


Interestingly, I've recently watched Real Life Lore's video on the topic. It's from 2 months ago and later in the video, it talks about the last batch of western foreigners that got in and how the regime almost immediately regretted letting them record and talk as much as they did.
There was also a S. Korean resort ran by Hyundai, from 1998 to 2008, which got shut down and nationalized after an incident had the N. Koreans shoot and kill Park Wang-ja, a 53 year old woman.

It's the people who build stuff. The elites control the resources, but they don't build shit. Ordering stuff to be done doesn't make you a builder, just as commissioning a portrait doesn't make you a painter.
People can come together and build big things without elites, kings or bosses sitting down and telling everyone what to do. Just because societies that greatly limit the power of the elites no longer exist, having been crushed, doesn't mean they don't work.

Venice as a city predates the independent republic by roughly 2 centuries
By your logic, Bezos built Washington, which is where Amazon started

No matter how one looks at that assertion, it's just plain fucking wrong.
Did slave owners build Venice? No. Rich Romans? Also no. Someone who isn't a slave owner but worked all his subjects to the bone? Nope as well.

I'm sure the Venetians would gladly help lex luthor with any difficulties in bending

Mr. Simpson, NOOO!!

Bozo is a fucking coward that deserves a firing squad treatment, along with his family and cronies.

Eh, I wouldn't go that far into calling our courts functioning. I'm glad bozo might actually get jail time (unlikely, this is Brazil, after all), but it really feels like a personal fight between bozo and judge Moraes.
Our justice system is the home of untouchable petty gods. Politicians avoid doing anything that could threaten judges, as a "surprise" investigation might start right afterwards. Being guilty is optional, suffering is assured. Listing all their abuses in the last 5 years is enough for a Master's thesis

The problem is detection, as not every AI generated thing is immediately obvious. Besides, shadow banning something that drives engagement so much is bad for business

The metric is "how much does this tool does the assignment for you". A translator does zero (I'm assuming a translator at classes, though any "translate this" assignment coupled with google translate or similars would make this fit in with AI). Computers made the writing and copy-pasting part easier and faster, but they didn't do the assignment. Google made the "find the correct stuff" easy, you no longer needed to manually look thru several books or ask people where the answer would be, but you still had to find it. Still, if an assignment asked for something that wasn't perfectly answered on some page on the internet, like some random equation or specific programming code, you'd still have to work out something.
With AI, you just throw the prompt and copy the result. "A patient arrived and has complained about severe chest pain. What procedures should be executed in which order?" - Don't know, don't care, AI wrote something, so it must be true. Copypaste, send, done.
\
That leads to the point where, if the people who are supposed to actually know stuff only pretend to know thanks to AI covering their asses, why should anyone bother with them? Skip the literal middleman and just ask an AI the same thing they'd ask and be done with it. "AI doc, I feel like my heart is burning, what do I do?" - Is the answer right or wrong? Don't know, don't care, the person who should didn't, either.

Ah yes, because translators also did the homework for the students

tldr - the organization is corrupt and stingy and lives off feeding dreams to young people who don't know any better. Or, put another way, they legalized hobo fighting

Holy shit, I think I stumbled upon an archaeological internet site!