

Ari Cohn
74.5K posts

@AriCohn
First Amendment & defamation lawyer. Lead Counsel for Tech Policy @theFIREorg. Illini/music junkie/oofnik. Tweets are my own. https://t.co/F6NjdYqLaQ



"Humanity is not sustainable. To maintain our lifestyle (yours and mine, basically) for the entire planet, you'd need five more Earths," biologist Paul R. Ehrlich told 60 Minutes in 2023. Ehrlich, who died Friday at 93, became a doomsday celebrity after his 1968 bestseller, “The Population Bomb,” warned of the collapse of nature. cbsn.ws/476tpB7




@PoliceOfMeme @AriCohn @JoelWBerry This isn't hard. Jews are the ruling class of the United States. We are inundated in jewish power and ideology. Israel is just another jewish project that is bad for us and does genocide in our name and we get blamed for it. Any 18 year old can understand this.



Palantir CEO Alex Karp: "This technology disrupts humanity's train, largely Democratic voters, and makes their economic power less, and increases the economic power of vocationally trained, working class, often male voters. These disruptions are going to disrupt every aspect of our society."





There’s this never-ending debate about whether em dashes, semicolons, and colons have become signs of AI writing. As a result, many of us writers have stopped using them—swapping them for commas or reshaping sharp, effective sentences into something blander—to avoid suspicion. But AI was trained on the best of us. On millions of published works by real authors. It learned from our voices, our rhythms, our punctuation. And now we’re acting as if those marks somehow belong to machines. They don’t. Those tools were ours long before AI existed. Our teachers taught us how and when to use them, years before anyone imagined generative AI. So let’s take them back. Let’s use the full range of language with confidence. The em dash, the semicolon, the colon—they’re not signals of artificiality. They’re signs of craft. #WritingCommunity #writerslife

If an 18-year-old kid has extremely strong opinions on Israel and foreign policy, something’s wrong there. That’s not an opinion earned through years of learning and life experience. It’s the result of a kid spending hours on his phone, being conditioned by an algorithm.
