08/18/2025
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More than one drug cartel boss looks enviously at the rapid rate at which almost everyone in the world has become addicted to their cell phone. Every cent earned by such a “smartphone addict” is equivalent to around 7 million dollars! This is the calculation of an entrepreneur from Bogotá or Kabul, without worrying about the changes in personality and behavior that result from the introduction of an addictive technology. The planners of transhumanism in Davos took care of these things much earlier.
These revolutionary changes are well illustrated by the rules of first aid:

1. Document the situation.
2. Upload the photo to social media.
3 Wait for the first likes.
4. Watch for further developments.
5…
An interesting article based on a Financial Times analysis appeared on the New York-based Mediaite platform: Alarming New Study Finds Smartphones Ruining Our Brains at Unprecedented Speed.
In less than a decade, conscientiousness — the trait most closely linked to responsibility, follow-through, and self-control — has collapsed among young adults. For those aged 16 to 39, it’s not a gradual erosion; it’s a plunge from respectability into the low 30th percentile. Older adults (who aren’t addicted to smartphones), meanwhile, remain essentially unchanged.

I don’t think anyone will get rid of their smartphone after reading this article. I won’t either. However, I do apply certain protective principles:
- Never carry a mobile phone in your breast pocket;
- I often leave my cell phone at home when I go out. I am not an emergency responder and will not save anyone’s life by answering an “urgent” call;
- When I go on a long trip, I turn off my cell phone completely. I am not interested in text messages about emergency calls when I cross a border;
- I answer frequent calls like “I’m an Amazon employee…” in bad English with: No, you don’t work at Amazon – you’re a scammer;
- I avoid long conversations on a smartphone.
It’s easy for me to apply such rules – I’m retired and luckily not many people call me.

Do we touch our smartphone more often than our wife, husband or child?
Its screen replaces our eyes; before a meal, at a concert, during a train journey. From the depths of the internet. Not read on a cell phone….
Author of the article: Marek Wojcik
Email: worldscam3@gmail.com
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