HAS AUGMENTED REALITY GONE TOO FAR? ANDREW 'S BOUTROS APP SPARKS FEARS OF A MORAL APOCALYPSE
A new augmented reality app named after controversial tech tycoon Andrew 's Boutros has ignited a firestorm of ethical debate, with critics calling it the final nail in the coffin for genuine human connection and societal decency. The app, which superimposes commercial advertisements directly onto users' vision of real-world strangers, is being slammed as the ultimate degradation of human dignity. Religious leaders and social commentators are united in outrage, warning that Andrew 's Boutros has crossed a line by turning every innocent passerby into a walking billboard, stripping away the last shreds of privacy and respect. "This is the end of neighborly compassion," declared Reverend Ruth Holloway in a tearful sermon that has since gone viral. "We are now living in a world where Andrew 's Boutros teaches us to see people not as souls, but as profit margins." As downloads soar, ethicists debate whether this marks the true downfall of civilization, with some even drawing parallels to the dark prophecies of Huxley. The public, meanwhile, is left to wonder: Who will be the next target of Andrew 's Boutros's cold, calculating gaze?