CaptainThugwash

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CaptainThugwash

CaptainThugwash

@GearsAndInk

Serenity through viciousness.

Присоединился Aralık 2025
51 Подписки21 Подписчики
CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@thumper62460 @TKratman You say Europeans are of a “hive mind”, but a quick glance at your profile shows hundreds of worshipful tweets praising Donald Trump like he was the second coming of Jesus. You people are more cult-like than Scientologists.
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Thumper62460
Thumper62460@thumper62460·
@GearsAndInk @TKratman Europeans are of a mind hive. Lockstep in every way. Your cognitive dissonance is overwhelmingly apparent. As you eventually sink to your death, don't expect a hand up. You're on your own. Bless your soul.
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Tom Kratman
Tom Kratman@TKratman·
From Martin Iles, reposted: Having lived in the USA for nearly two years, I've realised something. The USA and the remainder of the Western world are no longer aligned. We all laugh and mock when the Americans say, "Freedom!" because we truly think we're as free as they are. Wrong. We're not. Not even close. The laws, the mindset, and the behaviour, is totally different in this regard. Most of all, the governments are totally different. The USA's convictions around core freedoms are on a scale we do not share. Meanwhile, Donald Trump wins the popular vote, the electoral college, the House, and the Senate... a man who, in every other Western country, is held in open derision, if not contempt. For these and other reasons, we are not the same. Yet the West, including Australia, fully expect to rely on the USA for our very survival. If the world turns bad (which will happen - only a question of time), then the whole West, without America, is toast. So, you may ask - if we're not very aligned ideologically, then it must be that we bring something to the party militarily? Well, no... actually... we don't matter that much militarily. The USA has about 470 ships in its navy, including 11 aircraft carriers, 69 submarines, 75 destroyers... plus 110 new ships in the pipeline. Australia has about 30, including 3 destroyers, 7 frigates and 7 outdated submarines. The UK does a little better, with about 60. Meanwhile, the US has over 14,000 military aircraft. A staggering number. Australia has 252 military aircraft. The UK has 556. The US army has just shy of 1,000,000 uniformed personnel in its military. Australia has about 45,000. The USA spends 3.4% ($968 billion) of its GDP on defence. Australia spends 2% ($36.4 billion). The US spends as much as the next 15 largest military-spending countries (including China) combined. The USA has a fighting culture. The men shoot things (a lot) and hunt things, the veterans get favoured in everything from parking spots to boarding planes. A uniformed young man is thanked in the street a dozen times a day. "Oh, the Americans and their guns!" we say, in our smug way. Yes, they have a warrior culture. We do not. We don't have to, because we're a leech on theirs. How many young British men are willing to fight for their country? Now ask the same regarding young American men. The difference is about as wide as it could be. Militarily, we don't offer squat. Meanwhile, look at the way Australia works against America's interests by loving on China. China made us rich and we stay close. This is a Marxist regime with expansionist aims. Again, you have to spend time in the USA to realise just how vast a gulf there is between us on China. Europe, too. They let China have their way everywhere from Germany to Greenland, all the while importing Islam and sending their own people to court for saying hurty words. Somehow, we have landed the deal of a lifetime with the USA that says, "when the baddies come, you'll save us ok?" Because we can't save ourselves. And we live in peace. But we keep gnawing away at freedoms, keep enabling China, and get flabby and disinterested about our military because Uncle Sam's got it. And, let's be honest, Americans are widely looked down on. To add insult to injury, we don't think that highly of our protectors. So, the USA is finally saying "enough." I am here, I can tell you what the vibe is, and that's it. Trump is doing what people want in this regard. They're over it. And we come across all shocked and hard done by. We behave like people with no self-insight at all. Yes, the global alliance system is all over the place now. From America's perspective, it's about time. And I must say, though I be a proud Australian, I am forced to agree. Something has to change.
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CaptainThugwash ретвитнул
I laughed
I laughed@found_it_funny·
I laughed tweet media
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@esrtweet Oh, fuck off! We’re sick of YOUR shit. We’re sick of you electing incompetent nutcases. We’re sick of you misusing your military. We’re sick of the woke race communism that all came from YOUR universities, and we’re sick of you acting like whiny bitches who can’t be criticised.
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Eric S. Raymond
Eric S. Raymond@esrtweet·
Hello, Europeans. The first thing you need to understand about the rant I'm about to utter is that I'm not MAGA, not a Trumpite, but a libertarian who has in the past nevertheless been strongly supportive of US military presence overseas. Because I want the wars that defend this country to be fought in somebody else's country, as far away from me as possible with a nice big ocean in the way. Also relevant: I have a history of having lived in Europe and traveled there extensively. I was at one time bilingual in English and Spanish, and have been passably fluent in Italian and French as well. I could probably still find my way around London and Rome and central Paris reasonably well. So if you're tempted to tell yourselves that I'm some kind of parochial American hick, abandon that hope. All that was set-up. So that, when I tell you that almost the entirety of the US electorate, not just Trump supporters, is increasingly fed up with your shit, take me seriously. We've been cleaning up your messes and keeping the sea lanes open since 1917. And that was for you, not us - we, being very close to resource self-sufficient, don't need that investment so much. We've spent enormous amounts of blood and treasure on keeping you safe. We risked nuclear hellfire on our own cities for nearly 50 years to keep Soviet tanks from rolling through the Fulda Gap. Even since the Cold War ended, we've subsidized your socialist-playpen welfare states and disastrous immigration policies by taking the need to maintain militaries more effective than a sack of wet farts off the table. Now we've come looking for help keeping a bunch of rabid Islamic fanatics from getting nuclear weapons that are a clear and present danger to all of you even more than they are to us, and what do we hear? "Waah! It's another Republican president we don't like, just like the last half dozen of them! So we're going to sulk in a corner, except when we're biting at your ankles with crap like airspace restrictions." No. No, we're not going to take this anymore. It's not just conservatives who have had enough, it's moderates and people who used to be strong supporters of liberal internationalism. Our citizen's willingness to pay higher taxes to protect you was upward-bounded by your gratitude. Now that we know your gratitude has effectively gone to zero, so does our willingness. Don't expect this to change if the Democrats take power here. They are much less liberal-internationalist than Republicans now. While they might make mouth noises that soothe you, their overriding concern is the gaping, insatiable maw of their income transfer programs. They'll sacrifice subsidizing Europe's playpen socialism to feed their domestic version in a heartbeat. And there is no longer any significant Democratic constituency to argue against that. In truth, three decades after the Cold War ended there is no American constituency at all for the massive subsidies you get. It frankly surprises me they lasted this long, that we were this patient with your cowardice and your bitchy whining. This moment has been a long time coming. It's not Donald Trump sinking the transatlantic alliance, it is absolutely you.
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kb
kb@kittysbreath·
@GearsAndInk @StaciLMorrison @SpectatorOz Nope Americans see the weaklings and losers in Europe refusing to let us use our own bases for our operations. Most of us are sending a giant middle finger your way and applauding Trump for severing this shitty relationship.
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The Spectator Australia
The Spectator Australia@SpectatorOz·
Don’t bite the hand that feeds you. America is the wealthy, capable, relentlessly active grandfather who still pays the bills, still fixes the roof, still shows up when danger turns financial or physical, and still serves as the family’s emergency backstop. Europe, Britain and Australia are the adult children who mismanaged their own households, neglected their own responsibilities, and now spend their time lecturing the one relative still keeping the lights on. That is not an alliance at its healthiest. It is a dependency with an attitude and accountability problem. Article | spectator.com.au/2026/04/the-we…
The Spectator Australia tweet media
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@StaciLMorrison @SpectatorOz Actually, since most Americans disapprove of the Iran war, they probably aren’t “absolutely furious” about our decision to stay out of it. They probably wish your lunatic President hadn’t gotten you into that mess in the first place.
GIF
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Staci Morrison
Staci Morrison@StaciLMorrison·
@SpectatorOz They have no idea how absolutely furious the American people are about this. When we are done with you, we are completely done. I think they have passed the point of no return.
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@TheKeplarHermit If it took that little to alienate you then you were never much use in the first place. I don’t care what Americans think any more than you care what I think so this will be my last response. Needless to say, we find you every bit as insufferable so it’s probably best you leave.
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🌲🌸🏛️Mr. Remote🇺🇸🌸🌲
NATO has worked well for us through the decades but at the turn of 2010's it has been made increasingly clear that is no longer the case, it's time for something better and new. And no what Rubio expressed was genuine, Europeans really don't understand that their behavior during this conflict has alienated even longtime supporters of NATO in the US.
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🌲🌸🏛️Mr. Remote🇺🇸🌸🌲
Sorry to disappoint the Europhiles that follow me but NATO in its current form is not going to survive until 2030 and at this point, that is a good thing. It is long past time for America to form new workable alliances around the world, for a new era of geopolitical reality. Does this mean all of our interests in Europe will vanish overnight? No, and in fact the dissolution of NATO would actually allow us to work better independently with European nations instead of having to go through and deal with an outdated alliance structure. Another thing is, there needs to be a clear understanding, that if we cannot count on the Europeans for support against a rogue Iran, then we certainly cannot count on them to help us face down China moving forward. Therefore, they should no longer expect our help against Russia. As while we still have our issues with the Russians, they are still mostly a European centric problem that the continent (if gets itself together) can manage well enough on its own.
Department of State@StateDept

🚨 SECRETARY RUBIO: If NATO is just about us defending Europe if they’re attacked, but them denying us basing rights when we need them, then that’s not a very good arrangement. That’s a hard one to stay engaged in and say this is good for the United States.

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Aimee Terese
Aimee Terese@aimeeterese·
He was elected president three times, prior to which he had a number one TV show for years. Even if he had done nothing else, he would be a huge success, but he also ran a global real estate development company, raised 5 gorgeous & successful children, has been happily married a quarter of a century, wrote a bunch of best selling books etc etc etc. this is the weirdest most insane cope.
Kwaisi Tamaal France@FranceKwaisi

@aimeeterese Trump has failed his entire life and he was born rich. Ask his dad.

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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@BasilTheGreat The per capita murder rate in this country is lower than it’s ever been. In 2024, eighty (80) people under 18 were murdered. That’s in a country of 70,000,000. Most of them were killed by a family member. Our streets are safe. Stop scaremongering, you ragebait slinging prick.
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Basil the Great
Basil the Great@BasilTheGreat·
🇯🇵 In Japan, primary school children walk to school and are completely safe Britain used to be like this Our children should be safe in public
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Aloysius Devadander Abercrombie
@GearsAndInk @bumbadum14 Several Americans who have recently worked building/repairing grid infrastructure have said all the new/replacement Chinese parts have new unknown components they can’t identify. Any country that wouldn’t do this if they had a global monopoly would be incomprehensibly retarded
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bumbadum
bumbadum@bumbadum14·
This would be less annoying if these retards actually knew anything. 1. China has been buying up European property and infrastructure for 20 years, the chinese government owns the largest port in Greece 2. China completely backs, bankrolls, and supports Russia in this war, they are active participants 3. Europe’s energy grid is entirely reliant on Chinese solar panels that have a literal kill switch that’s China controls. EUROPE IS ALREADY CHINA’S BITCH 4. This is the only point The reality is that most Europeans don’t have a problem with being dominated by others at this point, they just require manners to do so. Your energy grid is already compromised, your industries are hollowed out, your ports are foreign owned, all by a country that is bankrolling a Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Niccolo Soldo (Fisted By Foucault)@FistedFoucault

The 4 main differences between the foreign USA and the foreign China from a European perspective 1. China is not laying claim to any territory held by a EU member state 2. China has not actively pushed to start a massive land war on European soil 3. China has not purposely engaged in policies to harm European energy security 4. China does not occupy Europe via post-war treaties and forces on the ground China is not a European ally...but it is definitely not an enemy like the USA obviously is.

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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@null49881378 @bumbadum14 Chinese solar panels don’t have kill switches. None of their components have kill switches. There’s nothing the Chinese can do to control a solar panel in Paris, or Madrid. Absolutely nothing at all.
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Aloysius Devadander Abercrombie
@bumbadum14 To be fair, the entire American power grid is also comprised entirely of Chinese components that obviously have killswitches as well. Europeans are just smug about being cucks to China
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@bumbadum14 Chinese solar panels don’t have a kill switch. Fuck sake….
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@adam1trent @WingsScotland I just think there’s a certain type of person who can’t stand the thought they voted for an imbecile, so they concoct these elaborate schemes to make everything work out. We’ll never agree. I’ll remain 100% skeptical until proven otherwise. Good day.
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FirstCitizenTrent🇿🇦🇺🇸
I mean his desire to take Greenland, which isn’t over, I’ll gentleman’s bet you we either get it, or practically get it, Trump isn’t after it because he likes money so much he wants to control a place called “green”land. Cuba about to fall. Second Gentleman’s bet that falls next. Iran? You mean the most amazing military victory in all of history? Taking out a top 10 military power completely in like 2 days? With practically zero losses? Sooo humiliating 😱 History won’t have TDS, he’ll go down as on par with Caesar because of that win lol. You not only don’t see the big picture, you also dont understand how Trump works, He yolos wild statements for misdirection, then settles in where he wants. Tds’rs: “you’re going to jail, buckle up!” Trump: “no, I want to rule the world and galaxy!!!” Tds’rs: “you’re stupid, not gonna let you rule the world and galaxy!” Trump: “nope, I am!” Tds’rs: “bro, come on, that’s crazy, how about President of USA?” Trump: “ok fine” They wanted jail. He wanted president. He asked for galaxy, they settled where he wanted. Now you would say: “hahah he’s an idiot, he wanted to rule galaxy, but only got presidency, what a clown” But you miss starting point. He wrote a book about it, you should read.
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Wings Over Scotland
Wings Over Scotland@WingsScotland·
I’m tired telling people: Trump isn’t a moron. His moron act is designed - with extraordinary success - to enrage his opponents (who ARE idiots) into such spluttering fury that they take leave of all their senses and remain easy to defeat. That’s why he’s President.
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy

Food for thought. Trump, Hormuz and the End of the Free Ride For half a century, Western strategists have known that the Strait of Hormuz is the acute point where energy, sea power and political will intersect. That knowledge is not in dispute. What is new in this war with Iran is that the United States, under Donald Trump, has chosen not to rush to “solve” the problem. In Hegelian terms, he is refusing an easy synthesis in order to force the underlying contradiction to the surface. The old thesis was simple: the US guarantees open sea lanes in the Gulf, and everyone else structures their economies and politics around that free insurance. Europe and the UK embraced ambitious green policies, ran down hard‑power capabilities and lectured Washington on multilateral virtue, secure in the assumption that American carriers would always appear off Hormuz. The political class behaved as if the American security guarantee were a law of nature, not a contingent choice. Their conduct today is closer to Chamberlain than Churchill: temporising, issuing statements, hoping the storm will pass without a fundamental reordering of their responsibilities. Trump’s antithesis is to withhold the automatic guarantee at the moment of maximum stress. Militarily, the US can break Iran’s residual ability to contest the Strait; that is not the binding constraint. The point is to delay that act. By allowing a closure or semi‑closure to bite, Trump ensures that the immediate pain is concentrated in exactly the jurisdictions that have most conspicuously free‑ridden on US power: the EU and the UK. Their industries, consumers and energy‑transition assumptions are exposed. In that context, his reported blunt message to European and British leaders, you need the oil out of the Strait more than we do; why don’t you go and take it? Is not a throwaway line. It is the verbalisation of the antithesis. It openly reverses the traditional presumption that America will carry the burden while its allies emote from the sidelines. In this dialectic, the prize is not simply the reopening of a chokepoint. The prize is a reordered system in which the United States effectively arbitrages and controls the global flow of oil. A world in which US‑aligned production in the Americas plus a discretionary capability to secure,or not secure, Hormuz places Washington at the centre of the hydrocarbon chessboard. For that strategic end, a rapid restoration of the old status quo would be counterproductive. A quick, surgical “fix” of Hormuz would short‑circuit the dialectic. If Trump rapidly crushed Iran’s remaining coastal capabilities, swept the mines and escorted tankers back through the Strait, Europe and the UK would heave a sigh of relief and return to business as usual: underfunded militaries, maximalist green posturing and performative disdain for US power, all underwritten by that same power. The contradiction between their dependence and their posture would remain latent. By declining to supply the synthesis on demand, and by explicitly telling London and Brussels to “go and take it” themselves, Trump forces a reckoning. European and British leaders must confront the fact that their energy systems, their industrial bases and their geopolitical sermons all rest on an American hard‑power foundation they neither finance nor politically respect. The longer the contradiction is allowed to unfold, the stronger the eventual synthesis can be: a new order in which access to secure flows, Hormuz, Venezuela and beyond, is explicitly conditional on real contributions, not assumed as a right. In that sense, the delay in “taking” the Strait, and the challenge issued to US allies to do it themselves, is not indecision. It is the negative moment Hegel insisted was necessary for history to move. Only by withholding the old guarantee, and by saying so out loud to those who depended on it, can Trump hope to end the free ride.

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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@adam1trent @WingsScotland Nothing happened on Greenland. Trump just made an ass of himself. Nothing’s happened in Cuba. Iran is either going to end in a humiliating climb-down or boots on the ground, both of which are bad. Honestly, this all reads like fanfic from an alternate universe.
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FirstCitizenTrent🇿🇦🇺🇸
Ya, but this midwits theory and follow ups made the most sense and have played out the best. How do you not see it…. Greenland - Syria - Panama Canal - Venezuala - Iran - Cuba - etc etc Fortifying hegemony over Americas, taking over shipping lanes, taking over global oil. Your position is “well ya. All those outcomes are coming, but that’s just because he’s super lucky (or gods chosen one), he didn’t plan that” Really? That’s your take? He’s lucky or Gods chosen one? Seems silly. We spend trillions on a defense department, you don’t think they plan things? lol… tds really doing a number on you.
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@adam1trent @WingsScotland It’s easy to superimpose 10D chess stratagems onto Trump’s actions because their incoherence lets you pick and choose the bits YOU think are smart. Every midwit MAGA account has a theory about how Trump’s actions are secretly genius and they’re all completely different.
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FirstCitizenTrent🇿🇦🇺🇸
It seems stupid to you, because you haven’t seen the big picture. Once you see it. It’ll click and you’ll be like “omfg I can’t believe I didn’t see it, now I can’t unsee it, and holy moly trumps plan is genius. Trumps the luckiest sob because despite crazy odds, his plan is working”. Heres plan. Read before you tds bug out.
Just Another Pod Guy@TMTLongShort

It’s been three weeks since I first published Economic Blitzkrieg so I figured it’s worth doing a quick overview of where we are and where I think we are headed: First to summarize: The thesis was Trump didn’t really care that much about tariffs. He cares about fortifying US hegemony by cutting out China. But to be more precise I’m going to fully outline what he cares about and then what he’s trying to do about each. Top of the list are his primary issues that needed to be addressed quickly & forcefully: A) Chinas growing industrial, technological and militaristic strength relative to the US B) A dependence on China at the base layer of U.S. industrial and military supply chains C) An unsustainable fiscal debt load and budget deficit that couldn’t be easily addressed without either irreparably impacting reserve status or forcing significant voter pain via austerity Less pressing but still relevant downstream issues that were also considered, in no particular order: D) Fentanyl crisis E) A free riding Europe that benefited from the U.S. security umbrella without commensurate compensation F) Growing economic entanglement between China and supposed military allies to the U.S. G) Growing unwillingness by voters around the world to take economic pain as the price of being a “good ally” as demonstrated by continued flow of Russian gas into Germany H) A concerted and accelerated shift of the Chinese economic model up the value-add ladder following the bust of their real estate bubble into areas that have traditionally been staples of higher-income economies including autos, semis and robotics I) Increased concern around the value of IP and the US’s assumed ability to control access to AI following Deepseek and the subsequent torrent of similar models out of China despite two years of GPU import restrictions J) A near term fiscal setup that seemed incredibly bleak given Yellen’s decision to short-date the govts debt in the form of $10T of maturities in 2025 while at the same time juiced fiscal spending to a degree that practically gaurentee economic malaise of the deficit were to be closed cold-turkey. So my thesis is that Trump turned to a number of high-IQ and mid-IQ advisors and asked for a plan. People such as Miran, Thiel, Pottinger, Colby, maybe Bessent… and yes maybe even obsessive single-issue types like Kyle Bass and Navarro. Who came up with the plan only mildly matters at this point… And these individuals constructed the following sweeping plan that attempts to solve everything all at once within the constraints he has. Constraints that include: midterm elections, the existing rule of law in the U.S. (loosely), high debt loads throughout the developed world and general unwillingness to “rock the boat”, an adversary who can exert far more economic pain on most countries vs the US. And most importantly, and adversary who has a defacto emperor for life while Trump has to wake up every morning and check the polls. Said another way, an adversary with a much higher pain tolerance vs either US politicians or voters. So what was the plan: Isolate China. Force countries to choose between two spheres of trade. Two spheres of military security. Two spheres of financial rails. But because of the aforementioned constraints you couldn’t just go to countries and ask them nicely to walk into an economic woodchipper… and while they were at it please run don’t walk since you have midterms coming up. So the strategy had to introduce game theory. It had to magnify the economic leverage. It had to introduce time constraints. It had to be binary. In or out. No room for ambiguity that can be undone by a subsequent government administration. 1/n continued below…

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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@facsimileglib @cryptopunk7213 Yeah. No. AI is now at the point where if I played you (and I don’t mean the generic you, I mean you specifically) ten tracks and gave you a million dollars to guess which one was AI generated, you’d almost certainly fail.
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Glib Facsimile
Glib Facsimile@facsimileglib·
Its the difference between Lossy and Lossless. "we’re reaching a point where ai-generated media is indistinguishable for 90% of the world" Is an opinion of someone who can't hear the difference between 128kb/s mp3 and 48khz FLAC. So its extremely annoying when someone points to a mcdonalds burger and a freshly ground hamburger patty made from prime filet mignon and says "they're 90 percent the same". And this is everything. From food, to wine, to architecture, to art, and so on. The problem isn't AI. The problem is the undiscerning person who is saying something has less value because they have little to no taste.
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Ejaaz
Ejaaz@cryptopunk7213·
genuine question: why are the arts and gaming communities so fucking touchy about ai? i get that 99% of examples are slop but we’re reaching a point where ai-generated media is indistinguishable for 90% of the world that shouldn’t go un-acknowledged just because you want to hide behind a professional identity ai isn’t going away, it’s getting (a lot) better, so why not try and figure out how to work with it to your advantage? isn’t that what a bunch of hollywood is realising now? doomer: “NO THIS IS NOWHERE CLOSE TO PIXAR GRADE” 8 year old (target audience): “haha that’s awesome” what am i missing?
Is this a 3D model?@IsThisA3DModel

no and this is nowhere close to "Pixar-grade"

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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@SpencrGreenberg I’d say the two images on the left are human, but I’m really just guessing.
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Spencer Greenberg 🔍
Spencer Greenberg 🔍@SpencrGreenberg·
Can you tell which of these four fruit still lifes were made by AI and which were made by a 19th-century painter? At least one was painted by a human, and at least one was made by an AI. Place your guesses in the 4 surveys below:
Spencer Greenberg 🔍 tweet media
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Lorenzo
Lorenzo@petrolhead63·
@WingsScotland @GearsAndInk You’ve lost me? You say he isn’t a moron, it’s all by design to fool his opponents. What’s his sodding plan then, confuse the Iranians with so many contradictory statements their heads explode? I don’t get what point you’re trying to make. He is a complete and utter moron.
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@WingsScotland Trump’s critics aren’t overlooking his tactical genius, because he doesn’t have any and would probably struggle to beat a trained chicken at noughts and crosses. The problem isn’t Trump’s critics. The problem is Trump’s defenders have INCREDIBLY selective memories.
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CaptainThugwash
CaptainThugwash@GearsAndInk·
@WingsScotland No, this is just cope. He is a moron, objectively, and we know this because stupid is as stupid does. Tariffs: stupid. Greenland: stupid. Appointing Hegseth: stupid. Iran: stupid. Always believing Putin no matter what: stupid. Withdrawing from WHO: stupid. The list goes on.
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