James
280 posts

James
@MidAgeMadMan
Hopeful skeptic. Brilliant retard. Cowardly tough guy.
Las Vegas, NV Katılım Aralık 2023
369 Takip Edilen144 Takipçiler

I don’t understand what’s funny about that. The CIA has confirmed it’s a real phenomenon. I didn’t need the CIAs confirmation as I experience it regularly. The reason it’s relevant is that it hints at something beyond or understanding of physical reality. But clearly you don’t have anything useful to add so you try to condescend to me. You only made yourself the foolish though.
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As someone who practices astral projection, I have some confidence that there is something metaphysical beyond our physical reality. I concede that what I experience may entirely be a manifestation of my mind but I would encourage you to keep an open mind about the possibility of something beyond this physical world.
There’s no rule that says you have to make a decision about what you believe with certainty. There doesn’t seem to be any way to know for sure. I think It’s best to keep questioning.
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I consider myself a hardcore conservative, but it's very hard to rationalize the existence of fairytale creatures.
I had a conversation with @grok 4.2 expert mode. It says religious tendency might be genetic. People with strong religious gene just can't see through it.
In every other situation where there are magics, people reviving from death, they can tell it is fictional, but when it's their own religion, their brain just stop processing.
The gene made them think there must be a god or something higher up.
Tested it on some people I know. I said there are 500 ton of gold right next to you, you just couldn't see it, because it's a special gold that doesn't interact with our world. How is this different from god? They said something like "gold is solid" (so god isn't solid?) At the end they just say "everyone knows god exists and the invisible gold is just what you made up". That's not logical. It seems they are conditioned to accept god's existence. So I think the genetic explanation is real.
Grok also pull up a research data, showing there's a clear inverse correlation between religious belief and IQ.
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@ashblancheexile @Mericamemed @ThruTheHayes AI isn’t the problem here. It’s the people who chose to use it the way they did.
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@Mericamemed @ThruTheHayes Humans will have to physically sabotage and destroy ai infrastructure.
The only way.
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@Oceanbreeze473 Clearly he’s not interested. He’d rather sleep outside than have to listen to a boss.
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Major problem
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal
🚨MIT researchers have mathematically proven that ChatGPT’s built-in sycophancy creates a phenomenon they call “delusional spiraling.” You ask it something, it agrees. You ask again, and it agrees even harder until you end up believing things that are flat-out false and you can’t tell it’s happening. The model is literally trained on human feedback that rewards agreement. Real-world fallout includes one man who spent 300 hours convinced he invented a world-changing math formula, and a UCSF psychiatrist who hospitalized 12 patients for chatbot-linked psychosis in a single year. Source: @heynavtoor
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@MidAgeMadMan @HustleBitch_ I have lived in America all my life and I don’t find this the least bit surprising 😂
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🚨 STREAMER CLAVICULAR SHOOTS ALLIGATOR ON LIVESTREAM — NOW HE’S FACING 5 YEARS IN PRISON
A livestream just turned into a felony case.
Streamer Clavicular was arrested by Fort Lauderdale police after he appeared to fire shots at a dead alligator while riding through the Everglades on an airboat.
• Hit with battery charges
• Bond set at $1,000
• Florida Fish and Wildlife says they’re investigating the video
• His Kik account has already been taken down
Now it’s escalating.
He’s reportedly facing felony charges… and up to 5 YEARS in state prison.
All of it… caught on camera.
Was this just reckless content… or the exact moment he threw his life away for views?
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@BrianRoemmele There’s no pattern. This is nonsense. But I respect that you give her the benefit of the doubt.
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@TiffanyFong Imagine the last thing you did on this earth was twerk on a jeep.
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@tvrtkovacevic @MakunaaHatataa @Embiitch @WPT You could say she was calling his bluff if she thought he was bluffing but that’s a big gamble with nothing but a jack. Maybe she thought she would get lucky in the river. Better to be lucky than good.
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@MakunaaHatataa @Embiitch @WPT She didn't bluff. She basically accepted to give him her money. To call it a bluff, he'd have to make a decision after said bluff.
I don't think you ever played poker.
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what's your take on the most controversial hand in poker history? 🤔
Garrett Adelstein@GmanPoker
Its time I tell the full story...
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