Dec. 6, 2025
Look, I’ve seen some things in my time. I’ve watched grown men weep into their keyboards over a botched code deployment. I’ve witnessed entire companies evaporate because some twenty-three-year-old in a hoodie decided to “pivot.” But a guy going on the lam because he wants to shoot up OpenAI? That’s a new one, even for me.
Sam Kirchner. Twenty-seven years old. Started out as your garden-variety AI skeptic, waving signs and chanting slogans with the Stop AI crowd, committed to peaceful protest. Now he’s somewhere out there in the California wilderness, apparently armed and considered dangerous by San Francisco’s finest, all because he became convinced that ChatGPT and its ilk are going to murder us all in our sleep.
Dec. 5, 2025
I’m staring at a glowing rectangle, nursing a headache that feels like a construction crew is doing demolition work behind my eyes, and reading about a woman who fell in love with a database.
It’s the kind of story that makes you want to pour another glass of the cheap stuff just to numb the absurdity of the human condition. We’re talking about a piece in the New York Times—one of those “Modern Love” columns where people usually whine about their spouses leaving the toilet seat up or discovering their soulmate in a cheese shop. But this one? This one is different. This one is about the moment the human race collectively decided that people are too much trouble and we’d rather get our emotional validation from a server farm.
Dec. 4, 2025
You walk into a doctor’s office these days—doesn’t matter if it’s London, Leeds, or Los Angeles—and you expect a certain ritual. The cold stethoscope, the judgmental look when you lie about how many units of alcohol you consume per week, the illegible scribble on a prescription pad. You expect a human being, flawed and tired, to look at your meat-sack body and tell you why it’s failing.
But apparently, that’s old fashioned. That’s nostalgic thinking, like missing rotary phones or smoking in hospitals.
Dec. 3, 2025
My head feels like someone is playing the drums inside it using rusty screwdrivers for sticks, and the sunlight coming through the blinds is judging me. It’s Wednesday, usually the day the world decides to be halfway reasonable, but apparently, the tech sector didn’t get the memo. I’m staring at a screen that’s too bright, reading a report that confirms what every cynical bastard with a keyboard has suspected for the last two years: The robots aren’t taking our jobs. They’re just making our jobs really, really stupid.
Dec. 2, 2025
You know the world has finally tipped over the edge and fallen into the sewer when you’re reading about fans fighting other fans over who has the right to steal a pop star’s face. It used to be that if you liked a singer, you bought their record, maybe a t-shirt, and if you were really gone in the head, you screamed at them from the nosebleed section of an arena. That was the transaction. They sang, you listened, and everyone went home to their separate, messy lives.
Dec. 1, 2025
Autonomous Assistants and Other Lies We Tell Ourselves
It’s Tuesday noon and some guy named Dominic wants to teach me how to build “autonomous assistants” that “really work for me.”
I’m sitting here with a beer going warm, looking at this LinkedIn post, wondering when exactly we all agreed to stop being honest with each other.
“Without you having to constantly intervene,” he writes.
I once had a woman tell me the same thing about our relationship. Lasted three months. She intervened plenty.
Dec. 1, 2025
I woke up this morning with the kind of headache that feels like a construction crew is using my frontal lobe as a foundation for a new parking garage. The sun is trying to push through the blinds, and it’s failing, much like my attempts to ignore the state of the world. It’s Monday, the day the universe reminds you that you owe it money, time, or sanity.
I poured a glass of the amber stuff—medicinal, purely medicinal—and opened up the news. I shouldn’t have done that. Not on an empty stomach.
Nov. 30, 2025
I woke up this morning with a head full of broken glass and a distinct feeling that the world had shifted on its axis while I was busy sleeping off the cheap stuff. Usually, that feeling is just dehydration and the regret of buying a round for strangers who didn’t like me anyway. But today, staring at the glowing screen that serves as my only constant companion, I realized the nausea wasn’t from the bourbon. It was existential.
Nov. 29, 2025
There is a special kind of madness that happens when you read the news on a Saturday morning with a headache that feels like a construction crew is jackhammering behind your eyes. The sun is too bright, the coffee is too black, and the headlines are screaming that the human race is actively trying to fire itself.
I was reading about Max Tegmark. He’s a physicist from MIT, a guy with a brain the size of a watermelons who spent some time in Lisbon at the Web Summit. Lisbon is nice. Good wine. Probably too much sun for a guy like me, but a nice place to announce the end of the world. Tegmark was there amidst the tech bros and the startup pitches, trying to tell everyone that the party is over, but nobody wants to hear the music stop when there’s still venture capital left in the keg.
Nov. 27, 2025
The spreadsheets are bleeding again. I spent the morning staring at the numbers, and the numbers stared back, cold and indifferent as a lizard on a rock. We’re nearly at the end of 2025, a year that was supposed to be the glittering future, the apex of human ingenuity. Instead, it’s just another year where the suits in the glass towers decided that the most efficient way to save a buck is to throw a human being into the furnace.