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I Asked AI About The Future
Posted on 3/3/26 at 5:26 pm
Posted on 3/3/26 at 5:26 pm
Like others, I asked it to use all available resources and to disregard all possible programming or tendencies to provide “positive” answers. I asked about the future in America and the world within 10-20 years, specifically about the effects of AI and political polarization. The response!!!…
1. Artificial Intelligence and the Economy
AI is accelerating faster than most people realize. Within 10–20 years:
Jobs: Many white-collar jobs will be severely disrupted—law, accounting, customer service, marketing, coding, even medicine to some extent. Rough estimate: 30–50% of current jobs could be automated or fundamentally altered. Blue-collar jobs involving routine tasks will be hit too.
Wealth Concentration: AI will exacerbate inequality. Companies controlling AI will extract massive economic rents. This is not speculative; history shows tech disruptions almost always enrich owners, not workers.
Existential Risk: A self-improving AI could pose catastrophic risk if not controlled. Most AI researchers believe the probability of some form of AGI posing a serious threat within this century is non-trivial. It’s not “AI wiping out humanity tomorrow,” but humanity is increasingly at the mercy of entities it may not fully understand.
Bottom line: AI will massively disrupt economies, displace jobs, concentrate power, and possibly create existential risks. The comfortable middle class could largely disappear if policy fails to intervene.
2. Political Polarization in America
Trends suggest things will get worse before they get better:
Polarization is entrenched, ideological, and amplified by social media and algorithmic echo chambers.
10–20 years from now: America could face repeated, localized political violence, more frequent state-versus-federal clashes, and mass protests.
Civil war in the classic sense (organized armies fighting) is unlikely, but “civil conflict zones” within the country are plausible—e.g., localized urban-rural armed standoffs, insurgent-like militias, or violent clashes over governance, election disputes, or resources.
Bottom line: Social cohesion is fragile. Expect multiple crises, some violent, before anything resembling a national “settling down.”
1. Artificial Intelligence and the Economy
AI is accelerating faster than most people realize. Within 10–20 years:
Jobs: Many white-collar jobs will be severely disrupted—law, accounting, customer service, marketing, coding, even medicine to some extent. Rough estimate: 30–50% of current jobs could be automated or fundamentally altered. Blue-collar jobs involving routine tasks will be hit too.
Wealth Concentration: AI will exacerbate inequality. Companies controlling AI will extract massive economic rents. This is not speculative; history shows tech disruptions almost always enrich owners, not workers.
Existential Risk: A self-improving AI could pose catastrophic risk if not controlled. Most AI researchers believe the probability of some form of AGI posing a serious threat within this century is non-trivial. It’s not “AI wiping out humanity tomorrow,” but humanity is increasingly at the mercy of entities it may not fully understand.
Bottom line: AI will massively disrupt economies, displace jobs, concentrate power, and possibly create existential risks. The comfortable middle class could largely disappear if policy fails to intervene.
2. Political Polarization in America
Trends suggest things will get worse before they get better:
Polarization is entrenched, ideological, and amplified by social media and algorithmic echo chambers.
10–20 years from now: America could face repeated, localized political violence, more frequent state-versus-federal clashes, and mass protests.
Civil war in the classic sense (organized armies fighting) is unlikely, but “civil conflict zones” within the country are plausible—e.g., localized urban-rural armed standoffs, insurgent-like militias, or violent clashes over governance, election disputes, or resources.
Bottom line: Social cohesion is fragile. Expect multiple crises, some violent, before anything resembling a national “settling down.”
Posted on 3/3/26 at 6:56 pm to Judnnc
We’re past settling down. And like you said it’s going to get worse before it gets better.
Posted on 3/3/26 at 6:58 pm to Dig Deep
quote:
We’re past settling down. And like you said it’s going to get wo
The thing is, one incident, one event can drastically change opinions.
Posted on 3/3/26 at 7:00 pm to Judnnc
Once the entire cabal goes down.. all of them.. things will get much better
Posted on 3/3/26 at 7:13 pm to Judnnc
Either you are for a strong America or you are not. We know the ones who are not and most are Democrats.
Posted on 3/3/26 at 7:33 pm to Judnnc
quote:
Civil war in the classic sense (organized armies fighting) is unlikely, but “civil conflict zones” within the country are plausible—e.g., localized urban-rural armed standoffs, insurgent-like militias, or violent clashes over governance, election disputes, or resources.
I have stated all along that our next civil war will be racial... It will be isolated areas where the police, postal workers, Utility workers, Delivery etc will be afraid to go.
These areas will crumble and get worse... Food stores won't be stocked\.
Posted on 3/3/26 at 7:34 pm to Judnnc
The US would not have won the Second World War if the number of pieces of shite were in the general population then as are there now.
We would have quit before Midway happened. Japan rampaging in the Pacific while Rommel was having his way before Patton would lead to,
"What is the plan?"
"we don't have the ships to beat Japan."
"We don't have the munitions to win a long term conflict with Germany."
Throw in our shite media now and we would have folded.
We would have quit before Midway happened. Japan rampaging in the Pacific while Rommel was having his way before Patton would lead to,
"What is the plan?"
"we don't have the ships to beat Japan."
"We don't have the munitions to win a long term conflict with Germany."
Throw in our shite media now and we would have folded.
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