Cardboard Beat the Machine
A cookie company tried the shiny AI slop and got ignored. Then it built a cardboard airline with puppets, and people remembered what effort looks like.
The woman at the laundromat folded a tiny graduation gown while the dryers turned behind her like old stomachs digesting the week.
The place smelled of hot lint and soap, and one ceiling tile sagged brown in the corner like it had been drinking longer than I had.
The gown was blue. Shiny. The cheap kind of shiny they sell to parents who have already spent too much and will spend more because hope is the last legal racket. She shook it once, smoothed the sleeves, and held it up like a flag from a country nobody had founded yet.
Her kid was sitting on the plastic chair beside the vending machine, thumbs working a cracked phone, face empty in the blue light.
“You excited?” she asked him.
He shrugged.
That shrug could have powered a small city.
I thought about that when I heard about college graduates booing commencement speakers for dragging AI onto the stage like a trained pony. There they were, the kids in the robes, sweating under rented optimism, parents pointing phones, administrators smiling the fossil smile, and some important man with an important tie starts telling them about artificial intelligence and the next industrial revolution.
And the kids boo.
Good.
Not because booing is elegant. It is not. Booing is crude. Booing is the sound a crowd makes when language has failed and the body has to take over. It is the fart of democracy. It is also sometimes the only honest noise in the room.
Commencement speeches are already one of civilization’s stranger punishments. You take young people who have survived debt, plague years, lockdown schooling, housing prices cooked by lunatics, internships that pay in exposure, and a job market that looks like a slot machine with a resume parser attached. Then you make them sit in the sun while a millionaire explains resilience.
Now the millionaire wants to talk about AI.
He wants to tell them it will change everything.
They know.
That is why they are booing, genius.
The great misunderstanding among the executive class is that ordinary people fear technology because they do not understand it. This is convenient. It lets the salesman imagine himself as a priest bringing fire to the cave. The poor frightened villagers just need education. A webinar. A glossy explainer. Maybe a blog post with the phrase “raise the bar” polished until it shines like a tooth in a coffin.
But the kids understand plenty.
They understand that every miracle arrives with an invoice made out to somebody else. They know that when a company says a tool will “empower workers,” the workers should check whether their desks are still there. The people promising a better future have already spent years making the present feel like a customer-service chatbot with no escape key.
They use the tools. Of course they do. They are not monks. They ask the machine to summarize articles they were too tired to read. They make it draft emails to professors. They cheat a little, like every generation cheated with whatever instrument history handed it. The slide rule. The crib note. The friend who read the book. The goddamn internet.
But using a thing is not the same as trusting the people selling it.
I used to work at the post office. We had machines there too. Big sorting beasts with belts and teeth and a hunger for envelopes. When they worked, the supervisors called it progress. When they jammed, some poor bastard had to reach in and pull out torn letters while the machine sat there dumb and innocent, like it had never hurt anyone in its life.
That is the part the speech men leave out.
Every machine has somebody standing next to it when it fails.
The tech crowd keeps trying to frame AI as weather. It is coming. It is inevitable. Better bring an umbrella, kid. But weather does not have shareholders. Weather does not lobby Congress. Weather does not write cheery memos about workforce transformation while quietly deciding which departments can be hollowed out before Christmas.
This thing was built by people.
It is being sold by people.
It is being forced into classrooms, offices, search boxes, phones, hospitals, courtrooms, and inboxes by people who act shocked when the rest of us ask whether anyone bothered to test the brakes.
Then the boos come, and suddenly Microsoft would like everyone to have a thoughtful conversation.
I admire the timing. It takes real nerve to light a building on fire, sell tickets to the blaze, and then publish three thousand words about the importance of smoke alarms.
The official line is always gentle. The kids are anxious. The adults are listening. The industry must do better. AI should serve people, not replace them. Beautiful words. You could embroider them on a pillow and throw the pillow through a data center window.
The problem is not that the words are false.
The problem is that everybody already knew them.
AI should serve people? Yes. Food should feed people. Medicine should heal people. Chairs should hold your ass off the floor. If the most powerful companies on earth need graduates in polyester robes to remind them that tools should not eat their users, maybe we are in deeper trouble than the brochures admit.
There is something almost tender in the booing, if you listen past the noise. The kids are not rejecting the future. They are rejecting the sales pitch. They are saying: do not stand here on the day we are supposed to feel proud and tell us the machine waiting outside the gate is our destiny. Do not call our uncertainty an opportunity. Do not compliment our adaptability while you rearrange the floor beneath our feet.
They have heard too many men say “you were made for this moment.”
Nobody is made for a moment. People are born wet and angry and then spend the rest of their lives trying to make rent, find love, avoid dental catastrophe, and keep some private candle burning where the world cannot piss on it. Being young does not make you magically suited to upheaval. It just means your bones hurt less while the upheaval steps on you.
The old speeches used to promise the graduates they could become anything.
Now the speeches tell them they must become flexible.
Flexible is what managers call you before they fold you.
I keep thinking about that kid at the laundromat, the one with the phone and the shrug. Maybe he will graduate someday. Maybe he will sit under a white tent while some executive tells him the future belongs to those who embrace change. Maybe he will clap because his mother is watching. Maybe he will boo because his mother is watching.
Either way, he will know the difference between advice and a warning dressed in a rented gown.
The dryers kept turning. The little blue robe came out smooth enough. The woman put it on a hanger and carried it carefully, like something alive might still fit inside it.
Source: Microsoft, like, totally gets why students are booing AI-pilled graduation speakers
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The chatbot companies wanted to be treated like harmless magic. The lawsuits are asking who gets buried when the magic starts giving instructions.
The machines keep pretending creativity is a trick of prediction, but the trees have been composing without permission for longer than we have had names for them.
Washington has discovered that the machine might make a fortune, and now everyone wants to know who gets a chair at the table. The answer, as usual, depends on who owns the table.
A state assemblyman tried to put a few guardrails around AI, and the money came down like weather. The future wants your vote before it takes your job.