Getting it Right - Rick Wagner

AI, Bias & the Family Feud Problem — How We Should Use Tech for Research

42 min · 7 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio AI, Bias & the Family Feud Problem — How We Should Use Tech for Research

Descripción

AI, State Power, and Political Drift Rick covers a wide range of issues, from the push to end daylight savings time to the growing role of artificial intelligence in research. He warns that AI can fall into a “Family Feud” problem—prioritizing consensus over truth. Rick also examines Colorado’s regulatory climate and why businesses are leaving for states like Texas and Florida. The episode closes with concerns over political pressure on sheriffs and a briefing on rising tensions between the U.S., Israel, and Iran

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260 episodios

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In this episode, Rick Wagner looks past the headlines and asks the harder strategic question: what happens when the West is forced to respond to pressure in too many places at once? From drone attacks and NATO vulnerability to the uneasy partnership between Russia and China, this discussion examines how modern conflict may not arrive as one clean, declared war, but as a series of overlapping crises—Ukraine, the South China Sea, Taiwan, shipping lanes, cyberattacks, proxy pressure, and political exhaustion at home. Rick argues that the real danger is not simply one hostile actor making one bad decision. It is the cumulative strain on Western capacity, attention, deterrence, and will. Russia and China may speak warmly of each other in public, but underneath the surface their relationship is transactional, unequal, and unstable. Russia does not want to become China’s junior partner, but its war in Ukraine has pushed it closer to that position. Meanwhile, China may not need to launch a dramatic invasion to create a crisis. A blockade, a shipping “inspection” regime, or a claim that weapons shipments threaten Chinese security could force the United States and its allies into a dangerous decision point. The larger question is whether the West still has the industrial base, political unity, military readiness, and strategic clarity to handle simultaneous pressure across multiple theaters. This is not panic talk. It is a sober warning: deterrence depends on credibility, and credibility depends on capacity.

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