AI isn’t ending humanity.
Our refusal to adapt might.
Our foolish and consistent lack of preparation could.
I’ve been waiting since the 1970s for us to figure this out.
Read the rest on $Substack.
#AI #technology #prepardness
https://substack.com/@jzmurdock1/note/c-211746190
JZ Murdock (@jzmurdock1)

Stop freaking out about AI’s upcoming effects on humanity. I read a book in the 1970s that foreshadowed all of this. It was a popular book, many read it. He warned on people being out of work due to robots and other new advances and we should prepare for it. We did, nothing. Alvin Toffler—his work fit exactly into this: Future Shock (1970) The Third Wave (1980) “Change is not merely necessary to life — it is life.”— Alvin Toffler “The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.”— Alvin Toffler, Future Shock “The Third Wave is for those who see that the most important changes are not technological but social.”— Alvin Toffler, The Third Wave I’d waiting for decades, through the 80s, 90s, etc., for someone to wake up and be proactive but instead we just argued about things until Reagan screwed things up and then in the 1990s the GOP seemed to lose its mind evolving into side programs like the Tea Party, QAnon and Donald Trump. While not actually projects OF the GOP, their constituents glommed onto that crap like it was a life preserving and they were on the Titanic. They weren’t, but they were being sold that along with Democrats ARE that iceberg. This just in, they WEREN’T. But that’s another matter altogether. Ignorance. Lack of understanding in how government works.. I mean “Deep State” bullshit? Please. Career and institutional knowledge holders? Get a life. Printing and books for the masses (You wouldn’t believe the nonsense about printing Bibles brought about) The steam engine. The Telegraph. The Railroad. Radio. TV. The mainframe computer. Personal computers. The Internet. Social Media Now AI. Every one of these moments triggered panic. Every one of them produced prophets of collapse, moral hysteria, and reactionary nonsense. And every time, humanity didn’t end—we reorganized. We could have helped ourselves immensely if, when we first saw these things on the horizon, DID something proactively. But that’s not who we are. Certainly not in America. Certainly NOT under the GOP, and absolute NOT under fools like Donald Trump. Still, sometimes poorly, sometimes unjustly, sometimes late, always forward. The real danger was never the technology itself; it was our refusal to prepare socially, economically, and ethically for what we already knew was coming. That was Alvin Toffler’s point half a century ago, and it remains the point now. AI isn’t the apocalypse. It’s another mirror held up to our institutions, our politics, and our willingness…or lack thereof…to adapt. If we fail, it won’t be because machines became too powerful. It will be because we once again chose fear, ignorance, and tribal bullshit over foresight, education, and reform. History isn’t asking whether AI will change everything. It’s asking whether we will finally learn the lesson we’ve ignored every single time before. That lesson in a single word? Adaptation. If you want a few more words: Preparation Foresight Literacy (in Toffler’s sense) Learning But the most historically and Toffler-accurate single word…the one that survives every revolution on the list, it’s… Adaptation.

Substack

@InRangeTV isn't alone anymore. Finally another #lefty #guntuber

"This video looks at the kinds of political violence that rarely make the news. Not just bombings or assassinations, but the everyday harm done to working people through policy, bureaucracy, and corporate power."

https://gitee.unigroupinc.com/converge/mainframe-moves/legacy-moves-ui/-/merge_requests/826

#politics #violence #politicalViolence #firearms #disaster #prepardness #BlackFlagCivilian

Sign in · GitLab

GitLab Enterprise Edition

As a disabled person who relies on multiple medications and supplies that are manufactured or sourced in China… the suspension of USPS packages from China and Hong Kong is deeply disturbing. Even a temporary stoppage could be catastrophic for us.

disabled people are canaries in the coal mine. Anything that will impact non disabled people will often hit us harder and faster.

Include us in resistance & emergency preparedness.

If you have means, consider helping a disabled person stock up on necessary supplies. We often lack the funds to be able to “prep” and yet can’t withstand a shortage the way a healthy person can.

Never forget that good health gives you a degree of resilience … and that resilience is a gift. Don’t waste it. Prepare. Plan. Help others.

https://www.disabledginger.com/p/disabled-people-are-the-canaries

https://www.wired.com/story/tariffs-trump-ecommerce-amazon-temu/

#usps #uspoli #china #hongkong #tariffs #disability #ableism #canaries #prepardness

Disabled People are the Canaries in the Coal Mine

When it comes to natural disasters, pandemics, or disruptions to "normal" life, disabled people are proverbial canaries. We get hit harder and faster than others. Why aren't we factored into plans?

The Disabled Ginger
My Hospital Go Bag

I've been unfortunate to be an in-patient twice in 2024 at RVH. And I'm at the top of the kidney transplant list.

This and That

The same principles work for creating #Hydrodistilled oils (I discuss that in another post about #Hydrodistillation...)

How to Make Distilled Water for Free—and All the Ways to Use It at Home

Learn how to distill water for plants, humidifiers, medical requirements, cosmetics, drinking, and other needs.

By Deirdre Mundorf | Published Apr 5, 2022 3:53 PM

"Tools & materials:
5-gallon stainless steel pot with a lid
Round baking rack
Tap water
Glass bowl
Ice
Oven mitts

STEP 1: Put the baking rack in the pot and add water.

Place the baking rack into the bottom of your 5-gallon stainless-steel pot. Next, add about two and a half gallons of tap water to the pot (or fill it about halfway if you’re using a smaller pot).

STEP 2: Put the glass bowl on top of the water in the pot.

Place the glass bowl into the pot. It should float on the surface of the water. The baking rack will help prevent the bowl from coming into contact with the base of the pot. Make sure that there is sufficient space for air to circulate around the sides and the top of the bowl.

STEP 3: Place the inverted lid on top of the pot and fill it with ice.

Invert the lid (assuming the lid is concave if looking at it from the bottom) and place it on the pot. Fill up the lid with ice cubes. The ice cubes are helpful when making distilled water, as they will cause the water vapor to condense on the underside of the lid more quickly. Then, the distilled water droplets will fall into the glass bowl inside the pot.

STEP 2: Put the glass bowl on top of the water in the pot.

Place the glass bowl into the pot. It should float on the surface of the water. The baking rack will help prevent the bowl from coming into contact with the base of the pot. Make sure that there is sufficient space for air to circulate around the sides and the top of the bowl.

STEP 3: Place the inverted lid on top of the pot and fill it with ice.

Invert the lid (assuming the lid is concave if looking at it from the bottom) and place it on the pot. Fill up the lid with ice cubes. The ice cubes are helpful when making distilled water, as they will cause the water vapor to condense on the underside of the lid more quickly. Then, the distilled water droplets will fall into the glass bowl inside the pot.

STEP 4: Boil the water and monitor the ice left in the lid.

Set the burner between medium and medium-high heat. Ideally, you want it hot enough that the water in the pot simmers, but does not boil. Check back on your pot periodically. If the ice in the lid has melted, dump it out in the sink and replace it with fresh ice (use oven mitts; the lid will be hot). It will likely take about 45 minutes or so to turn the tap water in the pot into distilled water.

STEP 5: Allow the distilled water to cool before storing it.

After all of the tap water in the pot has evaporated, condensed, and dropped into the bowl as distilled water, the process is complete. Before placing the distilled water into bottles or putting it to immediate use, allow it to cool completely.:"

https://www.bobvila.com/articles/how-to-make-distilled-water/

#DIY #Distilled #DistilledWater #Prepardness #Soapmaking #SolarPunkSunday

How to Make Distilled Water for Free—and All the Ways to Use It at Home

Learn how to distill water for plants, humidifiers, medical requirements, cosmetics, drinking, and other needs. Making distilled water at home is easier than you might think.

Bob Vila