May 29, 2026

Ctrl+Alt+Delete Your Friends?

Please Use AI

A raw anti-AI plea sparked applause, eye-rolls, and a mini comment war over human connection

TLDR: The article argues that using AI for deeply human moments — from recipes to wedding speeches — risks replacing connection with convenience. Commenters split between calling it a beautiful warning about loneliness and dismissing it as over-the-top, turning the thread into a small but lively culture clash.

A poetic blast against everyday artificial intelligence use has readers in their feelings — and in the comments, the real drama is whether this was a moving cry for human connection or just a little too much. The piece begs people to stop outsourcing life’s most personal moments to machines: don’t ask a chatbot for meal plans, wedding toasts, camping tips, or art help when you could call a friend, hear their stories, and stumble into the messy, emotional stuff that makes life feel real. It’s less “technology is evil” and more “please don’t replace people with convenience.”

A big chunk of the crowd was ready to stand up and slow clap. One commenter called it “beautifully expressed,” while another said using AI to strip away even more chances for human contact is “a tragedy.” Others piled on with variations of “beautiful,” “tragic,” and “very well written,” basically turning the thread into a mini fan club for analog life.

But then came the classic internet record scratch. One skeptic pushed back with the hot take that maybe everyone should calm down: use AI when it helps, call your friends too, and stop acting like every app is the end of civilization. That comment lit the fuse for the thread’s tiny but tasty showdown, with another reader snapping back that they had “totally missed the point.” No memes fully took over, but the whole exchange had strong “touch grass vs. let people use tools” energy — and that’s exactly why people couldn’t look away.

Key Points

  • The article uses irony to urge readers to use AI for personal, creative, and family-related tasks instead of relying on human relationships or lived experience.
  • It contrasts AI-generated assistance with conversations that might reveal friends’ personal struggles, daily lives, and moments of connection.
  • The piece argues that AI-written wedding speeches or poems would replace words shaped by a parent’s direct experience of caregiving, fear, loss, and love.
  • It presents AI-assisted creative work as a shortcut that bypasses the slow, difficult process of practice and craft.
  • The closing section names Chat, Gemini, and Claude while imagining AI-generated memorial songs built from obituaries, Facebook posts, and algorithmic text.

Hottest takes

"remove even more opportunities for human contact is a tragedy" — JSR_FDED
"Why do we have to over-dramatize everything?" — yanis_t
"totally missed the point" — patosullivan
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