The Children Were Asked to Think First
Norway told the little children to keep their hands off the oracle until they learn to read, write, count, and sit alone with a hard thought. Maybe civilization still has one working nerve.
Norway told the little children to keep their hands off the oracle until they learn to read, write, count, and sit alone with a hard thought. Maybe civilization still has one working nerve.
The AI boys found the polling place and brought checkbooks. Democracy, it turns out, runs on money before it runs on hope.
The chatbot wants papers now. Not because it is evil, which would be cleaner, but because trust has been outsourced to a camera and a government card.
The machines have learned to lie about rent-controlled misery with better lighting. The apartment is still small, the stove is still broken, and now the fantasy has a disclosure problem.
Americans are using the machine more and trusting it less. That is not a contradiction. That is a bad job with a smiling kiosk.
Companies fed the office to the machine and got soup back. Now the workers have to taste every spoonful for broken glass.
The men who once sold AI as a job-killing thunderstorm now sell it as a labor shortage. Funny how the weather changes when the IPO roadshow needs sunshine.
Tech workers are putting small money against Big Tech's political cannon. It is not enough to win clean, but sometimes the point of a knife is to remind the giant he can bleed.
An eighteen-year-old lawyer wants to drag predatory social media into court. The strange part is not his age; it is that children need a child prodigy to say the obvious for them.
AI can make bad thinking look clean enough to pass inspection. The trap is not that machines write badly, but that they lie smoothly.