Rugged individualist šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡øšŸ§€

Joined August 2010
1,063 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
24 Feb 2025
Elon Musk says we’re on the edge of the singularity, and while it’s a common term, I feel the need to share my thoughts on the subject. The singularity, in its simplest form, is an analogy of a black hole and technological development. I found myself following that analogy, taking it further, and came up with something I hope is educational, entertaining, or at least worth reading. Most black holes start as stars, and stars start out as thin wisps of gas in space, so I’ll start the analogy there. In our analogy, the gas in space is life. At first, it’s simple atoms or cells. In time, there starts to be more complexity, but it’s not a star or an organism capable of advanced technology. When gravity causes it to fall together, it creates heat and pressure. The collapse represents our advancement, the pressure is our wants and needs, and the heat is how we satisfy those desires. When a species arises that’s capable of advanced tech, that’s the formation of the star. If that species has simple needs, the star is small, and a simple hunter-gatherer society can last for a long time, but that’s not the type we’re interested in. We want to contemplate a society that always craves more and better things. This means the star in our analogy is massive, leading to the highest levels of heat and pressure in the process of satisfying those desires. At first, the star burns its hydrogen into helium. This represents the long period when the gatherer society has adequate space to expand into areas that have all the resources to keep them happy. As population grows, the heat and pressure rises slowly, but life largely remains unchanged. As we reach the limits of our environment, the pressure rises. We start pushing the limits of the hunter-gatherer society with better tools and weapons, but our needs become too great, and we need a new source of heat. At some point the pressure drives us to a new way of living. We start farming the land. In our analogy, this is represented by the burning of helium into carbon. The vast majority of the star’s life is already in the past. Farming isn’t a carefree or easy way to live, and it leads to more people with more need to trade and transport goods than would ever be needed in by hunters. The pressure to get more work done grows until another breakthrough is made. The star starts burning carbon into oxygen and neon in what our society calls the industrial revolution. By now, we have learned to never stop wanting more control of our wants and needs, and the pressure and heat keep rising until neon burns into more oxygen and magnesium and the internet is born. It doesn’t take long, and the oxygen burning of social media magnesium burning of smart phones begins. Things are getting dangerous now. If the star is too massive, our desires too great, the star’s life could end early in a pair-instability supernova, or what we would call nuclear war. In this case, the star is completely disrupted, leaving no black hole behind. The silicon, sulfur, and argon quickly build up from all tweeting in the bathroom, and they begin to burn into heavier elements of technology which also begin to burn. The burning of silicon, sulfur, argon, calcium, titanium, and chromium represent the development of artificial neural networks, knowledge representation, machine learning, natural language processing, machine perception, and social intelligence. It starts with the first ones, but they all happen together along with the big one, the burning of iron into nickel and general artificial intelligence. Then there’s nickel. That’s the end of the road. When it burns, that’s digital superintelligence. It removes our control of our wants and needs, as it takes control of everything. It takes control of the technological advancement of itself. Humans no longer have the ability to turn back as the core of technology crosses the event horizon. With the technology advancing itself ever more rapidly, it quickly reaches a point where it’s as advanced as physically possible. This is the point in the center of the newly formed black hole, what astrophysicists call a singularity.
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
Convince me that a chair came into existence without a mind.
Convince me that God exists:
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Why do I have to subsidize gas cars? Wisconsin already makes me pay the equivalent to $2 a gallon in fees on top of the electricity tax and a special car charging tax. Now the federal government wants to add more? nbc26.com/politics/congress/…
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My electric chainsaw's latest victim (my adult daughter for scale):
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Why does Dell block Grok from telling me about my computer? It's shockingly inconvenient.
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
Replying to @BoudreauxsGhost
You can’t have freedom without privacy.
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The 24" bar works well on my EGO electric chainsaw (my daughter for scale)
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Valentine's Day for my girl, @Cutieniccie
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I made the 1st one of these for my own use over 20 years ago. People made more of them from the same Visio file and I'm still seeing pictures of them online 20 years later
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
Tesla is the only company that has come this close to turning the sci‑fi people watched in movies into reality
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
Back in the day, Star Trek characters were actually allowed to be real three dimensional people, warts and all.

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17 Dec 2025
Cottonwood from the Wisconsin Governor's Mansion.
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
SPINOZA: YOU DON'T NEED A GOD TO DO GOOD Baruch Spinoza, the 17th-century heretic philosopher excommunicated from Judaism for thinking too freely, didn’t believe in a personal God who judges us. He didn’t believe in heaven, hell, or miracles. And yet, Spinoza believed in an absolute morality. How? Because for Spinoza, God wasn’t some sky-bound accountant tracking sin. God was nature itself - Deus sive Natura. The universe wasn’t cold or indifferent; it was divine. In this system, ethics isn’t imposed from above. It emerges from understanding. Spinoza argued that the more we comprehend our place in nature - our drives, our limitations, our interdependence - the more we live in accordance with reason, and the more virtuous we become. Morality, for Spinoza, is not about obedience. It’s about alignment. You don’t refrain from cruelty because a divine judge is watching. You refrain because cruelty fragments your essence, pits you against others, and sabotages your flourishing. Good is what enhances your power to exist and understand. Evil is what diminishes it. This isn’t relativism. It’s rigor, grounded not in commandments but in metaphysics. It’s not a loophole for libertines. It’s a call to integrity, one that doesn’t need a cosmic punisher to make it stick. And here’s the kicker: Spinoza was arguably more atheist than most modern atheists. He denied any anthropomorphic God, rejected the soul’s immortality, and still arrived at a moral philosophy that’s as demanding as any religious system. If that sounds like permission to ā€œdo whatever you want,ā€ you haven’t understood Spinoza. Or atheism. Or, frankly, ethics.
3 Nov 2025
Replying to @xwanyex
Very wrong. Read Spinoza.
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1 Nov 2025
Why when I say that people use their money that they should be using for food, and use SNAP for food instead, do that say stuff like this and block me? x.com/bennilee777/status/198…

Replying to @tkulogo @KwikWarren
You cannot use SNAP benefits for anything other than food. Period.
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I see X has banned the word Tr00n. What the hell, @elonmusk? I thought this was a free speech place. They call me a Nazi, but I can't call them a tr00n? I just got an email about every time I've used the word "tr00n" since my account was opened. Which is apparently a lot. šŸ˜‚
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
Do you think photons live forever and never expire?
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
14 Oct 2025
The fact that this issue hasn't gained public attention is amazing.
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Tim Kulogo retweeted
Replying to @mikepat711
šŸŽÆ
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31 Aug 2025
Nice pile of firewood, all split by hand.
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