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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 10, 2025

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Microsoft is trying to transform Windows into an agentic OS. Apparently, this means Injecting copilot into the operating system to the point where you can just ask it how to do something and it tells you exactly how to do it. Just follow its instructions, no need to know anything yourself.

I guess the argument is that it will make Windows easier to use for non-technical people. Of course, there is a multitude of problems with this:

The culture war angle:

The left absolutely hates AI. It is built by multi-billionaires looking to replace our jobs so they don't have to pay us and can take all the planet's resources for themselves. Every time AI is added to consumer products, the consumer is increasingly placed in the control of its owner. AI is known to be biased, and we have already seen the tech giants attempt to inject their own bias into them. So not only are we seeing a development in the wrong direction, we are becoming increasingly vulnerable to lies and manipulation by the most powerful in society. This is without even going into the monumental costs of training the models, and the opportunity cost from not spending the resources on other areas that would be more directly helpful to humans.

The AI doomers are afraid of AI takeover. This seems like a step towards that. A chief argument against the AI doomer scenarios has been something like "who would be dumb enough to place AI in control of key systems?" Well, Windows, apparently. While it is true that in their add, it is still the user making the final decision as to which settings to choose, it seems to me that a super-intelligent AI would be capable of manipulating most users into choosing exactly the settings best suited for the AI to manipulate them further. Besides, if this becomes a commercial success, then more is sure to follow. At least, you would expect Google and Apple to follow up, making all the mainstream OS's infected with the kind of intelligence that could ultimately destroy us.

The AI skeptics believe that AI is not going to improve much in the near future. As such, this is a misstep of moronic proportions. You even see it in the add: The user asks the AI to increase his font size. It suggests he changes the scale setting, which is currently at 150%. When asked what percentage he should change it to, the AI responds with 150%, as this is the recommended setting. The result? Nothing changes, because the setting is kept at default. Wait no, the user went against the AI's wishes and picked 200%, seemingly hoping that you would not spot this stupid mishap. If the actual marketing material is damaged by AI hallucination, how bad is the final product going to be? Are you going to have to argue with your AI until it finally does what you want? This is probably going to push more power users over to Linux, as the agent does not give them the fine control over their systems that they want. Meanwhile, it might actually make the experience worse for Grandma, who is gaslit into picking suboptimal settings for herself by an unhelpful machine.

Finally, if you are concerned about AI and mental health, you have probably heard of AI-induced psychosis. The usage of chatbots by a small minority of vulnerable people has apparently fed into their delusions, resulting in psychosis-related behavior. An agentic OS that at best requires the user to opt out of AI functionality, places the chatbot right in the user's face. While a therapist today could instruct her patients to avoid seeking out the chatbots, that is hardly possible when the main way to use your operating system is through an LLM. If copilot is on by default, or if other ways to use the system is slowly deprecated making it harder to use without the bot, I would expect this change to result in more cases of diagnosable mental health conditions.

AI is known to be biased, and we have already seen the tech giants attempt to inject their own bias into them

For example. I was talking to ChatGPT about Jesus the other day. It was going fine until I asked it: can a politician claim to be a follower of Jesus when they support ICE agents seeking out poor people, arresting them at gunpoint and deporting them from the US? Didn't he demand radical compassion? Seems like Jesus would be pretty disappointed with them.

The robot refused to answer, saying it couldn't help me with this. Cucked.

(Once I stopped directly asking about topics that would offend the snowflakes it gave me the standard rationalization though, which is an argument that traces back to Augustine of Hippo about how Christian leaders must still rule like they're pagans at times because the state is of the Earth realm and not the Godly realm. Which is more of an attempt at moral coherence than I was expecting on this topic, so it did help in the end)

The examples i was thinking of were Mecha hitler, Deepseek refusing to talk about the Tiannanmen square massacre, and Google making it impossible to generate white people with Gemini.

Right I'm aware. I'm just excited to report ChatGPT is also afraid of expressing thoughtcrimes that criticize the current US admin.

And that’s the irony. You don’t need AI for any of that. So why have it in the first place.

Hmmm? I actually wanted my question answered and I don't think I could've gotten a good one aside from talking to, like, a couple of pastors, who are not normally in my social circle.

Jesus says render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's, essentially imploring his followers to obey the rules of the state because the state is an earthly concern. But what is supposed to happen when Caesar himself becomes a follower?