The Smooth Lie
AI can make bad thinking look clean enough to pass inspection. The trap is not that machines write badly, but that they lie smoothly.
The bartender did not know what to do with the kid who asked for milk.
I like to imagine the pause. The music thumping its dumb little animal heart. The law students leaning into their glasses, practicing the loose confident laughter of people who have not yet been billed by life. Somewhere in New Orleans, a young man too young to order the usual poison asks for milk at a law school function, and the bartender looks at him like he has requested a live goat and a clean conscience.
No milk.
So the kid switches to cranberry juice.
There is your American education system in one glass: a child old enough to dismantle a tax argument, young enough to get carded by the furniture, standing among adults with cocktail breath and casebooks while the rest of the country tries to decide whether it should be proud, terrified, or merely entertained.
The kid’s name is Jimmy Chilimigras. Eighteen years old. Law degree already hanging on the wall, CPA record in his pocket, bar exam waiting like a bored heavyweight in a back room. He graduated high school at twelve, stacked accounting degrees before most boys learn to shave cleanly, scored high enough on the LSAT to make admissions officers rub their eyes, and now says he wants to do some good.
That phrase usually makes me reach for something brown in a dirty glass.
Do some good.
It is what politicians say before they sell the hospital. It is what consultants say before they turn a lunch break into a metric. It is what every bright little operator says when the machinery has not yet introduced him to its favorite trick: converting idealism into invoice hours.
But this one has a good target.
He wants to go after tax rules that chew up ordinary people when the letter never arrives, or the lawyer was a crook, or the hurricane came through and rearranged the furniture of your life. Fine. I have always respected anybody willing to step between a citizen and a form. Forms are where compassion goes to be stapled.
But the part that stuck in me was the other fight.
He wants to help hold social media companies liable for designing little glowing traps for children. He calls the stuff extremely predatory. That is a clean phrase. Maybe too clean. I would have gone with soul flypaper, or a candy store run by wolves, but the kid is going to be a lawyer. They train the music out of you early.
He says he has seen his siblings lose hours to the apps. Friends tell him they hate what it does to them and cannot stop. That is the sentence with blood in it. Not the degrees. Not the rankings. Not the youngest-this and youngest-that circus act we love so much because America cannot see a child without turning him into a headline, a product, or a warning label.
The blood is in the friend saying: I do not like this, and I cannot stop.
Every drunk knows that sentence.
Every gambler knows it. Every man who ever went back to the wrong woman, every worker who smoked in the parking lot after swearing off, every night creature who promised himself one drink and woke up with a receipt from a place he does not remember. We used to call these things vices, weaknesses, demons, bad habits, private failures. Then the engineers arrived with clean fingernails and stock options and figured out how to put a slot machine in every pocket.
Now the demon has a design team.
It has charts. It has tests. It has colors chosen because some lab rat in a hoodie discovered that one shade of red makes the thumb move faster than another. It has notifications that arrive like needy little ghosts. It has infinite scroll, which is just a treadmill for the attention span. It has algorithmic recommendations dressed up as choice, the way a casino dresses up arithmetic as luck.
And when the children cannot put it down, the adults tell them to practice self-control.
Beautiful.
That is like dumping a swimming pool full of gin in a kindergarten and telling the kids to hydrate responsibly.
The companies always have the same defense, even when they do not say it directly. We only gave people what they wanted. We connected the world. We built a platform. We empowered expression. We optimized experience. The language comes out soft and sanitary, the way hospital sheets look before someone bleeds through them.
Nobody ever says: we found the tender place in the animal and pressed it until money came out.
That would be impolite.
The strange thing is that Chilimigras got here by escaping another machine, or at least slipping through its bars. He talks about asynchronous learning, about people moving at different speeds instead of being marched through the same hallway at the same pace because the bell says so. He is right. School is often a factory that forgot what it was making. It puts thirty different kids on the same belt and acts surprised when some are bored stiff and others are crushed flat.
I worked in places like that.
Not schools. Worse. Sorting rooms. Offices. Time clocks. Places where the human being is treated as a unit of obedience with shoes. The system loves averages because averages are easy to schedule. The exceptional kid is a problem. The slow kid is a problem. The sad kid is a problem. The hungry kid is a problem. The dreamer looking out the window is a problem. The machine wants rows.
So here comes a boy who refused the row, or whose parents had enough sense and time and luck to help him refuse it. He moves fast. Too fast for the usual furniture. He becomes a lawyer before he can legally order a beer after losing a case. Then he looks at the other machine, the one chewing up the kids who are not prodigies, and says maybe somebody should sue the bastards.
I will drink cranberry juice to that.
Carefully. In private.
Still, I worry for him.
Not because he is young. Youth is not the disease. Plenty of old men are idiots with pensions. I worry because good intentions walking into the legal system are like fresh meat walking into a kennel. The law is necessary, yes. So are sewers. That does not mean you climb down there wearing white pants.
The companies have armies. They have lawyers who bill more in an afternoon than a substitute teacher earns in a month. They have lobbyists with faces made of hotel soap. They have research departments ready to explain that addiction is a complicated word, harm is a nuanced concept, causation is difficult, parents have responsibility, users have agency, and anyway please look at this wonderful transparency dashboard we built while nobody was watching.
The dashboard will have pastel colors.
There will be a committee.
The committee will recommend further study.
Meanwhile a thirteen-year-old will lie in bed at 2:17 in the morning with a blue-white screen lighting up his face like a tiny morgue, thumb moving, stomach sick, homework undone, mind full of other people’s faces and manufactured emergencies, unable to stop because some of the smartest adults on earth are paid very well to make stopping feel like death.
This is the part the speeches miss.
The kid with the law degree is interesting, sure. A prodigy makes good copy. We love the spectacle because it lets us avoid the ordinary tragedy. One boy outruns the conveyor belt and everyone claps. Millions of other children sit there with their attention carved into saleable strips and we call it engagement.
Maybe Chilimigras will help. Maybe he will get swallowed. Maybe he will become the sort of lawyer who says unfortunately a lot and keeps three phones on the table. The world has done worse to better people.
But I like the image of him at that bar, asking for milk among the future attorneys and their little glasses of courage. I like the bartender’s confusion. I like the absurd purity of the request. Not innocence exactly. Innocence is mostly something adults invent after they have ruined it.
Call it refusal.
A young man standing in a room built for adult rituals, asking for the wrong thing. Then adapting. Cranberry juice instead. Fine. The world has no milk. Take what they have and keep your head clear.
There are worse beginnings for a fight.
AI can make bad thinking look clean enough to pass inspection. The trap is not that machines write badly, but that they lie smoothly.
Meta broke the trust of its AI workers, then promised smaller manager ratios and better snacks. The machine age still runs on human misery with a pantry budget.
The feed promised to know us better than we knew ourselves, then sold our own appetites back wearing a dead person's sunglasses.
KPMG let the machine invent corporate reality, then discovered that authority without verification is just a parrot in a necktie.
Meta wanted superintelligence and found the old factory floor waiting inside the laptop: watched hands, dull tasks, and people drafted into feeding the machine.