repercussions for talking about her experience. She went online and looked through posts on Reddit, trying to figure out what to do.

“I found out that I could get an abortion pill shipped to my house,” she says. “I didn’t want to travel. I didn’t want to take time off of work. I am pretty knowledgeable about women’s health, and I know that the abortion pill is a safe and effective way to have an abortion.”

She ended up reaching out to a group called The MAP in Massachusetts, and she says the process was very easy.

“You basically go on their website, you answer questions, and then you pay whatever fee you can afford, which I thought was really, really cool,” she says.

About a week later, she received the two medications in the mail: mifepristone and misoprostol. She says the instructions that came with the medication were very thorough.

“People contact you after to make sure everything’s good,” she says. “They even have people contact you like a month after to make sure that you’re not pregnant anymore.”

Viv says she’s grateful she was able to have an abortion without having to leave Atlanta. She also notes that Georgia has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the country.

“If a woman doesn’t want to be pregnant, she should be able to have that right, and I think that should be the end of the story,” she says.

Frustration for ban supporters

Abortion-rights opponents view all of this as a huge problem. There are several legal challenges and a recent congressional bill that all aim to force the FDA to stop allowing mifepristone to be mailed to patients. (Misoprostol is a medication that has been on the market longer and is also used to prevent ulcers; it is harder to restrict.)

One of the court challenges was brought by Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill, who told a U.S. Senate committee in January that the FDA rules must be changed.

“Until then, Louisiana’s efforts to protect mothers and their unborn children and to hold out-of-state abortion pill traffickers accountable for the harm they inflict will be all but futile,” she said.

According to Guttmacher’s latest report, there were about 2,500 abortions in Louisiana in 2023, and last year there were more than 9,000. Overall, 91,000 patients in states with bans received telehealth abortions in 2025.

A federal judge is expected to rule in Louisiana v. FDA soon.

This Is Pertinent To Our Interests

Google Has a Secret Reference Desk. Here’s How to Use It.

40 Google features to find exactly what you need, the alternative search engines that do things Google won’t, and the reference desk framework underneath all of it.

Hana Lee Goldin, MLIS

Most of us search Google the same way we always have: type a few words, scroll, click something that looks close enough, and hope. For a while, that worked. Google handed us a list of links and let us take it from there.

Whatโ€™s happening now is something different. A 2024 study by SparkToro found that nearly 60% of Google searches end without anyone clicking through to a website, and the trend has accelerated since. By February 2026, Ahrefs found that queries triggering AI Overviews now see a 58% reduction in clicks. Google has been systematically inserting itself between you and the original source, answering questions with AI-generated summaries before you ever reach the page those answers came from. The results you do see are filtered through an algorithm that weighs your search history, your location, and the billions of dollars advertisers have spent to appear for particular queries. Two people searching identical phrases on the same day can get meaningfully different results without either of them knowing it. And because Google controls roughly 90% of the worldโ€™s search traffic, most people have no frame of reference for what a less mediated search experience would even look like.

The search bar replaced the reference desk without replacing the skills behind it: knowing how to ask a question precisely, understanding how information is organized and who funds it, knowing the difference between a primary source and a summary of one. The assumption was that the technology made all of that unnecessary, which suited Google; a user who canโ€™t navigate information independently is a user who keeps coming back to be guided.

The search bar you already have is more capable than that arrangement requires you to know. With the right syntax, it becomes a precision instrument: narrow by domain, by date, by file type, by exact phrase. We can pull up archived pages, surface open file directories, and even find what people said in forums instead of what brands want us to find. None of it requires a new tool or a paid account. The capability has been there the whole time.

When Youโ€™re Not Getting What You Asked For

Google is constantly interpreting you. It swaps in synonyms, personalizes results based on your history, and decides what you probably meant rather than returning what you typed. Most of the time that interpretation is invisible. These tools are how you override it.

site:

limits your search to a single website. Try: site:nytimes.com climate to search only the Times, or site:gov vaccine to pull results exclusively from government domains. It works as a better version of a websiteโ€™s own search function (most built-in site search is mediocre at best), as a trust filter when you only want results from a specific domain type, and as a research shortcut when you already know which publication or institution you want to pull from. You can also run it in reverse: electric vehicles -site:tesla.com returns coverage that isnโ€™t from Teslaโ€™s own pages.

Number ranges

let you set hard boundaries on any numerical search. Put two periods between two numbers with no spaces: laptop $500..$800 returns results mentioning prices in that range. The same syntax works for years (civil rights legislation 1964..1968) or any other measurement. It eliminates a significant amount of irrelevant results when youโ€™re comparison shopping or trying to find coverage from a specific period.

Verbatim mode

is the most powerful feature most people have never used. After any search, click Tools (just below the search bar), then the โ€œAll Resultsโ€ dropdown, then select โ€œVerbatim.โ€

Google stops paraphrasing you entirely and returns results for exactly what you typed, stripped of personalization and synonym-swapping. Itโ€™s one of the most useful things Google has buried several clicks deep, and the fact that it takes three clicks to reach says something about how much Google wants you to find it.

Quotation marks

work the same way at the phrase level. Try: โ€œthe medium is the messageโ€. Wrapping a phrase in quotation marks forces Google to find pages where those exact words appear in that exact order. Unquoted words are treated as suggestions; quoted phrases are treated as requirements. Use this to verify whether a quote is real and trace it to its actual source, to find a specific statistic rather than everything that implies it, or to track down a title you half-remember. Itโ€™s also the mechanism behind one of the most useful social search techniques covered below.

The minus sign

removes a word from your results entirely. Put it directly before the word with no space: jaguar -car returns the animal, mercury -planet returns the element or the musician depending on your other terms. Precise, effective, and useful any time a word youโ€™re searching carries more than one meaning.

AROUND(#)

is an undocumented proximity operator that tells Google how many words apart your two search terms can be. Try: climate AROUND(3) policy. The intent is that only pages where those terms appear in genuine proximity show up, rather than a page that mentions โ€œclimateโ€ in the introduction and โ€œpolicyโ€ ten paragraphs later. Google has never officially documented this operator and its behavior is inconsistent, but when it works, it operates closer to how academic databases have functioned for decades. Worth testing, but not something to rely on the way you would a documented operator.

When You Need the Real Source, Not Just a Summary

The difference between finding a blog post about a study and finding the study itself isnโ€™t trivial, and the gap between them is larger than most people expect.

filetype:

returns only a specific kind of file. filetype:pdf remote work productivity returns only PDFs. Swap pdf for ppt to find slide decks, or doc for Word documents. Most research reports, government documents, academic papers, and white papers exist as PDFs and donโ€™t rank highly in regular search results because they werenโ€™t built for traffic. Filetype search gets you past that.

intitle: โ€œindex ofโ€

surfaces something most people donโ€™t know exists: open file directories on the internet. Try: intitle: โ€œindex ofโ€ /pdf โ€œmedia literacyโ€

These are servers running with directory listing enabled, a default setting in Apache that displays all files in a directory when no index page exists. Most administrators never turned it off. The result is publicly accessible file systems, packed with documents, datasets, and files that donโ€™t appear in regular search results.

before: and after:

set a date boundary on your results. mental health social media research after:2023 filters out everything published before that year. Use before: to find what was known or written at a particular point in time, useful for confirming a source predates an event or for tracing how a conversation has shifted over time. Combine them with site: for a targeted archive search: site:theatlantic.com AI after:2023 pulls everything The Atlantic has published on the subject in the past two years. This kind of search used to require a library database subscription.

intitle: and inurl:

let you filter by the structure of a page rather than just its content. intitle:โ€media literacyโ€ returns only pages where that phrase appears in the actual title, not just mentioned once in passing. inurl:gov intitle:โ€AI policyโ€ finds government pages where AI policy is the stated subject. Combined, theyโ€™re considerably more precise than keyword searching alone.

When You Want Real Human Opinions, Not Sponsored Content

SEO has made the first page of Google results increasingly dominated by content written to rank rather than to inform. These techniques route around it.

โ€œcan anyone recommendโ€

exploits a quirk in how people write when theyโ€™re asking for help without a commercial motive. Try: โ€œcan anyone recommendโ€ noise-canceling headphones under $100. Because the phrase is in quotation marks, Google surfaces only pages where those exact words appear, which means forum threads, community posts, and real conversations where people asked the same question youโ€™re asking. Instead of a sponsored listicle, you get someoneโ€™s firsthand experience choosing between two specific products. Swap in โ€œdoes anyone know a goodโ€ or โ€œwhatโ€™s the bestโ€ for variations on the same trick.

@ before a word

surfaces social tags and handles in your results. Try: @reddit home espresso machine. Google officially describes this as a tool for finding social tags, so pairing it with a platform name like @reddit or @twitter alongside your topic pulls community discussions toward the top of your results. It doesnโ€™t filter exclusively to those platforms, but it shifts the result set in that direction. Combine it with the quotation mark technique when you want to narrow things further.

The omitted results link

is easy to miss. When Google adds a note at the bottom of a results page saying some results were hidden because theyโ€™re too similar to others, thereโ€™s a small link to include them anyway. The results Google omits tend to be less trafficked and less search-optimized, which frequently means theyโ€™re more substantive and written for readers rather than algorithms. When doing real research rather than a quick lookup, thatโ€™s exactly where to look.

When You Need to Go Deeper

The asterisk *

works as a wildcard for any missing word or phrase. Try: โ€œthe * of artificial intelligenceโ€. The asterisk stands in for whatever word you canโ€™t remember or want to explore. Itโ€™s invaluable for chasing down half-remembered titles and quotes, and it surfaces the full range of ways a phrase gets used across different contexts, which is useful for research that starts from a concept rather than a specific source.

Stacking operators

is where precision compounds. filetype:pdf โ€œinformation literacyโ€ site:edu before:2015 finds older academic PDFs on the topic from university domains. site:cdc.gov after:2022 -press release pulls recent CDC content with press releases filtered out. The combinations are where the real power lives, and once youโ€™ve internalized a few operators separately, combining them becomes instinctive.

When You Just Need a Fast Answer

Many of Googleโ€™s most useful features are things youโ€™d only find by accident, because nothing in the interface tells you they exist. These all work by typing directly into the search bar.

Paste a flight number

like UA 2157 and Google returns the live gate, departure and arrival times, current delay status, and a real-time position tracker without opening an app or an airline website. This works for any major commercial flight. If youโ€™re picking someone up, itโ€™s considerably faster than anything the airline itself offers.

Paste any package tracking number

and Google recognizes the format automatically, whether itโ€™s UPS, FedEx, or USPS, and shows live delivery status directly on the results page. If youโ€™ve been opening carrier websites every time you get a shipping confirmation, you didnโ€™t need to be.

Type run speed test

and Google measures your download and upload speed directly in the browser, without sending you to a third-party site like Speedtest.net. When youโ€™re troubleshooting a slow connection and donโ€™t want to open another tab, itโ€™s the fastest option.

Type [thing] vs. [thing]

like oat milk vs almond milk, Notion vs Obsidian, ibuprofen vs acetaminophen, and Google pulls a side-by-side comparison panel with key differences. It works for supplements, software, ingredients, and medications. Itโ€™s not always exhaustive, but itโ€™s faster than opening five tabs to piece together the same information.

A few more that show up less in guides but earn their place:

  • define: [word]ย returns the full dictionary definition plus etymology
  • how to pronounce [word]ย gives you an audio button and phonetic spelling
  • [food] caloriesย brings up nutritional information without leaving the search bar
  • sunrise [city]ย orย sunset [city]ย gives you exact times
  • time in [city]ย shows current local time anywhere in the world
  • [amount] [currency] to [currency]ย pulls a live exchange rate
  • stock [ticker]ย shows a live price chart with trading volume
  • tip for $[amount]ย opens a tip calculator you can adjust by percentage and split by number of people
  • translate [phrase] to [language]ย opens a full translation widget with audio pronunciation
  • what is my IPย returns your IP address immediately
  • random number between [X] and [Y]ย generates one instantly
  • color pickerย opens an interactive color wheel with hex and RGB codes in the results page itself
  • timer 25 minutesย starts a countdown without leaving Google
  • metronomeย opens a working, adjustable metronome
  • bubble levelย uses your phoneโ€™s gyroscope as an actual level
  • breathing exerciseย guides you through a timed breath pattern
  • what sound does a [animal] makeย plays the actual audio
  • flip a coinย andย roll a dieย both work exactly as described
  • Any math equation typed into the search bar is solved immediately

Google also has a full arcade buried in the results page. Searching solitairetic-tac-toesnake, or pac-man opens a playable game directly, no app or third-party site required. Most people have scrolled past these results for years without realizing they were interactive. And two Easter eggs that have been there since at least 2011 and still work: do a barrel roll spins the entire results page 360 degrees, and askew tilts it just enough that people think something is wrong with their screen.

One more that matters for anyone who makes content: after any image search, clickย Tools > Usage Rightsย and filter to show only images licensed for reuse. The feature is two clicks deep, most people who need it regularly donโ€™t know it exists, and using an unlicensed image because you didnโ€™t check is a more common mistake than it should be.

What Not to Do

These are the habits that undermine searches most often, and most of them are so ingrained they feel like standard practice.

Donโ€™t treat the AI Overview as the answer.

The AI-generated summary at the top of many Google results is the feature most likely to be wrong and most likely to present that wrongness with complete confidence. Since Google launched AI Overviews in May 2024, documented errors have included advising users to add glue to pizza, recommending that people eat one small rock per day, producing a response claiming Barack Obama was the United Statesโ€™ first Muslim president (drawn from an academic book title that Googleโ€™s system misread as a factual claim), and, in May 2025, insisting across multiple queries that the current year was 2024. These arenโ€™t edge cases. They reflect a structural problem with how the feature works: it synthesizes answers from sources you canโ€™t always see, using a system that can misread context, miss sarcasm, and draw incorrect conclusions from factually correct sources. If the AI Overview touches anything consequential, check the sources beneath it.

Donโ€™t click the first result without checking whether itโ€™s an ad.

Google labels paid results, but the labels have grown smaller and less visually distinct over time. The first two or three results on many searches are sponsored placements, meaning companies paid to appear there rather than earning their position organically. A business with a large advertising budget can outrank a more authoritative source on nearly any commercial query. Check for the small โ€œSponsoredโ€ label before assuming whatโ€™s at the top is whatโ€™s most credible.

Donโ€™t assume your results are the same as anyone elseโ€™s.

Google personalizes results based on your search history, location, device, and account data. Two people searching the same phrase can get meaningfully different pages in meaningfully different orders without either of them knowing it. When research matters, Verbatim mode or a private/incognito window removes some of that personalization layer.

Donโ€™t use quotation marks on everything.

Quotation marks are precise when you need an exact phrase, but applying them to every search narrows your results so sharply that youโ€™ll miss pages that would have been directly useful. If youโ€™re not searching for a specific verbatim phrase, leave the quotes off.

Donโ€™t add a space after an operator.

Purely mechanical, but it kills the function entirely. site:cdc.gov works; site: cdc.gov does not. The operator and the term have to run together with no space between them.

Donโ€™t just Google it when the stakes are real.

Most people use Google the same way for everything, whether theyโ€™re looking for a restaurant or trying to understand a diagnosis, a medication interaction, a contract clause, or a financial decision. That habit works fine for low-stakes questions, but for anything with real consequences, Googleโ€™s results, and especially its AI Overviews, are a place to find sources, not a destination. A Guardian investigation in January 2026 found multiple AI-generated health summaries that medical professionals flagged as dangerous, including dietary advice for pancreatic cancer patients that Anna Jewell, director of support, research and influencing at Pancreatic Cancer UK, said could โ€œjeopardize a personโ€™s chances of being well enough to have treatment.โ€ Google is often the fastest way to figure out where to look. Treating it as the place to stop is where the trouble starts.

Beyond Google: You Have Options

Knowing when to use a different tool is part of knowing any tool well. Treating one resource as the default regardless of the question is a habit, and like most habits, it runs below the level of conscious choice.

Google is where most people search, and learning to use it well is worth doing. But Alphabet, Googleโ€™s parent company, reported $350 billion in total revenue in 2024, with advertising accounting for more than three-quarters of that, according to the companyโ€™s own annual filing. The results Google shows you are shaped by that business model in ways that arenโ€™t always visible. Its algorithm promotes pages built to rank, which isnโ€™t the same as pages built to inform. Its AI summaries synthesize answers from sources you often canโ€™t see, which makes it harder to evaluate whether the underlying information is reliable. And because it personalizes results based on your history, two people searching the same phrase on the same day can land in meaningfully different places. Understanding that context changes what you should reasonably expect from a Google search, and knowing what else is available changes what you do when Google isnโ€™t the right tool for the question.

If the problem is structural โ€” that Google’s incentives and your interests don’t always point in the same direction โ€” then having alternatives isn’t about distrust. It’s about knowing which tool fits the question. These eight work differently, in ways that are worth understanding before you need them.

  1. Kagiย is a paid search engine with no advertising and no sponsored results. Plans start at $5 a month for 300 searches or $10 a month for unlimited. Youโ€™re paying directly for the service rather than trading your attention for access, which changes the underlying incentives entirely. Its results tend toward fewer SEO-optimized pages and more original sources, a difference most noticeable when the quality of information matters more than the speed of finding it.
  2. DuckDuckGoย is free, doesnโ€™t track your searches, and supports all the operators covered above. It also has a feature called !bangs: typeย !wย before any search to go straight to Wikipedia, orย !scholarย for Google Scholar. It turns the search bar into a shortcut launcher for wherever you want to land, without a company logging where that is.
  3. Brave Searchย is free and privacy-focused, and unlike most alternatives, it runs its own independent search index rather than licensing results from Google or Bing. Most privacy-focused search engines are Bing with a different coat of paint; Brave is the meaningful exception.
  4. Startpageย is free and returns Googleโ€™s actual results without Googleโ€™s tracking. It works as a private intermediary, submitting your query to Google anonymously and returning results without storing your IP address, search history, or any identifying data. If youโ€™ve tried the other alternatives and find the results weaker than you want, Startpage resolves that without sending your data to Google directly.ย One thing worth knowing going in: Startpage is owned by System1, a U.S. advertising company, which it discloses openly and says does not affect its no-tracking policy.
  5. Perplexityย is AI-powered and built for research questions. It gives you a synthesized answer with sources cited directly alongside it, so you can see exactly where the information came from and evaluate it yourself. For questions where you want a starting point with visible sourcing rather than a list of links to sort through, itโ€™s often faster and more transparent than a traditional search.
  6. Bingย is Microsoftโ€™s search engine and the second largest in the world by traffic, which makes it the most overlooked real alternative to Google. Itโ€™s ad-supported and tracks your searches, so it doesnโ€™t solve the privacy problem โ€” but it runs an entirely different index, which means different results, and that alone is worth knowing. For image search and video itโ€™s often stronger than Google. Itโ€™s also the engine powering Microsoftโ€™s Copilot, which gives you AI-generated answers with sourcing in the same way Perplexity does. If a Google search isnโ€™t surfacing what you need, running the same query on Bing takes ten seconds and frequently produces something Google buried or missed entirely.
  7. Ecosiaย is ad-supported and runs on Bingโ€™s index, so the results are comparable to Bing rather than Google. Whatโ€™s different is what happens to the money: Ecosia is a certified B Corp that directs the majority of its advertising revenue toward reforestation projects and publishes monthly financial reports so you can verify it. It wonโ€™t give you stronger results than the alternatives above, but for someone whose searches are already going to generate ad revenue for someone, Ecosia redirects that toward something. Itโ€™s a light switch, not a lifestyle change โ€” but itโ€™s a real one.
  8. Library databasesย are the option most people forget they already have. A public library card โ€” free in most cities โ€” gives you access to databases like ProQuest, EBSCOhost, and JSTOR that the open web simply cannot replicate. These index academic journals, historical newspapers, court documents, company filings, and primary sources that were never designed for Google to crawl and never will be. If youโ€™ve been hitting paywalls on research that matters, this is how you get past them without paying. Check your libraryโ€™s website for remote access instructions; most let you log in from home with your card number.

The Skill Nobody Told You Youโ€™d Need

There used to be a professional layer between most people and raw information. Librarians, researchers, editors, fact-checkers: people whose entire job was to understand how information was organized, who produced it, what motivated them, and where the gaps were in any given source. You didnโ€™t need to think much about any of that, because someone else already had.

That layer has largely dissolved. Search engines replaced the card catalog, algorithms replaced the reference interview, and AI summaries are now stepping in where a librarianโ€™s judgment about source quality used to sit. Whatโ€™s been left in place of all that professional mediation is a search bar and the assumption that youโ€™ll figure it out.

The tools above don’t fix that problem, but they change your position within it. Every technique here is a version of the same underlying move: being specific about what you need and deliberate about where to look for it. Most people were never taught to approach search that way, because the assumption has always been that it’s simple enough not to need teaching. But the same move works everywhere information is organized: library catalogs, academic databases, legal repositories, government archives.

Search syntax is just the entry point. What’s underneath it is a way of thinking about how knowledge is structured and who controls access to it โ€” and that transfers to every tool you’ll use after this one.

Florida Voters Did It!

Democrats flip seat in Florida state house in district that includes Trumpโ€™s Mar-a-Lago

Emily Gregory defeats Republican Jon Maples in district that is home to US presidentโ€™s Palm Beach estate

Democrats managed to flip a seat in the Florida state house in the district that is home to Donald Trumpโ€™s Mar-a-Lago.

Emily Gregory, a Democrat, defeated Republican Jon Maples, who had an endorsement from the US president, in the special election in Floridaโ€™s 87th state house district. The Associated Press called the race on Tuesday evening, with Gregory, a public health expert and small business owner, leading by more than 2 percentage points.

The Republican who previously held the seat had won by 19 percentage points in 2024.

Trump voted in the race via mail-in ballot, despite criticizing the practice as โ€œmail-in cheatingโ€ during an event in Tennessee this week. The president has long attacked voting by mail, describing it as a scam and arguing it creates fraud in elections. He still opted to vote by mail in the race although he was recently in Palm Beach, where early in-person voting was under way until Sunday.

The president had urged voters to back Maples, a financial adviser who describes himself as an โ€œAmerica-First patriotโ€. Maples had faced scrutiny in recent weeks over allegations that he did not live in the district in which he was running, claims that he denied.

Democrats have said that Gregoryโ€™s win shows voters frustrated over rising costs are moving away from Trump and the Republican party.

โ€œMar-a-Lago just flipped red to blue, which should have Republicans sweating the midterms,โ€ Heather Williams, the president of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, said on social media. โ€œA Trump +11 district in his own backyard shouldnโ€™t be in play for Democrats, but tonight proves Republicans are vulnerable everywhere.โ€

State Democrats have flipped 29 districts since Trumpโ€™s election, Williams said.

314 Action, a political committee that works to get Democratic scientists elected to office, had endorsed Gregory and praised her win, writing in a statement that โ€œa Stem wave is comingโ€.

โ€œEmily won because Floridians trust her to make decisions based on evidence not ideology,โ€ said Shaughnessy Naughton, the groupโ€™s president. โ€œSheโ€™s bringing science back to the state house and heading to the [state] capitol on a mission to lower costs, restore healthcare and bring down the temperature in Tallahassee.โ€