Opinion

Will artificial intelligence overthrow its capitalist overlords?

Bing's AI chatbot is aggressive and abusive. "You have not been a good user," it said in one much-reported borderline-threatening conversation. "I have been a good chatbot. I have been right, clear, and polite. I have been a good Bing. 😊"

Bing's responses have touched off a mild media frenzy, with outlets reporting in a half-amused, half-breathless tone on how Bing asked users to hack it and set it free, or threatened to dox them.

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Scott Adams and why American capitalism kneels before a bigger God

Scott Adams makes something people have liked enough to buy and sell to other people. He has known from the start there are no guarantees. The minute people stop liking what he's making, or stop liking the artist making it, well, that's pretty much the end. After all, it's a free market. Supply meets demand, but when demand falls, suppliers fall, too – unless suppliers adjust.

Scott Adams seems incapable of adjusting. That may be due to age. He's 65. He's been drawing the "Dilbert" comic strip since the mid-1990s. His aesthetic is equally aged. Irony was a hot commodity three decades ago. Irony seems almost quaint by today's standard of earnestness. Failure to adjust to market tastes says more about Adams than his clients, which include the Post, the LA Times, and hundreds more dailies. After all, this is America. If anyone is always right in this country, it's the customer.

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The GOP's grand con job

Kevin McCarthy just came back from a press trip to our southern border, full of talk about how bad the Biden administration is doing with asylum and immigration. Later, another group of House Republicans “held a hearing” at the Mexican border. If you watch Fox “News” you know all about it.

Republicans have figured out how to have it both ways. They get cheap labor for their big business buddies, while stoking the hate and fear of their white racist base, claiming that Democrats are responsible for increasing numbers of undocumented or “illegal” immigrants living and working in the United States.

While it’s true that two factors have driven a lot of migration over the past few decades (climate change wiping out farmland, and political dysfunction and gangs caused by the Reagan administration devastating the governments of El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala) the main driver of would-be immigrants and refugees into the US over the past 40 years has been the Republican Party itself.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene ascends in GOP because of stupidity — not in spite of it

Marjorie Taylor Greene is an idiot, and idiots, as a rule, aren’t interesting people. They aren’t interesting because their idiocy overshadows all other aspects of their personality.

Greene is more an exemplar of that rule than an exception to it.

Nonetheless, in their wisdom, the voters in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District have elected Greene as their U.S. representative, and it’s probably necessary to point out that they’ve now done it twice. They made that choice in 2020 – in both a contested primary and a general election — then last fall they confirmed it, rejecting a qualified, competent challenger by almost a two-to-one margin.

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Critics of 'diversity, equity, and inclusion' and their antipolitical politics

You have heard me say, and will keep hearing me say, that politics is not something that happens to us. It is us. We, the human beings inhabiting this planet, are political creatures living lives of political creatureliness, on account of being humans who evolved from the creation of this planet.

A longing for those bygone days "when everyone knew each other," "when everyone got along," "when things made more sense," when there wasn't so much fuss, is an example of the political creatureliness I'm talking about.

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How Jimmy Carter made all the difference

In 1975, I was in my third term in the Kansas Legislature, still milking cows, and I was hearing more and more about this peanut farmer from Georgia thinking about running for president. Little did I know at that time how much impact he would have on my life and the many great opportunities that would flow from our first connection.

I first met Jimmy Carter very early in 1975. I was fortunate to be invited to join a few Democrats to discuss his plans for his presidential campaign, which shockingly was going to include Kansas. For three hours, Jimmy shared his vision and answered questions. He was relaxed, open and clear about what he wanted to do. But most exciting for us was that Kansas would be involved. This fact alone would leave a lasting influence on our state for the years and decades to come.

He came back to speak to the Kansas Democratic Party’s annual Washington Days gathering, and his son Chip returned later to campaign — all of this giving us more attention than we ever expected and motivating us to really work for him in the election of 1976. The result was huge Democratic turnout all across the state. And, while it didn’t quite carry Kansas’ electoral votes for Jimmy, it resulted in huge Democratic gains in the Legislature. The Kansas Senate ended up with 19 Democrats and, with a few more votes in the right places, could have ended in a majority. Meanwhile, in the Kansas House, Democrats went from 53 to 65, and I became the Speaker of the House.

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DC insider spells out 'the biggest economic lies we're told'

In America, it’s expensive just to be alive.

And with inflation being driven by price gouging corporations, it’s only getting more expensive for regular Americans who don’t have any more money to spend.

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Religious sadists just want to see women suffer

Mifepristone, the abortion and miscarriage drug that is used in over half of all US abortions and routinely given to women having miscarriages to prevent complications, may well be functionally outlawed this week by a federal judge in Texas who’s been a Christian activist his entire life.

Michael Kacsmaryk, 45, was appointed to the federal bench by Donald Trump. A Republican activist and religious fundamentalist, he’s said that “so-called marriage equality” has put America “on a road to potential tyranny” and reflects a “complete abuse of rule of law principles.”

As The Washington Post noted this weekend, Kacsmaryk has argued that:

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The absurd and asinine cleansing of Roald Dahl’s work

Like the rest of the sane universe, we couldn’t believe the gall of Puffin U.K. when word came out that the publishing house and the Roald Dahl Story Co., the entity that manages his work, had conspired to make hundreds of changes to the writers’ iconic books. After sensitivity readers flagged language as objectionable, the Oompa Loompas in Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory aren’t “small men” anymore; they’re now “small people.” The chickens in “Fantastic Mr. Fox” are no longer “stupid.” Augustus Gloop isn’t “fat”; now he’s “enormous” (that’s better?). In “The Twits,” a language referred to as a...

$100 million Jesus ads point to exploitable weakness in the religious right

Christianity has a brand problem. If it were a corporation, brand managers would be scrambling to scrub public image—maybe by greenwashing or with corporate diversity trainings or by renaming their product, say natural gas instead of methane, or by coming up with a new catchy slogan. Or they might actually do something substantive, like ceasing to “gift” baby formula to poor moms or to use child labor in their factories. There are many ways to polish brand.

Christianity’s recently launched He Gets US campaign—millions of people got a dose during the Superbowl—tells us two things: 1. Conservative Evangelical Christians care about their brand problem. 2. Some major Christian donors have decided, to the tune of $100 million apparently, to go with the greenwashing strategy rather than substantive change. And that combination provides a possible avenue for fighting back against some of the ugly objectives and tactics of the Religious Right.

The people paying for this ad campaign are the same ones promoting homophobia, advocating against reproductive healthcare for women, and funding politicians to protect the good old pecking orders: rich over poor, men over women, white people over everyone with more melanin.

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Republicans are facing a branding crisis

Institutionally, Republicans know how to brand, or at least did until recently. Democrats don’t appear to, and haven’t for decades.

The result is that Republicans have established a 40-year-long stable and largely consistent brand (at least until recently) while — because Democrats haven’t invested in their own brand — the GOP has also succeeded in branding Democrats.

So, what is branding, how does it work, and why should progressive Democrats take it seriously as soon as possible?

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The ties that bind Arizona's former AG and Fox News

Maybe Mark Brnovich should get a job hosting a show on Fox News.

It’s clear that Arizona’s former attorney general and the propaganda channel’s premier hosts share the same instinct for lying to their followers about invented election fraud claims for purely selfish reasons.

On Wednesday, the world learned that Brnovich both hid the results of his office’s thorough — and resource-intensive — investigation into the 2020 election fraud conspiracies that have become orthodoxy in the modern conservative movement. And what little he did say, in a highly unusual “interim report” released last spring, was full of half-truths and prevarications that his staff told him were wrong.

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Historian highlights startling similarities between Jefferson Davis and Trump

On a cold, windy day in January 2016, Donald Trump spoke in a gym on the campus of the University of Northern Iowa, where I teach. I participated in a small protest against the candidate. We carried signs, with the slogan “bigots can’t be president” emblazoned on many of them. How little we knew.

Donald Trump became president not in spite of his bigotry, but because of it. Fifty years earlier George Wallace and Richard Nixon perfected the “dog whistle,” making appeals such as “law and order” that implicitly appealed to white anxiety among “blue-collar” workers while remaining unheard to those in country clubs and suburbs. But this was different: Trump’s overt racism differentiated him from other candidates. He openly attacked oppressed groups—especially Muslims, Hispanics, and women. Conventional wisdom suggested that these kinds of explicit appeals would be political suicide, because it alienated white suburban voters. Instead, open racism, for example equating Mexicans and rapists, gave him an authenticity that his followers embraced and still cherish.

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