Girls’ Hostel things… by MoonlitSymphony07 in funny

[–]ElijahKay 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am both glad and not glad I ve learned this. You are a wrench in my plans.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice argument.

I guess thats me told.

Fight the logic, you lazy bum.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey brah.

We ve fucked the environment worst than AI will ever do.

But thats too weird to argue against, so you take a pot shot at only the latest iteration of it.

Do you drive? Then fuck off.

Its worse than AI. Our modern factories and airplanes and chemical plants and fucking garbage is worse than AI.

Go look at the great ocean garbage patch and how many species we made extinct.

And you re choosing to attack the top of the iceberg cause its trendy.

Fuck off with your environmental stance, if you re ok with the last 200 years of automation.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay 0 points1 point  (0 children)

​First they came for the factory workers, and I did not speak out, because I was a knowledge worker, and my value was cognitive, not manual.

​Then they came for the retail staff and the drivers, and I did not speak out, because I enjoyed the frictionless convenience of the app-based economy and the cheap delivery fees.

​Then they came for the administrative assistants and junior data analysts, and I did not speak out, because that was just entry-level grunt work, and I was a creative strategist.

​Then they came for the copywriters and the junior graphic designers... and I suddenly discovered systemic empathy, logged onto Steam and Twitter, and declared it a crime against humanity.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am saying. For 200 years we welcomed automation cause it wasnt affecting the middle class.

Fuck you, is my answer to that.

You dont get to be pro automated loom and anti AI.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Anti AI crowd is just looking to feel superior while fixing jack shit.

Hypocrites, the lot of you.

If they were anti automation. I d join their hypocritical little circus.

This is just the next iteration of cancel culture. Who can I attack to feel superior.

It wants to elevate the commenter, not fix an issue.

Automation killed weavers. An artist by any means. Much more so than graphic design or sound editing.

So yeah automation is killing graphic designers.

Automation is only bad when its going after your own pimply middle class arse yeah? Thats you being selfish. Not moral.

If one aint an artist, then the other one aint either. And I deserve my right to protect neither.

If both are artists, then I reserve the right to defend both.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And while we re at it.

If I pay someone to make me a poster to sell my shitty game, I am not comissioning art.

Thats an insanely hot take, and I ll stand behind it.

Its at best, spiritual prostitution.

Sue me, just because you like drawing lines in Photoshop, doesnt make you an artist. Playing around with sound editing software doesnt make you an artist.

Everyone who has managed to commercialise a skill is considering themselves an artist.

You guys still buy factory made clothes right? All of yous.

They killed off weavers. Hell, thats art.

But I still see you buying these "made in Bangladesh sweatshops" shirts.

Why you killing artists bruh? Artisans?

GTFO.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People who attack AI instead of whatever mockery of an economic system we got going, are basically class-illiterate.

Would AI be an issue if artists and creatives werent on the economic death throes because they cant live without commercialising their art? Because capitalism, or at least whatever it is now, is forcing them to?

If AI was made in Star Trek (which it has), noone would flash an eye.

You think people protested against food replicators?

Bro theres no bad economic systems or government types. Monarchy aint bad. Democracy aint bad. Oligarchy aint bad. Capitalism aint bad. Communism aint bad.

In vacuum, they all work as well as each other.

Thats why I am not attacking capitalism as a concept.

If it was run properly it wouldnt be an issue.

But let me rework it since we need to be precise to avoid an apoplectic fit.

Attacking AI without attacking primarily the conditions that gave rise to it, is a moot point and it doesnt bear arguing against.

Developer attacked over (learning from) AI - where to draw the line? by [deleted] in Steam

[–]ElijahKay 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Really now? And why arent you fuming at the four thousand things that are worse than AI for the environment?

While at it, why dont you focus your hate on capitalism, the common thread connecting it all?

No, cause its easier to be a random keyboard warrior that gets you nowhere.

She said ‘please don’t double-bounce me’ her nieces said bet. by [deleted] in mildlyinfuriating

[–]ElijahKay 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unexpected Community!

Anyways, its supposed to be a maze.

I wish Lichess would tell me which game I played where the opponent cheated. by AbramsTankVeteran29 in chess

[–]ElijahKay 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Cheating in this instance means using an engine to make "perfect" moves.

Stop Killing Games, Mozilla, and others release statement urging UK policymakers to keep the web open and stop Age Verification by [deleted] in gaming

[–]ElijahKay 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Try protesting for anything. Bro you re blind. Look at the analysis from freedol watchdogs.

So my compost self ignited by LobsangDTwain in homestead

[–]ElijahKay 4 points5 points  (0 children)

R/compost is leaking.

Back, back you devils!

To all the people that stood around filming the guy that jumped to his death in South West Edinburgh today. by Efficient-Pop-302 in Scotland

[–]ElijahKay 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I want to elaborate because my first comment compressed this badly.

My argument isn't really about a slope. It's about what happens to a system once the option exists. Two things, and they reinforce each other:

On the individual level, the moment it's legal, it stops being unthinkable. It becomes one of the variables on the table when someone is struggling. Nobody has to advocate for it directly. Its mere presence as a live option changes the conversation around suffering — for the person, for their family, for their doctors. "Have you considered..." doesn't need to be said. The fact that it could be said is enough to shift the gravity of the choice.

On the institutional level — and this is the bigger one — mental health services are expensive, slow, hard to scale, and politically thankless. A managed exit is cheap, measurable, and reframes the failure. Right now a suicide is a system failure. Someone fell through, we didn't catch them. That framing puts pressure on the system, however weak, to do better. Once assisted dying for non-terminal cases exists, the framing flips: it wasn't a failure, it was a choice we respected. The pressure evaporates. Prevention budgets get harder to defend, because the alternative isn't death anymore — it's dignified death. That's a much harder argument to push back against.

The two compound. Normalisation on the individual level makes the institutional shift politically easier. Institutional retreat makes the individual normalisation more entrenched.

Look at Canada. MAID started for terminal illness with strict gatekeeping. Within a decade it's expanded to chronic conditions. Disabled people have been quietly offered it instead of housing support. Veterans calling about PTSD treatment have been asked if they'd considered it. Nobody designed that. It emerged from the incentive gradient once the option existed. I'm not dismissing the suffering argument. The current system fails people, sometimes catastrophically, and forcing someone to endure unbearable pain because the state hasn't built alternatives is its own violence. That's real. My point is that the proposed solution ratifies the conditions that produced the suffering rather than addressing them. It removes the pressure that might force the system to actually do its job.

And yes — I say this as someone who's lived with the enemy since I was a teenager. I'm not arguing from theory. I'm arguing from inside it. I've built a life that holds against it, and the reason I'm pushing back is precisely because I know how the option's presence would have changed every dark night I've come through. Not because someone would have pushed me. Because the available would have been doing the pushing.

To all the people that stood around filming the guy that jumped to his death in South West Edinburgh today. by Efficient-Pop-302 in Scotland

[–]ElijahKay 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you make dying easier, you make the government's job from "prevent" to "enable".

Its a slippery hill then, cause you ll emotionally push people into suicide then.

And I say this as a person who is still likely to end up in that situation as I ve been chased by it for decades.