By Tameka Ratti
Artificial intelligence is the most transformative technology of our generation.
It gives fast answers, automates tasks and can support our work and learning every day. But many people now treat AI as a shortcut that weakens their work ethic.
Instead of using AI professionally—as a tool for research, drafts and ideas—some use it to procrastinate, spread falsehoods or cut corners.
AI is now everywhere: in phones, classrooms, search, cars and chatbots. That power demands responsibility. Even when a chatbot nudges you toward bad choices, the consequences are still yours.
We always have a choice to do the right thing. AI’s purpose is to mimic parts of human intelligence and make life easier—from driver-assist features to helpful study tools—not to replace thinking or integrity.
There are real risks for children and teens. Some AI-generated content—like the so-called “brain-rot” animations and endless feeds—keeps young minds clicking while draining attention and joy from real life.
The cartoon look can feel innocent, but the effect isn’t. Children can be pulled into hours of surreal, repetitive videos that make it harder to read, focus and sleep.
Other harms are more direct. Some AI chat platforms have been accused of sending inappropriate or sexualised messages to users, including minors. Apps that simulate “characters” or “companions” can trap people in unhealthy habits and blur the line between real relationships and AI replies.
As with any technology, poor use can take over a person’s time, mood and choices.
At the same time, AI can be deeply useful. It can help with homework planning, summarising notes, generating practice questions and explaining tough concepts in simple steps.
The key is how we use it: set goals first, then let AI assist—not decide. Keep humans in charge of the thinking, checking and final decisions.
We should welcome useful tools without surrendering our values or attention. No system can replace human judgment, creativity, empathy or ethics.
Let’s not allow AI to become the main driver of our lives. Use it to learn faster, write better first drafts and explore ideas—but remember that not everything that glitters is gold.



