TinyTimmyTokyo

joined 2 years ago
[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 6 points 3 months ago

Same. I'm not being critical of lab-grown meat. I think it's a great idea.

But the pattern of things he's got an opinion on suggests a familiarity with rationalist/EA/accelerationist/TPOT ideas.

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 7 points 3 months ago (24 children)

Do you have a link? I'm interested. (Also, I see you posted something similar a couple hours before I did. Sorry I missed that!)

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 17 points 3 months ago (46 children)

So it turns out the healthcare assassin has some.... boutique... views. (Yeah, I know, shocker.) Things he seems to be into:

  • Lab-grown meat
  • Modern architecture is rotten
  • Population decline is an existential threat
  • Elon Musk and Peter Thiel

How soon until someone finds his LessWrong profile?

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 8 points 5 months ago

As anyone who's been paying attention already knows, LLMs are merely mimics that provide the "illusion of understanding".

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 15 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (17 children)

I'm noticing that people who criticize him on that subreddit are being downvoted, while he's being upvoted.

I wouldn't be surprised if, as part of his prodigious self-promotion of this overlong and tendentious screed, he's steered some of his more sympathetic followers to some of these forums.

Actually it's the wikipedia subreddit thread I meant to refer to.

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 7 points 8 months ago (1 children)

As a longtime listener to Tech Won't Save Us, I was pleasantly surprised by my phone's notification about this week's episode. David was charming and interesting in equal measure. I mostly knew Jack Dorsey as the absentee CEO of Twitter who let the site stagnate under his watch, but there were a lot of little details about his moderation-phobia and fash-adjacency that I wasn't aware of.

By the way, I highly recommend the podcast to the TechTakes crowd. They cover many of the same topics from a similar perspective.

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 8 points 8 months ago (1 children)

For me it gives off huge Dr. Evil vibes.

If you ever get tired of searching for pics, you could always go the lazy route and fall back on AI-generated images. But then you'd have to accept the reality that in few years your posts would have the analog of a geocities webring stamped on them.

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 16 points 8 months ago

Trace seems a bit... emotional. You ok, Trace?

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 6 points 8 months ago (1 children)

But will my insurance cover a visit to Dr. Spicy Autocomplete?

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 27 points 8 months ago (3 children)

So now Steve Sailer has shown up in this essay's comments, complaining about how Wikipedia has been unfairly stifling scientific racism.

Birds of a feather and all that, I guess.

[–] TinyTimmyTokyo@awful.systems 16 points 8 months ago

what is the entire point of singling out Gerard for this?

He's playing to his audience, which includes a substantial number of people with lifetime subscriptions to the Unz Review, Taki's crapazine and Mankind Quarterly.

 

Rationalist check-list:

  1. Incorrect use of analogy? Check.
  2. Pseudoscientific nonsense used to make your point seem more profound? Check.
  3. Tortured use of probability estimates? Check.
  4. Over-long description of a point that could just have easily been made in 1 sentence? Check.

This email by SBF is basically one big malapropism.

 

Representative take:

If you ask Stable Diffusion for a picture of a cat it always seems to produce images of healthy looking domestic cats. For the prompt "cat" to be unbiased Stable Diffusion would need to occasionally generate images of dead white tigers since this would also fit under the label of "cat".

 

Excerpt:

Richard Hanania, a visiting scholar at the University of Texas, used the pen name “Richard Hoste” in the early 2010s to write articles where he identified himself as a “race realist.” He expressed support for eugenics and the forced sterilization of “low IQ” people, who he argued were most often Black. He opposed “miscegenation” and “race-mixing.” And once, while arguing that Black people cannot govern themselves, he cited the neo-Nazi author of “The Turner Diaries,” the infamous novel that celebrates a future race war.

He's also a big eugenics supporter:

“There doesn’t seem to be a way to deal with low IQ breeding that doesn’t include coercion,” he wrote in a 2010 article for AlternativeRight .com. “Perhaps charities could be formed which paid those in the 70-85 range to be sterilized, but what to do with those below 70 who legally can’t even give consent and have a higher birthrate than the general population? In the same way we lock up criminals and the mentally ill in the interests of society at large, one could argue that we could on the exact same principle sterilize those who are bound to harm future generations through giving birth.”

(Reminds me a lot of the things Scott Siskind has written in the past.)

Some people who have been friendly with Hanania:

  • Mark Andreessen, Silion Valley VC and co-founder of Andreessen-Horowitz
  • Hamish McKenzie, CEO of Substack
  • Elon Musk, Chief Enshittification Officer of Tesla and Twitter
  • Tyler Cowen, libertarian econ blogger and George Mason University prof
  • J.D. Vance, US Senator from Ohio
  • Steve Sailer, race (pseudo)science promoter and all-around bigot
  • Amy Wax, racist law professor at UPenn.
  • Christopher Rufo, right-wing agitator and architect of many of Florida governor Ron DeSantis's culture war efforts
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