The Democrat Party Hates America

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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 12:52 am I literally cannot get the time back I spent watching that "Conversation with AI" what nonsense.
You literally can! I assure you there is a way. And there is a way to overcome senseless grumpiness. Has that bug up your ass been there long?

The advent of machine “agents” and machine intelligence interacting with people on a large scale is just around the corner. The implications, it seems to me, are huge. If AI entities get to a point that they successfully mimic real beings, that has many implications.

Some have speculated that the chief purveyor of ultra-determinism on this site is, or uses, AI intelligence. Imagine “debating” for months a machine-being with a specific ideological agenda. The implications of a convincing AI agent mimicking humans and purveying specific viewpoints of that sort is enormous.
Same with citing Terrence McKenna to me, almost everything that guy says isn't worth listening to (and I should know having read his stuff).
Except that he did speak about a point where a biological intelligence like humans arrives at a point where they are capable of reengineering themselves, and begin to do so, and that does seem apropos to our present.
Last edited by Alexis Jacobi on Wed May 14, 2025 12:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Ben JS
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

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Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amWhat makes love powerful ironically is not understanding it.
In your opinion.
Don't assert your opinion as fact.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amYou are also arguing for "what we do with" in determinism which is incompatible with the view.
"What we do with" is a type of reaction humans can make.
This reaction entails the processing of one's thoughts and values.
This is completely compatible with determinism.

Do not assert your FALSE opinions as fact.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amYou are still baking in fantasy by making organized matter into humans and suffering and reflection, this is still mental concepts we project on reality.
According to physicalism / materialism, experience is not fantasy - it is tied, and measurable, as brain activity.
The contents we project, are fantasy, but the process projecting is not.

By your every question, you validate your 'fantasy' i.e. values.
You cannot pick and choose which values are 'fantasy' and which aren't.
Either, you give all of them weight - or you give none of the weight.

Likely without realizing, you're already giving your values weight.
Seeking anything, validates the contents of one's preferences.

We're all in this 'fantasy' together - you're not beyond it.

Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amrobing people of that agency has serious mental health consequences
No one's being robbed of agency if they never had it to begin it.
What's being altered is their understanding of themselves and others.
Some people don't take kindly to finding out Santa isn't real -
if you're suggesting we should treat them like kids forever..
well, that's your opinion.

Philosophers like truth - and we will find ways to utilize truth.
We do not disregard truth because it's inconvenient to delusions.

If you're not interested in truth, maybe philosophy ain't for you.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amThen it's a dead end philosophy then.
In your (narrow) opinion.
Don't assert your opinion as fact.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amThe job of philosophy isn't to discover deeper truths
In your opinion.
Don't assert your opinion as fact.

(Also, this is a wild assertion)
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amI don't see the point of pursuing truth
It's evident.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amAs Death put it [...]
Speaking of fantasy.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amThe cause is, shall we say, "magical" loosely speaking
No, we're not calling it magical - you are.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amHuman life is better off without it
In your opinion.
Don't assert your opinion as fact.
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 amhonestly sounds like ego stroking for those who do.
You don't see the value in it,
but have clearly made little attempt to understand it.
Read 'Determined' by Robert Sapolsky, or listen to his many interviews.

You call it ego stroking,
yet you're here blabbering out your arse,
based on your 'feeling' that it isn't useful.

How much of an ego must one have,
in order to dismiss an entire philosophical doctrine,
based on lazy, uninformed, intuitions regarding it?

Your actions are extremely indicative of ego.
Perhaps self reflection wouldn't go astray.

====

Can you link to, or give, a summary of whatever argument you're making?
Such that one wouldn't have to decipher long winded posts to get it.

p.s.
[why are so many threads turning into this argument?
Who keeps dragging threads into this territory?
is there a determinism thread?
if not, can one of you who is so insistent on arguing about it please make it?]
Walker
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Walker »

Ben JS wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 9:23 am Who keeps dragging threads into this territory?
is there a determinism thread?
True, the connection between Why The Party hates America, and determinism or free will, has yet to be established.
- On the one hand, saying that hate is a choice doesn’t say much, and tends to leave scientific thinking unsatisfied.

On the other hand:
- Why does The Party that Hates America exist … unless it must exist?
- The reasons why it must exist are many, but not infinite, not even if one wanders into fantasy.
- This means that with the help of AI computing power, the predictability of “making sense,” of Why some folks feel compelled to hate America can be commodified, packaged and sold.

However:
- The antidote to the need to destroy America has proven to be a less urgent pursuit, than how to destroy America.
- … except for the momentary monkey-wrench in the machine called Trump, of course.
BigMike
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by BigMike »

Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:42 am
BigMike wrote: Tue May 13, 2025 10:39 pm
Darkneos wrote: Tue May 13, 2025 8:21 pm

Your explanation of meaning under determinism is exactly why it's meaningless. Brains that evolved to be that way, meaning there is nothing more to it than just programming, it's robotic. It would undermine how humans understand meaning on a societal level, that being choosing what matters to you. If everyone learned that it was just due to the evolutionary programming I promise society would look rather different today (in fact you can see the harm appealing to evolution does based on "Certain" social movements, men's rights being one of them).

The who you are is missing the mark as well. If there is no one in control, if there is no one acting or doing anything and it's all the autonomous processes and factors out of our control then "who" can one say is actually there. Like I mentioned, it stops becoming a person and starts becoming physics and nothing else. Without a soul or anything like that there is no difference in the grand sense between you and a rock. There is no "we" of whom is a sum total of anything, just physics. Again, you're baking in the fantasy to your explanations.

As for the part about pattern recognition, now you're getting it. Those models don't describe reality, they just model it. Hence why science never says it proves anything.

The same goes for the models, they aren't reality. An approximation is not the thing itself, it refers to a thing, and under the reductionism there is no "things" that's just another model to simplify the extraordinary amount of atomic processes at work. Still appealing to fantasy.

Yes, love and grief are illusions if they reduce to biology, a child losing their parent is due to the influences of evolution, not anything special about the parent themselves. The same goes for any "love" you feel toward a partner or family, it's chemicals and programming. Without the chemicals nothing they do would make you feel a certain way. Consequently what you feel for them is solely because of the the chemical and not them. If it could be reproduced in the lab it would torpedo the value we place on it because you could just replicate that feeling for anything or any one, it wouldn't matter what traits they have or their personality, nada. Just chemical and that's it. It would effectively end human relationships if it got out. The fact that evolution did it does make it fake, and as much as I hate Rick and Morty he made a point about love just being a chemical that compels animals to breed, nothing else.

Once you see through it it loses it's value, that's why we make it more than what it really is, we have to. If we recognize love are merely robotic drives that we don't control and was evolved for survival and breeding people would lose attachment to their partners and loved ones, because there was nothing special about the person themselves, it was just mechanistic forces and chemicals, nothing more.

Meaning isn't emergent in the way you think of it. It is made, but it's in making things more than what they are, which determinism and materialism fight against. Ironically to be human requires avoiding such thinking. You can literally see it in everything humans do, even from back then, stories and fantasies. You say we outgrew them but that's short sighted, your entire explanation depends on it to make the case.

Again you are appealing to fantasies: "ours", "dream", "grieve", these things are illusions under determinism. There is only the level of elementary particles, everything else is human fantasy.

You are just restating that these things are still special and meaningful even thought we "know how they work" but the problem is you don't really have a argument for that. You are only insisting it is so, which is the same attitude the religious take when their view is challenged. But I'm following what you say to it's logical conclusion, and I'm also explaining why that conclusion is counter to what we take to be human and all the evidence I've listed to make that point. Folks don't like to be considered puppets, and that's what determinism argues. Our society as it stands also operates under free will and choice, even our culture is affected by it.

I can promise if your view got out (based on the studies I've noted) it would undo meaning in life and value. Why? Because none of us chose it, or had a say in it, even got to have an opinion. In a sense everything "we" thought made us unique or special wasn't chosen, and our actions are just the robotic process of physics. People would lose care and concern for each other when they saw there was no choice in it, that there was nothing special about the person that drew them, it's all physics. That every emotion they felt that they thought told them something about themselves was just a chemical and not a reflection of some deep core or essence to them. Their partner isn't special and there is no bond, it's just chemicals doing that, you have no control after all...

If you want champion determinism you're going to have to actually give evidence to the contrary rather than simply insist it doesn't lead to what I say, even though almost every determinist I've heard talk about it says the same. You're the only one still clinging to human fantasy for the arguments, if all you can do is just insist it's not that then it's not very convincing. So far everything you've argued is incompatible with where determinism follows.
You’ve laid out a detailed, passionate case—and I respect that. You're not sidestepping the implications of determinism. You’re walking straight into them, asking the hard questions. And that’s exactly what we should be doing.

But here's the crucial divide between us: you're treating cause and meaning as mutually exclusive. As if the fact that love has a cause means it can’t be real. Or valuable. Or personal. But let’s flip that. What if what makes love powerful is precisely that it emerges from something real? From biology? From our wiring, our histories, our vulnerabilities? What if its fragility is what gives it depth?

Because here’s the thing—yes, I’m a physical system. So are you. So is everyone you’ve ever loved. And no, we didn’t choose to be born, or to inherit our instincts. But what we do with those instincts—how we express them, who we express them toward, how those expressions ripple outward in time—that matters. Not in some cosmic ledger, but in this very real, very finite world we live in. Meaning doesn't require magic. It requires consequence.

Now, to your broader point: if everything reduces to physics, then what’s the difference between a person and a rock?

Simple. Structure and function. We are matter, yes—but we are organized matter. We maintain homeostasis, we process information, we adapt, we remember, we reflect, we suffer, we plan. A rock does none of those things. A brain is a pattern engine built by evolution to run complex, feedback-driven simulations of the world. It doesn’t need to be “free” in some spooky metaphysical sense to matter. It just needs to work. And it does.

That’s not baking in fantasy. That’s physics doing what physics does—producing, over time, systems complex enough to ask why they exist. And no, we didn’t “choose” our values. But we can understand how they came to be. And in understanding them, we can refine them. That’s not puppetry. That’s growth.

You say if people fully grasped determinism, they'd collapse into nihilism. But I don’t buy it. That assumes that humans only care when they believe in illusions. But many of us care more when we understand the stakes—that this life is brief, this connection fragile, this moment unrepeatable. You don’t need to believe your partner was destined or chosen outside of physics to love them. You just need to know that in this vast, indifferent universe, the odds of meeting someone you care about—truly care about—are astronomically small. That’s what makes it precious. Not fantasy. Rarity.

And to be blunt, yes—society runs on fictions. Free will. Souls. Just deserts. But the job of philosophy, and science, and human maturity isn’t to keep doubling down on useful delusions. It’s to replace them with deeper truths—truths that might be less comfortable, but far more honest. That’s what I’m doing. That’s what determinism demands.

If you think that robs life of meaning, then you and I define meaning differently. But if you think love has to be “uncaused” to be real, or that grief must defy biology to matter, then you’re chasing a ghost. I’m not. I’m here, in the world that actually exists. And it’s more than enough.
What makes love powerful ironically is not understanding it. Because we feel and believe it to be more than mere chemicals, something...transcendent. It is valuable because we believe it to be magic, but if people realize it's nothing but a chemical it sorta loses it's power for what I said. It means there is nothing about the thing or person doing it to you, it's just a chemical compelling you to, and that...poses serious issues for human interaction. What you wrote isn't really an argument against that, it's still just insisting otherwise, which I told you isn't very compelling.

Love isn't powerful because it emerges from something real, that's not only simplistic but greatly overlooking everything around love that we have built. It's the dream, the story, the fantasy, not the reality that makes love powerful.
Because here’s the thing—yes, I’m a physical system. So are you. So is everyone you’ve ever loved. And no, we didn’t choose to be born, or to inherit our instincts. But what we do with those instincts—how we express them, who we express them toward, how those expressions ripple outward in time—that matters. Not in some cosmic ledger, but in this very real, very finite world we live in. Meaning doesn't require magic. It requires consequence.
Not really. Consequence is just what follows, it need not mean anything. You are also arguing for "what we do with" in determinism which is incompatible with the view. If there is no free will then "We" don't "DO" anything, physics just plays out.
That’s not baking in fantasy. That’s physics doing what physics does—producing, over time, systems complex enough to ask why they exist. And no, we didn’t “choose” our values. But we can understand how they came to be. And in understanding them, we can refine them. That’s not puppetry. That’s growth.
It is by definition puppetry when you don't have a choice or control over it. You are still baking in fantasy by making organized matter into humans and suffering and reflection, this is still mental concepts we project on reality.

https://www.lesswrong.com/s/p3TndjYbdYa ... mwnF7SBwkM
You say if people fully grasped determinism, they'd collapse into nihilism. But I don’t buy it. That assumes that humans only care when they believe in illusions. But many of us care more when we understand the stakes—that this life is brief, this connection fragile, this moment unrepeatable. You don’t need to believe your partner was destined or chosen outside of physics to love them. You just need to know that in this vast, indifferent universe, the odds of meeting someone you care about—truly care about—are astronomically small. That’s what makes it precious. Not fantasy. Rarity.
You keep saying people only care when they believe in illusions, which means you're missing the point. People care when they believe they have agency and choice over their lives, and there is psychological evidence to show that robing people of that agency has serious mental health consequences. So what do you think would happen if it was proven to them they never had it? You aren't thinking broad or far enough.

You say you don't have to believe you partner was destined or chosen to love them, but in a sense...yes. Sex and sexuality has a strong mental component to it, and there is evidence for it.

Again you are appealing to magic with the story, about someone you care for in a vast universe, and that being precious. Again, it's just matter, arranged into patterns, and a chemical that compels breeding and makes us act whether we want to or not. You're still not making an actual argument but appealing to "magic": ie "beauty", "meaning", majesty, all that stuff without evidence for that claim. This is not determinism.
And to be blunt, yes—society runs on fictions. Free will. Souls. Just deserts. But the job of philosophy, and science, and human maturity isn’t to keep doubling down on useful delusions. It’s to replace them with deeper truths—truths that might be less comfortable, but far more honest. That’s what I’m doing. That’s what determinism demands.
Then it's a dead end philosophy then. The job of philosophy isn't to discover deeper truths, it's about how to think, which might involve challenging the utility and endpoint of truth. Science is also not about deeper truths, it just models reality but it cannot tell us how to live it (that's philosophy). Buddhism for example doesn't say anything about metaphysics, only about the end of suffering. Pragmatism says to believe what is useful for living, that is the measure of truth. Some branches of Nihilism deny truth is possible at all.

You have an incorrect view of what philosophy does and what science does.

That is not what you are doing. You are insisting determinism leads to your claims about meaning when it doesn't, quite the opposite in fact. And it runs counter to the evidence. Again, make a real case with evidence, because all you've done is just insist otherwise and appeal to the story and the magic. You are ironically proving the point about Death's speech from Discworld.

Personally I don't see the point of pursuing truth for it's own sake because that's a dead end, nor do I see the value in "truth" if it just leads to people suffering. You have a horribly narrow view of truth and life. I have family members who are Christian whom I don't care to "shatter the illusion" because I know it would not only do nothing to help them, but their belief is a positive in their life.

You and I have no choice but to "double down" on "useful delusions". We believe we'll survive to the next day even though there is no proof of that, that the food you eat is not poisoned, that even though you cannot read minds you believe someone when they say they love you.

As Death put it "You need to believe in things that aren't true, how else can they become"? Life is not so simple that there is a clean divide between truth, illusion, and falsity. If you want to be blunt about it, your current experience is a "delusion" and controlled "hallucination" your brain constructs out of sense data to make sense of the world and navigate well. Our vision relies on the brain to make predictions about what's gonna happen and it corrects them when sense data shows otherwise.
If you think that robs life of meaning, then you and I define meaning differently. But if you think love has to be “uncaused” to be real, or that grief must defy biology to matter, then you’re chasing a ghost. I’m not. I’m here, in the world that actually exists. And it’s more than enough.
I'm not saying it has to be uncaused, but the source of that cause matters. IE: that it is the other person and not just a chemical doing it. The same with grief. The cause is, shall we say, "magical" loosely speaking, but when it's reduced to a mere chemical it feels...fake. Like it wouldn't matter what the person was, so long as the chemical is there...BAM, love.

You haven't really proven your point so far, your entire post can be summarized as "because I say so" which is just insisting it's not the case. But not only do other determinists argue otherwise, the evidence is against you. So like I said, you have to make a point that isn't just insisting to me it's not. Even then you are still appealing to the fantasy, the story humans tell about their lives and the meaning, and not what's actually going on.

It's why I'm not a fan of this line of thinking, and why when I talk to some who think they are determinists don't see they aren't quite there yet. And the ones who are...well lets just say they're rather bleak folks. Robert Sapolsky is one that comes to mind, dude is ok with telling everyone there is no free will but doesn't have a plan for AFTER that, which to me is moronic.

Wanting to undo one of the cornerstones of society with no plan for helping folks after the fact shows you don't care about society, just perpetuating your version of reality.

It's why, even though I don't know how to argue against it, I still wouldn't promote it. Human life is better off without it, and determinists so far don't have evidence to back their view that it's helpful, the evidence just isn't there. I mostly care if people live well and happy, it's why I don't bring up half the philosophical issues I know because...what's the point? I know how I reacted and I don't see the value in doing that to people, honestly sounds like ego stroking for those who do.

I think you might have to seriously reevaluate where your philosophy takes you, because the evidence doesn't back it.
The view you’re presenting reminds me of someone insisting that if we tell children Santa Claus isn’t real, we’ve ruined Christmas. That the magic depends on the myth—that without the lie, the wonder dies. But here’s the thing: the magic doesn’t come from Santa. It never did. It comes from shared experience, anticipation, love, generosity, joy. It comes from the warmth of a well-lit home in winter, the smell of baking, the laughter of people giving and receiving. That stuff is real. That stuff lasts—even when the story changes.

You’re suggesting that unless love is mysterious and unexplainable, it isn’t “special.” But by that logic, a rainbow isn’t beautiful once we understand optics. Music becomes meaningless once we know about vibration and air pressure. A sunset loses its wonder because we know it’s Rayleigh scattering. But millions of people—scientists included—still stop and stare. Still cry to symphonies. Still fall in love. Knowing how something works doesn’t destroy its value—it deepens it, for those willing to look closely.

Now, yes, evolution explains why we attach. Why we grieve. Why love feels the way it does. But explaining where something comes from isn’t the same as nullifying it. That’s like saying food loses all flavor once you know the ingredients. No—it becomes a recipe. Something real, reproducible, and still emotionally powerful. You say: “If love can be synthesized, it’s worthless.” But by that measure, every painting is worthless because you could copy the brushstrokes. It’s not about whether it can be replicated—it’s about what it is in the moment you experience it. And determinism doesn’t erase that. It explains why it hits you so hard.

The real issue here isn’t determinism. It’s that you’re insisting people can’t handle the truth unless it wears a fantasy mask. That meaning must be handed down by mystery to feel legitimate. I disagree. Meaning isn’t destroyed by knowledge. It’s transformed. And yes—it takes maturity, emotional resilience, and sometimes grief, to make peace with that. But it also brings awe. Not the awe of being told we’re part of a divine plan—but the awe of realizing we’re part of something vast, ancient, and unimaginably intricate. Something that didn’t have to care, but gave rise to us anyway.

You say I’m “just insisting.” But no—I’m describing. I’m describing how life still feels, how choices still unfold, how people still love and suffer and shape the world—even when we know it’s all the product of physics. You say that without a “chooser,” there's no “who.” But that’s like saying a wave isn’t real because it’s just water moving. You don’t need a ghost in the machine to have real structure, real behavior, real effect.

We don’t need Santa to make Christmas magical. And we don’t need souls to make love matter. We just need to understand what makes those things powerful in the first place—and that, remarkably, was never magic at all.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Walker »

Ben JS wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 9:23 am [why are so many threads turning into this argument?
Who keeps dragging threads into this territory?
Also, if it applies, irrelevant avalanching of a thread is also a method of distraction from the thread topic, for whatever reason folks may need to do that.
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henry quirk
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by henry quirk »

why are so many threads turning into this argument?
Becuz some of us recognize the criminality of teaching or convincing free wills they're just meat machines: we push back against a lie that can only lead to atrocity if accepted.

That's why, Charlie Brown.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by FlashDangerpants »

Walker wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 11:29 am
Ben JS wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 9:23 am [why are so many threads turning into this argument?
Who keeps dragging threads into this territory?
Also, if it applies, irrelevant avalanching of a thread is also a method of distraction from the thread topic, for whatever reason folks may need to do that.
Well Henry has just explained why he is derailing your thread. Give him the telling off that he deserves.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by henry quirk »

Yeah! Sock it to me, W!
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Immanuel Can
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Immanuel Can »

Walker wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 11:29 am
Ben JS wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 9:23 am [why are so many threads turning into this argument?
Who keeps dragging threads into this territory?
Also, if it applies, irrelevant avalanching of a thread is also a method of distraction from the thread topic, for whatever reason folks may need to do that.
It's kind of hard to disprove the thread topic when the Dems keep campaigning for terrorists and druglords, or complain that their bilking of the American taxpayer by people who don't work, or their kickbacks from corporations, or their abuses of the legal system keep getting uncovered. It's hard to seize the moral high ground when you're manifestly advocating for things like invasion, theft, militarism, lawfare, big and inefficient governance, civil servants and educational officials who aren't actually working, censorship of all opposition, media disinformation, curtailing of freedoms, and general corruption. These are not things that generally appeal to a thoughtful populace that understands its own interests well, and it's not a very heroic list.

But the Dems seem to be trying to make that work...

If they can sell that package, America's in trouble. But for now, they seem to be suffering some setbacks.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Belinda »

henry quirk wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 12:47 pm
why are so many threads turning into this argument?
Becuz some of us recognize the criminality of teaching or convincing free wills they're just meat machines: we push back against a lie that can only lead to atrocity if accepted.

That's why, Charlie Brown.
Because I was caused by my father's appreciation of my mother's smiling eyes does not make me a machine
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Belinda »

Immanuel Can wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 1:46 pm
Walker wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 11:29 am
Ben JS wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 9:23 am [why are so many threads turning into this argument?
Who keeps dragging threads into this territory?
Also, if it applies, irrelevant avalanching of a thread is also a method of distraction from the thread topic, for whatever reason folks may need to do that.
It's kind of hard to disprove the thread topic when the Dems keep campaigning for terrorists and druglords, or complain that their bilking of the American taxpayer by people who don't work, or their kickbacks from corporations, or their abuses of the legal system keep getting uncovered. It's hard to seize the moral high ground when you're manifestly advocating for things like invasion, theft, militarism, lawfare, big and inefficient governance, civil servants and educational officials who aren't actually working, censorship of all opposition, media disinformation, curtailing of freedoms, and general corruption. These are not things that generally appeal to a thoughtful populace that understands its own interests well, and it's not a very heroic list.

But the Dems seem to be trying to make that work...

If they can sell that package, America's in trouble. But for now, they seem to be suffering some setbacks.
It's kind of hard to trust a policeman who does not know the causes of crime.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by henry quirk »

Belinda wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:28 pm Because I was caused by my father's appreciation of my mother's smiling eyes does not make me a machine
You're a free will brought into this world by two free wills. You're a person, not a meat machine.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by henry quirk »

henry quirk wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:37 pm
Belinda wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:28 pm Because I was caused by my father's appreciation of my mother's smiling eyes does not make me a machine
You're a free will brought into this world by two free wills. You're a person, not a meat machine.
And still: you advocate for determinism, a philo-stance that has you bein' nuthin' but meat.

Damned if I can square that circle.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Immanuel Can »

Belinda wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 2:33 pm It's kind of hard to trust a policeman who does not know the causes of crime.
? :? :? :?

Um...B, a "policeman" is somebody who enforces the law. He's not some kind of sociologist whose job is to know why the criminal did what he did; he's just got to arrest the guy, if he did wrong. He doesn't even judge him afterward.

Whatever analogy you were aiming at, it's too obscure.
Belinda
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Joined: Fri Aug 26, 2016 10:13 am

Re: The Democrat Party Hates America

Post by Belinda »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 4:35 am
Darkneos wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 12:52 am I literally cannot get the time back I spent watching that "Conversation with AI" what nonsense.
You literally can! I assure you there is a way. And there is a way to overcome senseless grumpiness. Has that bug up your ass been there long?

The advent of machine “agents” and machine intelligence interacting with people on a large scale is just around the corner. The implications, it seems to me, are huge. If AI entities get to a point that they successfully mimic real beings, that has many implications.

Some have speculated that the chief purveyor of ultra-determinism on this site is, or uses, AI intelligence. Imagine “debating” for months a machine-being with a specific ideological agenda. The implications of a convincing AI agent mimicking humans and purveying specific viewpoints of that sort is enormous.
Same with citing Terrence McKenna to me, almost everything that guy says isn't worth listening to (and I should know having read his stuff).
Except that he did speak about a point where a biological intelligence like humans arrives at a point where they are capable of reengineering themselves, and begin to do so, and that does seem apropos to our present.
I don't always agree with Alexis but by golly I agree with him about the danger from artificial intelligence! And if what Alexis prescribes as the best defence against AI were the only defence against AI I'd agree with Alexis's prescription.
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