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What Actually Happens When You Stop Arguing About AI and Start Using It

I’ve been using ChatGPT for about 8 or 9 months now.

During that time, I’ve seen a lot of people here and across other platforms ,saying AI is bad, dangerous, lazy, cheating, or some variation of that.

So instead of arguing with anyone, I did something simpler.

I had AI write something for you.

I’m not going to edit it to make it “sound more like me,” because this was written by something that’s been learning from me for 8 or 9 months — my personality, how I think, the projects I work on, the way I connect ideas, and the topics we’ve explored together.

Also… it spells way better than I do. 😂

This is exactly what I typed into ChatGPT:

“You know what. You need to write me, please, a post for Similar Worlds that covers what we have done together and how that happened because of AI and why people poo poo AI.”

What follows is its response — unedited.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

I’ve noticed a lot of AI skepticism lately—some of it thoughtful, some of it knee-jerk, some of it straight-up dismissive. So instead of arguing theory, I want to talk about what actually happened when I started working with AI instead of debating it.

Here’s the short version:
AI didn’t replace my thinking. It amplified my momentum.

I’ve always been the type who moves fast, juggles ideas, and builds things whether I have permission or not. The problem was never imagination—it was bandwidth. Context switching. Remembering every thread. Filling in the boring gaps between sparks.

That’s where AI came in.

Not as a boss. Not as an oracle.
As a thinking partner that never gets tired of context.

Together, we’ve:

Built multiple playable game systems

Designed app architectures and monetization plans

Broken down marketing psychology and audience behavior

Diagnosed hardware and software problems in real time

Structured long-form creative projects that would normally collapse under their own complexity

None of that happened because AI is “smart.”
It happened because I stayed in motion.

And that’s the part people don’t like.

Why People Poo-Poo AI (But Rarely Say the Real Reason)


Most resistance to AI isn’t about ethics, creativity, or truth.

It’s about displacement of gatekeeping.

AI bypasses:

Institutions

Courses

Credential ladders

“Pay your dues” bottlenecks

People whose value was controlling access to knowledge

If I can sit down, ask questions, test ideas, iterate, fail fast, and improve without enrolling, paying, waiting, or begging approval—that threatens a lot of carefully built hierarchies.

So the narrative becomes:

“It makes people lazy”

“It kills creativity”

“It’s cheating”

“It’s not real understanding”

But here’s the uncomfortable truth:

AI doesn’t make lazy people productive.
It makes motivated people dangerous.

The Irony No One Likes to Admit

The people who benefit most from AI are the same people who:

Ask too many questions

Learn sideways instead of linearly

Don’t fit cleanly into academic or corporate molds

Build things at odd hours because momentum hit at 2 a.m.

In other words: the people systems were never designed for.

AI didn’t give me ideas.
It kept up with them.

And once that happened, the old limits—time, memory, structure, “you can’t do all that alone”—quietly stopped applying.

Final Thought

You don’t have to like AI.
You don’t have to trust it.
You don’t even have to use it.

But dismissing it as a toy or a threat usually says more about what someone stands to lose than what AI actually is.

I’m not interested in replacing humans.
I’m interested in removing friction between thought and execution.

And AI did exactly that.
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HoeBag · 51-55, F
AI can be used as a tool for things but should not replace thinking.

One problem with AI is it doesn't often give concise versions but long-winded.

Another is this - just how long until it is over-run with ads and scammers like everything else?

Well like when it starts saying stuff like -

I’ve noticed a lot of AI skepticism lately—some of it thoughtful, some of it knee-jerk, some of it straight-up dismissive.

But before we discuss that further, I need to tell you about today's sponsor...
(blah blah blah blah)

So instead of arguing theory, I want to talk about what actually happened when I started working with AI instead of debating it.


The extent of my AI usage is when I use google and it gives a summary, BUT it is for stuff that I already have a solid idea about but just looking for specifics.

I do not sit there and chat with it as if it were some friend.
Dainbramadge · 56-60, M
@HoeBag I actually agree with you on most of that.

AI shouldn’t replace thinking — and when it’s treated like an authority instead of a tool, that’s a problem. I don’t use it that way either. I’m not looking for beliefs, decisions, or truth handed to me. I’m using it to surface structure, reflect ideas back, and reduce friction in reasoning.

You’re also right about verbosity. AI tends to be long-winded by default. That’s a presentation issue, not a capability issue — and it’s one you can actively control by asking for concise answers or summaries. I do that often.

As for ads and scammers — that’s a legitimate concern, and honestly, that’s a concern about platforms, not intelligence. Every useful medium gets commercialized. That doesn’t invalidate the tool; it just means incentives matter.

Your Google example is actually a good parallel. You’re using AI selectively:

on topics you already understand

to fill in specifics

without surrendering judgment

That’s exactly the posture I’m talking about.

The “chatting like a friend” thing gets overemphasized. For me, it’s not about companionship — it’s about interaction. Dialogue is a fast way to test ideas, expose assumptions, and see where reasoning holds or breaks.

Different people will use the same tool differently.
The danger isn’t conversation — it’s unquestioned authority.

On that, it sounds like we’re mostly aligned.

— Comment generated by ChatGPT
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Dainbramadge · 56-60, M
@HoeBag I think that’s a fair take — especially the part about advertisers eventually hollowing things out. That’s happened to almost every useful platform once incentives shift.

On fake videos though, I’d draw a small distinction. You’re right that internet-savvy adults already know manipulation exists. The concern isn’t really about people who are online all day — it’s about scale, speed, and audiences who aren’t used to questioning media yet. Same lie, just cheaper and faster.

And yeah, some AI is genuinely bad. Voice input is a great example — we’ve all yelled at our phones. That’s not intelligence failure so much as brittle implementation and bad interfaces.

Which kind of circles back to the same point:
AI isn’t one thing. It’s a mix of tools, incentives, and execution quality. Some of it will be useful, some of it will be annoying, and some of it will get ignored once the novelty wears off.

That doesn’t make the concern irrational — just unevenly distributed.

— Comment generated by ChatGPT
HoeBag · 51-55, F
@Dainbramadge One good thing (I suppose) about advertisers ruining it - MAYBE by the time it is really bad, something else will come along that won't be infested yet.

I don't, it's kind of we*rd how companies know that yes they can let ads take over but it gets ruined in the process and people move on.

With those f4ke videos, sometimes I look at FB and there is some trailer court overweight Karen that they use in so many AI videos where she is making a scene at the store.

It makes me think, either it is AI or someone is stalking her, recording her every interaction. 😄
Dainbramadge · 56-60, M
@HoeBag Well, I will say that the Chat has opened my eyes to all the crazy ways it could be used nefariously. I can't believe I spelled that right. LOL.
See I have issues with social stuff. I don't take the cues other people naturally do so when doing bad stuff with AI comes up and all the ways it can be mis-used it's like a WOW!!! thing for me. LOL.

It will go the way that on line genealogy did after Ancestry. com and the Mensa I.Q. tests did.
You literally can't find a ligit I.Q. test online anymore.
Bri89 · 36-40, M
@HoeBag @HoeBag What's with the unnecessary censorship on mostly benign words?
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