Can You Trust the New Brain With an IQ of 7000?
by Jon Rappoport
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Ive been forcing myself to read gushing statements about the
march of artificial intelligence (AI) and how, in the near future,
we will have the source code of the brain, and computers
will be able to do whatever the brain can do, except much, much
faster.
Ive been
reading about the day when we humans will somehow merge with the
machines.
I think the
technocrats who promote these notions were raised on comic books,
and they havent really moved on from that phase.
What ever happened
to the old phrase, garbage in equals garbage out? Was
it too telling and real?
Take the idea
that some day, tiny nanobots will patrol the body making adjustments
and normalizing errant functions. Forget for the moment all the
damage these little scouts could cause. Just focus on the quality
of the information by which they would make moment-to-moment decisions.
Currently,
by the most conservative mainstream estimate, the medical system
in America kills 225,000 people a year. (See B. Starfield, JAMA,
July 26, 2000, Is US health really the best in the world?).
Of these deaths,
106,000 per year are directly caused by FDA-approved medical drugs.
Each one of these drugs was studied, and the results of the studies
were published in mainstream journals. This fact alone indicates
massive fraud in the clinical trials of the drugs.
Then consider
that for all 297 officially certified mental disorders, there exist
absolutely no physical diagnostic tests. No blood tests, no saliva
tests, no urine tests, no genetic tests, no brain scans. The very
definitions of these so-called disorders are adjudicated by sitting
committees of psychiatrists, who consult menus of behaviors.
Then consider
that the major infectious diseases in the West were already on the
decline before vaccines or antibiotics had been introduced, and
yet vaccines were hailed as the overriding reason for that decline.
These are just
several general categories of fraud, misinformation, disinformation.
So the question becomes: who exactly is going to program those wonderful
little nanobots before they enter the human bloodstream in the near-future,
and what medical information are they going to have access to?
And what kind
of moron would assume that, just because artificial intelligence
will have the ability to process enormous amounts of data about
the body, it will process the right and correct and truthful data?
By extension,
when it comes to AI solving political or economic or social problems
on a massive scale, why should we assume the information AI is deploying
will be correct and right and true, and why should we assume that
these problems are stated and formulated, in the first place, according
to underlying ethical values that we agree to or share?
Just because
a computer can be built that works faster than the brain, and on
more platforms, why on earth should we then infer that it is operating
from a storehouse of information that is relevant or useful?
And as far
as human brains merging with machines, why dont
we leave that mishmash idea to the Borg and the Star Trek crew?
The famous
Watson test proved that a computer could handle Jeopardy questions
on television better than two humans dedicated to trivia.
Deep Blue beat
the worlds best chess player.
A computer
can analyze the poetry of an author and then generate its own poems
in that style. Rather poorly.
Do these feats
imply something so significant that we want to put our future in
the cores of computers? For that matter, if there is some holy-grail
source code for the brain, why should we believe possessing it and
using it, or even improving it, would qualitatively improve the
solutions to our biggest problems as a species?
There are simple
and basic laws of logic involved here. You can compute from now
until the end of time, but your deductions are always going to proceed
from premises, and those premises are going to predetermine direction
and ethical values that color the end results. Computers dont
do Right and Wrong in any absolute sense. Never have, never will.
Even more important
is the system or mechanism for allowing AI to dominate our decisions.
Who is in charge? Who rules? Which humans hold the off-on switches
on the machines? Who programs the machines premises? Who can,
if necessary, use force to make the global population comply with
what AI decides? And what are these humans motives?
None of such
matters are mitigated by more intelligent machines.
The technocrats
are actually playing a shell game with us. Theyre showing
us a vast array of quantitative and qualitative improvements in
what computers can do, and theyre substituting that for wisdom.
Theyre redefining wisdom. Theyre omitting the whole
argument and debate about what kind of society we want to live in.
Theyre hucksters and hustlers and con men.
When faced,
for example, with the problem of how to feed the world, computers
would already be biased in favor of certain outcomes, and they would
also be biased toward the basic notion of universal distribution
of resources. Who made that choice? The humans deploying the machines
from behind the scenes.
Is feeding
the world an issue that should be solved top-down? Computers dont
answer that question. Humans do. And humans specifically
the ones in charge make spectacularly wrong choices, according
to the wishes and judgments of many people many people who
already know that placing a decision of that magnitude in the hands
of a few oligarchs is a recipe for disaster.
Who will decide
how to program the basic assumptions of super-brain computers on
the issue of climate change? With what science will
these computers be initially infected? Who decides what the valid
and the invalid science is?
Any beginning
student in a logic course quickly learns to distinguish between
ethical values and data. Neither computers nor brains determine
values based on information alone, no matter how quickly they think,
no matter how much data they can access.
A person or
a machine with an IQ of 7000 cant be trusted to install values
for others. Thats why we have this troublesome thing called
freedom. Thats why we have a fundamental principle that you
are free to do anything you want to, as long as you dont interfere
with another persons freedom. Any system that countermands
this basic principle, simply because it can think better,
is a tyrant, whether it is composed of flesh or metal or some synthetic.
NBC news recently
did a glowing feature on advanced cell phones that, in the hands
of doctors, can carry out a huge array of medical tests on patients.
The doctor was enthusiastic. The patient was enthusiastic. The reporter
was enthusiastic. It was a virtual love fest.
No one bothered
to ask about the meaning, utility, or dangers of the tests themselves.
That issue was swept off the table.
Who cares?
Its technology. It has to be good. If the patients test
results indicate he should be treated with a highly toxic drug,
so what? Thats a minor blip on the screen. We should all celebrate
the technological breakthrough. Pour the champagne. Forget about
the patient.
Some day, up
the road, a human will be sleeping in his bed at night. The tiny
bots circulating in his body will suddenly decide he needs a drug.
They will either release the substance without his knowledge, or
a robot sitting next to the bed will lean over and give him a quick
shot. Done.
What? He ended
up in the hospital next afternoon? Well, whatever the reason, it
couldnt possibly have anything to do with the little bots
or their programming or their method for accessing the vast clouds
of data in virtual space. No, those functions are all brilliant
and boggling and wondrous. It must have been something else.
A person walking
down the street will be picked up by a hundred cameras and other
surveillance devices. It will be adjudicated, in a matter of a few
seconds, that hes missed his latest series of a dozen vaccine
boosters. At the next corner, a mini-drone, barely visible to the
naked eye, will descend on him and give him a quick jab. Or his
next meal will magically contain food engineered specifically to
deliver the mandated vaccines.
Greatest good
for the greatest number. Already decided and programmed.
Is it better
to have separate nations with their own armies, or should we have
one giant planetary force? Let the AI decide. How? On what basis?
There are always value judgments that underlie these questions,
and computers dont suddenly create values unless theyre
told to do so. Only in comic books or pulp science fiction novels
do advanced races with very high foreheads come down and demonstrate
wisdom based on IQ.
There is no
evidence that, if you took a general like Julius Caesar and somehow
shoved his IQ up off the charts, he would suddenly change his value
judgments. Henry Kissinger hasnt.
If you built
a machine that could access every single datum acquired in 100,000
years of human history and store them all on the head of a pin;
and if that machine could rearrange all these data in a trillion
different patterns in a few minutes; and if that machine could then
generate decisions that answer any question put to it, what would
you really have? You would have, at best, sheer opinion on the most
important matters facing the human race.
Technocracy
is selling a myth of intelligence, a fairy tale. In this fairy tale,
the smartest brains (coincidentally resembling those of the technocrats)
would cross a threshold, beyond which intelligence would become
something else, something very different: machines that have higher
access to the best moral values.
Perhaps the
most avid and famous proponent of a technocratic future is Ray Kurzweil,
acclaimed inventor, author, businessman. He describes the event
he calls the Singularity:
Within
a quarter century, nonbiological intelligence will match the range
and subtlety of human intelligence. It will then soar past it because
of the continuing acceleration of information-based technologies,
as well as the ability of machines to instantly share their knowledge.
Intelligent nanorobots will be deeply integrated
Among the effects
of this unprecedented development?
the
exponential rate of technical progress will create within 40 years
an Internet that is a trillion times faster than todays,
a global media, a global education system, a global language,
and a globally homogenized culture, thus establishing the prerequisites
for the creation of a global democratic state, Globa,
and ridding the world of war, the arms trade, ignorance, and poverty
Billions
of people will be influenced by the best ideas that
the planet has to offer. Peoples minds will be influenced
powerfully, so that todays nationalist mentalities will
be gradually transformed into tomorrows globist mentalities
And just what
are these best ideas that billions of people will voluntarily
accept? The ideas expressed in, say, Platos Republic? Or instantaneous
3-D holographic you are there porn? Small decentralized
organic farms or some Monsanto plan to disseminate GMOs from the
sky all over the planet? A three-branched government with rigorous
checks and balances, or taking the points on the Jets vs. the Rams?
A healthy clean diet or a hundred vaccines by the age of three?
And the global
democratic state? Id like to see how the elections of
a president and legislators work for the whole of Earth (including
the recount after a charge of fraud is leveled by one citizen in
southern Argentina).
If presidential
debates in the US, targeting the lowest possible common denominators
among the voting public, are filled with vapid generalities, I can
only imagine the global debates: a few smiles, a few grunts, a few
assurances that were all in this together.
One language
for all the world? Sure, why not? Lets wipe out the memory
of what a few thousand years of hundreds of languages have produced.
And dont
worry. All over the planet, the people, newly brilliant,
will rise up and overthrow their dictators, just as they did during
the vaunted Arab Spring, where the crucial presence of cell phones
and Facebook was touted as the lever that forced democratic breakthroughs.
You remember that Spring: a promoted hoax designed to hide yet one
more elite power play.
Greater insight
into ethical values based purely on speed and range of information
processing is really a quasi-religion. It uses the notion of IQ
as the Prophet. It promises that, as the people have access to more
and more data, they will naturally and inevitably choose the right
values and the right data, because thats what IQ does, once
it passes through a certain upward level.
You can forget
about elite power players exerting control over the population of
Earth from above because, as in the Marxist formulation, these Rockefellers
and Warburgs of the past will simply wither away, no longer needed.
Im happy
to learn that. I can relax now. We can all relax. The great day
is coming. It will be brought to us by a multi-platformed brain,
using its neuronal substrate to reach out and connect with nonbiological
libraries of truth.
What were we
worried about?
Im sitting
here talking to you and youre talking to me, and youre
in Bombay and Im in San Diego, and were seeing each
other in high-res 3-D holographic brilliance, as if were in
the same room. And as we talk and access skies full of clouds of
relevant data in mere instants, were both coming to accept
the best ideas and the best values and the best language and the
best government, and were kicking the ass of the old world
and rushing into the New, and life will be different forever, and
I know it and you know it, so what else do we need?
My molecularly
enhanced IQ is 7000 and so is yours, so were on the same precise
page. Thats all the human race was waiting for all this time.
February
20, 2013
Jon
Rappoport runs No More
Fake News. The author of an explosive collection, The
Matrix Revealed, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional
seat in the 29th District of California. Nominated for a Pulitzer
Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years,
writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch,
LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other
newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe.
Copyright
© 2013 Jon
Rappoport
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