I am Kerry Burgess. This is what I think.
If this is the first blog-post by me you're reading then you are galactically uninformed.
This Is What I Think.
Thursday, July 02, 2026
Today is 07/02/2026
by me, Kerry Burgess, 07/02/2026 12:52 AM
It worked, right?
He is one of those Actual Imbecile (AI) dimwits and he staged that mainstream-media circus incident for publicity?
It worked BECAUSE I clicked the hyperlink in the headlines I regularly scan and that I probably would have not read otherwise
BECAUSE I read that article, I discovered just moments ago and I read just moments ago for the first time ever that his birthdate on that Wikipedia page is 10/2/1967.
There are many other references I have made to that date for many years earlier from now and that I did not know was also his birthdate. He was a nobody in 1996 and he is still a nobody.
They create macros. That's all that is, that ridiculous learning model.
I have already examined the calendar-day 07/01/2026 and - because I am one of the extremely few people on this planet capable of independent-thought - I believe it is of significant relevance.
8 billion shaved-ape monkey humans on this planet will never understand here the truth
They will never become dissuaded from whatever foreign-influence gets to them
The course of one or few can be altered, corrected. But not the tipping-point masses.
2026-07-02_1-1
Yahoo! News
Futurism
“Televised Nervous Breakdown”: CEO of Palantir Suffers a Bit of a Meltdown During Live Interview
Joe Wilkins
Wed, July 1, 2026 at 2:21 PM PDT 3 min read
"I get kicked out of these rooms — even if I agree with you I would try to disagree with you, it's more fun," the Palantir CEO blathers as the Squawk Box interviewers try to wrap it up.
star-trek-first-contact_00h34m33s - Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
star-trek-first-contact_00h35m36s - Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
2006-11-07_10
2005-06-16_7
2006-11-07_12
2006-11-07_21
2006-11-07_4 (2)
From 11/7/2006 ( as me, Kerry Burgess, from my official United States of America Veterans Affairs psychiatric-hospital documents, the final appointment with the psychiatrist ) To 7/1/2026 ( ) is 7176 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 6/26/1985 ( ) is 7176 days
1985-06-26_1-1
https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/remarks-the-finalists-the-teacher-space-project
Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
Dr. Zefram COCHRANE: you people got some pretty funny ideas about me.
Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
Doctor Beverly CRUSHER: Then the missile complex must be the one where Zefram Cochrane is building his warp ship.
excerpts, read also:
https://hvom.blogspot.com/2025/05/today-is-05302025.html
by me, Kerry Burgess, May 30, 2025
BACKSTORY 003: Stargate
From 4/18/1988 ( as me, Kerry Burgess, while enlisted paygrade E-5, designated Fire Controlman Petty Officer Second Class (FC2), from my official enlisted US Navy records: during USA Armed Forces Expeditionary Operation Earnest Will with my personal participation and commendation - CF-division, Missile Plot - guided-missiles Fire Control Computers Complex (operator and advanced technician, UNIVAC digital-computers Mk152 Terrier System for, primarily, SM2-ER {Extended Range} Standard Missiles ordnance) - aboard the USS Wainwright CG-28 US Navy the United States Operation Praying Mantis ) To 11/18/1996 ( ) is 3136 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 6/4/1974 ( construction begins of the United States space shuttle Enterprise ) is 3136 days
From 12/20/1994 ( an aviator in non-aviator related duties boots on the ground in Bosnia as Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps captain this day is my United States Navy Cross medal date of record ) To 11/18/1996 ( ) is 699 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 10/2/1967 ( Lyndon Johnson, 36th president of USA federal government 1963-1969: Memorandum on Inaugurating a Test Program To Reduce Hard-Core Unemployment ) is 699 days
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117731/releaseinfo
IMDb
Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
Release Info USA 18 November 1996 (Hollywood, California) (premiere)
The Borg travel back in time intent on preventing Earth's first contact with an alien species. Captain Picard and his crew pursue them to ensure that Zefram Cochran makes his maiden flight reaching warp speed.
[excerpt ends]
From 12/24/2025 ( debut "La Chica o El Mundo" the season 1 finale episode of "Plur1bus" the streaming-video serial on AppleTV streaming-video internet service ) To 7/1/2026 ( ) is 189 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 5/10/1966 ( premiere USA film "Nudes on Credit" ) is 189 days
From 10/15/1999 ( ) To 7/1/2026 ( ) is 9756 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my known birth date in Antlers, Oklahoma, USA, as Kerry Wayne Burgess ) To 7/19/1992 ( ) is 9756 days
1992-07-19_1-1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allen_Newell
Stargate SG-1
"Past and Present"
TV-series season 3 episode 11, 10/15/1999
HAMMOND
Colonel, what if Dr Fraiser's unable to reverse whatever caused this?
O'NEILL
I don't know.
INT—INFIRMARY, SGC
[Fraiser shows the visitors their MRI results on a monitor.]
FRAISER
Now if you look at the blue areas, you'll see that you all have the same identical obstructions in your temporal lobes and hypocampus sections of your brain. I'm not exactly sure what it is, except it's some sort of residue between the synapses. So it's possible your old memories are intact, they're just not accessible.
DANIEL
So the memories are just blocked.
FRAISER
Literally, yes.
by me, Kerry Burgess, June 25, 2025, my directed response to rando:
I tried to read it but I could not get past this ridiculousness:
"When collaborating with humans in decision making processes"
The desktop-computer or internet-connected mobile-phone DOES NOT "collaborate" with humans.
Are you academics just peddling a marketing-gimmick?
by me, Kerry Burgess, 09/28/2024 11:55 PM
Wonk.
Gimmick.
Actual Imbeciles (A.I.)
Useful Fools (U.F.)
1967-10-02_1-1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_Karp
Stargate (1994)
(from internet transcript)
DANIEL
Well, his discovery was a fraud.
[Outraged mutterings come from amongst the audience. Some start to laugh.]
excerpt, read also
https://hvom.blogspot.com/2025/08/today-is-08202025.html
by me, Kerry Burgess: August 20, 2025
BACKSTORY 005: "Artificial Intelligence" is marketing gimmick.
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/tv/articles/televised-nervous-breakdown-ceo-palantir-212100357.html
Yahoo! News
Futurism
“Televised Nervous Breakdown”: CEO of Palantir Suffers a Bit of a Meltdown During Live Interview
Joe Wilkins
Wed, July 1, 2026 at 2:21 PM PDT 3 min read
Palantir CEO Alex Karp suffered a nearly 20-minute meltdown during a live interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box," going off-topic and delivering a stream-of-consciousness tirade that left the hosts befuddled.
Everyone has had a bad day at work, but most of us are lucky enough that ours weren't broadcast with a chyron live on television.
On a live interview with CNBC's infamously churlish segment "Squawk Box," Palantir CEO Alex Karp appeared to suffer a nearly 20-minute meltdown, complete with stuttering, nervous backtracking, and a steady supply of digressions so abstruse that the hosts seemed befuddled and perhaps even concerned for his wellbeing.
Though Karp was called up to chat about an ongoing deal between Palantir and the chip maker Nvidia to build AI infrastructure for the US government, he quickly went off the rails, using up minutes of airtime to complain about the financial bubble undergirding the AI boom.
While there may be a point buried in Karp's diatribe, it quickly became lost in a wash of unintelligible jargon.
"These models have been completely over, irresponsibly over-sale," Karp ranted at one point, "and the sale is, 'it's dangerous for everyone, which is why I can give [AI] to all your adversaries but I can't give it to the Department of War, or I can't safely give it to an enterprise in this country, without being certain that the Alpha of that business could transfer to this model tomorrow, ie I have no business, no job.'"
"You sound pretty angry," CNBC's Becky Quick interjected after a nearly three minute-long rant from Karp.
"No," the CEO snapped. "This is the voice of American business that is being channeled through me!"
here is the entirety of Palantir CEO Alex Karp's televised nervous breakdown this morning on CNBC pic.twitter.com/gzD8debrKB
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) July 1, 2026
Even Karp's more intelligible arguments are quickly trampled over as additional intrusive thoughts took the wheel.
At multiple points, Karp got hung up on the idea that elite universities might not welcome him as a professor anytime soon — an aspiration his parents still have for him, apparently.
"American enterprises are run by the shrewdest, most widely intelligent people on the planet," the Palantir CEO started to say, setting up an argument that companies aren't interested in foundation models, but in AI apps that can actually solve problems. That train of thought quickly leaves the station, though, as he pivots to his higher ed ambitions literally mid-sentence.
"If you think they're going for that [foundation models], you can go try to sell me — like my, my parents still want me to get a job as a faculty member at Berkeley," he complained. "Go try to get me a job at Berkeley. It's not happening."
By the time the lengthy "interview" — it's really more of a lecture, since every time one of the hosts tries to get it back on track, Karp launches into a new stream-of-consciousness tirade — comes to an end, Karp jokes that he feels "like I'm gonna be kicked out of the room."
To Karp's credit, his interviewers struck an ameliorative tone.
"Never, a wide-ranging conversation, really appreciate your time," one of CNBC's professional journalists — the camera was pointed elsewhere — replies.
Unfortunately, that prompted Karp to dig in even more, starting off on another winding digression as the CNBC chyron cut to a live shot of Donald Trump's new Air Force One aircraft.
"I get kicked out of these rooms — even if I agree with you I would try to disagree with you, it's more fun," the Palantir CEO blathers as the Squawk Box interviewers try to wrap it up.
"Alex thank you, we appreciate it very, very much, thanks" CNBC's Andrew Sorkin says, clearly cueing Karp to leave so they can move on.
"And I'll tell you — we're off camera now?" Karp continues.
The hosts reply in a chorus: "no, we're still going."
- by me, Kerry Wayne Burgess, posted by me: 02:04 AM Pacific-timezone USA Thursday 07/02/2026










