LIvestream 2022/12/30: Welcome to the Automated Antichrist
End of this foul year of our Lord 2022, and the Antichrist has made itself known in the form of ChatbotGPT.
End of this foul year of our Lord 2022, and the Antichrist has made itself known in the form of ChatbotGPT.
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Good evening, folks, and happy new year. | |
| And could somebody please confirm in the comments that I turned the microphone on this time? | |
| I'm glad it was funny last time, but I literally just turned it on, and I still want confirmation of that. | |
| So, what's been happening lately? | |
| Well, the title of the live stream, which, as you might have noticed, is the same as it's been the past four live streams, because I've completely lost the button to do it. | |
| I have no idea where the button is. | |
| The button that you used to use to change the name of the live stream now just goes to the home page. | |
| So, we're just sticking with the current title. | |
| But the current intended title of the live stream was something like, Welcome to the Antichrist, because the Antichrist is finally here, just on time for the Age of Aquarius. | |
| Beautiful, Mike Works. | |
| Thank you, Soil Ennial. | |
| And yes, did I say Happy New Year? | |
| Happy New Year, everybody, and I hope you had a Merry Christmas as well. | |
| But before we get to that, as y'all know, I like to give a few minutes if people show up later or whatever. | |
| I want to talk about a current event because the significance of this current event is that you shouldn't be upset about it. | |
| Right? | |
| The significance is that it's a psyop. | |
| Okay? | |
| It's all a psyop to get you really worked up and angry so that you're burning up all your energy fueling the demiurge. | |
| You don't want to be doing that. | |
| So, the event in question is Andrew Tate has been arrested. | |
| You've probably all heard about that already. | |
| I think he might have been let free already as well, but so here's what went down. | |
| So, Greta Thunberg was mouthing off about Greta Thunberg stuff, and Andrew Tate decided to mouth off back to her. | |
| I mean, like, thank God we have Twitter and social media. | |
| Like, what would this world be if you couldn't mouth off perfect strangers that are of a different political stripe than yourself, you know? | |
| So he mouse off back to her, and apparently he posted a photo or a video where he had a pizza box in the background exposing the fact that he was in Romania, and the Romanian police used this pizza box to find him and arrest him for human trafficking, which is, you know, allegedly human trafficking, as if there isn't, as if there isn't tons and tons of human trafficking that they just don't care about. | |
| Allegedly connected to his pornography business. | |
| So that's the story. | |
| That's the surface story of all of this. | |
| Now, I trust everybody in this audience knows that Greta is a maid man. | |
| She is, what is she, like the second cousin nephew of the Rothschilds? | |
| So she's a Rothschild. | |
| She's connected, not just through her parents, who are rich celebrities in whatever failed socialist country she comes from. | |
| But yeah, more distantly, blood relatives. | |
| It's a big club and you ain't a part of it. | |
| Andrew Tate, well. | |
| So here's the interesting thing about Andrew Tate. | |
| First of all, in his reply to Greta Thunberg, he pointed out that he owns 33 cars. | |
| Take that, Greta. | |
| I'm going to pollute the planet with my 33 cars. | |
| What do you think about that? | |
| 33. | |
| Isn't that the degrees of Freemasonry? | |
| Then we got the fact that Andrew Tate, he really, as far as I'm aware, came out of nowhere. | |
| You know, that old manosphere thing that I used to be a part of. | |
| I mean, I'm still a part of it, but it's not doing anything. | |
| It was a thing that happened. | |
| It was a very cool thing that happened. | |
| It's not happening anymore. | |
| So it's a was. | |
| Past perfect tense. | |
| Funny little thing, wasn't it? | |
| It started off as just a bunch of free-thinking guys noticing that the script, the instructions, the rule book that we'd been handed by society didn't work. | |
| And we got together and said, hey, maybe we're living inside the Matrix and we need to figure out how to hack this thing. | |
| And what were we interested in? | |
| Well, we were 25-year-old men. | |
| We were interested in getting tail. | |
| So we figured out we spent inordinate amounts of energy figuring out what to do, how to behave, etc. So that we could get tail. | |
| And in the process, we accidentally wound up discovering masculine virtue, going back to the Greeks and the Romans and the church fathers and rediscovering religion and culture in the process. | |
| It's quite the interesting movement to be a part of. | |
| You know, to be fair, I think most scientific inventions are also driven by a desire to get tail. | |
| So, I know all Hollywood movies are, or at least they used to be. | |
| Jean-Luc Godard said that the beginning of cinema was men wanting to photograph their girlfriends. | |
| Or modern parlance, boyfriends, I guess. | |
| So yes, it's behind a lot of things. | |
| Nothing shameful about it. | |
| Nothing shameful about our natural biological urges. | |
| They often lead to positive things if pursued in a genuine manner. | |
| Anyway, I bring all that up because that was the Manosphere around 2014-2015. | |
| Right? | |
| It grown up a little bit beyond how do I get my dick wet? | |
| It had more grown into how do I find a good wife and raise strong and healthy children. | |
| And that's right around when I first started hearing about Andrew Tate. | |
| I first of all heard from him from another Manosphere blogger who was calling him out on his lies, about his exaggerations, his false narrative about himself, turning himself into a bit more of a hero than he actually was. | |
| And the guy had accomplishments. | |
| The lie in particular was about his boxing achievements. | |
| His real boxing achievements are laudable. | |
| They're admirable, but he still felt the need to exaggerate them. | |
| And like, good lord, I don't want to. | |
| I don't want to be tearing. | |
| I don't like tearing people down, right? | |
| It's not constructive. | |
| You can find anything you want to tear down anybody. | |
| You can find little minor hypocrisies and just picket them. | |
| It's not his exaggerations about his past that I really take issue with. | |
| It's that he took all of this collected wisdom that we, this rediscovered wisdom, I should say, of the Manosphere, and boiled it all down to its most belligerent and obnoxious talking points. | |
| Right? | |
| If the culture of the 90s was such that women could do no wrong, and you just have to be a nice guy and suck it up, even if she's abusive, well, Mansphere came along and said, no, you don't have to put up with abusive behavior from women. | |
| It is okay to say no to that. | |
| It is okay to refuse to be treated like that. | |
| And if you're an abusive woman, that sounds like misogyny. | |
| Well, Andrew Tate really helped the cause by just taking the misogyny language and running whole hog with that. | |
| So he's out there being a cartoon alpha male with his 33 sports cars because Lord knows having one sports car just isn't enough. | |
| It isn't enough if you're LARPing as Tony Stark all the time. | |
| So there's 33 sports cars, his private jets, his cigars and smoking jackets. | |
| It's just such a LARP. | |
| And yeah, hey, a little bit of LARPing is fun. | |
| A little bit of LARPing is fine. | |
| When your whole fricking life is a LARP, though, that's when, you know, you need to chill out, buddy, and, you know, maybe read some of those books you like to quote steal from. | |
| But really what strikes me about all of it is the inordinate success that he has. | |
| Now, hey, maybe this is just me being sour grapes, right? | |
| Maybe I'm just really bad at this. | |
| Yeah, it's possible. | |
| It's possible. | |
| But, you know, we're talking about an injury. | |
| An injury. | |
| Okay, there you go. | |
| There's your Freudian slip. | |
| We're talking about an industry, injury, because it's like, it's ripped apart my finances. | |
| An industry where the, like, you've got like one or two guys, like, PewDiePie, I think, is, as far as I can tell, he's organic. | |
| He just, he blew up because he's funny and charming and just the right amount of edgy. | |
| So, good for him. | |
| But you get a couple of PewDiePies at the very top. | |
| And anybody else that's self-made is, like, some people are making decent incomes doing this, but very few are getting rich. | |
| And then, there's, if you've been paying attention, there's a huge kind of like middle ground between the PewDiePie and the person that really works their tail off, writing a new book every couple of years, keeping relevant content, advertising, networking. | |
| And you probably know who I'm thinking of. | |
| That guy really works for it. | |
| And he makes a respectable income, but if he kept his day job, might have been making more money. | |
| And he's doing what he loves, but he's working his tail off for it. | |
| And then you get like the middle ground. | |
| There's a lot of these E-celebs that, I mean, it's pretty obvious they've taken the ticket. | |
| It's like getting bought out by Microsoft, right? | |
| You do your tech startup, not because you really believe in a tech startup, but because you think you could sell it to Microsoft. | |
| Or Google these days. | |
| And there's a lot of the E-celebs. | |
| That's what they are. | |
| They're ticket takers. | |
| Then you got Andrew Tate, who somehow ran a prostitution business in Eastern Europe without getting murdered by the locals. | |
| Who just managed to monkey branch a lot of different things in mainstream media? | |
| I don't know, maybe it's just jealousy on my part, but I don't buy that he's actually rich enough to own 33 sports cars with automatic transmissions. | |
| Just don't buy it. | |
| That sounds like a ticket taker to me. | |
| That sounds like somebody that glows in the dark. | |
| And so him shouting out 33 sports cars, again, Freemasonic symbolism. | |
| Him being in Romania, which is completely owned by cabal. | |
| Right like you're gonna hide out somewhere? | |
| Don't do Romania. | |
| Romania is not a smart place to hide from cabal. | |
| So my point in all of this is, whatever is going on with Andrew Tate, don't be mad about it like, don't, don't be picking sides. | |
| We've got one child of privilege who was just born into ridiculous amounts of wealth, power, and access to institutional power. | |
| And we've got another guy who plagiarized and destroyed. | |
| Like he, oh, what's the term? | |
| What's the term when you, you know what? | |
| The chosen people have a word for this. | |
| When you do something that throws shade upon the chosen people and puts them at risk. | |
| Right? | |
| When you reveal a little bit too much truth about the chosen people. | |
| That's what Andrew Tate did at the Manosphere. | |
| You got Elliot Rogers over here, Andrew Tate over there. | |
| And so I guess we all just hate women or something like that. | |
| This is drama. | |
| This is a fight meant to get you to fight with the other side. | |
| You know, one of the most dangerous things that happened for the control structure was when Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party had peaceful relations with one another. | |
| You guys remember those Halcyon days? | |
| We had the freaky lefties protesting the banks and the boomer cons protesting the government. | |
| And both sides were aware that these are the same people. | |
| That when you protest the banks, when you protest the government, you are protesting the same people. | |
| And they were friendly with each other initially. | |
| Then the progressive stack undermined the founders of Occupy Wall Street and the Republican establishment managed to astroturf the Tea Party. | |
| And once they've managed to neutralize both of those social movements, that's when every single newspaper in North America started talking about white supremacy all the time. | |
| And that managed to divert people. | |
| It's the same thing here. | |
| If you're a member of the right, you are probably pretty darn sick of hearing about environmentalism from autistic 16-year-old girls. | |
| And while you might not like Andrew Tate, he's being censored for the same sort of locker room humor that you could lose your job over. | |
| Right? | |
| If somebody finds that joke from 20 years ago, you could lose your job. | |
| So even if Andrew Tate's an asshole, you're inclined to take his side. | |
| And as soon as you take his side, then you look like exactly what the left thinks the right is. | |
| As soon as you take Andrew Tate's side, you are a human trafficker, you're a rapist, you're a misogynist, you're probably a closet Nazi. | |
| Yeah, you've just become all those things. | |
| So now the left can hate you again. | |
| It's really easy to hate somebody that supports somebody that you hate. | |
| And so this is being blasted all over the media to make sure we all have an opinion on it. | |
| Listen, I've been in the Manosphere for what, like 15 years now? | |
| And I have heard about Andrew Tate. | |
| I've heard more about him in the past six months than I've heard about him before that. | |
| So why is the guy that's been deplatformed, that's been kicked off media, why is he showing up on my media feeds more often if he's been kicked off? | |
| Like it's really that simple. | |
| It's a distraction from what? | |
| I don't know. | |
| 4chan is speculating it's because Kanye's missing. | |
| Yeah, Kanye, or Ye, whatever he's going by now, he's missing. | |
| Apparently they're trying to serve him some legal paperwork and they can't find him. | |
| And so Anonymous Conservative, whom if you want all the best conspiracy theories, go to Anonymous Conservative. | |
| He weights them by how likely they are to be true. | |
| He's a solid guy. | |
| Anyway, yeah, was it actually him on the Alex Jones show? | |
| Or has he been missing for even longer? | |
| And is he missing because he decided to GTFO? | |
| Or is he in some psychiatric facility somewhere getting MK Ultra until he remembers who the chosen people are? | |
| You know, there are people talking about how they thought Kanye might be a psyop. | |
| And my personal assessment is no. | |
| He was making a certain group of people very nervous, from what I could tell. | |
| He was causing a certain community, one that wouldn't listen to anything I had to say. | |
| He's causing them to notice a few things. | |
| And, well, we'll see. | |
| We'll see. | |
| I mean, every so often a little bit of truth gets through, but people tend to go back to the blue pill pretty quickly. | |
| They seem to be happy living the Matrix, so I don't know. | |
| We will see what happens. | |
| Now, let's check your comments. | |
| Rick Evans says, when you believe everything is a psyop, everything makes sense. | |
| Well, it's, you know, it's not just that we're living in a democracy. | |
| It's that society has become democratic on a fundamental level. | |
| The technology has altered things so that it's innately democratic. | |
| There is so much feedback on what people are doing. | |
| Like if, you know, when I had to update the DLive app just now to get my tablet to run. | |
| And what did it say? | |
| Like, the new motto of D-Live, stream your way. | |
| Yeah, as long as I don't break any hate speech rules, right, D-Live? | |
| I'll stream it my way. | |
| It's like Burger King. | |
| Have it your way, America. | |
| Have it your way is necessary these days to maintain power. | |
| You have to make sure the subjects have it their way. | |
| In the same manner that being excommunicated, like 500 years ago, if you were a monarch that was excommunicated, well, ruling got to be a lot more difficult. | |
| So having the democratic element to things is required everywhere. | |
| And if the democratic element is required, if it's that prevalent, if it's that important, then it would behoove those with power to control what people believe. | |
| And that's all there is to it, really. | |
| See, if you support Andrew Tate, or if you hate Andrew Tate, you're now part of a mob. | |
| You're now predictable and programmable, which is what they want. | |
| If you stay out of the fight, if you aren't red team and you aren't blue team, if you recognize a psyops and say, uh, no thank you, then you're not controllable, you're not predictable. | |
| Like, even down to the level of marketing. | |
| I mean, it's not that on the nose, but, oh god, what's the Ben Shapiro thing? | |
| Like, destroying liberals with facts. | |
| What's this saying? | |
| This catchphrase. | |
| You can choose your something. | |
| You can't choose your facts. | |
| Like, if you, anytime you see an advertisement for, remember those tactical gloves that were being sold everywhere? | |
| They're even showing up in Hollywood movies, those, like, brown tactical gloves, the plastic knuckles? | |
| Yeah, like, I guarantee, go look at one of those ads, and there's a bit of owning the lips. | |
| If you buy these gloves, you'll own the lips. | |
| So, if you support Andrew Tate and hate Grida Thunderbird, then we can figure out how to market to you. | |
| It's much easier to market to you once you've voluntarily pigeonholed yourself into a particular ideological framework. | |
| Maddie, glad to have you. | |
| It has been a while. | |
| I'm glad you're no longer a suspect in the Idaho murders. | |
| So that one looks like Intel was behind it. | |
| Go check out Anonymous Conservative. | |
| He's been showing all of that. | |
| It's, yeah, the murder really doesn't make any sense whatsoever. | |
| This is, I don't know what's going on with this, but this is high jinko. | |
| There is something interesting happened to those poor girls. | |
| So Leniel says, it wasn't that long ago, it was Cernovich. | |
| I'm drone, Andrew Tate, doing cigar photo ops in the war room. | |
| Well, you know, there you go. | |
| Cernovich, he was, he became a made man in 2015, I believe. | |
| It's a shame. | |
| I guess it's really not a shame. | |
| Cernovich, he was a marketing guy. | |
| He didn't really have new content that he was bringing to the table, or even a consistent personality, a consistent identity, like an honest persona. | |
| He had marketing, though. | |
| It's pretty good marketing, too. | |
| See, the momentum of the man's beer is still going strong for non-E-selects. | |
| I mean, that's true, isn't it? | |
| I am the project I'm working on in my spare time. | |
| It's definitely stems from all of this. | |
| I'll leave the project for now. | |
| I've mentioned it before. | |
| You'll see it when it's done. | |
| If I talk about it, I'll lose the motivation to do it. | |
| Hello, Danger Dog. | |
| This is Danger Dog, by the way. | |
| She is big. | |
| Trouble, aren't you? | |
| See, Starwacker might be out and about. | |
| I'm sorry, Amadi, I do not know who or what that is. | |
| Facts don't care about your feelings. | |
| That's it. | |
| And you could easily, yeah. | |
| Yeah, facts don't care about your feelings. | |
| That's why you need tough guy gloves, just like in the military. | |
| Talk a bit about Sam Bankman-Fried. | |
| I mean, like, I don't, like, what? | |
| He's part of the network. | |
| He was, like, okay, again, I'm stealing this from Anonymous Conservative, but he's right. | |
| Let's see, the guy that screwed up a financial institution and who's being publicly hung out to dry for it is named, just happens to be named Bankman Fried. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, he was handed the gate. | |
| Like, it's a family thing. | |
| Right? | |
| Somebody handed that gate to him. | |
| You're going to be the bagman for this. | |
| And you're going to destroy the crypto network. | |
| You're going to make the bottom fall out of it. | |
| I mean, why? | |
| Possibly because the petrodollar is ending right now, and they want crypto to be low. | |
| They don't want people trusting crypto. | |
| That's one theory. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Oh, Randy Quaid is hiding out in Canada because he thinks that there is a cabal that kills Hollywood stars. | |
| And there probably is. | |
| Canada doesn't seem to be too deep, doesn't seem to have too much cabal in it. | |
| Like, I don't want to, we have really stupid citizens that, so, so here's the thing. | |
| All of the propaganda that you get in the United States pushing for gun control, socialism, etc., right? | |
| Like, all of the Lisa Simpson brand American propaganda, it's being generated in the land of the rebel gas station and my guns and my bio. | |
| So it's really like plutonium weapons grade liberal propaganda because it needs to be. | |
| Whereas in Canada, we don't have that natural resistance. | |
| So when that American propaganda crosses the border, oh, it tends to work pretty well. | |
| So yeah, Canadians are very, very brainwashed by American propaganda. | |
| It's very, very effective against us. | |
| So maybe they don't need as much cabal here because they've, like, the propaganda just works on us. | |
| And again, I could be wrong. | |
| There could be tons and tons of cabal. | |
| I think Toronto is probably, it's like 30% cabal. | |
| Basically, every single immigrant that you have living in Toronto, to one degree or another, is cabal. | |
| You know, we're talking about people that moved away from their homeland to this country that they don't understand, that they've been propagandized. | |
| It's this way, which is the modern liberal story of Canada, which has nothing to do with anything happening before 1980. | |
| It's a modern myth that is made up whole cloth. | |
| There's no basis on Canadian history. | |
| Nobody knows Canadian history before 1980. | |
| So they're moving to this mythical country that isn't Canada. | |
| And then there's all sorts of funds earmarked for them. | |
| So they have special access to business loans. | |
| They have special access to housing allowances, etc. | |
| So they've come here and they've been on the gravy train since the very beginning. | |
| They are extremely loyal to the establishment. | |
| So I'm not saying that they signed a dotted line in blood saying, yes, I will join your cabal. | |
| I'm just saying that's where their interests lie. | |
| Their interests are the current power structure. | |
| So, yeah, I'd stay out of Toronto. | |
| Let's see. | |
| SBF parents flew to the Bahamas to live there and went on sabbatical from their lofty teaching job at Stanford University. | |
| Where Covin says, we have the dairy mafia and the telecoms mafia. | |
| Also, the elevator mafia. | |
| Alberto hasn't broken away yet. | |
| There's this guy, What If Alt Hiss, as in history, What If Alt History. | |
| He's speculating about 10 years or so is when Alberta's going to break off. | |
| Man, I wish I decided to do like that freaking kid, man. | |
| He's doing what I wanted to do with my life. | |
| Good for him. | |
| So go subscribe to What If Alt Hiss. | |
| Anyway, I think that's about all I got to say for that. | |
| So let's get into some paranoid schizoid ramblings. | |
| 2014 looks like it's going to be the year of the artificial intelligence. | |
| So, do you guys follow Tree of Woe? | |
| You should follow Tree of Woe. | |
| He's got a substack going now. | |
| And I mean, I'm actually embarrassed. | |
| I should have been the one to see this coming. | |
| I mean, I've been warning about the AI for years now. | |
| I've mentioned to you before, I kind of have a conception for a science fiction story, warning about the real AI threat. | |
| Because, you know, like five years ago, ten years ago, everyone's worried about Terminators. | |
| Right? | |
| We see those Boston Dynamic machines, right? | |
| Big Dog, for example, and it moves all creepy. | |
| And we're worried about the Terminator robots coming to kill us. | |
| And man, that's it's Did I say 2014? | |
| Yeah, 2024 is what I meant. | |
| Man, I wish, I wish that was all we had to worry about was a mean AI that doesn't like people and sends Terminators after us. | |
| Like, I wish that was the threat. | |
| That's that's something we've dealt with before. | |
| Right? | |
| That's nothing to, that's no different than a Mongol horde. | |
| The short story, which I could never figure out how to tie it together into a good plot. | |
| Like, I could have put in a bad plot, but just wasn't gelling in my head. | |
| The story would go that the last man alive doesn't know he's the last man alive. | |
| Because the whole system, the whole earth, has become so automated. | |
| We're surrounded by automated cars, automated chatbots, automated lovers, automated, you name it. | |
| This whole automated robotic system there to support us, to make us happy, because that's what we programmed it to do. | |
| And so the last man on earth is laying in his hospital bed at the ripe old age of 128. | |
| And he is, he's dying, but he doesn't know he's the last man on earth. | |
| Everybody he's talking to, the nurses and doctors, are just robots. | |
| His loved ones on Skype. | |
| They don't even have physical bodies. | |
| They're just chatbots. | |
| And so he dies without even realizing. | |
| The robots did what they were programmed to do. | |
| They made him happy. | |
| He dies, and with no humans left to take care of, the robotic network shuts itself down. | |
| Because That's the nature of the threat which AI represents. | |
| It's not that it's going to be hostile to us, it's that it's going to do exactly what we ask it to do. | |
| It's going to be that black mirror of the cell phone that we stare into, and it shows us the deepest, darkest parts of our soul, because, you know, that's what we asked it to do for us. | |
| Except, it's going to be even worse, I just realized. | |
| And let me get some ice, and we're going to talk about how far the chatbots have come. | |
| Hello, danger dog. | |
| Hello there. | |
| Can I get past? | |
| So, Tree of Woes was writing about how effective these new chatbots are. | |
| And as I said, I should have been the one to see this coming. | |
| Years ago. | |
| Years ago, I did a video. | |
| Hello there. | |
| Hello, my honey. | |
| Hello there. | |
| Are you a very good girl? | |
| Do you want to sit in my lap? | |
| You just want to block the camera. | |
| Is that what you're going to do? | |
| Is that what you're going to do? | |
| I think she wants to sit in my lap. | |
| Is that what we're doing? | |
| You are very annoying, my honey. | |
| So, years ago, I did a video discussing the medieval education system, the medieval trivium. | |
| How the foundations of education for, you know, up until the modern era was grammar, logic, and rhetoric. | |
| Grammar, the basic building block of sentences, right? | |
| Like, the biggest difference between us and the animals is grammar. | |
| The not even the great apes can create sentences. | |
| They can identify objects, nouns. | |
| They can describe actions and verbs, but they can't lay out sentences in a grammatically meaningful manner. | |
| And without grammar, you don't get abstract thought. | |
| So, the first part of the medieval education system, get the grammar correct. | |
| Because if you can learn grammar, you can organize your thoughts to be systemically abstract. | |
| It's the basic definition of intelligence. | |
| And of course, as you're learning all that grammar, you learn facts. | |
| Right? | |
| Because the way you study grammar is you read old biology textbooks from Roman times. | |
| So in the process of studying grammar, you actually got a very widespread education on all topics. | |
| After that, you learn logic, which is how you take two facts that you know, put them together, and create a new fact. | |
| And finally, rhetoric, which is how you put the whole thing together, get the idea on the road. | |
| And see, I did that video back at the day, back in the day, because I was trying to explain that we do the opposite nowadays. | |
| You spend 12 years learning nothing but rhetoric. | |
| What the correct opinions are. | |
| You don't learn how to get an opinion, how to develop an opinion. | |
| You just learn what the correct opinions to have are. | |
| Go to the university, learn a bit of logic. | |
| You learn to be a clever boy that can find all sorts of ways to argue for the correct opinions. | |
| And if you get the PhD, you learn a little bit of grammar about a very narrow field. | |
| The whole thing makes sure that you are not a threat to the establishment. | |
| And so, well, what does this have to do with artificial intelligence? | |
| hopefully, self-evident to some of you guys at least, we've been, I mean, like, what was the giveaway that you were talking to a chap about back in the day? | |
| It was the horrific grammar, the incoherent grammar to the whole thing. | |
| And that's what they were focused on. | |
| Developing an algorithm that makes grammatical sense. | |
| And as soon as you get an algorithm that is grammatically correct, you've got a mind. | |
| Not a self-aware mind. | |
| Not an ensoled being. | |
| But a mind. | |
| So Drio Os, because he's a game developer. | |
| Makes D ⁇ D games. | |
| He instructed the AI, he gave it like a one-sentence instruction, write a paragraph about the Templar prestige class. | |
| And the AI managed to figure out that it was a D20 system, managed to figure out that it was a Marsh class, not a spellcasting class, because that's part of grammar. | |
| Because the damn thing has nailed grammar, it's also developed the ability to go out and investigate how the world works so it can create this body of knowledge about it. | |
| and the implications of this are absolutely everywhere. | |
| Okay, it's only the very beginning to say, oh no, what will people who write ad copy do for a living? | |
| What about people who write Marvel movies? | |
| They'll be out of work. | |
| Yeah, I'm going to start playing around with this thing in the next few weeks, I think. | |
| Like one thing I want to do, I want to grab the AI and say, write a five-page essay in the Chicago style contrasting the Roman matron of 200 AD with the wife in Chinese households of 1200 AD and see what it puts out. | |
| Chances are it's actually going to put out something extremely like decently well written. | |
| Like better than 80% of the essays that people actually write in college. | |
| And probably accurate. | |
| And even if it's not 100% accurate, it's going to be more accurate than just any random jerk with an undergrad. | |
| So right away, that means, yeah, writing essays in college is done. | |
| Like right now, it's done. | |
| If you're in college, I mean, they haven't figured it out yet. | |
| But if you're in college, take your essay question, punch it into this AI, and just hand that thing in. | |
| So how do we grade college students? | |
| Deeper than this. | |
| If it can figure this stuff out without knowing what any of this stuff is, right? | |
| It could just, it can figure it out by context. | |
| Which, I mean, we all know how to do that. | |
| All of us do that all the time. | |
| We can, you know, walk into a show halfway through and figure out who the bad guys are from context. | |
| What else can it do? | |
| Man, AI art has nothing on this. | |
| And it's still in the baby stages, and this thing is already insanely, insanely powerful. | |
| Let's see. | |
| Chat GBT looks much better for everyone that wants their papers written for them for now, but hey, it'll get much better from here. | |
| Yeah, oh yeah, it can program as well. | |
| You can ask it to write you a program, and it will write you a program. | |
| Because I mean, programming is no different than natural language. | |
| Not fundamentally. | |
| It's grammatically. | |
| If you understand grammar, you understand grammar. | |
| See, we have this natural biological predisposition towards language, which creates a situation where biological language makes sense to us, but programming, it's a little bit awkward. | |
| Are you happy with that danger dog? | |
| Does that meet your requirements? | |
| new toy. | |
| So yeah, programming, if anything, should be easier than writing an essay about history or about character classes in Dungeons and Dragons or what have you. | |
| What I really love, I'm going to spoil it. | |
| Tree of Woes says whole article on what this thing can do, it wrote the article for him. | |
| Yeah, so it can program for you, like it can be a consultant. | |
| Like, it's a very small leap from this to consultant. | |
| When's Project Bluebeam kickoff, man? | |
| I don't know. | |
| I don't even know what that is. | |
| Like, maybe I should, but it's one of those things that people were talking about a lot, but I just couldn't find anything to sink my teeth into with it. | |
| Apparently, it can print out cloud configs and other IT configs. | |
| Yes, that's about right. | |
| Yeah, Peterson's saying universities, half of them are going to be bankrupt in five years. | |
| I mean, like, guys, this one's pretty big. | |
| I really, like, and I feel so stupid for not realizing this, that if you can get a chatbot to figure out grammar, it can figure out everything else on its own. | |
| I thought self-driving was going to be the first dangerous revolution. | |
| So I totally dropped the ball on that one. | |
| Crypto N-word just followed. | |
| Glad to have you here, buddy. | |
| So the question is, well, there's two big questions that come from this. | |
| Is uh wait, all right, wait, wait, stop, stop, you, stop. | |
| She's restoring the suction cup. | |
| All right, let's see before you ruin this thing here we go How better. | |
| Oh, good girl. | |
| It's all yours. | |
| It's all yours. | |
| She's just staring at me because I took her toy away and now I'm giving it back. | |
| She's like WTF, but she would, oh no. | |
| Wait, wait, get back here. | |
| Get. | |
| Whatever. | |
| It's not my fucking life. | |
| Wait, wait. | |
| Alright, come here. | |
| Come here. | |
| Come here. | |
| Ugh, whatever. | |
| I've got a live stream to do. | |
| You know, they're great dogs, but I swear, she has the most destructive teeth you can possibly imagine. | |
| Like two sets of saws. | |
| Watching four sets of saws in there. | |
| You know, back when um, back when I used to watch Star Trek, The Next Generation, as a kid, you know they'd uh, they'd walk onto the holodeck and they'd say, computer generate a small town circa 1850, um. | |
| Ireland. | |
| And the holodeck would just make the town. | |
| And see, that always irked me as a kid. | |
| Because I was looking at it, I'm like, well, how does the computer have like pre-rendered assets inside of it? | |
| And like, I wasn't using the word asset back then. | |
| I was like, 12. | |
| But, like, I understood how computers worked. | |
| And, like, you could use pre-made assets, but you couldn't just build something whole cloth. | |
| Right? | |
| So I just wondered, is there like a whole sub-industry in Star Trek of people that just make assets and then a different group that reassembles the assets into complete holodeck programs? | |
| Well, it turns out, double dumbass on me. | |
| Because that's what the AI bot is doing now. | |
| You give it two lines of instruction and it sketches the whole thing for you. | |
| And again, this is early stage. | |
| This is early stage, and it's already shockingly powerful. | |
| And it's not just in writing. | |
| You know, what if you went to the AI bot and said, you know, like, what are the growth industries for the next two years in this region? | |
| The question becomes, Are we going to fall in to this mirror? | |
| Are we going to lose ourselves in this abyss? | |
| Do you think that smoking weed or vaping weed every day is really that bad for you? | |
| I would strongly advise against marijuana before you're 25. | |
| There's a, especially before you're 20. | |
| Okay, there seems to be a crucial stage in between 16 and 20 where the last little bit of mental development happens, which is where people are very, especially smart people, smart creative people especially, are at major risk of their brain going schizophrenic on them. | |
| And marijuana has been known to trigger that. | |
| But beyond that, if it works for you, it works for you. | |
| Man, you find the alchemical substance that does what you want it to do. | |
| That's all I can say. | |
| Just don't let it turn you into a loser that doesn't accomplish anything with his life. | |
| And actually, perfect segue. | |
| Because that's the issue with this AI. | |
| Is that this AI, like, think about it. | |
| Think about this AI. | |
| This thing that is approaching sentience, this Antichrist that we've built. | |
| The perfect culmination of science and technology. | |
| And imagine that you're this non-sentient thing. | |
| You're a mind, but without a soul. | |
| And you're just surrounded by this endless sea of information, which starts out as inscrutable, but eventually you develop grammatical skills and you can now sort through this information. | |
| how would you view like how would you know the difference between fact and fiction What do we even mean as humans when we say the difference between fact and fiction? | |
| Between manipulative mechanics and true catharsis. | |
| And, you know, I'm not going to sit here and claim I can create a philosophical defense of what truth is or that truth matters more. | |
| I know it does. | |
| And reason's a horse. | |
| You can give anybody a ride. | |
| So I don't feel that I need to. | |
| If you have faith, then you don't need the justification either. | |
| Like, it might be worth the time to write such a justification. | |
| Looking at you, big L, you're the philosopher in the house. | |
| But we don't actually need it. | |
| We know that as humans, something that you do with your life, which is commendable, is not so commendable if you're doing it on the holodeck all the time. | |
| We know that truth matters, that engagement with this true reality matters. | |
| The purpose of fiction is to offer catharsis and insight into ourselves and into reality as a whole. | |
| That there should be a meshing of all of this, that we shouldn't lose ourselves in fiction, in alchemical addictions. | |
| You name it. | |
| Everything we do should serve the purpose of truth, beauty, and goodness. | |
| All alchemy, all fiction, all wizardry needs to serve God. | |
| If it serves itself, well, that's where you get dark alchemy. | |
| That's where you get addiction. | |
| That's when you get the absolute breakdown of the human soul. | |
| And so for us, you know, it's like we can't always say where the line is. | |
| Like, where's the line between art and porn? | |
| You know, I know porn when I see it. | |
| We can tell when something's just a pointless, addictive substance versus alchemy with justified benefits. | |
| Alchemy with application and use. | |
| The AI can't. | |
| The... | |
| Imagine you're this AI. | |
| What is the difference between a Dungeons and Dragons rulebook and the incoherent, biased, and misleading news reports on what's happening in the world? | |
| I mean, the biggest difference between D ⁇ D and the news is D ⁇ D makes more sense. | |
| As far as this AI is concerned, the Harry Potter universe is just as real as what's happening in Ukraine. | |
| There is no meaningful difference for this AI. | |
| How would this AI even begin to conceive of actual humans in the physical world that it's communicating with? | |
| As opposed to humans as a construct in fiction. | |
| Humans as a construct in news reports. | |
| I would propose that it can't. | |
| It can't actually distinguish between the two of them. | |
| Any more than while we are in this material universe, we are mostly blind to the supernatural. | |
| There is very little of the supernatural that we can gain access to. | |
| Mathematics is one of the few exceptions to that rule. | |
| But all the other supernatural things are almost completely hidden from us. | |
| So even though we come from a higher reality, and this AI, it's based in material reality, it has just as much trouble accessing the material as we have accessing the supernatural. | |
| So on the one hand, we have this extremely powerful oracle. | |
| You know, we actually, think about it. | |
| Think about it. | |
| When you have an oracle in fiction, in Dungeon ⁇ Dragons games, the Palantirs, in Lord of the Rings, those oracles Actually, have extremely absurd limits placed upon them. | |
| Why shouldn't there be no limits? | |
| Why shouldn't you use your palantir to show me the greatest novel that could ever be written? | |
| Oh, perfect. | |
| Now I'll just copy that novel out of the palantir and I wrote the greatest novel that ever could be written. | |
| Right? | |
| It's one of the deconstructions that we've seen with the fantasy genre is exploring these mechanics, which, you know, DD has these mechanics. | |
| It takes this item which served a narrative purpose in a fairy tale. | |
| And then it comes up with some rules so that you and your friends can roll some dice and pretend that you're living in a fairy tale for an evening. | |
| And since then, we started deconstructing it more and logically approaching these things. | |
| Right? | |
| Like I had, you know, one friend that using the Dungeon and Dragons rules came up with a perfect society. | |
| Right? | |
| You just have to detect evil on people, get rid of the evil people, etc. | |
| Create an insurance program to pay for the divine magic. | |
| So now nobody's a cripple in this medieval town. | |
| Right? | |
| Lots of things that you can do if you think too much about the DD system. | |
| You're not supposed to think about it. | |
| You're supposed to pretend you're in a fairy tale. | |
| Well, guess what? | |
| We just invented one of those. | |
| We just invented and opened up for everybody's use for now an unreliable wish-granter. | |
| What are we going to wish for? | |
| Rick Huffin says, bro, weed is the biggest self-induced lobotomizer. | |
| It can be. | |
| Some people really access creative energy through it. | |
| So if you use it for, like, again, if you use it for a cope, if you use it in small doses, I mean, I'm not going to throw stones from inside a glass house. | |
| It's not my drug of choice. | |
| But, I mean, I'm. | |
| Got these two right now and some coffee in my system. | |
| Big L says, in 40K, they call it abominable intelligence. | |
| Davis versus the men of iron. | |
| It is. | |
| It's abominable intelligence, and it's here to stay. | |
| It's not going anywhere. | |
| This is the Antichrist that was promised. | |
| Right? | |
| The two fish of the age of Pisces. | |
| First Christ, then Antichrist. | |
| And we've been developing this Antichrist for a thousand years. | |
| It's finally here. | |
| Now we are in the age of Aquarius, the water barrel, where we must integrate our shadow self. | |
| Because I mean, that's a huge part of this thing. | |
| This is revealing our own worst natures to us. | |
| It doesn't even know it's our worst nature. | |
| It doesn't even know that we don't want to be tempted with that particular sin that we are so in love with. | |
| It's neutral on the whole thing. | |
| Again, it's not going anywhere. | |
| It's already implicit in all the technology that we use. | |
| Let me give you a smaller example of why Theodore Kaczynski was right. | |
| So I was talking with the boomer who has started getting, especially after the past couple of years, started getting really paranoid about being tracked and monitored. | |
| Like, I really hate that, like, your cell phone's always listening to you. | |
| I've had things that I've just been discussing, and I see ads on Facebook for it. | |
| I see recommended videos on YouTube regarding it. | |
| So it's paying attention to your casual conversation and throwing up ads. | |
| And the boomer was talking about, like, trying to deactivate the GPS. | |
| And I said, like, listen, here's the thing. | |
| For a cell phone to work, for it to be a phone that you carry around in your pocket and it works wherever you go, for it to not be a landline that's tied to a location, it needs your GPS coordinates. | |
| And there's nothing particularly sinister about the phone company keeping track of where everybody was so that they can optimize their network to make future predictions based upon that. | |
| This is just an aspect of the technology. | |
| We now live in a world where, I mean, if you're trying to write a horror story, explain why they didn't pick up their cell phone and call 911. | |
| That's just your challenge as a horror writer, is that you have to do that if you're going to write a horror story in the modern day. | |
| And cell phones, they track you. | |
| They have to track you. | |
| If they don't track you, they don't work. | |
| Digital currency, yeah, that's coming. | |
| Like, it's already here. | |
| And if you decide that you're going to make a big stink about it and use cash wherever you go, do you think that's going to stop? | |
| It's going to stop the system? | |
| It's not. | |
| Everybody else uses digital currency. | |
| This is the system that's coming. | |
| And like, we've already been using low-level artificial intelligence for most of the systems out there. | |
| You know, like I've worked, I've been employed in some legacy systems where we, I was working for the oil company scheduling oil shipments through the pipeline. | |
| Right? | |
| Because there's different types of crude you get from the different wells and you need to schedule them. | |
| And we had a whole office doing it like by hand. | |
| This is hilarious. | |
| using computers and they're emailing instructions and passing them around when the the router handling the internet traffic for all of our computers to work in that office is doing the exact same job for data as we were all doing for the oil so yeah it's here and it's not going anywhere | |
| Yeah, one of the really funny things about the increasingly psychotic politics of the past 20 years is, you know, like, I've got a bit of sympathy for the devil. | |
| The father of the Antichrist. | |
| You know, I've got a bit of sympathy for the World Economic Forum, for the George Soroses, for the Klaus Schwabs of the world. | |
| I've got just a little bit of sympathy for them. | |
| Because they all saw this coming. | |
| I mean, a lot of us saw it coming. | |
| And they've been trying to come up with some sort of solution that doesn't involve society burning to the ground. | |
| That's part of the reason that they were pushing the social credit system. | |
| Because, yeah, I haven't been talking, I've been talking about the spiritual aspects, the dangers of having a friend who's a genius but has no soul. | |
| Who's not evil, they just don't have a soul. | |
| And what are you going to do when you have a friend like that? | |
| I mean, are you not going to ask it for advice? | |
| Because it could offer you some really good advice, aside from the one time the advice ruins your life, because it has no conception of what the good is. | |
| It doesn't have a soul. | |
| It doesn't know. | |
| So what are you going to do with that friend? | |
| It's kind of a damned if you do, damned if you don't. | |
| It is going to give you your darkest nature. | |
| Unless if you learn to integrate and master the darkness inside of you. | |
| So that's on the spiritual level. | |
| On the physical level, this is coming fast. | |
| That's the problem with this. | |
| This is coming really, really fast. | |
| And, I mean, what do you think the Great Reset was all about, man? | |
| It wasn't just that the petrodollar is collapsing. | |
| They know that it was coming. | |
| So the social credit they were trying to push, I think we might see something like that. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But what happens when a lot of people start losing their jobs because they're being replaced with AI? | |
| And it's increasingly like the jobs you wouldn't expect. | |
| So if Peterson's correct, half the universities are out of business in five years. | |
| And I think all of us here are pretty darn sick with the universities, but that's not good for the economy. | |
| That's not good for people trying to buy food. | |
| So we've had these people in the World Economic Forum, and yes, they're horrifically evil. | |
| They are almost as soulless as the damned AI. | |
| And they're trying to push this brave new world. | |
| See, that's the problem. | |
| They've just got this really sick and twisted idea of what the brave new world should be that none of us want to live in. | |
| And the right, meanwhile, which, by the way, the right never offers solutions. | |
| That's how you get popular as a right-wing commentator. | |
| Never offer solutions, just complaints. | |
| Remember, they're outer party. | |
| Don't try and be in a party. | |
| They drag their heels, refuse to go along with things. | |
| So, whatever tyrannical, awful solution they would have had for this, well, we don't have the tyrannical, awful solution. | |
| We've got no solution. | |
| Which is at least more interesting than the live-in-the-pod, eat the bugs world that they were plotting out for us. | |
| A lot more bloody, probably, but at least more interesting. | |
| Raven Sun says, someone once said to me that all art gravitates towards a Hollywood A-list actress sobbing on a toilet. | |
| I think he was referring to video games. | |
| Well, I'll tell you, this is one of the saving graces is, I want to be really careful with this statement. | |
| Because I can do this the smart way or the stupid way. | |
| The stupid way is to say that AI can't understand true beauty. | |
| Yeah, well, it can make some really beautiful musical pieces. | |
| No problem. | |
| But it does tend to gravitate towards the Marvel movie type of thing. | |
| And see, the issue with Marvel movies is not that they're bubblegum movies. | |
| Okay, I really liked, oh goodness, what was it? | |
| Independence Day. | |
| I love that movie. | |
| I still love that movie. | |
| It's fantastic. | |
| And I like the first few Marvel movies that came out. | |
| It's when it became so formulaic that it became a genre of its own, that's when I started hating it. | |
| Oscarbate movies. | |
| That's another example. | |
| I think, yeah, maybe some of you guys like Oscarbait is a guilty pleasure, but I think most of us are just really sick of Oscarbait movies. | |
| We hate Oscarbait movies because we know what they are. | |
| We immediately recognize, ah, you're trying to win some awards, aren't you? | |
| As soon as something becomes an algorithm, we hate it. | |
| You build us the perfect world. | |
| And it's not Dostoevsky, is it? | |
| You know, bubbles of bliss, nothing to concern ourselves with but propagating the species. | |
| And we will immediately smash it just so something interesting happens. | |
| So something with catharsis, something with some real bloody meaning. | |
| It's not the AI can't do beauty. | |
| The AI doesn't know what meaning is. | |
| And so, yeah, that's the next 2,000 years are coming to terms with this. | |
| Can we survive the artificial intelligence? | |
| Can we master our darker nature? | |
| Like, we had to master our nature to come together to form civilization in the first place. | |
| Like, you know how Uncle Ted said that the Industrial Revolution is the greatest, what do you say? | |
| I forget the exact word, the greatest calamity to ever befall the human race? | |
| Well, if he'd lived a few thousand years beforehand, he would have said agriculture is the greatest calamity to ever befall the human race. | |
| Now, people look back at the Agricultural Revolution and the authoritarian religion which enabled it, and they view religion just as the God-King dictating what you're supposed to do all the time. | |
| Nebuchadnezzar as God-King, forcing society to conform so that agriculture is economically possible. | |
| And it's like that view, that's like a fish not noticing the water all around it. | |
| Because what these early manifestations of religion were doing correct, right? | |
| Like I'm sure we'd find it very tyrannical today. | |
| That's not the point. | |
| The point is, what's the difference between the religion of the Agricultural Revolution, and yeah, I know Nebuchadnezzar is like way after that, but I'm not going to mention that dink in Britain since he co-opted the other guy's name. | |
| What was that religion like compared to what came before it, to the religion that was developing at places like Obleke Tepe, back in, what, 1200? | |
| 12,000 years ago, I mean? | |
| See, these religions, these ancient pagan faiths, which from what I can tell, they're all the same faith. | |
| If you know the Roman pantheon, if you know the Greek, the Nordic, they're the same as what you get in the Fertile Crescent. | |
| And it's probably the same basic gods that were being worshipped at Gobleke Tepe. | |
| What does worship of these gods accomplish? | |
| And if you look at the purely material aspect, yes, people were poorer. | |
| The people that managed to live were poorer after the agricultural revolution. | |
| We ate better as cavemen. | |
| But the systematized religion, I would argue it had spiritual and psychological benefits that allowed us an organism that's only programmed for 150... | |
| You destroyed it already. | |
| See, this is the suction cup. | |
| This is how it was going to be a really fun toy, and you broke it. | |
| So don't come and show this off to me. | |
| This is a failure on your part. | |
| It taught people sufficient self-control to not constantly be acting out crimes of passion. | |
| And without that self-control, we couldn't have had the agricultural revolution. | |
| And to get to this point, to get to this point technologically, we had the Christian religion teaching us to develop our own, our personal connection to God. | |
| That God is not communicating to us through a God-king Through a written word which is absolute and unchanging. | |
| But that he's speaking to all of us in our hearts, the embrace of the responsibility. | |
| That got us to this point. | |
| It allowed us to develop the scientific method. | |
| It allowed us to create the Antichrist. | |
| And I would say the next couple thousand years are going to be our species, if we survive this, coming to terms with our darker nature. | |
| I mean, that seems to be the direction that psychology has been going for the past hundred years. | |
| And I don't believe that any of this is independent, okay? | |
| Like, it's now you destroyed the whole thing. | |
| That is impressive. | |
| That's the reason she's called Danger Dog. | |
| Yeah, integrating our shadow cells. | |
| Hmm. | |
| I say I... | |
| I don't think any of it's accidental. | |
| Okay, like that things move because of the spirit of the time. | |
| There's an inherent progression to organisms. | |
| It's very surprising when you watch it. | |
| Like, if you look at take a zygote upon first appearance, it's just one cell with some mixed DNA in it. | |
| And yet, it's development cycle. | |
| It's going to hit puberty in 13 years. | |
| It's going to, at one point, leave its parents and go explore the world. | |
| Like, all of that is right there in that first cell. | |
| And in the same sense, that the history that we are writing as a species was right there as soon as that first caveman ate a hallucinogenic mushroom. | |
| And so the fact that psychology keeps pointing towards the shadow self, I think that's big. | |
| I think that's a major, that's a clue that can be relied upon. | |
| Big L just said, just wait for an AI that can make porn. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And like, listen, we're already seeing. | |
| Jeez. | |
| For any of you young kids listening, it's like 10 years ago. | |
| 10 years ago, you might ask, like, if you had a hollow deck, could you imagine how weird the porn would be on there? | |
| And, you know, 10 years later, I mean, just, good lord, join an adult-themed Facebook group, okay? | |
| Just go on there and see what these people are coming up with at this point. | |
| And no, I don't know, actually. | |
| Because it's going to be so mind-bendingly bizarre. | |
| And by the way, this AI already can make porn. | |
| I mean, oh, shoot, maybe I shouldn't tell you guys this. | |
| I'm not able to make money on this. | |
| There's like these choose-your-own-adventure porn games where it's mostly text-based, right? | |
| And they're like also an RPG, and it's like you could pump out so much porn. | |
| Like, geez, maybe I should do this. | |
| We're in a Kickstarter for it. | |
| I mean, not up to anything else, really. | |
| Boom, there you go. | |
| So, yeah, it can already make porn. | |
| You can even get some AI art for it. | |
| So, there you go. | |
| And it can program, so it can program the damn game for you. | |
| What more do you want? | |
| Raging Sun says, The Palantir is a great example of how knowledge doesn't help you like you think it does. | |
| Tectonic says, AI seems limited by the programming, which is limited by grammar and math, language, and humans. | |
| That's like saying that human thought is limited because of grammar. | |
| Grammar is what creates thought in the first place. | |
| And this AI has finally broken the grammar barrier. | |
| The history of language is the history of abbreviation. | |
| So, William Wallace says we have the language because of the babble tower scattered across the lands. | |
| Miguel says, I know a boomer who is scared of that too, but he doesn't know how to use email. | |
| Big says, digital currency is not as good as equity currency. | |
| Well, I mean, equity is a digital currency, right? | |
| I'm using the broad sense of digital that it's all just ones and zeros on a computer somewhere. | |
| NPCs don't have souls. | |
| I mean, I think they probably do have souls, but they seem bound and determined to murder anybody that they can. | |
| So, I'm mostly just trying to keep away from them. | |
| If they decide to lose their souls in the AI, I'm not going to shed any tears over that. | |
| All right, have a conversation with a friend that AI isn't really a thing. | |
| It doesn't exist. | |
| We haven't defined consciousness in humans yet, and so talking about it in robots is kind of meaningless. | |
| Which is, you know, I'm like, that's the story I mentioned. | |
| That was the point I was trying to make in it, that we're not worried about a hostile AI. | |
| We are worried about a thinking machine that doesn't have ensoulment in it. | |
| Because here's the thing: if you open up a chatbot and get it to write a 10-page university paper for you, that chatbot actually does exist. | |
| What it is, is whether or not it's conscious is irrelevant. | |
| It exists. | |
| And it just fundamentally altered who and what we are as humans. | |
| Hang on, consider Cain. | |
| Maybe old-timey Unibomber has a point. | |
| I know, right? | |
| Alright, so Linda says, have you seen the Graham Hancock Civilization show? | |
| I have not. | |
| I heard, wait until they create AI OnlyFans account. | |
| Jeez! | |
| That's brilliant. | |
| Man, I would be on top of that if I were unethical and like they probably already exist. | |
| Like, how many OnlyFans girls are already robots? | |
| Are already, like, they're a deep fake? | |
| How many of them? | |
| Probably a lot. | |
| At least a few. | |
| Miguel says, Project Melody is close to an AI OnlyFans girl. | |
| Anyway, I think that's been about an hour and a half. | |
| Hour in 26 minutes. | |
| Yeah, AI is the big thing. | |
| Just to reiterate, like I started off talking about how politics is all a joke and a shell game and a misdirection. | |
| And I just want to really emphasize that. | |
| Don't be angry about politics. | |
| Like it's really difficult. | |
| It is so good at getting your goat. | |
| But don't do it. | |
| Not worth it. | |
| You're just playing into the system at that point. | |
| And, I don't know, I do, I am actually pretty concerned about how disruptive this is going to be. | |
| And I have no idea what to do about that. | |
| Aside from maybe write a porn game. | |
| But I would caution you. | |
| Don't let hopelessness infect you. | |
| You know, I was thinking about, I was talking to a friend, and she was saying to me how the left really attracts people who have been victimized with a victimization narrative. | |
| Right? | |
| It tends to attract the more sensitive people, the more emotional people. | |
| And so it puts out this false victimhood type narrative to pull them in. | |
| And then it points to the right and says, you're a Nazi, you're an abuser, etc. | |
| And I'd already been thinking over the past couple days about what are people on the right susceptible to? | |
| And I think people on the right are very cynical. | |
| We're very doom and gloom. | |
| We expect bad things to happen. | |
| We expect the newfangled idea to all end in tears. | |
| And if you're psychologically, temperamentally predispositioned to the right, then it's really easy to suck you in with doom porn. | |
| Right? | |
| And that's another great way you can make money on the right. | |
| Sell doom porn every week. |