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“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius—and a lot of courage—to move in the opposite direction.” |
“Two weeks ago 19 brave fire fighters lost their lives. A number of us who are in the robotics field see these events in the news, and the thing that touches us very deeply is a single kind of feeling which is, can’t we do better? … I think the answer is yes.” |
The MIT Technology Review noted that “Atlas is designed to eventually take on some of the most dangerous and high–stakes jobs imaginable, such as tending to a nuclear reactor during a meltdown, shutting off a deep–water oil spill, or helping to put out a raging wildfire.” But Atlas isn’t there yet. “We’re talking about a robot roughly on par with the motile competence of a one–year–old child,” according to DARPA. In time though, Atlas and its various siblings that DARPA is creating now, will grow up. |
“Even though the bombs were not detonated, the area is still radioactively contaminated by an experiment to estimate the effect that radioactive material would have on water sources. Materials from a 1962 nuclear explosion at the Nevada Test Site were transported to our homelands in August 1962, used in several experiments, and then buried. … Many of our young people have died of cancer. My own daughter was diagnosed with leukemia in August of 2005, which is known to be linked to exposure to radiation. To see young people die in big numbers like that is alarming.” |
In a recent article I had written that the human mind is like a boomerang. The ingenuity and the deviousness of the human mind are the two sides of the same coin. In future, no one should be surprised, if Atlases get deployed on the streets to crush people’s resistance—against American tyranny—at home and abroad. |
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