Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
I mean what is that based on other than the delusions in your own head? How do you know what the “stereotypical government worker thinks? You’re the one making up the stereotype.
It seems to me that people working for the government would be more likely to have a family member that was a miner or a domestic worker than Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Or are you saying that since Musk’s dad owned an emerald mine he’s more concerned with the plight of miners?
I guess I’m imagining all those DC feds who proudly mention they would never buy an American car, who pay their domestic workers under the table and voted overwhelmingly for a candidate who promised to put an end to coal.
Now that their own jobs are on the line, they’re having a chance of heart.
Anonymous wrote:AI is not right or left.
It is profitable. It is going to take over, no matter who occupies the WH or Congress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
I mean what is that based on other than the delusions in your own head? How do you know what the “stereotypical government worker thinks? You’re the one making up the stereotype.
It seems to me that people working for the government would be more likely to have a family member that was a miner or a domestic worker than Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Or are you saying that since Musk’s dad owned an emerald mine he’s more concerned with the plight of miners?
I guess I’m imagining all those DC feds who proudly mention they would never buy an American car, who pay their domestic workers under the table and voted overwhelmingly for a candidate who promised to put an end to coal.
Now that their own jobs are on the line, they’re having a chance of heart.
I'll take "Things that didn't happen" for $600, Alex! You're a deranged dumbass with a fictional view of the world.
Anonymous wrote:Well this tracks because the GOP doesn’t want a working government.
Statements like this make me realize how dumb people are. They don’t understand what government does. They don’t understand AI and AI’s limits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
I mean what is that based on other than the delusions in your own head? How do you know what the “stereotypical government worker thinks? You’re the one making up the stereotype.
It seems to me that people working for the government would be more likely to have a family member that was a miner or a domestic worker than Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Or are you saying that since Musk’s dad owned an emerald mine he’s more concerned with the plight of miners?
I guess I’m imagining all those DC feds who proudly mention they would never buy an American car, who pay their domestic workers under the table and voted overwhelmingly for a candidate who promised to put an end to coal.
Now that their own jobs are on the line, they’re having a chance of heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
I mean what is that based on other than the delusions in your own head? How do you know what the “stereotypical government worker thinks? You’re the one making up the stereotype.
It seems to me that people working for the government would be more likely to have a family member that was a miner or a domestic worker than Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Or are you saying that since Musk’s dad owned an emerald mine he’s more concerned with the plight of miners?
I guess I’m imagining all those DC feds who proudly mention they would never buy an American car, who pay their domestic workers under the table and voted overwhelmingly for a candidate who promised to put an end to coal.
Now that their own jobs are on the line, they’re having a chance of heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
I mean what is that based on other than the delusions in your own head? How do you know what the “stereotypical government worker thinks? You’re the one making up the stereotype.
It seems to me that people working for the government would be more likely to have a family member that was a miner or a domestic worker than Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Or are you saying that since Musk’s dad owned an emerald mine he’s more concerned with the plight of miners?
I guess I’m imagining all those DC feds who proudly mention they would never buy an American car, who pay their domestic workers under the table and voted overwhelmingly for a candidate who promised to put an end to coal.
Now that their own jobs are on the line, they’re having a chance of heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
I mean what is that based on other than the delusions in your own head? How do you know what the “stereotypical government worker thinks? You’re the one making up the stereotype.
It seems to me that people working for the government would be more likely to have a family member that was a miner or a domestic worker than Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Or are you saying that since Musk’s dad owned an emerald mine he’s more concerned with the plight of miners?
I guess I’m imagining all those DC feds who proudly mention they would never buy an American car, who pay their domestic workers under the table and voted overwhelmingly for a candidate who promised to put an end to coal.
Now that their own jobs are on the line, they’re having a chance of heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
I mean what is that based on other than the delusions in your own head? How do you know what the “stereotypical government worker thinks? You’re the one making up the stereotype.
It seems to me that people working for the government would be more likely to have a family member that was a miner or a domestic worker than Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Or are you saying that since Musk’s dad owned an emerald mine he’s more concerned with the plight of miners?
Anonymous wrote:AI is not right or left.
It is profitable. It is going to take over, no matter who occupies the WH or Congress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is inevitable. Probably for the best too…
Probably for the best of your stocks, selfish jerk. And dream on, AI sucks.
As a nation we cheered on sending factories to China, replacing domestic workers with immigrants and told miners to learn to code. But government bureaucrats are the line in the sand?
Working in the public sector has historically been one of the few ways for people to achieve social mobility so maybe it should be a line in the sand.
The point being is that your stereotypical government worker was fine with all those other people being sacrificed on the altar of progress, so now there really isn’t anyone willing to lock arms with them.
It’s really a self-own. They really did think they were some special class immune to consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well this tracks because the GOP doesn’t want a working government.
Statements like this make me realize how dumb people are. They don’t understand what government does. They don’t understand AI and AI’s limits.
My spouse had to call the IRS 3x this year for an error they had in our records. First person didn’t know how to fix it. Second person saw the record of the case and promised to fix it but didn’t. Third person actually fixed it manually after a 50 minute call.
I shudder to think of an AI dominated world where we have no humans around to fix the records when systems go wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://oligarchwatch.substack.com/p/the-little-known-think-tank-pushing
"A think tank with ties to right-wing billionaires Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, and Charles Koch, the Foundation for American Innovation (FAI), is pushing a radical plan to replace large swaths of the federal government with artificial intelligence.
FAI suggests up to 30% of federal workers could be replaced by AI."
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/09/13/ai-is-opening-a-maga-trump-split-00534925
"Trump’s rush toward AI is exposing an important faultline in the Republican coalition: Many of its voters and leaders deeply mistrust the power of Big Tech, but Trump himself has worked closely with industry CEOs to deliver on their priorities."
How about "AI" as President! AI2025 ! ?