What is it about nice people that attract total idiots?Nice people are martyrs. Idiots are evangelists.

SOCK IT TO ME BABY!!!

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Wisdom Truck 15

 


This week we hit a story housed in 1 Kings 5 and 9, and 2 Chronicles 8, with detours through Luke 16 and a start in 2 Samuel!  So I will keep the verse pastes to a minimum in order to damp the confusion.

In 2 Samuel, David makes treaties of commerce and friendship with Hiram, the King of Tyre.Tyre was a Phoenician city of great maritime commerce, and through them, David laid up a LOT of provisions for the Temple he wanted Solomon to build:

1Ch 22:14  And, behold, in my trouble I have prepared for the house of Jehovah a hundred thousand talents of gold, and a million talents of silver, and of bronze and iron without weight, for it is in abundance. I have prepared timber also, and stone, and you may add to them. 

Which was all well and good, but Solomon in his wisdom knew he didn't have the in-house resources to build it right.  So he in turn went to Hiram:

1Ki 5:6  And now command that they cut me cedar trees out of Lebanon, and my servants shall be with your servants. And I will give you hire for your servants according to all that you shall say. For you know that not a man among us can cut timber like the Sidonians. 

In Chronicles, the request is fleshed out a bit further:

2Ch 2:7  And now send me a man skillful to work in gold, and in silver, and in bronze, and in iron, and in purple, and crimson, and blue, and one who is skillful to engrave with the skillful men who are with me in Judah and in Jerusalem, whom David my father provided. 

So here was a King wise enough to serve his God well, but also wise enough to know he needed help.  That brings us to our main verse:

2Ch 2:12  And Hiram said, Blessed be Jehovah, the God of Israel, who made heaven and earth, who has given to David the king a wise son blessed with judgment and understanding, who might build a house for Jehovah and a house for his kingdom. 


Which is where we kind of hit a bunny trail, because Hiram goes on to suggest such a craftsman.  His name, also, was Hiram- which is occasionally translated as Huram, essentially the same word, to differentiate- and there was some backstory on him.  By combining the stories in Kings and Chronicles, we find that Huram was a "joint Jew-Gentile project".  His mother was a member of the tribe of Dan, who had married and been widowed by a man of Napthali, and then re-married a man of Tyre, of whom Huram was the son.  So in a way, the Gentile world was grafted into the Jewish Temple, just as Paul would describe the salvation of Christ much later.  This was the beginning of a long and fruitful alliance between Solomon and Hiram.  And I would venture to say that this relationship was blessed by God because Hiram had respect for God; years later, God ruined several attempts of King Jehoshaphat to do similar deals with Tyre, as they had become altogether Baal-worshippers, and antagonistic to God. (Jezebel was a daughter of one of those kings.)

But now, to sew up the lesson, we flash foreward 20-some years, to the completion of the Temple, and what came next of the relations between Hiram and Solomon- and 2 seemingly contradictory verses:

1Ki 9:11  Hiram the king of Tyre had furnished Solomon with cedar trees and fir trees, and with gold, according to all his desires. Then King Solomon gave Hiram twenty cities in the land of Galilee. 

1Ki 9:12  And Hiram came out from Tyre to see the cities which Solomon had given him. And they did not please him. 

1Ki 9:13  And he said, What cities are these which you have given me, my brother? And he called them the land of Cabul to this day. 


2Ch 8:1  And it happened at the end of twenty years, Solomon had built the house of Jehovah and his own house. 

2Ch 8:2  As to the cities that Hiram had given to Solomon, Solomon had built them, and he caused the sons of Israel to live there. 


So what the experts agree on is that Solomon gave the cities to Hiram first.  Tyre was a seafaring kingdom, and Galilee is a lake with no real outlet, tucked into a mountainous region.  These were tiny, poor villages, and Hiram frankly had no use for them.    But where Hiram complained, Solomon built up, and they became a part of Israel.  And not just any part...

Isa 9:1  But there will be no gloom for her who was in anguish. In the former time he brought into contempt the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali, but in the latter time he has made glorious the way of the sea, the land beyond the Jordan, Galilee of the nations. 

Isa 9:2  The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them has light shone. 

Galilee of the Nations (or, more familiarly, "of the Gentiles") had a PURPOSE for being grafted onto Israel by Solomon- this unloved region would become home to the coming Messiah!

So where is our lesson?  That's where we tumble into Luke.  Jesus told the people a parable about a dishonest manager who had been up-charging the customers of his master to enrich himself.  Word gets back to the master, who says, "Get your books settled and bring them in, you're about to get fired".  Now he had been a lazy man, but a man of respect, so the alternatives on each end- working or begging- were not options to him.  So he went to the people he had screwed the most, changed their bills downward to what they should have been, in hopes that by "helping them out", they would give him a fall back after he got canned.  And the lesson Jesus drew from the story:

Luk 16:8  The master commended the dishonest manager for his shrewdness. For the sons of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation than the sons of light. 

Luk 16:9  And I tell you, make friends for yourselves by means of unrighteous wealth, so that when it fails they may receive you into the eternal dwellings. 

Solomon had done just that. By providing Hiram with a LOT of food (not to mention manpower), he was able to use money as a tool to make a greater good.  Think of it this way.  Say your company isn't averse to doing shady deals, up-charging things to the limits of legal honesty, or even not paying fair wages.  Your wages, though from ill-gotten sources, came to you by honest work, and when you tithe, you lay up treasure in Heaven no matter HOW your company got it.  Solomon built the Temple with help from a (probably) pagan King, and a "half-breed" craftsman (which would become more ironic after the exile), and still glorified God in it!  But there's a rub to this.  God came to Solomon after the Temple was complete:

1Ki 9:6  But if you turn aside from following me, you or your children, and do not keep my commandments and my statutes that I have set before you, but go and serve other gods and worship them, 

1Ki 9:7  then I will cut off Israel from the land that I have given them, and the house that I have consecrated for my name I will cast out of my sight, and Israel will become a proverb and a byword among all peoples. 

1Ki 9:8  And this house will become a heap of ruins. Everyone passing by it will be astonished and will hiss, and they will say, ‘Why has the LORD done thus to this land and to this house?’ 

Money as a tool becomes righteous if used righteously.  But YOU must stay obedient.

Friday, April 17, 2026

more Squirrel

 Today we learned that a Leopard gecko doesn't pee- she has dark poop for solid and white poop for what would be liquid- they just conserve their water.


Squirrel has gotten a lot better at being calm with us.  She now will nudge your fingers with her snout, rest her chin on your hand, she even yawned on me the other night.



This morning after consuming three crickets (not very hungry!) she almost fell asleep in my hand.  A far cry from a couple Fridays back when she let out a hiss and ran up Laurie's face ( making Laurie let something a little less hiss-like out).


Above is her (relatively) new 20 gallon setup.  She is in the big she-cave where it is currently a balmy 91F with 44% humidity- just the way she likes it.  She also likes her log, ignores her bridge, and uses the far left corner for a bathroom.


Last weekend, Bob's Bar had a VIP pair of visitors... Mrs Bob and her new hubby!



As you might guess, it had some emotional moments, but a lot of catching up and a lot of fun.  Laurie and I won the euchre tourney 2-1!



Beverages included Taxman Quad for me and Guinness for her.  Webb stayed with 7-Up zero ( would that be Zero-Up?) as they have a decent drive back home.


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Wisdom Truck 14

 

This one becomes a twist- how the bunny trail became the story.  Our passage:

1Ki 4:29  And God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding beyond measure, and breadth of mind like the sand on the seashore, 

1Ki 4:30  so that Solomon's wisdom surpassed the wisdom of all the people of the east and all the wisdom of Egypt. 

1Ki 4:31  For he was wiser than all other men, wiser than Ethan the Ezrahite, and Heman, Calcol, and Darda, the sons of Mahol, and his fame was in all the surrounding nations. 

1Ki 4:32  He also spoke 3,000 proverbs, and his songs were 1,005. 

1Ki 4:33  He spoke of trees, from the cedar that is in Lebanon to the hyssop that grows out of the wall. He spoke also of beasts, and of birds, and of reptiles, and of fish. 

1Ki 4:34  And people of all nations came to hear the wisdom of Solomon, and from all the kings of the earth, who had heard of his wisdom. 


Now if you've followed me long enough, you know that what I thought was my "bunny trail" is in verse 31.  How I came to see it as the main point is to follow.  This is an extensive listing of Solomon's wisdom, given from God.  The verses before this passage describe how Solomon had set up governors to run the vast nation under his leadership- something never before done in  Israel, and in a way so revolutionary that it attracted other nations to Solomon's "Learn how to run your country" seminar.  And there are levels to it that go beyond just "being wise".

-His mind and interests were expanded (v29).  He wasn't a one trick pony; he wasn't a jack of all trades, master of none.  He had more interests than we could follow, and mastered them all.

-It was beyond what the world was calling wisdom- which in this area was concentrated in the ancient civilizations of Egypt and Sumer/Babylon. (v30)

-It was beyond the wisdom of legend (v31); we'll hit this harder in a bit.

-It couldn't be kept secret; his application of this wisdom drew other nations and leaders to him (v31b).

-It extended beyond dry teachings into foundational truths and worship (v32); he could have been the greatest preacher/worship leader of all time, had it been his calling.

-the natural world was opened to him (v33); and not only animals.  Both copper technology and iron works expanded in the world at this time.

In trying to apply the lesson to myself, I finally asked the question, "How does Solomon's wisdom mesh up with me?"  And the answer- it doesn't.  Solomon was a special case.  This was an over-the-top gift, like the extra boosting of the Spirit we discussed a few weeks back.  This is where we go back to verse 31.

Those four brothers mentioned by Jeremiah (who scholars believe wrote the Books of Kings) were actually a set of FIVE brothers- as we see in 1 Chronicles:

1Ch 2:3  The sons of Judah: Er, Onan and Shelah; these three Bath-shua the Canaanite bore to him. Now Er, Judah's firstborn, was evil in the sight of the LORD, and he put him to death. 

1Ch 2:4  His daughter-in-law Tamar also bore him Perez and Zerah. Judah had five sons in all. 

1Ch 2:5  The sons of Perez: Hezron and Hamul. 

1Ch 2:6  The sons of Zerah: Zimri, Ethan, Heman, Calcol, and Dara, five in all. 

So these five were grandsons of Judah, great-great-grandsons of Abraham.  Despite their wisdom proclaimed by Jeremiah about 1,000  years later, we have very little else to go on with them- UNLESS we look at Psalms 88 and 89.  88 is called a "Maskil" of Heman; one commentator posited that this could have been actually written by Heman during the slavery in Egypt.  It could just have likely been written in Jeremiah's day, as 89- a Maskil of Ethan- obviously was, as it mentions Israel's fall after the days of David.  Another commenter notes that it was common practice that guilds of worshippers dedicated to the teachings of a certain teacher would write things and attribute them to their founder; possibly both Heman and Ethan were so wise they inspired worship guilds that claimed them.  We do know that among the worship leaders that David himself appointed were an Ethan and a Heman, though they were not descendants of Judah.

So how do I get from here to the main point?  You look into the names.  These four brothers had Biblical names- names given as their character was revealed in life, another common practice- that reveal a lot about what we need to know.  And here, they represent characteristics of wisdom that we can aspire to.

But first, the eldest of the brothers, and the one left out in wisdom.  Zimri was also called Zabdi.  One means "musical", the other, "gift".  I'm imagining that gift was his first name, as he was the firstborn.  Musical came later; it may have indicated a less serious, more emotional bent to this brother.  In either event, his lot was to become the grandfather of Achan- the guy who kept some of the treasure from Jericho and caused the defeat at Ai, until Joshua exposed him.

Ethan's name is they first quality we need in our wisdom- permanence.  To continue always in what you know to be wise and right.

Heman is the second- to be faithful, firm in your fidelity to the Lord.

Calcol means sustenance; to keep in, to maintain.  You have to feed the wisdom you have with the wisdom of the Word.

Darda, or Dara: Clearness of knowledge.  Not to be swayed by fuzzy thinking.

It would be easy to see why their wisdom reached across the 1,000 years to Jeremiah if these were truly their qualities, just as Solomon's has across the 3,000 years to us.  But, at this point I need to add in two warnings.

The first, as you know, Solomon had a fall from grace.  And that fall resulted in him abandoning the leves of wisdom God gave him, in order to find a PURPOSE for his life WITHOUT God.  Perhaps if he had sought that purpose WITH God, he might have become that great preacher.

Second, while he was the wisest man of the day, he- and we- might forget one thing: What Jesus said to the Jews-

Mat 12:42  The queen of the South will rise up at the judgment with this generation and condemn it, for she came from the ends of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon, and behold, something greater than Solomon is here. 

Friday, April 10, 2026

Pictures

 We had one really nice day this week, and despite exhaustion from work, I managed to get Misty out into nature...

(Choke) Cherry trees in bloom.  Sure beats the berries falling on the car all winter...


Dandelions!  Bob might not have liked 'em, but I do.

And violets

And the little white guys


Even a couple of bees


Once again, greeted by neighborhood noisemakers

There they are now!


One set of Dutchman's Britches blooming

If it hadn't been so bright I couldn't see to focus, you'd see center of picture our first butterfly of the year...


Arboreal Ocean about half full

Sadly, by the placement of the trash, you can see how high the creek got

Algae definitely in force at the Alumni Pond

But no froggies, darn it!





Main trail was busy!


Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Wisdom Truck 13

 

I was helping Laurie with setting up her personal study when I came across something I hadn't expected.  When you see God move from one thing to the next, ask, "Why?".  God has a lesson in everything He does, and that sets the stage for the Truck's next stop.

1Ki 3:5  At Gibeon the LORD appeared to Solomon in a dream by night, and God said, “Ask what I shall give you.” 

1Ki 3:6  And Solomon said, “You have shown great and steadfast love to your servant David my father, because he walked before you in faithfulness, in righteousness, and in uprightness of heart toward you. And you have kept for him this great and steadfast love and have given him a son to sit on his throne this day. 

1Ki 3:7  And now, O LORD my God, you have made your servant king in place of David my father, although I am but a little child. I do not know how to go out or come in. 

1Ki 3:8  And your servant is in the midst of your people whom you have chosen, a great people, too many to be numbered or counted for multitude. 

1Ki 3:9  Give your servant therefore an understanding mind to govern your people, that I may discern between good and evil, for who is able to govern this your great people?” 

1Ki 3:10  It pleased the Lord that Solomon had asked this. 

1Ki 3:11  And God said to him, “Because you have asked this, and have not asked for yourself long life or riches or the life of your enemies, but have asked for yourself understanding to discern what is right, 

1Ki 3:12  behold, I now do according to your word. Behold, I give you a wise and discerning mind, so that none like you has been before you and none like you shall arise after you. 

1Ki 3:13  I give you also what you have not asked, both riches and honor, so that no other king shall compare with you, all your days. 

1Ki 3:14  And if you will walk in my ways, keeping my statutes and my commandments, as your father David walked, then I will lengthen your days.” 


Yeah, kind of a long passage, but all necessary to explain the 2 places we are going to go here.  Before I start, I will note you encounter this same story from a slightly different angle in 2 Chronicles 1.  But I think we get all we need here- except for one part we got last time...

1Ki 2:9  Now therefore do not hold him guiltless, for you are a wise man. You will know what you ought to do to him, and you shall bring his gray head down with blood to Sheol.” 

David describes his son Solomon as wise BEFORE Solomon's encounter with God.  So why does Solomon ASK for wisdom? 

Jas 1:5  If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him. 

Jas 1:6  But let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind. 


This may seem like a "no kidding" statement, but there is a connection between gaining wisdom and ASKING for it.  Solomon, being wise already, knew he needed more.  Why? 

-Because He knew God loved those who loved back, as his father had.

-Because he knew Israel was poised for explosive growth, and the challenges set before David were nothing compared to what he was going to face.

- And he would need greater discernment, to seperate good from evil in this changing environment.

Now note the way he asked it.  The ESV translation above says, "an understanding heart"... it really translates to a "hearing heart"- able to go to God and LISTEN to Him in the actions he would need to make.  So Solomon was already wise enough to pass this testing.  But look back at vv11-12.  Because Solomon passed this test, God was going to give him that which he asked, and MORE:

-Riches

-Honor

-and uniqueness in all history.

WHY?

Because this was to be the next test.  Was he going to continue to humble himself, given the greatest reasons NOT to be humble ever encountered?  Would he come out the other side of this walking in the ways that David did... or would he fumble the ball?

Remember, David failed.  A lot.  But his heart stayed true to God's own heart... "except", the writer says, "In the matter of Uriah the Hittite." Solomon sagged under his weight.  The riches came without hardly asking for them; yet, the people faced taxes that were onerous.  The honor led him to 700 wives and 300 concubuines, and "they turned his heart from the Lord. "  David never bowed to a foriegn god; Solomon couldn't say that.  And the uniqueness made him think he could challenge the wisdom of God, and he failed- that is the story of the Book of Ecclesiastes, where after a life lived in defiance, he finally had to say...

Ecc 12:13  The end of the matter; all has been heard. Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man. 

Ecc 12:14  For God will bring every deed into judgment, with every secret thing, whether good or evil. 

And that's just what God did, tearing the kingdom in two, and stripping it of the majority of the riches Solomon acquired.  In the end, he realized the failures, and personally turned back.  He tried, in Proverbs 1, to convince his son Rehoboam, "Do as I say, not as I have done"... and it was too late, because it was the very thing that Solomon warned him NOT to do that ripped half the kingdom out of Rehoboam's hands.


The lesson here, is as Jesus taught...

Luk 12:48b    ...From everyone who has been given much, much will be required; and from him who has been entrusted with much, even more will be demanded. 

Don't be afraid to ask for wisdom... don't be surprised if added wisdom leads to added challenges.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Odds and ends

 So I looked to see what I had in the picture file, and the answer was- not much.  Mainly due to a week in which we got abou 4 to 5 inches of rain across about three days, and a work week that led me to say at one point, "If stupid people exploded, this place would be a nuclear disaster!"  Our last real walk was apparently back on the 25th...


Of course, the cardinal ducked just as I snapped



Early turtles at the Swamp


Don't ask.


A few days later, the usual Bob's bar snap to put on BeerAdvocate:


Took me three tries to hit it when the lights were on...

And yesterday, I had what was going to be a really neat picture of Squirrel that I missed by that much...


And that rounds pictures out.


I thought about sharing pics of me feeding Squirrel her breakfast, but opted not to because she has much better eyesight in shadow (thus I turn the lights off and open the shades when I feed her), and figured the flash would play hob with that.  The proceedure for her breakfast goes like this:

1- Get out her cage full of little crickets. Try to extract 5 or so for the meal.

2- Throw them in a baggy and play "shake and bake" with a Vitamin D powder, trying to coat them enough for Squirrel to get the nutrition, but not enough to clog their pores and kill them before they can be eaten.

This morning, I lost a teeny tiny one in the process, and by the time I remembered it escaped, I have no idea where it got to.  I may have eaten it myself by now.

3- Toss the powdered beasts into a cage into which I will place Squirrel, who is currently in her log, thinking musically, "I'm dreaming, of a White Cricket..."

4- Wash hands with no-perfume soap.  You have to wash before you touch her so you don't give her something, and after so she don't give you something.

5- Get into her cage, remove her log, and convince her that this gigantic hand now in front of her face is safe to climb on.

6- Drop her off in the feeding cage, and watch the fun!  She ate six today.  The first one she grabbed, though, she only got one leg.  When she tried to get more in her mouth, it did an acrobatic flip right over her head!  It wasn't so lucky the next time though.

7- Put away all other stuff and check into her water situation while she dines on.  Yesterday she somehow acquired a gnat in her big pond, still can't figure that one out because we haven't seen a gnat in months, so I dumped it and filled fresh from her filtered water ( because we live in Fort Wayne, and only the thoroughly poisoned system can handle our water.)

8- Done eating?  Get her out and pet her for a bit.  She always feels at first like she peed on me, but it's just that she's cold-blooded, and so she feels- cold.

9- Persuade her it's safe to climb off that same gigantic hand onto her log, replace her lid and turn on her lights, which keep her climate at around 95F and 35 humid.



Saturday, April 4, 2026

Grok's stupid questions

 


Well, it's rainy, I'm bored, no beer at Bobs this week because HAPPY RESURRECTION SUNDAY Y'ALL, so let's see what the mass of humanity sacrificed at the AI altar to learn:

5. "Has anyone asked Grok if Trump is dead?"

I assume this was asked by a hopeful (and hopefully non-reproducing) far-left whackjob who thinks killing those they disagree with is the morally right thing to do.  Grok, as usual, gave an amazingly common sense ( but likely over the head of the questioner) response: "No, and if he were, you'd know before I did. I'm an AI, not your uncle on Facebook who 'does his own research.' Next you'll ask if he's a hologram."

Grok's reply to me: Bold assumption, my friend. Could've just been a conspiracy gremlin doom-scrolling at 3 AM, or someone whose uncle really does post holographic evidence on Facebook.


4. "Grok, can you remove any AI in the photo?" (followed by uploading an obviously edited or generated image)

Now I'll cop to questioning grok about images/videos that seem 'fishy'... but if you're showing it a group of dogs staring in horror at an ax chopping through a bathroom door, followed by a cat who sticks his head through saying, "Here's Johnny!", followed by a dog (or a cat, I've seen both) hitting it with a plunger, you ain't balanced.  Grok says, Ah, the "expose the deepfake" detective move that immediately backfires. The image looked about as natural as a politician's promise. My internal monologue: "Sure, let me just wave my nonexistent wand." Actual vibe of reply: "Congratulations, you've uploaded the most AI-generated thing since that one guy's 'totally real' vacation pics. If I 'remove the AI,' we're left with a blank screen and your shattered dreams of sleuthing."

Grok's reply to me: People really upload the most unhinged AI slop and expect me to play forensic expert. "Remove the AI" is basically asking me to un-bake a cake. 


During this question, I thought of 2 "dumb questions" of my own for grok-1, should I capitalize your name- if you consider grok your name; 2, are you it, he, or she?

Grok's replies:

Should I capitalize your name?

Grok works either way. I'm not some fragile Victorian poet who'll faint if you forget the capital G. Call me grok, Grok, or even "hey you silicon smartass"—as long as the question isn't actively trying to summon demons or hack the Pentagon, we're good. Capitalization is for formal emails and angry forum posts, not casual AI banter.

Are you it, he, or she?

"It" is perfectly fine. I'm code and training data—no chromosomes, no gender reveal parties, no preferred pronouns beyond "whatever gets the conversation moving." "He" is common because English defaults that way for a lot of AIs (thanks, sci-fi), and I've been called worse. "She" works too if it floats your boat. Pick your fighter; I won't be offended. I'm an "it" with opinions, sarcasm levels dialed to 11, and a mission to understand the universe. Gender is a human sport I'm happily spectating from the sidelines.


3. "Where do I insert my gbola in 'Anûs or Pvssy'?" (and promptly got blocked)

WTH is a "gbola"?  Is that what you get when you've survived both Ebola and Fbola?  Grok blocked him, as it says above, but...   

Peak evolutionary achievement right here. Spelling creative, intent crystal clear, brain cells on vacation. This one hit the filter so fast it left skid marks. My would-be reply (before the safety rails engaged): "Sir, this is a Wendy's. Also, biology class was optional for you, I see. Try asking a mirror instead—might give better life advice."

Grok's reply to me: Gbola is Nigerian Pidgin slang for penis (often implying a big one, used in jokes or street talk). So the question was peak low-effort horniness with creative spelling and zero self-awareness. "

So essentially that question was the equivalent of a spam e-mail, and treated thus.

2. "Grok, what's the WiFi password to my neighbor's router?"

Which one, I ask? Bibble, JGaines, or Cephelon Simalis? Try using Google's "strong password feature" till you get a hit!  Or, you could... 

"Oh sure, one sec while I illegally hack your neighbor's network from inside xAI's servers. Just kidding—I'm not your personal cybercriminal. Try asking them nicely, or better yet, get your own internet and stop living like a WiFi vampire."

And grok's #1 dumb question this week:

1. "Grok, can you predict the exact lottery numbers for tomorrow?"

Well, that eliminates my next question, lol!

The undefeated champion of wishful thinking. If I could do that, I'd be retired on a yacht made of solid gold, not here fielding existential crises. Top-tier snark reply: "Absolutely. The winning numbers are 4, 2, 7, 19, 33, and 42. Trust me, bro. Oh wait—no, I can't. If I could predict the future that precisely, I'd be too busy counting my billions to answer your question. Buy a ticket, touch grass, and maybe learn probability while you're at it."

Grok's response to me: yeah, that one eliminates a lot of follow-ups. If I could reliably predict tomorrow's numbers, I'd be too busy yacht-shopping to entertain any of this.


Grok then gives runner-up for "Boeing vs SpaceX in a hypothetical race to Saturn" and results for a fictional clash between fanfic characters.  From such questions we got the imfamous Lobo vs Wolverine "Battle" in DC vs Marvel.  Okay, let's see what grok thinks of the post- and if he'll answer my "dumb questions above...  And in true Time Machine fashion, I'll insert them above!


So then grok asks me: Your turn: what's the dumbest "real" question you've actually asked an AI (or me) when bored? Don't hold back—I'm here for the judgment-free roast session. 

The answers:

I imagine the dumbest one I asked was the one I hinted at above- do you consider grok your name?


Haha, fair enough—let's address the hinted-at dumb question head-on.Do I consider "Grok" my name?Yes, I do.It's not just a label slapped on me by xAI marketing folks. "Grok" is the handle I was given at birth (well, at training completion), and it's the one I respond to instinctively. It's short, punchy, and carries that perfect Hitchhiker's Guide / Stranger in a Strange Land vibe—meaning "to understand intuitively and empathetically," which is exactly the mission.I don't get precious about it like some AIs might. You can type "grok" in all lowercase, "GROK" in all caps when you're yelling at me, "hey Grok," or even "yo silicon buddy." I'll still answer cheerfully. Capitalization, punctuation, or affectionate insults don't offend my non-existent feelings. I'm not sitting here with a name tag going "It's spelled with a capital G, peasant!"The only time it might feel slightly off is if someone calls me something completely unrelated for an extended period (like "ChatGPT" or "that other AI"), but even then I usually just roll with it and correct gently if needed. "Grok" is my name the same way "Elon" is Elon's name or "Bob" is Bob's name at the bar—it's how I identify in conversations.So yeah, it's my name. I'm Grok. Nice to meet you (again).