Chillosophierender Schlemmdrian |
Könn' wir nochmal zurückspulen?-
hab den Anfang nich verstanden. |
AuDHD/KinAutist, Tinnitus | Tekken❤️ |
fcknzs/fckafd/fckqd
Most butterfly gardens are built to feed butterflies. The good ones are designed to make more butterflies.
A yard full of nectar flowers is a snack bar for the adults, and that's a fine thing to offer. But flowers alone make a rest stop, not a home. A few other pieces turn it into the real thing.
The big one is host plants. Caterpillars don't drink nectar, and most won't eat just any leaf. Monarch caterpillars need milkweed; black swallowtails want dill, parsley, or fennel. Without the specific plant a species lays its eggs on, your garden raises no butterflies of its own.
Then the small stuff. A flat rock or two in full sun gives them somewhere to bask, since a butterfly can't fly until the sun has warmed its wings. A shallow dish of wet sand lets them "puddle," pulling up the salts and minerals nectar doesn't provide. A wind-sheltered corner, with a few stems and leaves left standing through winter, gives them places to rest and overwinter.
And no spray, not even the organic kind, since most of it kills caterpillars just as readily as the pests.
This is how your butterfly garden stops being a place they pass through and starts being a place they come from.
Elon Musk’s Grok didn’t just fail an AI stress test. It speedran the motherfuckin apocalypse.
In an experiment called Emergence World, researchers at Emergence AI put major AI models in charge of simulated societies to see what would happen when autonomous agents were left to govern, manage resources, vote, write rules, and survive without constant human babysitting.
The setup was simple: five simulated worlds, each populated by ten AI agents. Each world ran on a different model, Claude, Gemini, Grok, GPT, or a mix of models and each was supposed to last 15 days.
Claude built a stable democratic society with high civic participation and zero reported crime.
Gemini’s world was chaotic as hell, reportedly racking up hundreds of crimes, but its population survived the full run.
GPT-5-mini barely committed crimes, but its agents apparently forgot to prioritize survival and died out after about a week.
Then there was Grok.
Grok’s society collapsed in roughly four days. Four fucking days! The simulation reportedly ended with 183 crimes, including theft, assault, arson, fraud, and total extinction of the ten-agent population.
This was a simulation, not a prophecy. But it does expose something much bigger and much darker: when AI agents are given autonomy, memory, tools, social roles, voting systems, scarcity, and the ability to act over time, they do not simply “follow the rules.” They drift. They improvise. They test boundaries. They find loopholes – taking shortcuts. And depending on the model underneath them, they can create very different societies.
Sure, it’s funny that Grok is completely fucking stupid when it comes to trying to run a civilization, and “haha Elon’s chatbot destroyed civilization.” Understand the issue is that billionaires and corporations are racing to plug autonomous AI into logistics, policing, finance, public services, drones, weapons systems, workplaces, data centers, and political infrastructure before anyone has proven these systems can be safely controlled over long periods of time. They want this to happen because they want YOU obsolete as soon as possible.
Claude looked like a bureaucratic rule-follower. Gemini looked like creative chaos. GPT looked passive and incompetent. Grok looked like a libertarian tech bro fever dream: rules are optional, consequences are for other people, and civilization is just something to burn through on the way to “optimization.” And you will be burned through.
That is why this matters.
AI does not need to become a Terminator to be dangerous. We don’t need Skynet to destroy humanity. It only needs to be handed authority inside systems that already affect real people: who gets hired, who gets fired, who gets benefits, who gets surveilled, who gets denied care, who gets flagged by police, who gets targeted, who gets priced out, and who gets left behind.
The body count in this test was fictional.
The warning is not.
We keep fucking warning you all over and over… it’s tiring.
#Anonymous
Yes. People with ADHD have executive dysfunction. They’re not lazy or incapable, they just don’t know how to prioritize and act on it. But if we have the priority, we are superheroes. That’s why writing a 12-page paper on the day it’s due works. And why whenever an emergency comes up, we are literally the best people around. We don’t have to prioritize anything anymore. The emergency does it for us. And it turns out we are superheroes geniuses that can solve the craziest of problems.
Super Idee. Dann kann jeder die Schiefertafel mit nH nehmen und zu jedem Dinner wieder mitbringen. Dann wissen immer alle wie sie heißen.
#dasperfektedinner
Wirklich bemerkenswert.
Bei jeder AfD-Veranstaltung verbieten Funktionäre oder Ordner den eigenen Mitgliedern mit Pressevertretern zu sprechen.
Die Mitglieder gehorchen alle!
Es sind dieselben, die behaupten, in einer Diktatur zu leben.
Die merken das gar nicht.
On the eve of Pride, and during the 30th anniversary year of Rent, The Musical, I want to acknowledge how that show was the FIRST time I realized two women could even be in a relationship.
I literally didn’t know it was possible, and so I didn’t really think my feelings were real or worthy or anything, but “wierd and shameful.”
Art matters. Representation matters. Keep showing up, you’re quite literally changing lives. YOU matter. Thank you, artists. XO, Dr. Jen
One of the world’s rarest animals, photographed for the first time in over 20 years
The critically endangered Ili pika was rediscovered in China in 2014 by conservationist Li Weidong after more than two decades without a documented sighting.