Clip Show · the singularity is nearer
Politics & Government · Mar 30, 2026
Institutions should be judged by whether they increase real human capability and stay in contact with reality—rejecting artificial scarcity, performative consensus, and strategic dishonesty—and evaluated instrumentally (not ideologically) by whether they enable people to build, repair, think, move, and refuse rather than preserve prestige, rents, or dependency.
Clip Show · the singularity is nearer
Science, Technology & Innovation · Mar 30, 2026
Plurality is framed as an infrastructural design objective: dispersing compute, tools, and technical competence to preserve multiple centers of agency, cultures, and goals and to guard against political and metaphysical loss—favoring competition, interoperability, open technical lineages, and dispersed suppliers over a single dominant stack.
Clip Show · the singularity is nearer
Business, Finance & Industries · Mar 30, 2026
The text argues the key divide is between 'builders' who expand real productive capacity (energy, housing, software, tools, medicine) and 'rent-seekers' who extract value by inserting tolls or gatekeeping—caused by a representational failure where money/status detach from productive reality—and concludes that firms increasing throughput, repairability, and production are more robust than those relying on access control, artificial scarcity, or bureaucratic complexity.
Clip Show · the singularity is nearer
Science, Technology & Innovation · Mar 30, 2026
The text argues that real sovereignty now rests on technical control—who has “root” to change systems, revoke access, force updates, block copying, or prevent repair—so freedom depends on locally operable, modifiable, and refuseable hardware/software, leading to a principled defense of open source, local computation, commodity hardware, and decentralized infrastructure and a warning that mandatory remote-control or non-repairable closed systems weaken user sovereignty and long-term trust.
Clip Show · the singularity is nearer
Politics & Government · Mar 30, 2026
The AI thesis says the main danger is not intelligence per se but institutional centralization—an 'infrastructural singularity' where concentrated compute, infrastructure, and control create a singleton—so governance and investment should prioritize decentralization, diverse technical lineages, and distributed access over relying on centralized firms or abstract safety arguments.