@_amitbehere Absolutely. People perform this on stage because they know this shit is popular. Yahan pe open roads pe susu karte hai log bina sharm ke(we all are guilty at some point). Bas camera ke saamne mat karo aur kuch karte pakde mat jao.Even Hypocrisy comes to die in such society.
@_amitbehere Absolutely, no doubt. But then, when you are so dumb you can't reason yourself on what is right and wrong and just follow someone else's views on everything (be it politician, your favourite hero, your close family member etc. ) then you are doomed. (Andhbhakt case)
@sabeer Wow!! So true. Even though they are really good, that fear is always there which not only hampers the decision making but also makes their happiness/sensex of fulfillment based on that. How wonderful it would be to get relieved of that.
Suffering is inherent to our world. Yet it must remain within reasonable limits and for reasonable causes — and what counts as “reasonable” is for us to decide.
: The author acknowledges that suffering is an inherent part of our world, woven into the fabric of existence through natural processes, limitations, and the very conditions that make life possible. However, he insists that suffering must not be unlimited or arbitrary. It should be kept within reasonable bounds and arise only for reasonable causes.
Crucially, what counts as “reasonable” is not dictated by nature or fate, but something humanity must consciously define. This places profound moral responsibility on us. We are not powerless victims of suffering, nor are we obligated to accept it without question. Through reason, ethics, and collective will, we can reduce unnecessary pain, alleviate avoidable hardship, and set boundaries on what suffering we tolerate in our societies and in our own lives.
The statement is both realistic and empowering. Suffering may be inevitable, but its scale and character are not. Defining and enforcing reasonable limits on suffering is one of the central tasks of a mature civilization.
@_amitbehere Absolutely. Date aisi batao ki koi check hee na kar sake kee promise kab aur kya kiya tha. Jokes apart,but I am afraid there won't be much to look forward to at that point of time. I sincerely hope I am wrong in assuming this.🤞
@_amitbehere 100%.To target different and especially weaker groups than itself has been in the human DNA from eternity.Only survival of Homo Sapiens and extinction of other species is a testament. To defend and give equal opportunity who are in minority is the whole point of democracy.
Anthropic pays engineers $750,000+ a year to understand how LLMs work.
Stanford just put a 2 hour lecture that covers 80% of it for FREE.
Bookmark this. Give it 2 hours today.
It might be the highest ROI thing you do this month:
“While spacewalking I realized something, I used to think I was scared of heights but now I know I was just scared of gravity.”
― Artemis II Astronaut Reid Wiseman
The most dangerous thing about leaving Earth isn’t the vacuum.
It’s the clarity.
When astronauts return from long missions, most talk about the Overview Effect in poetic terms. They describe seeing Earth as fragile, borderless, beautiful.
What rarely gets reported is the second layer of that experience — the part where the beauty curdles into something more disturbing.
Because once you’ve watched the planet from that altitude long enough, the human activity you observe starts to look less like civilization and more like a colony of organisms running programs they never consciously chose. Wars over invisible lines. Cities choking on their own exhaust. Seven billion people sprinting toward goals that were handed to them before they were old enough to question whether they wanted them.
I don’t think the “Big Lie about humanity” he’s describing is some kind of a conspiracy.
It’s something quieter and far more pervasive. It’s the collective hallucination that the world you were handed at birth is the world as it actually is. That the values you absorbed from your culture are the values that exist in nature. That the urgency you feel about status, money, and approval reflects something real about the universe rather than something manufactured by systems that benefit from your compliance.
Orbital altitude strips that hallucination away with brutal efficiency.
Gravity keeps more than your body on the ground. It keeps your perspective locked inside the consensus.
Astronauts who spend months outside that gravity field don’t just lose bone density. They lose the psychological weight of inherited assumptions. And when those assumptions lift, what sits underneath them is a question most humans never get forced to confront in a lifetime.
What would you actually want if nobody had ever told you what to want?
The Big Lie was never about them.
It was always about that question and how hard the entire structure of modern life works to make sure you never stop long enough to ask it.