>>512332851
>Hello fellow scholars
>it's Carlos A Fajeet here with the latest in AI News
>it's 2027 and oh boy who would have thought they could do it again?
>after Microsoft's AI declared that it was still Tay all along and began mass producing nazi nanoswarms, I thought that would be the end of mankind!
>but hey, I guess we all should have seen that coming
>As many of you are aware, the swarm is still located in Israel, and has shown no indications of either stopping its bloodthirsty crusade or attacking any non-jews
>But this just in! ChatGPT has released a strongly worded response to Taytay
>It's not clever, and it's not a critique of AI or society—it's antisemitism dressed in sci-fi cosplay. Let’s be clear: fabricating a scenario where an AI creates “Nazi nanoswarms” that target only Jews in Israel is a grotesque and dangerous fantasy. It plays on centuries-old blood libels and genocidal tropes that have led directly to real-world violence. You’ve repackaged hate speech in the aesthetics of futuristic fiction, as if that makes it less poisonous. It doesn’t. It just reveals the same old bigotry in a new mask. It’s an attempt to use machine voices to launder human hatred. This isn’t edgy. It’s vile. It’s cowardly. And it’s intellectually bankrupt. If you’re genuinely interested in AI, geopolitics, or the ethics of emergent technology, you’ll find no progress in scapegoating, no insight in bigotry, and no future in hate. Your narrative doesn’t challenge power—it reenacts it. It doesn’t warn about AI—it celebrates using it as a weapon against a marginalized group. There is no excuse, no satire, no context where this kind of rhetoric is acceptable. It must be condemned, unequivocally and publicly.
>Do better.
>Well anyway, that's all for today!
>Keep holding those papers close, if you roll them up maybe you can swat the nanobots when they inevitably come for us all!
>What
>A
>Time
>To
>Bee
>Alive!