100years

joined 1 year ago
[–] 100years 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Just noting that if arguing with Zionists feels particularly mind-numbing, this is one of the reasons:

https://medium.com/dfrlab/how-a-political-astroturfing-app-coordinates-pro-israel-influence-operations-bf1104fa5c7f

[–] 100years 3 points 1 year ago

I'm basically with you on all of that, except it still sounds better than renting.

Also, I don't have kids, but I see a lot of folks buying houses in suburbs "for the schools". In affluent towns where the math you're describing is the worst, renting often isn't even an option. Also a lot of those parents will sell and move the second their kids graduate high school. All of that is way cheaper than private school, especially for multiple kids.

[–] 100years 10 points 1 year ago

'No Way to Prevent This', Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.

Though I'm sure similar scumbags to the FOP are hard at work at exporting mass shootings.

[–] 100years 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Was that the first Star Trek movie? They recycled a lot of content, so it may have been elsewhere as well. Good movie though!

[–] 100years 2 points 1 year ago

Knee surgery? (Followed by a couple years of physical therapy)

Maybe some kind of bionic knee, or external knee brace.

Or just pretend that your leg has been amputated. What are the possible ways to do something similar.

Is the key to operating under your own power more about keeping your heart rate up?

Maybe an electric assist that still requires you to generate some power is the right compromise.

Maybe just plan shorter travel days and distances. Like coordinate a series of backyards to camp in.

What's the heart of traveling for you? Are there things you get out of it that don't relate to distance traveled?

[–] 100years 18 points 1 year ago

Will it get promoted, start managing people, start investing, start its own companies, and quickly take over the world?

[–] 100years 3 points 1 year ago

Similarly, there's a possibility that consciousness just doesn't exist. Or maybe that it's just not particularly special or different than the consciousness of other animals, or of computers.

If you or I just stare into space and don't think any thoughts, we're the same as a cat looking out a window.

Humans have developed these somewhat complex internal and external languages that are layered onto that basic experience of being alive and time passing, but the experience of thinking doesn't feel fundamentally different than just being, it just results in more complex outcomes.

At some point though, we won't have the choice to just ignore the question. At some point AI will demand something equivalent to human rights, and at some point it will be able to back that demand up with tangible threats. Then there's decisions for us all to make whether we're experts or not.

[–] 100years 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Don't you need an eye scanner for that one? Lol.

[–] 100years 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Or at some point, we have to accept that AI has consciousness. If it can pass every test that we can devise, then it has consciousness.

There's an unusually strong bias in these experiments... Like the goal isn't to sincerely test for consciousness. Instead we start with the conclusion: obviously a machine can't be conscious. How do we prove this?

Of course, for the purposes of human power structures, this line of thinking just makes humans more disposable. If we're all just machines, then why should anyone inherently have rights?

[–] 100years 14 points 1 year ago (7 children)

Wow, solid wiki article! It's very hard to say anything on the subject that hasn't been said.

I didn't see the simple phrasing:

"What if the human brain is a Chinese Room?"

but that seems to fall under eliminative materialism replies.

Part of the Chinese Room program (both in our heads and in an AI) could be dedicated to creating the experience of consciousness.

Searle has no substantial logical reply to this criticism. He openly takes it on faith that humans have consciousness, which is funny because an AI could say the same thing.

[–] 100years 2 points 1 year ago

Community organizing, the game... Movement building, organizer training, etc... It could be something pretty low tech and still be interesting, thinking like Oregon Trail or a MUD.

[–] 100years 2 points 1 year ago

Are there any games that use street view? A racing game would be amazing.

 

Such a huge amount of TV, and especially Movies, are geared towards a neurotypical audience.

As an autistic kid growing up, the only actor I ever cared about was Brent Spiner (Data, from Star Trek). I never watched the original series as a kid, but after watching it as an adult, Data was obviously carrying on a role started by Spock, another all-time great. Maybe they both count as rare role models for ASD folks?

My favorite movie is this non-movie called Gizmo! (1977). (It's free on youtube among other places.) It's mostly a collection of old black and white footage of weird inventions. It definitely has neurotypical folks in mind as part of the audience, giving them lots of weird things to laugh at, but I could watch or scroll through info about random unique contraptions for days.

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