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AI is destroying creativity

Aug 07, 202557 min
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Episode description

Is AI suffocating creativity and replacing human connection with code? Jerm and Eric Coppolino tackle tech, censorship, gender, and why real relationships still matter.

More Jerm interviews: https://www.ukcolumn.org/series/jerm-warfare

Transcript

The COVID era really showed us, you know, who's got hair in their arms. I mean, if you think about it right, we lost a lot of friends and we gained a lot of new friends and we learnt a lot about the world around us. And in many ways, I feel like we're in a better place. I mean, would you go back to 2019 if you had a choice 20? 19 was very rough. That's why it worked. The reason that the COVID operation worked is because people were so stressed out and unhappy.

Really a treadmill feeling, people would really run ragged. And the lure, the, the bait of the bait and switch was you get to take a little break, you get to breathe for a second. I didn't. I was on March 3rd, I was working on COVID-19 news. I started, I started my daily publication and chronology 10 days before the emergency was declared, and then I was up to like 4:00 in the morning for the

next 600 nights. But I got a good journalism assignment out of it. Were it not for the whole era, the SIOP, the operation, I wouldn't have met you. Yes, Yep. And I'm happy to have lost the false friends. And, you know, a lot of my clients bailed out, you know, for my other business bailed out. And I thought I was a better teacher than that. But, you know, they're accusing me of of things and of being a Trump supporter and, you know,

lying about killing grandma. And I'm like, you know, you've been, you say you've been reading me for 15 years and I've always gotten it right. But maybe you should call me up since my phone number is all off my website and I actually answer the phone. You should call me up and ask me what's going on that way. What's you can call me up and say, you know, what's your problem, bro? I'll tell you, I'll tell you. This is a weird thing you said

now Trump supporter. And I remember a time many, many years ago where you could say openly, I like Obama or I like Clinton or I like whoever, doesn't really matter. And you wouldn't lose friends over it. You might get into a bit of an argument, but you wouldn't lose friends. Yeah, that end, though I tend to lean left in my politics, I have been the kind of person who leaned left who always listened to what people from other viewpoints had to say and that they respect that immensely.

If you are, if you're, if you're a liberal, who actually cares what they say, you're not a Lib tard. And anytime I've had a long and storied journalism career going back to to 1983, and anytime I have been arrested for journalism, banished from a place in any way, censored or banned, it's always been liberals who have done it. Never once has somebody who allegedly had some opposite viewpoint of mine, which then you find out isn't so opposite

when you actually parse it out. It's always been people on the left who who just blatantly practice lockstep censorship or pillorying or wokeism or or whatever. And that that's been instructive. I think it's not indicative of a sound character. Now let me just categorically state I have kind of given up on the labels thing. Left, right, liberal, conservative, big. That's because I don't. I don't really know what they mean.

For the sake of a discussion, I'm only saying it for the black pieces and white pieces in chess, you have to have. I mean, I'd love a chess board with like purple and green Is that is that that must have got that exist. But yes, it's become completely meaningless.

I think though, in the United States there is this weird thing that thinks of itself as liberal movement, which flies the trans flag, which will try to correct your speech, which will accuse me of photographing models that are conventionally attractive. I once had one of these my studio. What's that, Sweeney? Have you seen that that that whole new thing now with those jeans, the what's their name? Sue Sweeney? Something little. Cute. That's what they're mad about.

She's hotter than they are. That's all it is. But she's got what? A little cutie? Jesus Christ. I downloaded the my favorite of those images, and I've got it at full resolution. Then I wrote to the Then I wrote to the ad agency with my Pacifica Network branding on my e-mail saying, well, they're all pissed off, but I'm not, so I'm having fun with that.

It's, it's so absurd. Like there's, they're actually claiming this is a neo Nazi. They, if they, if they think that's neo Nazi, let me take you to Auschwitz. Let me let's take a walk through the mass graves of Bookenwald. I've been there. It had nothing to do with a cute girl with bare feet and bell bottoms. I'll take the girl on the bare feet and bell bottoms any day over Bookenwald. Well, the point I was trying to make is that the whole left right thing, yes, it does have a

place. I think in in general conversation, we kind of know what we mean when we say liberal or conservative. We do, we do kind of have an idea. I've had the best conversations over the years with self identified communists for example. Or or yeah, when you get into the point of the conversation where it's like, well, what are your actual values? I I wrote in my last column that sign of the times cops or more or interesting more interesting

than hippies. This is just based on conversations, but I also think that prostitutes are the most interesting women to talk to. I've had something very probably then then you get guys like Buckminster Fuller agreed with this. He's like he the women he loves the most, the smartest women, some of the most intelligent, by which I mean general intelligence. They could keep up with anything that I would say have been

prostitutes. So the the labels are are ridiculous and but you know, you need them to a point. But then like I've, I've watched my positions on issues changed, like abortion, for example, like feminism. Feminists convinced me that feminism was a lie. They they buy their behavior. And then I started to look into the concepts behind Open Access to abortion, and I started to disagree with those foundational principles. Now there's a complicated issue, right?

Because we have bodily autonomy. And I think that's, that's the beauty though of, of, of reality as opposed to constant academia and theorizing. Yeah. When you just look at actually what's going on around you and when you experience it, it does alter the way in which you perceive things. This is why I said to you earlier, I've had some of the best conversations with self identified communists. Because they tend to be

intellectually advanced. They've if they've read Marx, I want to know what the hell they read. I I haven't read Marx, but I'm very interested in what people who have read Marx have to say about Marx. It doesn't make me a Marxist, but there's a lot of very interesting critique of the problems we are experiencing now, AI being one of them. This is colonialism. This is we are in another stage of colonialism right now.

Yeah, You just created my segue because I wanted to ask you about AI. So let me just quickly premise it with the following. So I know we've chatted about this off air briefly. My my position is nuanced on AI. So I have the view that technically, all right, it can't control us. It can't take over because it's purely a set of algorithms designed with a purpose. It doesn't have a will or a desire. So it can't, it can't become human in the sense that it's

going to think about things. However, that's where it ends because in the same way it like like smartphones have taken over our daily lives. I think in the same way we will allow ourselves to be taken over in an A sort of abstract way by AI. And I think you kind of agree with that. Yeah, though my position is historically based and goes back to Telegraph and the light bulb. So I saw your show the other week. That's why I wrote to you with those two guys.

And look, they're solid and it's the I forget their names. And it was the best technical explanation I have seen. Although I am, I'm now reading this, which is stunning. It's it's really, she's made. You could probably get her on the show and had I not see my my dad was a professor of communications. And so I was aware of the work of Marshall Mcluhan when I was a kid. And, and when when we watched dinner TV at dinner, there was a microphone taped to the television.

So we didn't just consume television. When you're growing up and your dad has a microphone taped to the side of the television, you know, you're supposed to observe it. It's not just a thing that's just going to float through you like a The Flintstones. So he recorded the news and those tapes are gone. He's kept everything he's ever owned and he doesn't have those tapes, which would be incredible to have little old little reel to reel, like 4 inch reel to reels.

So, and not video because there was no videotaping. And so I was aware of media theory very young and, and I applied it as best I could. And then I met Andrew Mcluhan, Marshall's grandson. And through Marshall I met his father, Andrew's father, Eric. And so I have gotten to have many conversations with actual people in the Mcluhan family. And Eric was Marshall's collaborator and assistant for

more than 10 years. So I started to read in D in depth on Mcluhan's theories and he provides a map to the territory that we're in. But he could not, I know where he stood on computers. He couldn't foresee what we are having going on right now. He did not foresee them hallucinating for example. But what he did. But what he did say was that computers are LSD for the business community. We can't find this quote, but I

have read this. I'm not sure what book I read it in. Computers are LSD for the business community. He said this in the 60s and he believed they induce an out of body hallucinatory state. For those who've never done LSD. It's like you're living in a dream. Basically. You you. If you have, if you have good stuff by a good chemist, you're living in a subtle dream world but you're waking. You can get up and go to the

kitchen. You can get a cup of coffee, put it back on the table if you're so inclined. And that's what he said computers are doing to us. And he and all electrical technology has been regarded pretty much by any observing philosopher as something that basically shoves us out of body onto the astral plane. And this starts with Telegraph and it's and it continues with telephone and the electric light. I don't think we've recovered from electric light as a

technology advance. The world was dark at night and light during the day and now, except like where I am, it is light all night. It's it's light on. Yeah, that's interesting. And this, our hormones, our social behaviors, yes, every, it changed everything. And you couldn't stay up. Well, they had whale lamps how I couldn't and candles and candles as dangerous and I could. I couldn't do that. People get old their their eyes aren't as good as when they're young.

So how are you reading by oil lamps all all night long? So you most people were not so they would go to bed. And the shocks. I mean, for example, the advent of feminism takes place with the Seneca Falls Convention two years after the Telegraph. The first Telegraph signal was sent when you read the Seneca Falls Convention statement called the Declaration of Sentiments. Every single statement is a lie. Historically, women can't go to college. That's a lie.

Many colleges had opened for women. The leader of the conference was educated. Total lie. Women don't have money. No, the money to women were sitting right in the room. You can keep going. Women resigned from the human race 2 years after the Telegraph sends its first signal. What hath God wrought? They blamed God for the Telegraph. The first message Tele Telegraph was What hath God wrought? The women resigned from the

human race. The most astounding thing about the declaration of sentiments which I, which I mark as being contemporaneous with the Telegraph, is it has never once mentioned children. They make this big statement about women, their rights, their the way that men have enslaved them for all of eternity and they never once mentioned children. Think about this. So the feminist movement begins with women resigning for motherhood. Well, who's going to raise the

kids? Let's have a real conversation. I'm hoping to have. I'm hoping to that conversation. Look, if I had a baby, as I'm sure you do, I would be. I'm sure you're up at night as much as your wife is that you'll take care if she's got to sleep, you'll take care of the kid all night. You got to talk to me. You'll, you'll come a little bit wrinkled. Fine. You know, you know how to do this when you haven't slept. I'm sure that might not have

been the case. Well, but we forget that in, you know, 1912, everybody was up until all hours the, the men were out milking the cows at 11:00 at night. It might have been 5° outside and they've got to milk the cows. Mama's putting the kids to bed and then suddenly we're those are rural areas that are not impacted. And as electricity progressed, things got more and more insane, which is now where we are.

Right, right, right. So if I'm following you, Eric, what you're saying is that these big moments in history, these big events have had significant existential impact on on society and electricity, for example, being one of them that we haven't quite recovered from and AI being the next. No, There have been a series you could look at. What happened with radio was a major turning point. Radio precipitates the world wars one and two. It it, it, it what? One of the things Mcluhan said

is that people don't like this. But Gandhi, Hitler and FDR all, all rose to power thanks to radio. So radio creates A tribalism. It unravels literacy overnight. It creates tribalized, electrically tribalized people. And, and then you'd follow that through and, and then by the by the 60s, we're under the full thrall of television. And then people are treating their lives like television programs even though they didn't have television programs.

You and I have little television programs, right? That was not true in the 60s. It wasn't even community access cable in in the 60s, but people start acting like their lives are television shows in the in the 1960s, under the influence of television, all the behaviors change. Yes. In other words, these big events led to like a rewiring of the mind.

Of, well, all social relations, the internal relationship the of the, the, the years and the centuries of in, in inner focus LED created by literacy were unraveled almost immediately in the early 20th century by radio. And then they're working on television in the 30s. They're working then the computer science is born in the 40s during World War 2 and it was a bit of a very different thing. It was not digital, it was analogue.

And then in the late 40s, it's starting to go more digital, but very expensive. And this is changing people, but it's changing every social relationship. I mean, the, the, the, the phone, no one thought, no one saw this and thought this is going to change every last social relationship that we're in. But it has changed every last social relationship. Now we carry a tracking device around.

So now our position is being announced 24 by 7, it can be looked up. So one of the things electricity was a completely destroyed privacy, the reality of privacy and the concept of privacy. But for example, a digital effect that we lived through was 2020. This is very important to understand that 2020 was not possible without digital conditions. I'm, I'm used to speaking in YouTube language.

I call it the 2020 crisis because the their algorithm is not on, they're not on to the 2020 crisis. They keep giving me strikes if I say virus or COVID. So those digitalized, digitized people, digitized people fell for COVID. They fell for the software upgrade that would not have worked in the analog world. They tried meaning that there was an attempt at at a there were several pandemic scares, including one in 68 and 69. And all the kids came to Woodstock.

They couldn't frighten them with newspaper articles. And and then I interviewed the principles of Woodstock and really nobody cared. The the Germaphobe principal photographer Elliot Landy didn't even know or care about it. Michael Lang, the founder, didn't even care about it. I actually reached them directly in 2020 to do the story. And so the mere fact of COVID was not just created by the PCR. It was not just created by algorithms.

It was greatly facilitated by by robots invading social media. People are not realizing that all the censorship was AI. All the strikes were AI, right? When you're taking off Facebook and 30 seconds, that's AI working. But the people were so porous, porous from all this overexposure to digital, that all you had to do was launch this and and suddenly they're terrified.

Yeah, I, I think I agree with you actually quite a lot because on the one hand you go, OK, cool, AI is a very helpful tool. And on the other hand, it, it blurs reality. You know, my video gets taken down. Was it somebody at YouTube or was it, you know, a bot and. The very high level people like might have somebody YouTube watching the people with millions of followers. There might be some human intervention and ranking and demonetized, but for 99.9% of YouTube's, it's all algorithm.

Facebook, it's algorithm that are policing. It's looking for keywords. It's it's, yeah. But I mean, that's part of the danger then of of AI is that you don't know what is real anymore. Including you. But what they're not talking about is how fast we are becoming like it. I don't hear anyone talking about this, that the all technology environments condition humans essentially to be like them.

So you're following me here. There's things are moving in two directions, but I'm not seeing any discussion of the other direction of movement. And the direction of movement is people starting to think algorithmically Now they're they're I'm seeing stories about people using AI words like it's kind of jargony and people are picking up on that jargon, which is 1 little clue, but it's much, much worse than that. So. Where do you see it going?

Well, it it is said that there is a layer of ash that covers the world. If you dig down anywhere, you'll find a layer of ash. We're going to have a creative layer of ash. What what is doing is it is shutting people down. Look there, there's an article that was pulled off the Internet from a Lily bit the the blog, a Lily bit Substack blog. I saved it. I saved it. I saved the PDF of this.

Thank God she pulled it down. She did an analysis of how many teenagers are using companion chat bots as they're like girlfriend. Something around half of people like in the 18 to 24 range. Yeah, they're not out. That's for danger. They're not out. You know, I was always the editor in chief, so I never had to really go anywhere to find girlfriends.

I would just do my thing, publish the newspaper, sit in my office, and then all these artists and writers and production assistants would, would show up. Well, the fun of being an editor in chief all these years has always been the social environment around it. Besides my my love of publishing gone. That's gone that whole, the whole concept that you would hang out with people, really hang out with people in in

groups and get close to them. And now you've got people who have already been alienated by these technologies, young people who grow up on them. And then suddenly they're feeding them a $12.00 a month chat bot that they think they love or that's going to respond to them because they're

terrified of the girls. The boys are terrified of the girls after the Me Too movement, which is one of my main objections, which they objected to because I said, look, you can't tell me. My clients are calling me and they're worried about their their 16 year old sons who are afraid to ask a girl to the prom lest they be thought of as a sexual predator. When we confuse asking a girl to the prom with sexual predation, we're done. There's no predation and asking a girl out to the prom.

It's the school puts the prom on. How are you gonna You gotta have a prom. The boys are expected to ask the girls out and they're terrified. This has expanded into society. The so not the boys have to have a little chutzpah to engage with these kind of mystical beings known as women. I mean, even if they're. Checking out they're. Terrified. Yeah, they're checking out they're.

Well, they're checking out, yes. And they have they, I think unless they're very fortunate, lack the conversational skills to to engage them and and the girls are making it hard. The girls are being conditioned also by this, by this environment and they're they are being as they were made. They were dehumanized in the, in the Telegraph era, not mentioning children. Like has this ever been written about in any feminist term paper ever?

Like I'm really, I'd love to do a search of the literature and see if anyone's ever done a doctoral thesis on this. To not mention children in the declaration of sentiments is colossal. And then this, this conditioning has proceeded through every stage of, of, of technology conditioning the behavior and the and the thinking of everyone. But it's affecting men and women

slightly differently. But hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on. So the it's not a counter argument that you're creating, you're sort of creating an addendum. An environmental I'm taking an environmental position. I'm taking a ground field. I'm looking at the ground field, not the figure of oh this cool chat bot or how does this technology work goes JGPT 123 or 4 Sam Holtman, Bill Gates, you know.

But Eric, then are you not suggesting, therefore, that this is just a a, a consequence of progress? Well, it is. It is and. Therefore, therefore, is there moral judgement that that is required to be attached to it? Like is it a good or bad thing

or is it just a thing? Well, OK, so again, referencing Mcluhan, who was always very careful to try to avoid moral judgement, but he also didn't see what we're seeing when it when you start to have half of young people absorbed in their phones, not even chatting with each other. But but chatting with a machine, a an algorithm thinking that it's a person and then it's making them like an algorithm.

And when the, when you see the birth rate going down and when and when, when, when everyone's terrified of everyone else, that you, you, it's no longer a moral judgement. It's it's a judgement of like there is poison and the animals are all dying. You can't say, well, it's just poison. You know, it's just a molecule, a hookah, little dioxin. You know, it's like molecule like any other. It actually is not.

So your addendum then to the to the to the discussion is that while AI itself isn't going to take over, people are actually making a takeover. Them people are people are taking it's taking over people's minds and they're allowing it. Well, yeah, they're but it's so it's so tempting to like. Do you play musical instrument? I do. What do you? Love it. I've I've got a couple guitars. OK, so we've been, we've been

down this road, right? You know it, the cowboy C chord, for some reason my hands could not make that chord. I could make a lot of chords. So I had to really want to learn how to do how to do that. You have to sit there and you have to, you have to put in time and hours. I was, I, I could afford to take 4 guitar lessons a week for a while. I started at age 47 and my teacher, of course, was happy to come over every night and teach me and I'm like, give you food and money, let's work.

And now you just basically you can make up whole songs pushing buttons. This the people are lazy and there's a lot of things like that. I mean, I to, to write. I when we're done, I'm going to go, I've major writing project doing about a week and a half. I'm, I'm, I've got, I've got like 18,000 words left to write. I mean, I'm going to sweat to do that and do it well. Well, I'm willing to do that. I've I've put in my time.

I have, I have a unique talent as a writer, but that's because I write a quarter million words a year. That's my at least. At least that much. Well, on AI you can create a whole song in space of 60 seconds, yeah. Yes, and I forget which, which presenter did a takedown of it. He's one of these music producers who does a podcast and he had it, he did the song on the air and he like he composed it on the air and he could, but it's total cliche. And and you realize how much of

other culture is total cliche. But the problem is that that has worsened under digital conditions. So AI is an extension of digital conditions given a name. We've all been interacting with AI using Google, for example, all the way back to the beginning that there there's a theory that all digital technology is AI, which I agree with. I think that when you when you use a pocket calculator, not that they exist anymore, that's a form of AI doing division. Who can do division?

Who can who can divide like uneven numbers and or square roots? Can you do factorials? I don't know, maybe, but but that's a form of AI. To take a a human mental function that you'd have to train to do to be able to do this kind of long division and have it done in one second, that's a form of AI. You mentioned playing guitar earlier. You were talking about AC chord. I just play a power chord because I'm lazy. Sure. Well, but that's OK, But see, but that's solution and you know

that that gets a certain sound. Whole bands have made their sound up on power cords, like the whole 90s. Basically, it's power. Cords every. Every punk song ever, Yeah. And they're great, but that's the reason that they're great. So here's an example. There's this thing called the Boiler Room series. And these two, who are these two Asian kids, Yoko Kokomichi or something, these two Japanese kids.

It's I'm tuning in to this and I I work with a tech who's half my age, and we don't really have many cultural meeting places. But I saw this thing one night and I said it to him. I'm like, you got to fucking see this. And he writes back and says, oh, that's like my favorite thing ever. And I said, wait, you're telling me that this thing that I think is like the greatest thing, greatest thing since Brian Eno is your favorite DJ set. He's like, yeah, totally nonplussed.

I'm excited by this. And then the conversation proceeds the next day and he, he reveals this concept that you could just get an algorithm to do that. Are you familiar with the boiler room sets? It's a, I'll send a link so we can link to it in the notes. They're, they're a, they're, they're raves basically. And they're in like weird places And they set up they, they must get permission. They set up all the gear.

And these two, these two young guys have a lot of excitement around them and the people, they are absolutely enraptured by what they're doing. But there is also the beauty of the moment, the human moment that could never be created by an algorithm. Nobody would care. And these two guys are like marathon DJs working in total coordination, two different minds in total. And it's not DJ like mixing one song into another. It's this whole original. Thing.

It's spontaneous creation of electronic music with rehearsed parts and pre written parts, and then they mix it into this thing that's never ever happened before, that cannot get that kind of love and passion in the room with an algorithm doing that. So the human factor is very important, but it ceases to be important when we no longer want it. But Eric, you're just a Luddite, ha. Ha ha ha, I'm not a Luddite. Ha ha ha. You should see where I'm sitting. I'm a loveite.

I love this technology. I think it's amazing. I think it's amazing. I love it. But I am here 90% of the time. I'm creating something in this technology and that's the only antidote. Yes. Hang on, hang on, hang on. Yeah, That's that's that's the keyword. You said I'm creating something. I think that pretty much is the undertone or the undercurrent of this entire conversation. It's about creativity and creation, which is what AI ultimately is destroying. Yep, Yep, totally destroying it.

That's layer of ash that will cover the the earth. I accept that these technologies all transform us. They work us over completely. But this is different. This is different. This article, and I'm sure you can post a link to the PDF. I'll put it up. I'll host it on my website. So I'll I'll take the heat if we get in trouble. Is it different though? Because I remember in the 90s, sorry for interrupting, but I remember in the 90s when people said this Internet thing.

This isn't. This is not good. It's caused a lot of problems. We didn't need it. We didn't need it. And the phone look, I ran AI had a fabulous photo project called The Book of Blue and I started in Paris and then I went to Belgium and then I came to New York with it and I watched the models start to slowly go insane as the iPhone took over their minds. Their whole concept of their mind body relationship made it

plainly dangerous. And So what it's doing is it's it is distorting our relationship to our bodies. Have I read this quote on your on on your show the last time we did. Let me let me read this quote. The body everywhere is assaulted by all of our new media, a state which has resulted in deep disorientation of intellect and destabilization of culture throughout the world. In the age of disembodied communication, the meaning, significance and experience of the body is utterly transformed

and distorted. That's what's happening. Yeah. Profound. Profound. But Eric? I'm I don't know how to put this into words. Let me, let me try and hope that you can follow what what he is saying and what you and I are effectively doing here is we are offering a sort of a perma critique. I guess this is this perpetual criticism of progress. No, because the people who perpetuate it never care about the negative consequences. And now I think they're exploiting the negative consequences.

When you have Musk talking about going to Mars, right? You know where it's, you know where his mind is at. What is motivating these people is immortality. Yes, transhumanism, transhumanism. They, they, they think that when they're, they're, they'll get a new body, They'll have their, it's going to be like The Simpsons. You know, Richard Nixon has head in the jar. That's prescient. And it's not predictive programming. They're just smart people. So the progress is driven by

profit. It's not driven by helping people. And they make the case early in AI. Oh, this is all going to be about the mission. The mission. We're going to save you. Save. Well, wait a second. We've just lived through like 30 years of fracking, pumping hydraulic fluid into freshwater wells. Remember, freshwater is 1% of

the water on the planet. Most of it's held in the ice caps, which are melting whether you like it or not, whether you think it's climate change or not, the glaciers are melting, they're retreating. The water's running into the ocean. And so we've only, we've got a very small percentage of water. Well, AI consumes huge amounts of water. Forget about, sorry, what it's doing to people's minds and hearts. It's it is burning water. And then where are we going to

get the electricity? Well, you've got both Gates and and Zuckerberg contracting nuclear power. So five years ago it was green, green, green, green, green. And now it's like we must have electricity. They didn't have enough electricity. They didn't know how they were going to solve it for the electric car. And now they're talking about, I forget which one of these moguls, it may have been Musk or one of these big guys said 20% of the world's power is going to go to AI. But why?

Why do we need this? We don't need it. They they need it. Then let's talk about the tracking, the tracing, the surveilling. I'm editing a thing called ICE 9 News now. I'll give you a link to it. It's a daily AI news compilation. Just so someone's preserving these articles. We're preserving like 30-40 articles a day on this thing. We're up to probably 6 or 700

articles. Well, now they've got a thing where you can walk into a room with Wi-Fi and automatic Wi-Fi can automatically on the system tell who you are without any biometrics based on things like bone density and your heartbeat. So this is about a total surveillance state. But also to be fair, a lot of AI like the LLMS for example are

utter rubbish. I mean, they on the one hand are very good at, let's say you want to ask something to do with coding, but anything beyond that they're completely useless, I mean. Even that they're useless for they couldn't they don't they can't really. We don't respect the beauty of human ingenuity, the the beauty of an ordinary, you know, person down in their basement with like a drill bit in certain several parts.

And I'm going to fix the freaking boiler, you know, using what they've got on the spot, right? I don't know if you're a fan of the film Apollo 13, which probably didn't happen, but my favorite scene is where they've got the guys floating out in interplanetary space and they they that's. The one created is that the one of Tom Hanks ever got it wrong. I think so I'm not I'm not that big on on holiday could be, but it's the one where they have an

accident. There's an oxygen condenser like blows up and they're floating around space. My one of my favorite scenes in all of cinema is they've got the Grumman guy sitting around the table and they've recreated the problem in the next room. They've they know exactly what they've got on board that spacecraft. They've got some tape, they've got some square pegs, they've got some round holes. They've got like parts of other

old oxygen condensers. And the guy walks into the room with the engineer sitting around the table and he dumps all the parts onto the table. And you know, you guys have an hour and a half to make an oxygen condenser out of this garbage. That's human ingenuity. I've, I've got the, the, the notebooks of da Vinci. Da Vinci invents the helicopter with a charcoal and paper. He invents single element typing, right?

That's the that's the that's the thing the the IBM thing you don't have the little tight basket Da Vinci long before anybody was capable thought of single element typing. We do not need the humanity needs to solve its own problems, not make bigger problems and there's nothing pure about these guys. This is massively driven by the whole thing is capitalized. It like the capitalization according to Empire of AI. This book I'm pointing at here.

The capitalization when I think just this year went up $8 trillion increased these companies. It's just all this gold rush. It's got nothing to do with us. This is about crushing us with central bank digital currencies and with a smart which are, which are smart, which are every dollar is pegged with coding and tagging and what you can and can't buy and where you can and can't. That's what this is about. I I was just reminded now when you mentioned Apollo 13 just on that quickly.

My favorite moon landing movie actually ever is a recent one that came out by Apple. Have you seen it? It's called Man on the Moon. I have not. I think about a year ago. Listen, I highly recommend Is it? Historical. Is it it's it's about back at one or is it about a new mission? No, no, no. It's looking back, but it's got such a great twist. It's very original. It's the OK. So let me put it like this. The assumption is that the moon

landing is real, right? That's the premise of the movie. Fine, because it's a mainstream. Movie premise so let's work with the premises so you. Have to work within the parameters, but here's what I liked about it. It stars a couple good actors, Woody Harrelson being one of

them. He is a character who basically was this clown, this conspiracy theorist who argued that it didn't happen, wasn't going to happen, and he was in charge of setting up the the secret filming the the secret production of the landing itself, which is what was going to be played on TV. Now the fact is that it doesn't matter that he's made to look cuckoo. The point is that they actually entertained the idea, which I

thought was great. Right in a in a modern context, they entertained the idea that the photography was fake. And they brought in Stanley Kubrick, the I mean that that whole aspect of of the moon. That theory about that and he did indeed borrow F .9 lenses or something like that. These like $25,000 whatever God knows how much lenses to film to 2001. But Kubrick was the cinematic genius of of kind of of them all.

And if Kubrick filmed the moon landing, if he made that up as a movie, he put in every conceivable photography error into the moon landing to make it blatantly obvious that it had to be fake, like 2 light sources and shadows going the wrong way. And Kubrick was more than qualified to be able to insert those errors, including the Coke bottle. So to say that Kubrick shot that the only the only way that you can make that work is, yeah, he was flipping it to NASA.

And he's like, oh, eventually people will be sophisticated enough to look at. And people doubted it at the time. But think of how destabilizing this all is. Like we we live in the midst of this Dist instability. We live in the midst of this chaos. We live in the midst of the time when when boys were afraid to ask girls out to the prom. God damn. It's hard enough without that. It's hard enough without that. It's hard enough when you can

ask a girl out to the prom. How's AI or our technological progress going to in any way fix that? It's not knowing you've got 52% of kids and I will send you this article the minute we're off called. Am I allowed to use four letter words? Yes. By by It's a Lily bit. It's the blog Lily bit on Sub Stack. It's called Fucking ourselves to Death. And she pulled it down. It was one of the most blistering, incredible investigative features I've ever

read in my entire life. And it was only up for a few days. And I, I read the thing into my show on Friday night, which I love to do. And then it was, I sent it to a friend last night and she said I the link is not working. She pulled it down by Sunday and it talks about the sledgehammer that this is taking to young people's relationships. Look, I'm, I'm, I'm old and I, I know how to flirt with a woman and have it not seem like I'm flirting, right? That's a beautiful.

I love your earrings, right? You're not, you're not calling attention to the like nipples. You're like, I love your earrings. Oh, I love the way your shoes match your right. This is a legit way to flirt, right? Or you just talk about anything and say, I read a book lately. What what book have you read once that once that level of and, and people are terrified to go off script. They were terrified to go off script 10 years ago. They're terrified to go off

script. Flirting made impossible because there's always a little off script and flirting, right? And flirting's a very important level of human interaction. We have to get to like each other. We have to kind of feel each other out and check the vibes and see like, do I like the way this person looks at me? My wife made a great comment a couple of years ago, actually now, but we would we were in a group of friends.

We were with a group of friends and they were chatting about exactly what you're talking about now, how guys get they're now checking out and they don't want to make these moves. Things like buying a drink, you know, for a girl in a bar, like the old school type of stuff and cat calling, cat calling, being whistled at. My wife said, you know what, like what's wrong with being whistled at? She said now nobody wants to whistle at me.

And she's like, that sucks. And you must be good enough women complaining that the guys aren't catcalling. But this is the, the feminism, the the guiding rule of feminism is heads I win, tails you lose. That's how So you can't be you can't be listening to feminists. And I also think that the, the, the girls are in some ways smarter than the boys. I think I'm not saying any ways. In many. Ways there are and and to be to be a man, you have to catch up

with that. You have to you have to master that game. But what's happening is that the that for the boys who are first of all, who like the girls and I realize there's less and less to like, but still I I will forever like women. I just kind of like women. It's got nothing to do with anything except they're like female and I like female. For the boys who like female, this is this is kind of like the the the game.

It's their game. Because you go to college now the majority, the majority of college students are women. It's like I'm waiting for the guy to say, yeah, majority of the college students are women. Isn't that great? Isn't that great? Men, actually, men actually, I think in the main, are Dumber than women. I think this is a reality that we don't really want to accept. In a certain way. Well, I mean if you're.

Dying the Lincoln Tunnel. Or even if you plot it on a bell graph, right, Men are more extreme than than women, which is I think, I think that's probably correct and that's probably how it should be. This is This is why you have men who make films like Jackass where they will form each other riding bicycles down a road into a tree and then laughing about it. But women look at that and they go, that's stupid, why would you want to do that? Yeah, but they do. They do other suicidal things

like. Hilarious. And that's also why, like, that's also why the best chefs are men and the why the fastest are men and why the strongest are men. Because we do extreme things. Women, we have determination. We have the ability to focus on something and not stop until it's done. Panama Canal. I mean, read the story of the Panama Canal. They had to build a freaking canal over a mountain, a mountain range.

This is not like dig a trench between the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean. Oh, look, there is an isthmus. Dig a trench. No, they had to float. This is why I want to go. When I learned that, I didn't understand that. Once I heard that, I'm like, do they have Panama Canal cruises? I got to see this. You mean you can get on a boat and you can have the boat lifted over a mountain by water? That's what men do. And we need that. All civilization is men.

We had a car hit a tree here and knocked down the power pole. I knew my power was going to be out. So I, I went back a couple of times and then finally I went back and I stayed for the last three hours with the with the crews who were sorting out this mess. There were no women. It was a bunch of guys and they had to re drill. This is an ordinary work a day repair. They had to put a new pole in, they had to drill through rock, they had to mount a new

transformer. They had to sort all these. It was a complete well. That's dudes. But but that's actually, I mean, I've covered this a couple times on my, on my show, Eric and you, I mean you, you're preaching to the converted because what what feminism has done, it has ruined gender roles. And that's a very unpopular opinion, but it really is the truth.

Intentionally so. We do actually have roles that we are just simply better AT. And of course there's lots of crossover and all that sort of thing, and no one's actually arguing that. But there are essential roles that we do best at and and we need to also just be honest with ourselves about it. Yeah, and it doesn't mean there are not some transcendent mathematical geniuses among women and transcendent engineers, but usually guys are

drawn more to that. I'm a little odd in that, like growing up, I was equally into women's crafts and men's crafts. I had my Remington book, you know, I wanted my 12 gauge shotgun. And I was also interested in how that sewing machine works. And it was one guy who wanted to make clothing. So there's the engineering angle of that. But the women in my family were all very good seamstresses. And then I'm realizing, oh, this

is architecture. It's not really that easy to make a make a dress, to cut the fabric, to sew all you got to be pretty damn smart. But now you can do it with AI. Yeah, sure, you can have three-dimensional printing and you just go command P and it spits the dress out of your Poly polyester printer. But you're going to get a very sub paw result. Yeah. Well, because a dress is art as well as, as as architecture. It's art. You, you know, it's art.

So we we're going to lose that. And but what I'm more concerned about is the loss of the aesthetic sense. That's the problem. It's not so much the computers are doing things, it's the loss of the aesthetic sense. Creativity. But the sense to sense the creativity to to feel the beauty of writing. Like I'm reading, I'm always reading and I'm always reading a book. This, this book has been absolutely riveted by the quality of her writing.

And she's spending the first like 10 pages explaining the interview and fact checking process. I'm like, you got me. I, I know exactly what you're talking about. We're in the same business. Ah, you follow me. So I I'm like in love with her because plus I've seen her in a lot of interviews, but now it's like, oh, the Sapio part of my mind is like, holy shit. She is fully dedicated onto the story 5 years before that.

I I, I love that with passion. It's interesting what you're saying also because that extends into so many other facets you're talking, I mean, there you, right? Right now you're holding a pen and often, often jokes about. An old pencil fashion pencil. The eraser because I'm. Often joke about this though, when someone says you know, you're can you write it down? Well, what is what is paper and what does it do? You know, because we we write everything down now on our phone or our tablet.

Well, let me give you an example. Now you know that I'm an astrologer, and I don't blame you for wondering what that means. But my charts look like this, or I draw them, or I draw on them like this. Everyone's an original piece of artwork. So there's, there's art and architecture in here. It's both. And so there's mathematics involved and then there's intuition involved. But I, I encourage my students to print the thing and completely make it your own work

of art. So we, I sell chart sets. I put in multiple copies so you can screw it up. I put in the blank wheel. Most people are just staring at the computer screen. I think it's a completely different experience to be staring at a screen, to be doing this sublime intuitive thing that, by the way, goes back to the era of music theory and the and the alphabet 2500 years ago. It's like reading a book versus reading a Kindle. Yeah, I would never. I can't stand reading Kindles.

I print. I print out many articles. Also, I'd much rather read off the printed page. It gets unwieldy after a while. You know, I my printer, I did a test. I printed 43,000 pages on my. I have two of them and one of them informed me I had printed 43. Wow, that's a lot of reams of paper. That's 20. It's like how many reams? 25 reams of paper, basically, no, much more than that. Anyway, the the involvement of digital, it's totally sucks you in as a user.

Now we're completely involved with each other. We've built a relationship over time. We've designed our studios, we've refined our craft and all all this stuff. People watching, some obviously are going to be broadcasters, but they're on the other end of that creativity and, and, and digital and AI encourage being a consumer and not a creator. The creation is, no one would have ever imagined you could fit an entire van of equipment into this. This is Kurt Vonnegut, by the

way, who saw it? Who knew the problems we were going to be having? This would have taken a truck easily. Just the darkroom, the recording studio. There's a recording studio in there. A darkroom. Basically a post office printing press. Who could have imagined that? OK, Eric, I'm looking at the time. Give me. Give me a closing thought, a negative wisdom.

The, the most important thing we must not sacrifice to this technology is our relationships, our willingness to be vulnerable, our willingness to talk to each other and be truthful with each other. And this. And, and then right along with that is our ability to make art, our ability to find ourselves through the work that we do to process the terrible things that happened on this planet to us through the, through the creative process.

We are going, if we keep going on this trajectory, we will lose each other and we will lose ourselves. And that's what, that's why I'm concerned. That's what has me concerned. And also how to wear cool glasses like like you. They're just my reading glasses, 10% tint but they they look cool on video. They do. They've they've kind of got that Bono vibe. And I squint. He has glaucoma. That's why he wears glasses. Does he really? Is that just like image thing?

Glasses are for, that's what the sunglasses are about. Yeah. And for me, I just tint my reading glasses and I'm, I squint a lot and I squint into the I just, I don't really pop my eyes open. You're good. You're good at the guys wide thing. So it kind of Shields me from that a little bit the the fact that I, I squint a little bit. OK, Eric, how can I follow you? Two substacks, Planet Waves dot substack and Planet Waves FM dot substack.

Is that clear enough? Planet Waves FM dot Substack and Planet Waves dot substack. The news and technology in politics is more on Planet waves FM dot substack and the astrology stuff like Planet waves dot substack and there's a lot of overlapping between them. My program is called Planet Waves FM and the short shortest way to get there is Planet Waves dot FM. That's good enough. Eric Coppolino, thank you for joining me in the trenches. Jeremy.

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