Robbie Cheadle posted the second part of my guest post on Scandinavian Folklore on LatinosUSA. LatinosUSA is a wonderful online magazine/blog featuring poetry, stories and all kinds of interesting content from around the world. She also included a great review of my Leonberger book Le Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle, and I am very grateful for that.
Category: Blog News
This category consist of posts featuring blog news, such as blog anniversaries
I Promise Not to Post AI Generated Comments
Esther’s writing prompt: December 3 : Promise
Click here to join in.
This post is not about Leonbergers but about a phenomenon that seems to be spreading like wildfire in the blogosphere, AI generated comments. If you are a blogger that has been blogging lately, I am sure you have seen them. Well written, seemingly creative, flattering and detailed comments that give the impression that the commentor, who appears to be an extremely articulate writer, has read your post really well and understood it, and has spent a long time perfecting the comment. Unfortunately, he/she didn’t write anything and has probably not even looked at your post. He/she might have, in a very short time, generated hundreds of comments automatically for hundreds of blogs he/she has never looked at and knows nothing about.
When I started getting the AI generated comments I was really flattered at first. Someone really took the time to read my often lengthy and complicated posts and not only understood them well but loved them for all the right reasons. As the Devil in the Devil’s advocate said, “vanity is my favorite sin”. However, I eventually realized that these comments were inauthentic. I still say thank you when I get an elaborate and flattering comment that does not look genuine or seems to be too good to be true. First of all, it is difficult to know for sure whether the comment is AI-generated and secondly, they did make some effort even though it was minimum. I don’t know if that is right or wrong of me.
To generate an AI-comment you can, for example, use a website such as Postiz. You copy and paste the content of a blog post into the edit box “Original Post Content”, then select the tone, for example, “friendly”, and then you press the button. Then copy and paste the comment in the blog.
There are many other tools for generating comments, blog posts, and other content including HyperwriteAI, which also can make the content sound genuine using your writing-persona. It trains the AI to mimic your unique writing style (you provide examples) ensuring the output sounds like you.
My Murder Moose Example
I am not going to post examples without the consent of the non-authors, so I am giving my own example based on my recent post “What are your Favorite Animals Not Murder Moose Anymore“. I used Postiz, which generated the following comment for me.
Wow, that’s such a cool journey from the Murder Moose to loving dogs!
I love how you turned your childhood memories into a drawing.
And writing a book about Leonbergers is amazing!
Dogs really do bring so much joy and companionship.
Rollo sounds like a great buddy too!
Below is the drawing that Postiz is referring to:

I posted an AI-generated comment above, which makes it seem like I already broken my promise not to post AI generated comments. However, the comment was not posted in anyone’s comment section but here in my post for illustration purposes. What I promise is to not post AI generated comments on anyone’s blog post without telling them it is an AI generated comment, unlike a lot of bloggers. The picture above is also AI generated but I am stating that it is.
In my opinion, leaving AI generated comments on people’s posts without telling them it is AI generated is dishonest and the same is true when someone posts an AI generated blog post without mentioning that it is AI generated.
The Death of Internet
AI generated comments, bots posting comments, bots arguing with people in the comment sections, bots arguing with other bots in the comment sections, and bots “clicking” massive amounts of reactions (like, love, angry, laughter, etc.). Not to mention the spread of deep fakes These are phenomena spreading like wildfire.
Not all AI generated comments and comments by bots are innocent flattery. Bots frequently spread false information, false narratives, division and anger. AI generated comments and bots are ruining the comment sections in various ways. Before you get into a lengthy argument with someone on internet, here is some expert help to determine whether you are arguing with a bot, or not. On my second blog I posted about the fact that “more than half of Internet Traffic is Bots”. Most of the bot traffic is malicious by the way.

This makes me wonder if the internet is dying. With that I am not referring to the Dead Internet Conspiracy Theory that claims that Internet is already dead and entirely governed by bots that are controlling us. I am referring to something more realistic, that our internet experience is ruined first by people using AI generated content (comments, posts, etc.) without telling readers, and secondly by bots. Is Internet losing its authenticity and value?
And to reiterate, I promise not to post AI-generated comments on people’s blogs.
100000
At about 8:00AM Central Standard Time my Leonberger blog surpassed 100,000 views. At the moment of this writing, I have 55,000+ visitors, 10,600+ comments, 16,800+ likes, and 326 posts. I am very grateful for all of your visits, likes and comments. Thank you so much!
I started this blog to promote my Leonberger book “The Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle, Stories and Tips from Thirteen Years with a Leonberger” (see picture below). That was a bit more than three years ago. I can add that the three-year anniversary of the release of my book is coming up in July. Click here to read more about my book.
Since the launch of my blog, my blogging has evolved and in addition to Leonbergers my blog has become a personal blog featuring book reviews, travel stories, and other topics. In other words, I am using my blog for my personal entertainment, in addition to on occasion promoting my Leonberger book.
The Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Lowenhohle



Three Leonberger Photos



Our Leonberger ChatGPT and Google AI
Today I was having fun with ChatGPT and Google AI. I asked ChatGPT the following question : Was there a Leonberger called Bronco?
The answer is shown below

If the text is hard to read in the picture, this is the answer ChatGPT gave.
Yes, there was a Leonberger named Bronco. Bronco, officially named Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle, lived with the Wikman family in Dallas, Texas, from 2007 until his passing in 2020. Notably, he lived an unusually long life for his breed, reaching almost thirteen years, surpassing the typical life expectancy of Leonbergers, which is around nine years. His story is detailed in the book “The Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle” by Thomas Wikman, which shares anecdotes of Bronco’s adventures and provides insights into caring for Leonbergers.
I think that sounds right.
Confusing ChatGPT
Next, I asked ChatGPT the following question : Did the Leonberger Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle rescue Hamsters?
I can add that Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle is a unique Leonberger name. There is a Leonberger database called the Worldwide Independent Leonberger Database featuring more than 172,000 Leonbergers. It covers most Leonbergers in the world back until the beginning of the 20th century and only three of them were named Bronco including Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle, which is the only Leonberger named exactly that. As you can see below ChatGPT is confusing our Leonberger Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle with another dog.

If the text is hard to read in the picture, this is the answer ChatGPT gave.
Yes, Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle, a Leonberger, is known for his heroic act of rescuing a group of hamsters! This event gained attention when Le Bronco, who was living in Germany, saved several hamsters from a fire in 2011. The hamsters were trapped in their cages, and thanks to Le Bronco’s quick thinking and bravery, he managed to alert his owners and helped rescue the small animals.
His actions were recognized as a remarkable act of kindness and heroism, showing the intelligence and sensitivity that dogs, particularly the Leonberger breed, can possess.
I’ve noticed that ChatGPT is sometimes wrong. For example, when you ask questions on a topic for which there is sparse information ChatGPT frequently gets the answer wrong. Another way to confuse ChatGPT and get bad answers is to ask vague questions or ask questions that cannot be answered precisely. ChatGPT relies on internet data and may base its answers on people’s biases and cliches rather than accurate information.
Google AI on Bronco
Interestingly enough, Google AI gave more extensive and interesting answers to my questions, and unlike ChatGPT it answered both of them correctly and provided links to the sources.
First, I asked : Was there a Leonberger called Bronco?
This is what I got :

If the text is hard to read in the picture, this is what the screenshot says.
Yes, there was a Leonberger named Bronco. Bronco, officially named Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle, lived with the Wikman family in Dallas, Texas, from 2007 until his passing in 2020. Notably, he lived an unusually long life for his breed, reaching almost thirteen years, surpassing the typical life expectancy of Leonbergers, which is around nine years. His story is detailed in the book “The Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle” by Thomas Wikman, which shares anecdotes of Bronco’s adventures and provides insights into caring for Leonbergers.
Yes, there was a well-known Leonberger named “Bronco” (Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle) who lived with the Wikman family in Dallas, Texas, and was the subject of a book and blog called “Leonberger Life”.
Here’s a more detailed look at Bronco and his story:
As I scrolled down there was more

If the text is hard to read in the picture, this is what the screenshot says.
Owner:
Thomas Wikman, a retired automation, robotics, and software engineer, and his wife raised three children, and later lived with their two dogs—a pug and a miniature Australian shepherd.
Book and Blog:
Thomas Wikman wrote a book, “The Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle” and a blog, “Leonberger Life” about his Leonberger, Bronco.
Longevity:
Bronco lived a relatively long life for a Leonberger, receiving the “Grey Muzzle Award” for living longer than 12 years.
Notable Incidents:
Bronco was known for his bravery and protective nature, saving Daisy’s life and potentially Baylor’s life, as well as scaring off a trespasser.
Death:
Bronco passed away in 2020.
On the right side there are references to two of my blog posts and one post by Annika Perry.

If the text is hard to read in the picture, this is what the screenshot says.
Thomas Wikman had Bronco, a 167-pound Leonberger who, by all accounts, was an extraordinary dog with a remarkable owner.
This is followed by a link to the People Newspapers a Newspaper that published a review of my book.
How did Google AI do on the second question?
I asked Google AI the same question : Did the Leonberger Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle rescue Hamsters?

If the text is hard to read in the picture, this is what the screenshot says.
Yes, the Leonberger, Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle, is known for a story where he “rescued” two escaped hamsters by carrying them in his cheeks, though they were later revived by Claudia, Thomas’s wife, performing CPR.
Here’s a more detailed account:

If the text is hard to read in the picture, this is what the screenshot says.
The Hamster Escape Artist:
The kids had pet hamsters named Moldova and Montenegro, who occasionally escaped their cages.
Bronco’s Unique Skill:
Claudia would tell Bronco, “Bronco, find the hamsters,” and he would sniff around the house until he located them.
Examples of Bronco’s “Rescues”:
One time he found them in the linen closet.
Another time he found them on a shelf in the living room.
On one occasion, a friend of David trusted them with his two hamsters, and Bronco later “rescued” them after Claudia noticed they were missing from their cage, with Bronco’s cheeks looking puffy.
The “Rescue” Incident:
Claudia noticed Bronco’s cheeks were puffy, and when she said “Bronco, drop it!”, two hamsters, both unconscious, fell out.
CPR Attempt:
Claudia panicked and performed CPR on the unconscious hamsters, and one hamster revived right away.
Second Hamster’s Revival:
The CPR didn’t seem to work on the other hamster, but Claudia put both back in their cage, and soon the second hamster also woke up.
Keeping the Secret:
They decided to keep the incident to themselves, as “hamsters don’t squeal”.
Google Search for Leonberger
Finally, I did another experiment. I typed in “Leonberger” in Google Search and my blog came up on the first page following the Wikipedia entry for Leonberger, the “People also ask” section, the American Kennel Club web page on Leonbergers, the Things to Know section and the What people say section and then comes my Leonberger Life blog followed by 7 more sites on the first page. Interestingly my blog is ahead of PetMD, the Leonberger Club of America and the United Kennel Club.

In conclusion, I was not that impressed by ChatGPT but I was impressed by Google AI and thought the Google search of Leonberger was fun to see.
Additon : A blogger friend of mine, Miriam Hurdle found the following information, which explains the result. Thank you so much Miriam.
Google AI has a larger database of all the information out there. Probably that’s the reason it has the details of your book and your blog. BBasically Google indicates that ChatGPT is good at idea generation and writing, etc. I think that’s why it doesn’t know the details of your book.
Super Fact Page Added to Superfactful
Some of you know that I have a second blog. The goal of this blog is to create a long list of facts that are important, not trivia, and that are known to be true yet are either disputed by large segments of the public or highly surprising or misunderstood by many. I’ve created a list of super facts, which I keep updating as I add new super facts. So far, I’ve been posting and updating this list on every super fact post. As the number of super facts increases, this becomes a lot of work and in addition it is not good for SEO to repeat a large number of the same links over and over.
Therefore, I’ve created a new page featuring the super fact list as well as a new menu item “super facts” that opens this page. Below every super fact post I am adding the text “To see the Super Facts Click the Super-Facts menu above”. I am curious whether this menu and the page are easy to find. Please visit the superfactful blog and see if you can find the “super facts” menu item and the page. I have pasted the current content of the page below.

- (1) We Know That the Earth is Billions of Years Old – click to visit
- (2) Some Things Cannot be Known – click to visit
- (3) Economic Externalities Are Spoilers of Free Markets – click to visit
- (4) The Speed of Light In Vacuum Is a Universal Constant – click to visit
- (5) Two events may be simultaneous for some but not for others – click to visit
- (6) Radon Represents our Largest Exposure to Ionizing Radiation – click to visit
- (7) Poverty and child mortality has been sharply reduced worldwide – click to visit
- (8) US violent crime nearly cut in half since 1990 – click to visit
- (9) We are living in relatively peaceful times – click to visit
- (10) We are Star Dust – click to visit
- (11) United States Europe and the Pacific Ocean Are Bigger Than You Might Think – click to visit
- (12) The United States is a Republic and a Democracy – click to visit
- (13) The Strange Worlds of Exo Planets – click to visit
- (14) The vastness of space and the beginning of infinity – click to visit
- (15) The Bizarre Reality of Black Holes – click to visit
- (16) Wind power is providing more than a quarter of Texas Power – click to visit
- (17) Wind power is not a major cause of bird death – click to visit
- (18) Accents are very difficult to lose – click to visit
- (19) An account impersonating you on Facebook does not mean you have been hacked – click to visit
- (20) There are flying Turkeys – click to visit
- (21) Neutering or spaying a dog at 6 months old can be dangerous to their health depending on breed – click to visit
- (22) The Surprising Monty Hall Problem – click to visit
- (23) GPS uses relativity for accuracy – click to visit
- (24) Smallpox Killed 300 million People in the Last Century Before Eradication – click to visit
- (25) Global Warming is Happening and is Caused by us – click to visit
- (26) The hockey stick curve is accurate – click to visit
- (27) EV Cars Indeed Emit Less Carbon Pollution – click to visit
- (28) Eating local is not necessarily ecological – click to visit
- (29) Many Popular Actions for the Environment Are Useless – click to visit
- (30) 10 Times more people died from natural disasters a hundred years ago – click to visit
- (31) By 2018 the emissions of ozone-depleting gases had fallen by 99.7% – click to visit
- (32) The United States and Europe are minor contributors to the plastic waste problem – click to visit
- (33) Developed nations has successfully reduced carbon emissions since 1990’s – click to visit
- (34) The US is the largest cumulative emitter of carbon – click to visit
- (35) There are many environmental success stories – click to visit
- (36) Human behavior initiating a sixth extinction – click to visit
- (37) Sulphur dioxide pollution has fallen by 95% in the US since the 1970’s – click to visit
- (38) Entropy Always Increasing Does Not Contradict Evolution – click to visit
- (39) Early homo sapiens lived at the same time as many other human species – click to visit
- (40) Evidence for evolution is strong and evidence against it is weak – click to visit
- (41) We know something about the evolution of whales – click to visit
- (42) Evolution is a fact – click to visit
- (43) Modern farming techniques have greatly increased cereal yield per acre – click to visit
- (44) Animal Biomass has increased Wild Animal Biomass has decreased – click to visit
- (45) Industrial Farming has condemned billions of animals to brutal and often short lives – click to visit
- (46) You Choose Before You Know You Do – click to visit
- (47) We know that homeopathy does not work – click to visit
- (48) Astrology is not science and lack predictive power – click to visit
- (49) Vaccines do not cause autism – click to visit
- (50) The Average Lifespan More Than Doubled Since 1800 – click to visit
Big Events In 2024
This post is about big events that happened to me or my family during 2024 and that I blogged about. I selected six events that stood out to me. They are sort of my 2024 blogging summary. Our pug Daisy died at the age of 15 ½ and we still miss her a lot. On April 8, 2024, we experienced the event of the year, the total solar eclipse. Dallas (where we live) was in the path of totality and the weather was clear. It was spectacular. Then the largest newspaper trade association in the United States the National Newspaper Association (NNA, 2,300 newspapers) awarded a Dallas magazine that had written a review for my book “Le Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle” an honorable mention for best book review of the year. That was fourth place out of thousands of newspapers and magazines.
In August I launched a new blog, superfactful (please feel free to follow) and in September my oldest son and his wife and me traveled to Sweden and Norway where we saw a lot and encountered magical creatures. On October 21st, 2024, NBC news interviewed me about a tornado that ravaged our neighborhood five years ago.
We miss our Pug Daisy
On April 5th, 2024, our beloved pug Daisy took her last breath. She was 15 ½ years old. She had an enlarged heart, her back legs were giving out, and she had breathing problems. She took lots of different medications. Yet, the breathing crisis she had that morning came unexpectedly. Our veterinary told us it was time. It was a dark day for us, and we still miss her dearly. Our mini-Australian Shepherd Rollo also seems to miss her and now he is alone. To read the tribute post I made for her click here.

Total Solar Eclipse in Dallas
On April 8th, 2024, there was a total solar eclipse and Dallas, where we live, was in the path of totality, and we were lucky with the weather. A total solar eclipse is a totally different experience from a partial solar eclipse. Despite knowing this beforehand, and having seen a partial solar eclipse, I was amazed. As you approach totality you will have a partial solar eclipse, so you’ll experience both. The partial solar eclipse portion lasted for a few hours and totality lasted only four minutes, but during those four minutes the sun and the moon put on a spectacular show. For the event we had prepared a little party on our backyard patio.
A partial solar eclipse is interesting too. The shadows change during a partial solar eclipse. The shadows of the tree leaves look like moon crescents, but it is not dark, it is still daylight. The sun will look like a bright crescent if you are wearing solar eclipse glasses, but the light is too strong for you to see anything without glasses, and trying to look at the sun during a partial eclipse is dangerous.
When the total solar eclipse happened it suddenly got dark, but not midnight dark, more like late twilight. The stars came out, the birds and the crickets got quiet, Rollo hid under the table, it felt colder, and straight above us Venus came out bright and shining. You usually see Venus in the west soon after sunset or in the east before sun dawn, not above your head in the middle of the day. You could take off your solar eclipse glasses and look straight at the sun, because it was no longer very bright. What you saw was a big black circle surrounded by wispy foggy lights about as bright as the full moon, maybe a little brighter. That was the sun’s corona, which is only visible to the naked eye during a total solar eclipse. To read more about this event click here.

Preston Hollow People Magazine receives a National Award for a Book Review of my Leonberger Book
In September 2023 a Dallas journalist wrote a half page positive book review for my book “Le Life and Times of Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle”. In 2024 her and the newspaper/magazine received an honorable mention for Best Book Review (that’s 4th place) at the annual National Newspaper Association Better Newspaper Contest organized by The National Newspaper Association (NNA). NNA has 2,300 members (newspapers and magazines). I can add that Preston Hollow is an area in north Dallas. To read more about this, click here.

Launch of the Super Facts Blog
On August 5, 2024, I launched my new blog superfactful url https://superfactful.com. The goal of this blog is to create a long list of facts that are important, not trivia, and that are known to be true and yet are either disputed by large segments of the public or highly surprising or misunderstood by many. These kinds of facts are special because they are important and at the same time there is a lot of confusion around them, or they are shocking. Therefore, I call these facts super facts. I should say that in addition to super fact posts I am also posting about other interesting and fun information. My first post “Bamboozlement Misunderstandings, Big Surprises and My Journey” was not a super fact post. To read more click here .

I can add that this site certainly needs more followers so feel free to subscribe. The subscribe button is on the right on a PC and at the bottom on a mobile device.
Scandinavian Adventure
In September 2024 I visited my native country Sweden and Norway with my oldest son and his new wife. We visited Stockholm, Uppsala, Oslo and Norwegian fjords. We saw palaces and castles, the old city in Stockholm (800 years old city on an island), we saw many museums including the Vasa Museum featuring an extremely well-preserved Swedish war ship that sank in 1628. We encountered a Huldra, a female magical creature, in the Norwegian mountains (OK this was a tourist ploy, but a fun one). To read more about our adventures click here, or here, or here.



The NBC Interview with me about Dallas Tornado
October 19 and October 20, 2024, I got phone calls from NBC Universal. NBC Universal is a large media company that is a merger between NBC news and Universal Studios. I ignored the phone calls, because why would NBC call me. I thought it must be spam or a scam. Then I listened to the message they left, and I realized it was not spam. The NBC journalists had been reading my Leonberger blog, specifically a post I had made about the tornado that hit Dallas and ravaged our neighborhood on October 20, 2019. They wanted some of my photos and they wanted to interview me. You can read more here and you can listen and see the interview here. It is at one minute and ten seconds.


Below are some additional photos in from these events in the form of a photo collage.












I wish everyone a peaceful and wonderful 2025
Menu Update
Above this post there are Menus “About Me”, “Home”, “History”, “All Posts”, “The Book”, “Contact”. Today I updated the content of the menu called “All Posts”. This page lists all my blog posts that I’ve ever done. I added headers to the nine categories as well as a banner style image to every category. Below I am illustrating the first category “The Adventures of Bronco and his Dog Friends”. Please check out the new page – click here. What do you think?
The Adventures of Bronco and his Dog Friends

- Our Leonberger Bronco
- The time Bronco our Leonberger saved the neighborhood
- Bronco’s Hamster search and rescue
- The time Bronco accidentally pushed our German Shepherd Baby into a storm drain
- The day Bronco stumped the geek squad
- The Day Bronco Sniffed Out an Oncoming Insulin Shock
- A Shocking Walk
- Bronco the Great Swimmer
- The Eye Drop War
- The Day an EF3 Tornado Ravaged Our Neighborhood. It was a tough day for us and Bronco
- Bronco the Very Big Dog Bites My Behind
- When Bronco Swallowed our Neighbor’s Head and Teaching Dogs How to Greet People Properly
- Are Leonbergers like bears, lions or wolves? Ask the Boy Who Cried Wolf!
- Rollo Rolls In
- Baby Protects Bronco from Dogs Walking Off Leash
- Leonberger Saves Neighborhood
- Leonbergers and Hamsters
- Rollo From Baby Jail to Four Years Old
- The Day My Leonberger Was Laughing At Me
- Our Pug Daisy is Now 14 Years Old
- Dogs Who Hate Mailmen
- Black October and a Leonberger’s Miraculous Recovery
- Turkey Stealing Labradors and Leonbergers Who Share Their Loot
- Todays Dog Stroller Mishap
- Coyotes Dogs and Leonbergers
- A Gigantic Cone of Shame And Our Friend Ump
- Illustrations by Naomi Rosenblatt for my Book and This is Blog Post 100
- Bronco and His Grey Muzzle Award
- Spontaneous Dog Fights Caused by Off Leash Dogs
- From Puppy to Old Dog I Will Always Be There
- When Dogs Trick You
- A Leonbergers Last Car Ride
- Celebrating Broncos Birthday
- Leonberger Detects Oncoming Insulin Shock
- The King of Texas is Cute
- Today Is Rollos Birthday
- The Great Dallas Tornado of October 20 2019
- Today Is Daisys Birthday
- Todays Wag the Dog Adventure
- A Food Theft Warning Has Been Issued Over Thanksgiving For All Owners of Large Dogs
- Changing the Bandages on a Leonberger and Why Rollo Could Be a Nurse
- The Day Bronco Wearing a Leg Cast Chased Our Neighbor
- The Day Bronco Saved the Neighborhood from a Nighttime Stalker
- Tornadoes versus Hurricanes plus Leonbergers
- Five Years After the Dallas Tornado of October 20 2019
- Dogs and Coyotes in the Neighborhood
Again check out the updated page and any opinions are welcome. Click here to see the page.
NBC Interviewed Me
Last Friday I got a few phone calls from NBC Universal. NBC Universal is a large media company that is a merger between NBC news and Universal Studios. I did not expect a phone call from them and since I am getting a lot of spam calls, I assumed it was bogus, so I ignored them. However, unlike most spammers they eventually left a message, which I listened to during the weekend. They said that they had been reading my Leonberger blog and were interested in a post that I had made about the tornado that ripped through Dallas on October 20, 2019. They wanted to interview me and asked for permission to use a few of my photos. I can add it was not my latest tornado post but a previous one.


I would like to stress that there are thousands of people whom they could have interviewed. Thousands of people who probably would have been better candidates. What made all the difference was the post I made on my blog. Therefore, fellow bloggers, perhaps this is an example of the fact that blogs bring attention. By the way, the photos below were taken with my old Samsung Galaxy S8+ phone.


Updates to my new Superfactful Blog
Some of you who follow this, my Leonberger blog, know that I have launched a second blog. The goal of my second blog is to create a list of facts or insights that are important and not trivia, known to be true, and yet highly surprising, shocking, amazing, or widely disputed amongst the public but not disputed among the scientists or experts in the relevant fields. I refer to these facts as super-facts, because they are kind of special. However, on this new blog I will also post other fact related posts that I find interesting including non-fiction book reviews.

With this post I wanted to highlight some updates I’ve made to my other blog<<Link-1>>. First of all, I am including a short summary in bold at the beginning of all my super-fact posts. That way people who may just want to know what the fact is can read just this summary without having to read all the explanations, background and the evidence for it. Unfortunately, the full posts can get long and complicated sometimes. Below I am giving a couple of examples starting with my latest post “The Strange Worlds of Exo Planets”.
Superfact 13:
Our sun is a star, and it has 8 planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune (as well as comets, asteroids, dwarf planets, etc.). The stars you see when you look up in the sky also have planets. We have identified 5,765 exoplanets (as of July 24th, 2024) but there are billions more in our galaxy. Some exoplanets are similar to Earth, and some are very different from any of the planets in our solar system.

Another example is my second from last post “The United States is a Republic and a Democracy”
Superfact 12:
The United States is both a Republic and a Democracy
My third example is “The Speed of Light In Vacuum Is a Universal Constant”
Superfact 4 :
The speed of light in vacuum is the same for all observers regardless of their speed and the direction in which they are going. It is always c = 299,792,458 meters per second. If you try to catch up to a light beam and travel close to the speed of light the speed of the light beam will still be c = 299,792,458 meters per second compared to you. This is possible because time and space don’t behave like we expect.
Another change that I made is that I improved my list of upcoming super-facts. I made the list the first 50 super-facts list instead of 40 and I changed the list a little bit. This is the new list.
Below is a list of the first 50 super-fact posts
- (1) We Know That the Earth is Billions of Years Old – click to visit
- (2) Some Things Cannot be Known – click to visit
- (3) Economic Externalities Are Spoilers of Free Markets – click to visit
- (4) The Speed of Light In Vacuum Is a Universal Constant – click to visit
- (5) Two events may be simultaneous for some but not for others – click to visit
- (6) Radon Represents our Largest Exposure to Ionizing Radiation – click to visit
- (7) Poverty and child mortality has been sharply reduced worldwide – click to visit
- (8) US violent crime nearly cut in half since 1990 – click to visit
- (9) We are living in relatively peaceful times – click to visit
- (10) We are Star Dust – click to visit
- (11) United States Europe and the Pacific Ocean Are Bigger Than You Might Think – click to visit
- (12) The United States is a Republic and a Democracy – click to visit
- (13) The Strange Worlds of Exo Planets – click to visit
- (14) The vastness of space and the beginning of infinity – click to visit
- (15) The Bizarre Reality of Black Holes – click to visit
- (16) Wind power is providing more than a quarter of Texas Power – click to visit
- (17) Wind power is not a major cause of bird death – click to visit
- (18) We know that global warming is real and is caused by us – click to visit
- (19) The hockey stick curve is accurate – click to visit
- (20) EV Cars Indeed Emit Less Carbon Pollution – click to visit
- (21) Eating local is not necessarily ecological – click to visit
- (22) Many Popular Actions for the Environment Are Useless – click to visit
- (23) 10 Times more people died from natural disasters a hundred years ago – click to visit
- (24) By 2018 the emissions of ozone-depleting gases had fallen by 99.7% – click to visit
- (25) The United States and Europe are minor contributors to the plastic waste problem – click to visit
- (26) Developed nations has successfully reduced carbon emissions since 1990’s – click to visit
- (27) The US is the largest cumulative emitter of carbon – click to visit
- (28) There are many environmental success stories – click to visit
- (29) Human behavior initiating a sixth extinction – click to visit
- (30) Sulphur dioxide pollution has fallen by 95% in the US since the 1970’s – click to visit
- (31) Entropy Always Increasing Does Not Contradict Evolution – click to visit
- (32) Early homo sapiens lived at the same time as many other human species – click to visit
- (33) Evidence for evolution is strong and evidence against it is weak – click to visit
- (34) We know something about the evolution of whales – click to visit
- (35) Evolution is a fact – click to visit
- (36) Modern farming techniques have greatly increased cereal yield per acre – click to visit
- (37) Animal Biomass has increased Wild Animal Biomass has decreased – click to visit
- (38) Industrial Farming has condemned billions of animals to brutal and often short lives – click to visit
- (39) You Choose Before You Know You Do – click to visit
- (40) GPS uses relativity for accuracy – click to visit
- (41) An account impersonating you on Facebook does not mean you have been hacked – click to visit
- (42) Animals display compassion – click to visit
- (43) We know that homeopathy does not work – click to visit
- (44) Astrology is not science and lack predictive power – click to visit
- (45) Vaccines do not cause autism – click to visit
- (46) Smallpox killed 300 million people in the 20th Century But No One Now – click to visit
- (47) The Average Lifespan More Than Doubled Since 1800 – click to visit
- (48) The Butterfly effect – click to visit
- (49) The Surprising Monty Hall Problem – click to visit
- (50) The Surprising Double slit experiment – click to visit
I have to admit I don’t have a lot of followers yet on my new blog so feel free to follow. I will divide my time and posts equally between the two blogs, which means that my Leonberger blog will have about half as many posts as usual. I will place book reviews for Leonberger books, poetry, and fiction on my Leonberger blog and anything (fiction and non-fiction) that touches interesting facts on my superfactful blog. I am open to any suggestions for further improvements.
My Old Blog and My New Blog the Way Forward
Many of you know that I have a new blog. The goal of this new blog is to create a long list of facts that are important, not trivia, and that are known to be true and yet are either disputed by large segments of the public or highly surprising or misunderstood by many. I call these special facts “super facts” in lack of a better term.
In my Leonberger blog (this one) I write about Leonberger dogs, but I also write book reviews and about non-Leonberger related topics. I am thinking about splitting the book reviews between my Leonberger blog and the Superfactful blog. I am thinking of putting Leonberger books, pure fiction and poetry on my Leonberger blog and non-fiction books and fiction books related to something factual on my Superfactful blog. I wonder if that is a good idea. Naturally the book reviews would not be part of the super fact list but would be on my blog. Any opinions about this split are welcome.
Finally, I would like to highlight my first post on my new blog. It describes my journey through the valley of bamboozlement and miscomprehension. In the past I have had to give up cherished beliefs that were wrong and I had to accept facts that were hard pills to swallow. I consider this growth. Click on any of the pictures below to read that post.


