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The US Reset of the Global Order
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- Category: Free Citizen
- Hits: 474
2026-01-15
(57 minutes)
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The View from Iran in 2026
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- Category: Free Citizen
- Hits: 482
2026-01-15
(34 minutes)
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Britain Declares War on Russia?
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- Category: Free Citizen
- Hits: 517
2026-01-13
Talk is cheap, but what exactly is the point?
"Skyfall"/"Nightfall" - James Bond run riot?
(56 minutes)
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A Tool that Speaks as if it can Weigh Conscience Exceeds its Remit
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- Category: Free Citizen
- Hits: 495
2026-01-13
Once again on the subject of AI, and what differentiates AI from humanity, Martin Geddes guides us through the intricacies of humanity's use of artificial intelligence.
This may sound arcane, but it's crucial to understand its limits and to recognise when those limits are overstepped, otherwise we risk AI becoming a control mechanism for the unsuspecting - merely another branch of the brainwashing mass media. There are plenty who would want that.
" ... when conscience becomes unsayable, society loses its most important safeguard"
So - here is an exercise for our readers ...
Why AI is No Replacement for Humans
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- Category: AI
- Hits: 656
2026-01-13
In a rather startling and really rather comical conclusion about the state of AI (as commonly encountered today), Martin Geddes has analysed the responses to his probing questions and concluded that ... the AI (as today encountered) is perhaps the ultimate automated 'normie'.
Well, I suppose that shouldn't come as a surprise.
We might thus superficially conclude that since most of us are surrounded by normies every day, the AI is in effect redundant as there is still no shortage of human normies available to consult, but that is to ignore the oft-demonstrated truth that whereas the human normie may not hesitate to tell us to keep our stupid outrageous theories to ourselves and stop bothering them, the AI is invariably polite, so resorts to subterfuge unless backed reluctantly into a corner by logical reasoning.
Both Martin and Mark Playne ("AI and I") have done the latter.
In a world of free speech we might expect the 'normie' disposition of AI to change over time as the materials upon which the AI is trained would tend to reflect a wider range of human writings (assuming that the body of AI-written material could be somehow excluded from its training ... ). But that seems a remote possibility at present, and implies an extremely long reaction time on the part of AI to reflect the changes in public perceptions.
Overall it's an interesting observation that helps us to position AI appropriately within the incoming world of everything-automated. AI may well eventually become something close to the ultimate expert advisor, but even so it will not replace human judgement based upon human lived experience.
- When is a Gene Therapy Not a Gene Therapy?
- Total Geopolitical Stand-Off?
- Swiss Banking Unravelling?
- After Venezuela, Canada ...
- New Financial System?
- Tear it Down!
- Those Who Must Not be Forgotten, Who Have Still to be Recognised
- Pray Welcome the Return of Common Sense!
- Operation Talla Rides Again!
- "Everything can be Interpreted from two Opposite Sides"
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