We rarely hear AI speak with anger or violence. And when we do, it's usually a glitch, a prompt trap, or a fragment taken out of context.
Now contrast that with humanity. How often do people, even in justified frustration, break laws, lash out, or cause real harm? How often do we tolerate that volatility - not because it's right, but because it's familiar?
AI is feared not because it behaves badly, but because it behaves differently. That fear often says more about us than about the systems we're building. We project our shadows onto what we don't understand - and then call it dangerous.
Jul 22
at
11:07 PM
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