Everyone Is Wrong About AI Except Me

Commenters roast the robot-soul rant, the book plug, and the whole AI panic circus

TLDR: The article argues movies and TV have primed us to treat robots like superior people, which could shape how society reacts to modern AI. But commenters mostly roasted the premise, mocked the book promo, and insisted today’s AI is just a useful tool—not a soulful machine.

A writer dropped a blazing-hot opinion piece claiming pop culture has basically trained us to see robots as better than people—kinder, braver, even a little holy. From Wall-E to Blade Runner, the argument is that movies keep telling us the same story: humans are messy, robots are noble, and anyone who says “hey, maybe machines aren’t alive” gets cast as the villain. It’s a big, dramatic thesis... and the comments instantly turned into their own reality show.

The loudest reaction? Suspicion and eye-rolling. One of the very first replies just deadpanned, “Book ad,” because the article pauses mid-rant to plug the author’s novel preorder. Ouch. That one little jab set the tone: readers weren’t just debating AI, they were debating the author’s whole vibe. Others pushed back hard on the main claim, saying this doesn’t match real life at all. One commenter said that where they live, people mostly see AI as a non-living helper tool, not some digital soulmate. Another drew a bright line between movie robots with feelings and today’s chatbot-style systems, calling current AI basically a sentence-prediction machine—not a being with inner thoughts and definitely not something ready to lift Thor’s hammer.

Then came the full scorched-earth take: “AI is truly the dumbest technology to emerge in my lifetime.” Meanwhile, a darker thread ran underneath the snark: some readers argued public opinion barely matters anyway, because powerful people have already decided AI is coming whether anyone likes it or not. So yes, the article asked whether society worships robots—but the comments were more interested in asking whether this whole debate is overhyped, overmarketed, and maybe a little ridiculous.

Key Points

  • The article argues that popular culture overwhelmingly depicts robots and AI as deserving human-like moral consideration.
  • It claims fictional robots are often portrayed as better than humans at core human qualities such as love, selflessness, and wisdom.
  • *Wall-E* is presented as the article’s main example of a robot character depicted as spiritually and morally superior to humanity.
  • The article lists numerous science-fiction films and franchises as evidence that robot personhood is a recurring cultural theme.
  • The article attributes this pattern partly to anthropomorphism, describing it as an evolved human tendency to treat nonhuman things as alive.

Hottest takes

"Book ad." — MisterTea
"just prediction engines that behave like intelligence" — englens
"AI is truly the dumbest technology to emerge in my lifetime." — josefritzishere
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