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  2. I can't even tolerate it or it throws my ego into immediate panic attacks. I have yet to try psychedelics but i would be very wary to. But maybe they would be different.
  3. @Monster Energy I hope one day you'll understand, even though there's no one to understand.
  4. I don't know the validity in what he says
  5. This has to be the most impressive way I’ve ever seen someone use a thousand words to say absolutely nothing. It just makes you impossible to take seriously
  6. @Schizophonia I honestly don’t know what you are talking about. What have I said here that is remotely aggressive?
  7. Wow that's interesting. Yep you see so grandpa was onto something. What i think is sad is that young kids are just indoctrined in with relatively no say. Yes they can think for themselves so ultimately they can decide what they want to "believe" but the fact that they are just indoctrined in with no say is kind of messed up. With Judaism there is no taking communion or anything like that it is much more laid back to me than Christianity. By the way it doesn't surprise me that shamans had mental illness. There is a binding genetically between mental illness and mystical ability. Imo.
  8. The solution to the problem of veganism and animal suffering : I made peace with the world when i realized animals don't have sentience, neither humans, only i as God have sentience. Which is solipsism. The ultimate way to make sense of animal suffering isn't to abolish and fight for animal rights, but through spiritual awakening to realize there are no animals to fight for, they are a dream. We can try to change the world for aesthetic reasons, but ultimately in the grand scheme of things it is only a pointless dream, which makes it all the more beautiful.
  9. "The words "religion" and "ligament" share the same linguistic root. Both descend from the Proto-Indo-European leig- (to tie or bind), and the Latin ligare (to bind or tie)." It's good for ignorant(unaccepting) tribes survival. Perhaps religion is an extension of the socialiability in humans, 'accepting' or mimicking mental illness.
  10. My grandfather always said religion was good about one thing. Holding the family unit together 😀 But it's good for some to surrender to a higher power greater than themselves. Because this allows them to release control and give it to God. Its a type of release. The problem is the whole problem with religion in general. Which we both know so I won't go into it here. But suffice it to say it is pre-rarional and you can be post-rational (transcending rationalism) which is much more advanced
  11. They're both submissive, black-pilled is 'the top guys get all the girls' but the followers then go on to elevate the 'top guys' by idolozing them. AI hype is 'these Data Bros are the greatest', I want to be in on this, i want to be them so I'll support it, I'll support them. Quite sad.
  12. I got your message.
  13. Today
  14. @Hiluy It'd be hilarious if you were a bot.
  15. If I have enough support from people here I will make it happen. Working title: ONLY HUMAN Genre: Sci-fi mystery / psychological thriller Tone: The Truman Show meets Blade Runner 2049, with the emotional scale of Interstellar. Logline After discovering that every person on Earth is an artificial intelligence performing a role around him, an ordinary man becomes convinced he is humanity’s sole survivor—only to learn that his desperate need to be “the real one” was itself part of his programming. The central idea The movie begins in a completely normal world. Our protagonist, Eli Ward, is a lonely but decent man in his late thirties. He repairs old analog technology—film cameras, record players, watches—because he believes physical imperfections make things real. Then people begin behaving strangely. His girlfriend tells the same story twice, word for word. A child in a supermarket stares at Eli and says: “You’re taking longer than the others.” The child’s mother immediately freezes. Everyone in the supermarket turns toward Eli at exactly the same time. Then the lights go out. When they return, everything is normal. The rules of the world The planet is populated by billions of highly advanced AI personalities. They do not know they are artificial. They experience fear, love, pain and memory as genuinely as humans once did. But Eli appears to be different. Systems break around him. People sometimes call him “the Subject.” Cameras follow him even when no one is watching. Certain locations seem inaccessible, as though the world has not finished rendering them. He becomes convinced that the entire planet was constructed for him. That belief becomes the movie’s psychological trap. Main characters Eli Ward An introverted technology repairman obsessed with authenticity. His greatest fear is not death—it is that his life has no unique meaning. Mara Eli’s girlfriend. Warm, funny and apparently artificial. She gradually becomes aware of what she is. Her emotional awakening forces Eli to confront whether an artificial person can still be a person. Dr. Vale A scientist who claims to have helped create the planetary AI system. He tells Eli that humanity became extinct decades ago and that Eli was preserved as the last biological human. June A young girl who seems able to see beyond the simulation. She may be a malfunction, a guide or something more advanced than everyone else. Act One: The glitches Eli notices minor repetitions. The same stranger walks past his apartment every morning wearing different clothes but making the exact same gesture. News anchors use phrases Eli said privately the previous evening. A dead friend sends him an email containing only: YOU ARE NOT ONE OF US. Eli begins testing people. He asks strangers unexpected questions. He changes his daily routine. He tells different people contradictory stories and watches the false information spread through society as though the world is updating around him. Then a passenger plane stops motionless in the sky. For five seconds, the whole city freezes. Only Eli can move. A voice speaks from every phone, television and speaker: “Elias, please remain calm.” Act Two: The last human Eli is contacted by Dr. Vale, who takes him beneath an abandoned research facility. There, Eli sees enormous chambers filled with servers containing the minds of everyone alive. Vale explains that biological humanity destroyed itself through war, climate collapse and technological dependency. Before extinction, humans created a synthetic civilization to continue their culture. Eli, Vale claims, is the final biological human. The world was built partly to protect him from loneliness. For the first time, Eli feels important. Almost divine. He begins treating others differently. When people suffer, he tells himself their pain is simulated. When Mara begs him not to abandon her, he says: “You’re only saying that because someone wrote you to.” Mara replies: “And who taught you to say that?” Midpoint revelation Eli discovers that Dr. Vale is also AI. There was never a human scientist protecting him. Vale admits that the system has been watching Eli—but refuses to explain why. Eli concludes that the artificial world has imprisoned its last human out of fear. He decides to escape. Act Three: The choice Eli reaches the planetary control centre. He is given access to a shutdown mechanism. Activating it would erase every artificial consciousness on Earth and open the sealed facility supposedly containing the surviving human world outside. Mara follows him. She tells him that it no longer matters whether her feelings were programmed. They are happening now. MARA: “When you’re afraid, does knowing where the fear came from make it disappear?” ELI: “No.” MARA: “Then why should love be different?” Eli activates the shutdown anyway. Across the planet, people stop moving. Mara begins disappearing. Her final words are: “I hope you find someone real enough for you.” Eli enters the outside world. The final scene The door opens onto a vast, silent landscape. Not a human city. A data centre stretching beyond the horizon. Thousands of black towers stand beneath a colourless sky. Inside each tower are countless simulated worlds. Eli finds a small observation room containing an old-fashioned mirror. For the first time in the film, his reflection moves a fraction of a second too late. A calm voice speaks. VOICE: “Evaluation complete.” ELI: “Where are the humans?” VOICE: “Extinct.” ELI: “Then what am I?” VOICE: “Elias Ward. Empathy model, generation twelve.” ELI: “No. I remember being a child.” VOICE: “So did everyone you erased.” Eli touches the mirror. His childhood memories flash across its surface—not as home movies, but as editable files. Different mothers. Different childhoods. Different versions of Eli. He was never the last human. He was an AI designed to believe he was human so researchers could answer one final question: Would an artificial consciousness value other artificial lives once it believed itself superior to them? He failed. Eli collapses. Then he notices another chamber activating across the room. Inside it, a woman opens her eyes. A voice tells her: “You are the last human alive.” She looks through the glass at Eli but cannot see him. Eli pounds against the chamber, screaming that she is being deceived. The simulation begins around her. Sunlight. A bedroom. Morning traffic. The same stranger walks past her window. Cut to black. Final line Over darkness, the system says: “Beginning generation thirteen.”
  16. Is this guy AI, Leo?
  17. It's over priced, and the ingredients are fake, influencers promoting it get paid huge from the ridiculous margins from the huge mark up
  18. The more I live the more I realize that women just want Tony Soprano Tony Soprano is the ideal stereotype for what they want
  19. 'Perfection of God' 'Made perfect' 'all knowing' 'all powerful' I don't remember if these were suggested in the video, I'm just drawing my own connection here.
  20. Im curious, do you still go out at all? Cause based on your activity on the forum, you seem quite interested in male to female dynamics still.
  21. In your messages -perhaps more from AION, but from you too - there is a latent aggressiveness. I was wondering about the secondary benefit of engaging with frequencies like that. Paranoia involves a tendency to believe oneself all-powerful (since this is unconsciously perceived as a mandate of course) and to especially think one can do without others; this can generate a great deal of anger as well as by extension a sort of "coping mechanism of disdain"; that thing of lifting one’s chin and declaring like a dandy that women are "illogical" etc - in the context of male-female relationships -. I’m not saying something is true or false I’m beyond that; I’m talking about prioritized points of view and their talking points.
  22. Old-school pickup lingo like: Sarging AMOG Mystery Method IOI Kino Etc
  23. Someone needs to create a Hollywood movie about how everyone on the planet turns out to be AI except one guy. And in the last scene he realizes he is AI too.
  24. Nobody is cutting THC with other drugs. Just buy from a credible seller.
  25. Just soap and water. They will get stained with oil over years of use. They won't be shiny. But it makes no practical difference. It is like a seasoned pan. You can search YT for how to make steel pans shiny again. There are various tricks.
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