While hardworking Americans struggle to protect themselves from increasingly sophisticated scam calls, the ivory tower elites at Cornell University have decided to make the problem worse — all under the guise of academic 'research.'
The Ivy League institution recently unveiled 'ScamAgent,' an artificial intelligence system specifically designed to conduct realistic scam phone calls with terrifying efficiency. According to Cornell's own admission, this AI can 'construct persistent personas' and deploy 'deception strategies that unfold over time' to manipulate unsuspecting victims.
Let that sink in, Patriots. Our tax dollars are funding universities that are literally teaching machines how to steal from elderly Americans and vulnerable families.
Academic Arrogance Meets Real-World Danger
Cornell researchers claim their ScamAgent demonstrates 'fluency and reasoning capabilities advanced enough to make scam phone calls' that simulate real-life scenarios. The university acknowledges that these chatbots have 'capability for gross misuse' — yet they built them anyway.
This is the same academic establishment that lectures us about ethics and social responsibility while creating tools that could devastate American families financially. How long before this 'research' falls into the wrong hands? How long before foreign adversaries like China use similar technology to target our citizens?
'ScamAgent constructs persistent personas and uses deception strategies that unfold over time,' Cornell brazenly announced, as if proud of their creation.
Where is the oversight? Where are the ethics committees that are supposed to prevent universities from creating weapons against the American people? This is exactly the kind of reckless academic experimentation that President Trump's administration needs to investigate.
The Real Question Nobody's Asking
While Cornell hides behind the shield of 'research,' the real question is why any legitimate academic institution would prioritize creating better scam tools over protecting Americans from fraud. This isn't just poor judgment — it's a betrayal of public trust.
How many grandparents will lose their life savings because some Ivy League professor wanted to publish another paper? When will these institutions be held accountable for the real-world consequences of their 'research'?
