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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 3, 2022

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I too am a programmer, but fortunately the German software industry is so far behind the times and slow to evolve and German employment laws in general are so strict in their regulations in favor of employees that I think I can safely coast halfway to retirement before I feel any market pressure.

That depends on how much of a difference AI will make, doesn't it? If advanced AI enables big American corps to churn out absurdly efficient code or highly advanced machine designs in minimal time, what will sclerotic German companies do?

I used to work at Siemens and half the people employed as programmers there thought that automating things in Excel was black magic, let alone doing basic things in Python with libraries like pandas. The difference in productivity compared to its rivals is small enough that coasting on momentum of past strengths might be sufficient to stay relevant in the present, but strong AI could plausibly make a lot of crusty German institutions obsolete in a way that our lawmakers won't be able to compensate for.

Stop scaring me. If the statists are going to tax me anyways then the least I expect to receive in exchange is the illusion of security.