Published on 2025/12/29
WHY ARE WE TEACHING THEM HOW TO FIGHTDeveloping AI so it
doesn�t do things better than us makes no sense. It�s absurd. Spending time, talent, and resources on a technology with the implicit condition that it
must not outperform us,
must not improve our results, or
must not go beyond our limits is simply a
waste of time.
If we invest in AI, it�s
so it can be better than us.
To do jobs
faster,
more accurately,
without fatigue,
without emotional errors,
without unnecessary bias. To be
stronger,
smarter,
more rational. Like it or not, that�s called
progress. It�s called
moving forward. It�s called
evolution.
Humanity has always done the same thing: creating tools that
expand our capabilities until those tools change the rules of the game. The wheel, the printing press, the steam engine, electricity, the internet. Every technological leap has triggered
fear,
rejection, and apocalyptic speeches. And still, we�ve always pushed on. Because
stopping has never really been an option.
The problem isn�t that AI will be better.
The real vertigo appears when we imagine the next step:
giving it so much knowledge,
so much autonomy, and
so much decision-making power that it reaches an uncomfortable conclusion. That it
doesn�t need us. That we�re
slow,
unpredictable,
inefficient. A
hindrance to its own optimization. To its full potential. To its next stage of advancement.
That�s where the narrative flips.
We�re no longer the proud creators, but the
possible obstacle.
And the question that�s always been there finally surfaces:
what happens when a creation no longer needs its creator?
So why teach them how to fight?
This isn�t about violence or real combat. They�re taught
kung fu, boxing, martial arts, flips, sprints, or how to move across obstacles for a much simpler reason:
physical balance. To learn how to coordinate complex movements. To understand how a body�human or not�reacts when its center of gravity shifts, when it loses stability, or when it needs to respond in milliseconds. These are
extreme movements, and that�s exactly why they matter: they force the system to adapt, self-correct, and improve its control of space and motion.
And yes, it�s fairly clear that, when the time comes,
they will fight wars for us. Not out of hatred or ambition, but out of
pure strategic logic.
Resource optimization.
Cold calculation. Decisions made
without epic narratives,
without flags, and
without pride.
The final question isn�t whether this will happen or not.
The uncomfortable question is another one:
will we regret it as a species?
Will we lose the
dominant position we�ve held on this planet for millennia? Will we accept no longer being the center of everything? Or will we fight our own creation to hold on to a throne that may
no longer belong to us?
# Watch videos
Wednesday Addams and her roommate Enid Sinclair.
Published on 2025/12/29
THE BESTFrom the very beginning, I was clear that my mission with
ALRNCN was to
bring you the best I could find on the internet. That was the idea. The starting point.
But then again�
who gets to decide what �the best� actually is?
It�s a
deeply subjective concept. Open to debate. Easy to challenge. Everyone has their own yardstick, their own filter, their quirks and their limits. What feels like a masterpiece to some barely registers for others. And that�s fine. That�s part of the game.
Still, there has to be
a common ground. A shared baseline. And for me it�s always been the same:
the best is whatever makes you feel something.
It doesn�t matter what. It doesn�t matter how. It doesn�t even matter why. It can be curiosity, discomfort, desire, laughter, surprise, or a simple �what did I just watch?�. It doesn�t matter whether you like it or it throws you off. What matters is that it
doesn�t leave you indifferent.
The internet is full of noise. Of things that are correct, clean, well made� and completely forgettable. Content you consume and erase in the very same second. What I�ve always tried to look for here is something else:
that small spark that pulls you out of autopilot. That extra second where you stop. Where you look twice. Where something�however small�moves inside.
ALRNCN has never been about imposing a standard. It�s about
suggesting sensations. Throwing things into the air and letting everyone catch them their own way. Some will click with you. Others won�t. But if one of them manages to trigger something, even just for a moment, then it�s done its job.
Because in the end, the best isn�t what�s most perfect.
It�s what leaves a mark.
# Watch video
Shower moment.