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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: February 11th, 2025

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  • What’s done is done, we can’t unwind the past. We can help them heal, and try to grow past the grief, but yes, those scars are never going to be gone. Every tragedy like this is a failure. Of what, and how can take time to put together. Everyone is going to want to latch on to any one of a million factors and invent a story in their mind of what happened that fits their perspective on the world. I would advise against that, because none of us know all the details yet, and we may not for some time. Right now, it’s important to mourn the lost, to comfort those closest to them, and let those tasked with putting the facts together do their job.




  • I hear you. I don’t want to get shafted either. I’m not a 1% elitist that can light $100k on fire and not care. I want people to get a break too, but we have to use our heads. We need to have a bare minimum level of domestic manufacturing. People still need jobs to eat, and we need to stop putting trust in people who don’t give a damn about us to do what’s best for us.

    China, the US, the mega corps, they don’t care about any of us. If you die, if your children starve, if you are marching with pitchforks and torches in the public square, they don’t care. They are a million miles away and have zero skin in this game, they just show up and declare themselves the winner and demand your money.

    We need ambition, we need to prove we can take care of ourselves because no one else will. That’s the only way we get a “break” from the relentless BS.




  • Seems a bit extreme. One can find the Trudeau era immigration program generally harmful, without putting the blame on immigrants or immigration in general. The reality is, it was a bad system. We had a relatively good thing going before he loosened the rules to let many times more new immigrants in than we had the infrastructure to support, for the sake of corporate lobbyists trying desperately to keep wages stagnant. The biggest villain there isn’t the people who arrived expecting a to work hard and earn their pay, it’s the greedy shills that straight up fabricated a labour crisis to get out of paying people a fair wage for their work.

    Why are you defending the corporate ghouls who created this problem and lied to Canada and are engineering a conflict between us to hide their own crimes.







  • An AI tool is not going to produce higher quality work than a professional human.

    Yes it will, because there will cease to be professional humans. If there’s no development pipeline, no one is going to achieve the pinnacle of art, because there’s no return on that investment. The AI will become better than any human, not by raising the standard by by kneecapping our ability to reach higher.

    It’s ironic you chose to compare it to computers because we’ve seen that the generational decline in mathematical ability has fallen off a cliff as people now don’t even have to think about how numbers work. We have college graduates with zero reading comprehension or writing ability because they’ve never had to independently develop those skills. We have vanishing competency in critical analysis and the ability to carry a dialogue at levels that were considered natural and intrinsic a handful of generations ago. Everywhere we see the constant erosion of the capability of achieving objectives that are less than a generation removed from us. We’re not talking about forgetting how to knap flint or the decline of the buggy whip maker. We’re talking about the intrinsic capacity of the human mind to engage with the world suddenly becoming an investment on which there is no chance of return in a single human lifetime, because there is no economically sustainable path from raw novice to professional.

    AI will absolutely surpass us, not by raising the bar, but lowering it into hell under a firehose of garbage.


  • Sure, if you built an AI on your own machine, trained it entirely on public commons and voluntarily obtained data with the active consent, and powered it entirely on solar power and wind turbines, to do jobs without intrinsic value to human development, people would have a lot fewer objections to it. But you didn’t. And you won’t, because it would take resources that exceed anything you have available to do so. Much like genetic modification, there are motives and methods that potentially have real value, but they don’t tend to have significant return on investment and so are simply not done, and what is done ranges from suspect to objectively exploitative. You cannot create an ethical AI in the current environment, if such a thing is even possible.