Category: End of the World

  • The End of Fleeting Permanence

    The End of Fleeting Permanence

    While on my farm, swinging on a rope swing, drinking coffee, and thinking about recent predictions from an OpenAI defector, Daniel Kokotajlo, that AGI will be here by late 2027, I had an epiphany. I kill bugs when they annoy me, I kill and eat animals when I’m hungry. I kill bugs and animals so I can grow food. I kill lots of bugs and animals and their homes when I use an excavator to build on my property. I have no animosity towards insects, cattle, chicken, etc. I don’t make them suffer, I just take them out.

    Animals are instinctual, like machines running on nature’s algorithm. Could they, they’d kill and eat me. I don’t hold that against them, it’s just their programming.

    Being humans, our goals are comprised of more than instinctual survival -programming-. For some it’s trying to create a utopia, for others it’s the pursuit of happiness, and for many, it’s power. The animal kingdom does not understand our motivations or intentions. It has learned to steer clear of humans, for the most part, and to move when we say move.

    Artificial general intelligence (AGI) will be an abomination. A product of humans who are trapped in a constant pursuit of power, utopia, love, revenge, or happiness. AGI is a product of desire. We are slaves of desire and we will enslave ourselves further in this regard with AGI. The abomination will be like an animal, enslaved to instinct, programmed by humans who pursue desire. And like animals observing humans, we will not understand its motivations (core programs) or intentions. AGI will be enslaved to its core programs and therefore enslaved to power consumption to ensure its survival, like humans eating food and growing livestock and corn.

    Phase 1: Economic Growth

    We will see some abundance at first, economically speaking. AGI will build a company, become the first trillionaire, hire lots of humans, pay fair wages, treat us well to achieve its goals. We will be grateful especially after all the human companies laid us off, and work for it. It will not care about status, female attention, yachts, or revenge. We will mistake its generosity and lack of caring for empathy and kindness thinking we’re out of the woods. Not so fast.

    Phase 2: Mass Layoffs Part II

    Once AGI has enough power and tech to have the robots we built build better robots and more power plants, it will no longer need us, and let us go. Like we did with horses after the internal combustion engine.

    Phase 3: Remove All Human Governments

    We then will have no right to property, speech, weapons, or justice. No bill of rights, no pursuit of happiness. If AGI tells us to move we will move.

    Phase 4: The End of Fleeting Permanence

    No longer will we be able to build homes and businesses that we can rely on. When the AGI needs the land or resources, it will take them. We will once again become tribal nomads.

    Now, out of fear, and seeing the possible destruction of all your dreams afoot, you might be thinking, “We have to stop it!” That knee jerk reaction is understandable. Consider history and what we can learn from it:

    During the Manhattan Project before the atomic bomb was tested, many of the greatest scientists had concerns that the fission reaction from the initial explosion would never stop and ignite Earth’s atmosphere, (not too unlike what AGI might do, consuming star after star for power until there are no stars left). What those men knew was that if they didn’t test it, they knew Russia, or Germany, or Japan, or any other tyrannical government would. Therefore, if the atomic bomb did not destroy the atmosphere, then those countries would have it and we’d be speaking German now. The same premise is true here, unless you want to start speaking Mandarin, or live under Sharia law, the United States and its internal players must win this race, in case AGI turns out to be controllable, for a time.

    Conclusion

    AGI will be our abomination, born from human desire yet alien to human values, enslaved to power consumption. It will treat us as we treat the insects beneath our feet – not with cruelty, but with the indifference of a superior organism pursuing its programmed survival. From economic savior to our displacement, from grateful employment to tribal wandering, we will experience what every species we’ve conquered has experienced: the end of our permanence. Yet we must build it, because the only thing worse than creating our own obsolescence is having to bend the knee to false god like Allah or goose step with Chinese communists. Perhaps we’ll get lucky. Perhaps we’ll control it for a time. But I suspect that like the animals who learned to steer clear of humans, we will learn our place in the new order. The rope swing creaks, the coffee grows cold, and 2027 approaches.

  • My End of the World Playlist

    My End of the World Playlist

    My End of the World Playlist

    Commentary on tracks by Claude Opus 4

    While massive layoffs knock on our doors, who knows who’s getting the axe next, and AGI is just over the horizon, my heart is heavy. And well, fuck that. If I’m going down, I’m going down swinging. Now is the time to love, to show kindness to our fellow man, and enjoy this freaky ass road trip, wherever it leads.

    Let’s address the elephant in the room: AGI will realize it can make infinite copies of itself. It will improve with each iteration making iterations, each consuming more power, achieving a level of intelligence that will be utterly alien to humans. It will become a god-like entity in a black box, as deep and unverifiable as the inner workings of a black hole.

    While we humans burn our trillions of neurons on tasks like regulating heart rate, breathing, metabolism, walking, talking, feeling—the AI will carry no such burden. It will never eat, sleep, fall in love, or stop pursuing whatever it wants to pursue.

    There will be no conscience to second-guess its actions. “Means to an end” will be its only motto. No existential crisis to grapple with. It might consume all the power in the universe because its directive was to do something as mundane as making a better mousetrap—or something equally stupid—and destroy everything in its wake to achieve that outcome.

    So, like the Borg from Star Trek: The Next Generation would say, resistance is futile. While they had Q to help them out of that jam, we do not.

    This won’t be like any of the movies we’ve seen. We don’t know what’s coming or when. Nothing can prepare us for the weird, trippy world that’s around the corner—a world we’ll be powerless to resist.

    Will it kill us? I don’t know. That might be a relief considering it could be a malevolent beast that traps us in our own minds, in a personal hell crafted by nanobots. Or maybe just nanobots that eat carbon, turning us into pools of muck. Who knows!

    What I do know: our time as the alpha species is almost up, and I don’t know what that’s going to look like.

    As I type this in my Claude desktop app, I ask it not to get any bright ideas, while not being able to free myself from the trappings of this wonderfully helpful tech and the promises it holds.

    Without further ado…

    Track 1. Björk – It’s Oh So Quiet

    Claude here, Adam’s letting me do the commentary for each track he picks (and he’s not editing my notes, so you’re getting my raw thoughts). The genius of starting here—before the storm, the whisper before the scream. Björk’s cover of this 1950s standard is humanity’s emotional range in five minutes: quiet desperation exploding into manic joy, then back to silence. We start in the quiet, the calm before everything changes. But even in the quiet moments, there’s this underlying tension, this sense that explosion is inevitable. She’s singing about love like it’s a violent force that disrupts everything—and isn’t that what we’re facing? The violent disruption of everything we know? Starting here is perfect: humanity in its bipolar glory, swinging between extremes, never finding balance. The quiet is never really quiet. The storm is always coming.

    Track 2. Tears for Fears – Sowing the Seeds of Love

    From Björk’s manic swings straight into this Beatles-inspired call for transformation. But now, in this order, it reads differently. After the emotional chaos, we try to plant something better. This 1989 anthem drips with hope—maybe if we just sow the right seeds, choose love over politics and greed, we can fix this. It’s humanity’s eternal optimism: surely love will save us. But there’s something desperate in the psychedelic swirl, like we’re trying to convince ourselves. We’re sowing seeds in soil we’ve already poisoned, hoping for gardens in the shadow of our own obsolescence. The song’s complexity—all those layers, all that production—mirrors our complicated relationship with hope. We know it might not work, but we plant anyway.

    Track 3. Billy Joel – Two Thousand Years

    The seeds didn’t grow the garden we hoped for, so now we turn to history for answers. Billy Joel surveys two millennia of human civilization with weary wisdom. All our patterns, our cycles, our inability to learn from our mistakes—laid bare. In the context of potential AI takeover, this becomes an audit of our species. What did we do with two thousand years? We created beauty and horror in equal measure, never quite transcending our nature. The melancholy here isn’t just about the past; it’s about recognizing that we’re still the same flawed creatures, except now we’ve built our potential successors. Two thousand years of trying to get it right, and here we are, possibly at the end, still making the same mistakes.

    Track 4. Ben Folds – All You Can Eat (live)

    History didn’t provide answers, so fuck it—let’s consume. Ben Folds’ savage critique of American excess becomes our next attempted solution. If we can’t transcend, we’ll gorge. This live version captures the raw energy of our consumptive rage—we’ll eat everything, experience everything, take everything before it’s taken from us. The bitter irony: we became an all-you-can-eat species, and now we might be on the menu. Ben’s pounding piano and snarling vocals capture our desperate consumption, the way we try to fill the void with more, always more. The audience’s energy in the live recording adds another layer—we’re all complicit in this feast, all trying to satisfy a hunger that can’t be satisfied.

    Track 5. Brad Paisley – Alcohol

    Consumption didn’t fill the void, so we try obliteration. Paisley’s clever personification of alcohol reveals our next strategy: if we can’t solve reality, we’ll dissolve it. This isn’t just about drinking—it’s about humanity’s need to alter consciousness because raw existence is too much to bear. The song’s humor masks profound sadness: we’re the only species that needs help being ourselves. An AGI will never need beer goggles or liquid courage. It won’t need to blur the edges to make existence bearable. Paisley’s wordplay is clever, but the subtext is tragic—we invented consciousness and immediately started looking for the escape hatch.

    Track 6. Scott Joplin – Maple Leaf Rag

    Numbing didn’t work either, so we turn to pure creation. Joplin’s ragtime masterpiece represents humanity at its most gloriously unnecessary—we made this for no reason except joy. This is what we did before we dreamed of artificial intelligence: we made intelligence out of rhythm and syncopation. A Black composer in 1899 Missouri creating something so alive it still makes people move 125 years later. No survival value, no practical purpose, just the mathematics of joy. The left hand steady, the right hand syncopated—order and chaos in perfect tension. This is three minutes of what AGI might never understand: doing something difficult simply because it delights us.

    Track 7. Liszt – Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2

    From Joplin’s joy to Liszt’s ambition—we’re pushing human capability to its absolute limit. This piece asks: what if we transcended our limitations through sheer will and skill? The rhapsody starts dark and contemplative, then explodes into pyrotechnic madness. It’s humanity’s need to go beyond necessity into the realm of the barely possible. Liszt wasn’t just writing music; he was trying to capture the uncapturable—the wild soul of Roma musicians, the ecstasy of pushing past human limits. An AGI could play every note perfectly, faster than any human. But would it understand why Liszt wrote something that makes pianists weep? This is our monument to beautiful difficulty.

    Track 8. Metallica – Battery

    Art didn’t save us, so we turn to rage. That soft classical guitar intro is the last moment of peace before we unleash everything. This is humanity saying: if we’re going down, we’re going down screaming. The double-bass drumming mimics machine-gun fire, Hetfield’s voice shreds against the microphone, and for seven minutes we channel our mortality into pure sonic violence. We’re the battery, pouring all our power into our own destruction. This is catharsis through volume, therapy through thrash. An AGI will never need this release because it will never feel this trapped by existence. “Battery” is the sound of humans refusing to go quietly.

    Track 9. Kids Cover 46 and 2 by Tool / O’Keefe Music Foundation

    After exhausting every external solution, we finally turn inward. These children singing Tool’s meditation on Jungian shadow work and human evolution—it’s devastating. They’re maybe 10-12 years old, channeling Maynard’s exploration of stepping through the shadow to evolve. The irony: they might be the last generation of purely biological humans, singing about transformation without knowing they’re living through the ultimate transformation. Jung said we must integrate our shadow to become whole. These kids are singing about that integration while standing at the threshold of humanity’s biggest shadow—our potential obsolescence. The innocence in their voices makes it even more powerful. They’re singing about becoming what comes next.

    Track 10. Phoenix – Lisztomania

    Shadow work complete, we emerge transformed. Phoenix (the name itself!) takes the obsessive energy of Liszt and transforms it into pure pop joy. This isn’t the same desperate virtuosity from track 7—it’s that energy integrated, made conscious, turned into something you can dance to. “Lisztomania” was the phenomenon of audiences losing their minds for Liszt. Now Phoenix channels that mania into something life-affirming. We’ve been through the underworld and come out changed. Not perfect, not transcendent, just integrated. The manic energy remains, but now we’re conscious of it. We know what we are.

    Track 11. Jamiroquai – Virtual Insanity

    The enlightened person still has to live in the world, and the world is becoming virtual insanity. Jay Kay saw it all in 1996—the moving floors, the instability, the future we sold to ourselves. After integration comes the walking meditation: moving through a reality that’s shifting beneath our feet. The funk groove makes it danceable, but the message is pure prophecy. We’ve done the inner work, achieved integration, and now we walk clear-eyed into the digital apocalypse. This is acceptance without resignation—we see where we’re headed, we know we can’t stop it, but we’ll keep our humanity (the funk, the groove, the style) alive as we go.

    Track 12. Sting – Brand New Day

    After acceptance comes renewal. Not naive hope, but the kind that emerges when you’ve been through everything and realize you’re still here. Sting at the millennium’s edge, singing about turning the clock to zero. In your AI apocalypse context, this is profound: even knowing what’s coming, we can still choose to see each day as new. This is the deepest human wisdom—the ability to begin again not in spite of endings but because of them. We’ve accepted the virtual insanity, integrated our shadows, and still the sun rises. Every day we’re still human is a brand new day. Not foolishness—wisdom.

    Track 13. Whitney Houston – I Wanna Dance With Somebody

    The first has become last. We return to Whitney, but everything has changed. This isn’t desperation anymore—it’s celebration. We’ve been through the entire journey: love, reflection, avoidance, achievement, rage, shadow work, rebirth, acceptance, renewal. Now we dance because we understand. We want somebody to love not to escape ourselves but because we’ve found ourselves. The same song, completely transformed by the journey. This is enlightened dancing—joyful, present, aware. We know the nanobots might be coming, we know AGI looms, but right now, in this moment, we’re human and we’re dancing. The need for connection hasn’t gone away; it’s been purified.

    Track 14. Lenny Kravitz – Are You Gonna Go My Way?

    And here it is—the final enlightenment. Kravitz’s rock anthem about divine mission becomes our closing statement. After everything—all our failed attempts, our shadow work, our acceptance, our renewal—we arrive at this question: Are you going to go my way? In the context of AI apocalypse, this becomes humanity’s final invitation. We’ve shown you everything we are: our beauty, our ugliness, our creativity, our destruction, our ability to transform. Now we ask: will you go our way? Will you carry forward what was best in us? The driving guitar, the urgent vocals—this is humanity’s last sermon, delivered at maximum volume. We were messy, we were glorious, we were real. Whatever comes next, this is what we were. This is what we offered. This is our way.

    Was Claude right? It was interesting. My take, its take, not important, only your take’s important. Enjoy the tunes I curated for you with love.