Welcome to My Site

If this is your first visit, welcome! This site is devoted to my life experiences as a Filipino-American who immigrated from the Philippines to the United States in 1960. I came to the US as a graduate student when I was 26 years old. I am now in my mid-80's and thanks God for his blessings, I have four successful and professional children and six grandchildren here in the US. My wife and I had been enjoying the snow bird lifestyle between US and Philippines after my retirement from USFDA in 2002. Macrine(RIP),Me and my oldest son are the Intellectual migrants. Were were born in the Philippines, came to the US in 1960 and later became US citizens in 1972. Some of the photos and videos in this site, I do not own. However, I have no intention on infringing on your copyrights. Cheers!

Monday, February 23, 2026

Demystifying AI: A Personal Reflection

Demystifying AI: A Personal Reflection on Understanding the Machines We Created

Artificial Intelligence has become one of the most talked-about, and most misunderstood forces shaping our lives today. For some, AI represents breathtaking promise: cures for disease, safer roads, smarter cities. For others, it evokes fear of lost jobs, lost privacy, or even lost control. When I hear the phrase “demystifying AI,” I hear a quiet but urgent call: to slow down, to look past the headlines, and to understand what AI truly is and what it is not.

I did not grow up in a world of algorithms and machine learning. Like many of my generation, I witnessed technology evolve gradually: from typewriters to personal computers, from fax machines to email, from dial-up modems to instant global communication. Each leap forward brought both excitement and unease. AI feels different only because it touches something deeply human, thinking, creating, deciding. It feels as if the machines are crossing an invisible line. But are they really?

Demystifying AI begins with a simple truth: AI does not think in the way humans do. It does not possess consciousness, intention, or wisdom. It recognizes patterns, processes vast amounts of data, and produces outputs based on probabilities. Behind every AI system are human choices, what data to use, what goals to prioritize, what limits to impose. When we forget this, we give AI more power than it deserves and absolve ourselves of responsibility we still very much hold.

In my professional life, especially in environments shaped by science, regulation, and public trust, I learned that technology is never neutral. Tools reflect the values of the people who design and deploy them. AI in medicine, for example, can help doctors diagnose diseases earlier and more accurately, but only if the data are fair, the systems transparent, and human judgment remains central. Demystifying AI means acknowledging both its promise and its blind spots, without surrendering to either optimism or fear.

There is also a personal dimension to this conversation. Many people worry that AI will replace creativity, empathy, and human connection. Yet what I have observed is something quieter and more hopeful: AI often reveals what is uniquely human. A machine can draft a sentence, but it cannot draw from a lifetime of memories. It can analyze a poem, but it cannot feel loss, love, or longing. When we understand AI clearly, we stop competing with it and start using it as a tool, one that can amplify, rather than diminish, our humanity.

To demystify AI is also to democratize it. Understanding should not be reserved for engineers and corporations alone. Citizens, patients, workers, and readers everywhere deserve a clear explanation of how AI affects their lives and what rights they should expect. Transparency builds trust; secrecy breeds fear. The more open the conversation, the more responsibly AI can be integrated into society.

Ultimately, demystifying AI is not about the machines. It is about us. It is about whether we choose curiosity over panic, responsibility over resignation, and wisdom over speed. AI will continue to evolve, but the values guiding its use remain firmly in human hands. The mystery dissolves when we remember that simple fact.

As with every powerful tool humanity has ever created, the question is not what can AI do? The real question is what will we choose to do with it?

Closing Reflection: Why Demystifying AI Matters Now

As we move deeper into 2026, the conversation around AI is no longer abstract, it’s immediate and consequential. Governments, companies, and communities around the world are wrestling with how to balance innovation and safety. International summits on AI impact are bringing leaders together to discuss real governance frameworks and shared responsibilities. Countries are proposing new laws to increase transparency and protect people, while others debate whether regulation stifles or supports progress. 

At the same time, concerns about AI-generated misinformation, deepfakes, and automated content that blurs truth and fiction are rising, prompting collaborations to detect and combat harmful uses. This highlights a broader truth: AI’s influence isn’t just technical. it’s social, legal, and human. Without understanding what AI really does and how it works, we risk shaping policies driven by fear or misinformation rather than informed judgment.

In moments like these when markets react to AI investment plans, when laws are debated in parliaments, and when artists and technologists clash over creativity and authenticity,  demystifying AI isn’t just a philosophical exercise. It’s a practical necessity. It allows us to participate in these discussions not as bystanders but as informed citizens, rooted in curiosity instead of fear. And in that informed participation lies our best hope for guiding AI toward outcomes that reflect our values, not misconceptions.

Meanwhile, My Photo of the DaY:


Finally, the top Five News of the Day

📰 1. Blizzards and Historic Nor’easter Slam Northeastern U.S.

A powerful winter storm has brought blizzard conditions, heavy snow (potentially 1–2 ft), and dangerous winds to the Northeast, prompting blizzard warnings, travel chaos, and states of emergency in multiple states. 

📉 2. Public Opinion Shift on U.S. Checks and Balances

A growing majority of Americans say the system of checks and balances isn’t functioning properly, with skepticism rising on the eve of a major political address. 

🤖 3. Pentagon-AI Tensions: Anthropic CEO to Meet Defense Officials

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has called Anthropic’s CEO to the Pentagon for high-stakes talks over AI usage safeguards in military systems. 

⚖️ 4. Royal Scandal Deepens Around Former Prince Andrew

Sordid allegations and legal troubles surrounding Prince Andrew have intensified, causing internal strains within the British royal family. 

🚗 5. Severe Weather Driving Ban in Delaware

Sussex County remains under a Level 3 driving ban due to severe winter conditions and impassible roads.


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