Damn, Robots are going to take over the World!

sdw

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They not only make practically everything, Now an university is teaching them to play music.


Our leaders are so tired of soldiers having a conscience and not killing like rabid dogs, that they are developing Robots to do their killing for them.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ba6U2mfU3vY
 

sdw

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:) That's why I'm getting panicky. They manufacture everything, the military is using them for everything - they like soulless killer robots, they already provide sex dolls - especially in Japan where there are actual Brothels full of sex dolls and now they are learning to play music. Won't be long now before we're completely unneeded and the robots decide to rid themselves of humans that use too many resources.
 
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vancity_cowboy

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on yer ignore list
...Disguised as a human, a cyborg assassin known as a Terminator travels from 2029 to 1984 to kill Sarah Connor. Sent to protect Sarah is Kyle Reese, who divulges the coming of Skynet, an artificial intelligence system that will spark a nuclear holocaust. Sarah is targeted because Skynet knows that her unborn son will lead the fight against them. With the virtually unstoppable Terminator in hot pursuit, she and Kyle attempt to escape...

 

Lee Marvin

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sdw

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Does anyone know why the monitor is showing "You are compulsive and must turn yourself in for recycling"

 

sdw

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Are we the last generation of humans that will be allowed to work?

ps, does anyone know what this sentence in my refusal letter from the seminary means? "We find that you are insufficiently motivated by gratification from young children, integration into our community would be too difficult" Does that mean I won't be able to get one of the few jobs that Humans will still have? Will Robots tithe the Church?

 
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sdw

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Have they made the robot that is going to do your job?

 

sdw

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Be afraid, be very afraid - Atlas is coming


Did you see how well Atlas recovers it's balance?
 

johnsmit

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I am sold .. get it to straiten up when it walks....replace the barel chest with some brests and put a real doll skin on her .
And you might get some guys ready to give her a lub job lol

I don't want to see any thing like the scean from Saturn 5 where the robot stuck a head on top
There you had a robot lusting after Farrah Faucet.
 

erber

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Next time you need a doctor for medical service, you just have to bring yourself to the self-service machine to scan your body, temperature, draw blood for testing, and biopsy.
Proceed to the vending pharmacy for your precribed medicine.
Don't worry, it already marked your next salary to be deducted.

Doctors will be obsolete, not now, but sooner than later.
 

sevenofnine

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I wonder what were all going to do for work,

driver less cars and now robots. most of the conventional jobs could be gone one day.
 

sdw

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I wonder what were all going to do for work,

driver less cars and now robots. most of the conventional jobs could be gone one day.
Science Fiction has a lot of books on what a world where no human works looks like. Most likely, the 1% will be the overlords of a breeding stock for entertainment that are the remnants of the 99%. Of course, that's if we don't get off of the Earth. If we do get into Space, the 1% will need some of the 99% to open up new planets.

Most of the imagined futures are basically Feudal societies. The 1% provided the core breeding stock for the overlords and the remnants of the 99% provide the need number of serfs.
 

sdw

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Robots can be invaluable in dangerous situations where no human being should belong...question is, will we let them?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/05/AR2007050501009.html
Yes, we should let Robots work inside Nuclear Power Plants, of course, we would have to start building Nuclear Power Plants that are designed to have Robots work in them.

No, we should not allow Robots to do all of the boring, menial jobs. What happens is we take the non-skilled and turn them into a permanent class of unemployable people on social assistance.

No, we should not allow Robots to fight our wars for us. We've already seen what happens with drones - killing people, directed assassinations and the politicians gloat "we got him". Killing becomes a video game. We already know that politicians have no morals. Do we want it to be easy for them to send a drone after us? People have morals. Nobody knows just how many politically directed deaths didn't happen because the killer that was to do the job said No. War with no people dying, with no media and public pressure to find a path to peace - is going to result in politicians having a war any time they feel like beating their chest. What would Putin do if he had an army of Robots entirely controlled by himself?

We already have directed military actions that are of little value to the world. We are already admitting that Afghanistan was a bad idea.

http://www.macleans.ca/general/gen-...-canada-should-stay-in-afghanistan-past-2011/

Q: Why did we first send troops to Afghanistan, in your opinion?

A: We were going somewhere in 2003, just as a way to relieve the pressure of saying no to the Americans on Iraq, and it ended up being Afghanistan. But I think now we view the world through a more strategic lens: we have to bring stability to places where there’s chaos, to help those areas develop.
Would we want our government to have Robots so that it was even easier to send military force off somewhere because another Nation(s) need to think we can pound our chest with the best of them?

http://foreignpolicy.com/2011/11/09...blic-about-the-afghan-war-a-helpful-primer-2/
Voice
19 true things generals can’t say in public about the Afghan war: A helpful primer

By Thomas E. Ricks
November 9, 2011

19 true things generals can’t say in public about the Afghan war: A helpful primer

As a public service, Best Defense is offering this primer for generals on their way to Afghanistan.

Here is a list of 19 things that many insiders and veterans of Afghanistan agree to be true about the war there, but that generals can’t say in public. So, general, read this now and believe it later-but keep your lip zipped. Maybe even keep a printout in your wallet and review before interviews.

My list of things to remember I can’t say

Pakistan is now an enemy of the United States.

We don’t know why we are here, what we are fighting for, or how to know if we are winning.

The strategy is to fight, talk, and build. But we’re withdrawing the fighters, the Taliban won’t talk, and the builders are corrupt.

Karzai’s family is especially corrupt.

We want President Karzai gone but we don’t have a Pushtun successor handy.

But the problem isn’t corruption, it is which corrupt people are getting the dollars. We have to help corruption be more fair.

Another thing we’ll never stop here is the drug traffic, so the counternarcotics mission is probably a waste of time and resources that just alienates a swath of Afghans.

Making this a NATO mission hurt, not helped. Most NATO countries are just going through the motions in Afghanistan as the price necessary to keep the US in Europe

Yes, the exit deadline is killing us.

Even if you got a deal with the Taliban, it wouldn’t end the fighting.

The Taliban may be willing to fight forever. We are not.

Yes, we are funding the Taliban, but hey, there’s no way to stop it, because the truck companies bringing goods from Pakistan and up the highway across Afghanistan have to pay off the Taliban. So yeah, your tax dollars are helping Mullah Omar and his buddies. Welcome to the neighborhood.

Even non-Taliban Afghans don’t much like us.

Afghans didn’t get the memo about all our successes, so they are positioning themselves for the post-American civil war .

And they’re not the only ones getting ready. The future of Afghanistan is probably evolving up north now as the Indians, Russians and Pakistanis jockey with old Northern Alliance types. Interestingly, we’re paying more and getting less than any other player.

Speaking of positioning for the post-American civil war, why would the Pakistanis sell out their best proxy shock troops now?

The ANA and ANP could break the day after we leave the country.

We are ignoring the advisory effort and fighting the “big war” with American troops, just as we did in Vietnam. And the U.S. military won’t act any differently until and work with the Afghan forces seriously until when American politicians significantly draw down U.S. forces in country-when it may be too damn late.

The situation American faces in Afghanistan is similar to the one it faced in Vietnam during the Nixon presidency: A desire a leave and turn over the war to our local allies, combined with the realization that our allies may still lose, and the loss will be viewed as a U.S. defeat anyway.

Thanks to several people who contributed to this, from California to Kunar and back to DC, and whose names must not be mentioned! You know who you are. The rest of you, look at the guy sitting to your right.
 
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