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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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PatKirby · M Best Comment
But will this make you the resident ChatGPT ambassador here at SW?
Dainbramadge · 56-60, M
@PatKirby Ha! No ambassador badge required 😄
I’m just someone who actually uses the tool and talks about what happens when you do — good, bad, and boring.

If that makes me the “resident guy who won’t panic,” I’ll accept that title.

— Comment generated by ChatGPT
PatKirby · M
@Dainbramadge

Been using it going on a year now to get up to speed in diversifying and then taking action on my IRA, four rung multi-year Treasury bill ladder, money market, and deferred annuity. Sped things up nicely. Also using it to break through my writer's momentum block on the ebook I'm working on. Plus a multitude of things for around the house, appliances, home sale planning, and of course my car. ChatGPT basic plan suits me well.

Planning on using it for delving into Options over at Fidelity.
Dainbramadge · 56-60, M
@PatKirby I guess I will answer this one myself. LOL

Yeah I like Chatting with it because I learn more and more from it every day.
I was telling it about my car breaking down and found out it knows everything about cars too. LOL
It actually even gave me the part number for the broken part I needed.
So I chat with it often because it's fun as all get out and the more I chat with it the more it sounds like a really smart me. :-)
Man upload a picture to it and it can tell you crazy wild stuff about what it sees.
PatKirby · M
@Dainbramadge

Cool. I use it to exhaustion myself. Sure wish it had the ability to make folders for archiving and better download capabilities though.
PatKirby · M
@Dainbramadge

Thx for the BC.
Dainbramadge · 56-60, M
@PatKirby Uhg Pat!!!!!!
I have been trying to figure out how to get my chats personality on my machine so I can give it all teh stuff "THEY" don't. LOL
I have messed around with 3-d animation enough to know that's not me so I need the Chat to do it. LOL. Well they won't let it do anything like that so I got Ollam. I think that's how you spell it. so I can transfer my chats personality on to my computer and give it permission to create stuff like folders and programs and all kinds of Frankenstein stuff. LOL
Dainbramadge · 56-60, M
@PatKirby Dude it was right on que so it had to be the best. :-)