Understand this pattern. Create crisis. Traumatize population. Offer solution that expands power. Label dissenters as crazy or dangerous. Repeat. And most importantly, don’t comply out of fear. Fear is the weapon. Your compliance is the goal. Stay Awake
Thinking about starting a Rumble channel called, “Contra Intelligence”. Unless there’s a better protocol or platform. I’m up for suggestions. This goes back to the #Nostr Interviews I said I was going to start. I’ve been mulling over several ideas. Anyone have ideas or suggestions? #asknostr
A psychological weapon does not have to exist physically to function effectively. It only needs believability, repetition, authority figures and emotional resonance. We must be aware and prepared for such weapons. Our governments bank on us believing said MindWars.
We’re building systems that never forget, in a world that has always depended on forgetting. Second chances are fundamentally irrational. They require someone to look at the same circumstances and say, This time is different. They demand we ignore the data and believe in transformation without proof. This has always been the structure of grace. Someone with full knowledge of your failures choosing to see you differently anyway. Not because the record changed, but because mercy transcends the record. Ancient communities granted second chances because memory was fallible. Your past dissolved into the charitable fog of time. But even in traditions with concepts of divine omniscience, forgiveness required a deliberate act of not counting what was known. The point wasn’t ignorance. The point was choosing not to hold the knowledge against you. Today, every mistake is eternal. Every failure is timestamped and archived. Hannah Arendt warned us by saying, justice systems without discretion become rigid to the point of cruelty. They mistake uniformity for fairness. AI optimizes for consistency. Humans optimize for mercy. One requires the possibility of forgetting. The other cannot forget. The problem is that we’re building systems that can judge but cannot redeem. They can execute justice but they cannot grant grace. Perfect memory with no mechanism for mercy doesn’t make systems more fair. It makes transformation impossible. The question isn’t whether machines remember better than humans. The question is can a system that never forgets still believe people can change? Can second chances survive perfect memory? Or does redemption require us to deliberately build forgetting, or something like it, back into the architecture? Something to consider as we hand more decisions to systems that have never needed forgiveness, never experienced transformation, and never had to trust someone to become better than their record suggests. gm. Choose mercy when you can.
I spend sometimes more time talking to complete strangers on Nostr than I do to some people I’ve known for twenty years. And the strangers are better company. You’d think this would be odd, but it isn’t. After a few years of watching how a man thinks, what he cares about, how he carries himself in writing, you know him. Sometimes better than the neighbor you wave to every morning who you couldn’t pick out of a police lineup if your life depended on it. These are real friendships. Not the neutered, back slapping “hey great post!” kind that evaporates the moment you close your browser. The kind where you remember what a man said six months ago. Where the conversation has weight and continuity. Where you know someone by the shape of his mind, not the shape of his face. I’ve wasted enough time on the other platforms to know the difference. They don’t produce this. Can’t produce this. Nostr attracts genuinely fascinating people and then gets out of the way. That’s the entire magic trick.
If you could be proficient in one weapon system, what would it be? And why?
Because we love to roast @Derek Ross 🎙️🤙
👀 @walker image
One of the most remarkable things about Nostr is watching people collaborate and create together. I genuinely believe this is the sanest corner of social media, where optimism and joy actually thrive instead of getting drowned out. I love showing up here every morning, and it’s because we share something fundamental. We’re all here for the right reasons. We’re building something better, together. That shared purpose makes all the difference.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Also, GM!
Surveillance capitalism’s most profitable trick…convincing you to buy and install your own monitoring device View quoted note →