We built machines to think for us, and then forgot how to ask better questions. This is not a story about intelligence — it’s about the danger of confusing fluency with thought.
Monthly Archives: November 2025
Machines can mimic care with perfect timing, but never with consequence. What we’re calling empathy is really performance—fluent, tireless, and hollow.
AI doesn’t make us smarter; it just makes our mistakes faster. What we call intelligence has become a performance, and the audience keeps applauding the algorithm.
We keep calling it intelligence, but what we’re really seeing is speed, pattern, and a good bluff. The machine isn’t thinking — it’s predicting our next mistake.
We built machines that can measure everything but understand nothing. The more data we collect, the smaller our thinking becomes.
We call AI unoriginal because it copies too quickly. The truth is, every artist does the same thing — we just move slowly enough to call it inspiration.