Beyond the Trump Era: AI, Politics, and the Search for Meaning
Many ongoing American challenges, like using legal actions against political foes (known as lawfare), the loss of economic hope and purpose among young men, and government shutdown fights, didn't start with Donald Trump and won't end when he's gone—they trace back decades. For instance, lawfare ramped up after Watergate with independent counsels probing officials from both parties, causing massive personal and financial strain similar to recent cases. Similarly, young men's struggles with jobs, homeownership, and spiritual fulfillment surged after the 1970s manufacturing decline and 2008 financial crisis, fueling votes for change-makers like Trump or earlier leaders like Clinton and Obama. Government shutdowns, too, echo tense partisan battles seen under Clinton, Bush, Obama, and Biden, often resolved when one side blinks in the PR war.
Shifting to AI, it's democratizing fast—top models like ChatGPT or Grok are free apps anyone can download, already used by over half a billion people for everything from editing books to business advice. Unlike past tech that trickled from governments to individuals over decades, AI starts with consumers and small businesses adapting quickest; big companies lag due to bureaucracy. For a bakery owner, AI could critique staffing schedules, analyze customer emails for patterns, or brainstorm expansion like how Ray Kroc scaled McDonald's. It mimics human creativity, like crafting hilarious jokes by drawing from vast online data on comedy timing and specifics, but can err (hallucinate) facts, though newer versions self-correct by cross-checking sources. In global competition, China leads in manufacturing AI-integrated products like self-driving cars and drones due to their command economy and our offshoring policies, but the U.S. excels in software innovation and entrepreneurship.
Finally, true liberty thrives with moral and religious foundations, not just politics—without belief in a higher power, people seek meaning in movements like activism, mirroring religious rituals of chanting and community, but ultimately falling short compared to faith-based purpose.
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