TED TALKS
TED Talks (short for Technology, Entertainment, Design) are those short but punchy presentations — usually under 18 minutes — where smart, interesting people share ideas they believe are “worth spreading.” And to be fair, a lot of them actually are.
They started back in the '80s as a half-tech, half-artsy kind of event, but really blew up in the 2000s when the talks were posted online for free. That’s when it all went viral. Now there’s TEDx — local versions popping up in cities everywhere, with speakers of all kinds: scientists, activists, artists, teachers, ex-cons, even kids.
The talks are super polished, both in content and delivery. Everything is packaged like it’s the idea that’ll change your life. Sometimes it is. Sometimes... not so much. But the format hooks you: good storytelling, clear messaging, and a closing punch that leaves you thinking (or reposting it to look deeper than you actually are).

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PROGRESS DOESN’T THINK ABOUT YOU, IT THINKS ABOUT THOSE WHO COME AFTERIf it were up to you, everything would stay the same. You’ve already spent enough time getting used to how things work—why change them now? After all, if it took you effort to adapt, why would you want to start over? But progress doesn’t ask for permission—it moves forward. And it doesn’t do it for those of us who are already here, but for those who will come next.
If we had clung to the idea of "keeping things as they are," we’d still be throwing garbage out the window, lighting our homes with candles, and painting books with pigments made from odd, outdated mixtures. Every advancement that seems normal today was once questioned. Every innovation we enjoy now had its critics in the past.
New things always unsettle those who have lived long enough to prefer what’s familiar. It’s natural. The unknown creates resistance, but progress doesn’t wait for approval. It moves forward—with or without us.
What feels strange today will be normal tomorrow. What sparks debate now will be the standard in the future. And in a few years, others will be saying the same thing: "After all the effort it took me to adapt, now they come and change everything again." That’s history, that’s progress. And that’s how it will always be, whether you like it or not.
In case you’re struggling to read between the lines, this is about those who resist AI-generated adult content. I’m not saying you have to accept it, or that you have to like it—not at all. But just because you don’t like it doesn’t mean it won’t become a reality.
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