South Koreans and Japanese are not occupied
Yes, they are. There’s a reason people here tend to say Occupied Korea rather than South Korea. You need to learn about Korea’s history evidently. They faced enormous violence and repression, first under colonial Japan and then under US occupation, and the US occupation continues to this day. The whole designation of North and South Korea was literally drawn up by the US military.
Japan’s situation is a bit more complicated because of their part in colonialism and imperialism prior to and during WWII. But it would still be racist and reductionist to imply that Japanese people are a monolithic entity deserving of suffering because of their governance.
indigenous and black people as I said before they’re not considered citizens
Black people absolutely can be citizens of the US. They still face systemic racism on top of that. The Civil Rights Act was more of a diffusion of revolutionary energy than it was a solution to problems of racism, but it did further the rights of black people in the US and normalize them more so into the US culture as other regular people. If you’re thinking of what’s going on right now with ICE and all, that’s more of a broader violence of white supremacy and the institution of whiteness, and it’s not as simple as “everyone is going along with it” or something.
With indigenous people, it’s complicated by the fact that they wouldn’t necessarily want to be a citizen of the US. There are still indigenous nations who want their sovereignty respected. I can’t speak to the exact details of it, but I feel confident in saying that they are not generally interested in assimilation into the US project that genocided their ancestors and continues to treat them as less than.
That said, I’m not entirely sure what this has to do with excusing a lack of empathy. Regional barbarism, as I said before, is not a controlled implosion. And as we can see with what’s going on in the US right now, the mask off stuff with ICE is primarily hurting historically marginalized groups, not those who people would tend to be most disgusted with and have a harder time feeling any empathy for. I don’t think the liberal mask is really “better”, but I also don’t think accelerationism tends to hurt the people you think it will. The contradictions are what they are and we have to deal with them as they are, not turn up our noses because we don’t personally love everyone around us. You don’t have to be burbling with love to do a good strategic analysis, but if you aren’t motivated by compassion, it leaves one to wonder what you are motivated by. If there is one thing I take away from successful AES projects, it’s that they tend to have a great love for the people and a great interest in serving their needs. This desire alone does not make them successful, but it sure is a helpful motivator.





Generally speaking, don’t take it at its word and consider it like it’s an assistant, or even just an ideas machine.
Example: I’ve used an LLM before when there’s a term I can’t think of the name for. I describe what I can remember about the term and see what it comes up with. Then, if it gives me something concrete to work with (e.g. doesn’t go “I don’t know” or something), I put that into a web search and see what comes up. I cross-reference the information, in other words. Sometimes the AI is a little bit off but still close enough I’m able to find the real term.
Cross-referencing / sanity checks are important for LLM use because they can get deep into confidently wrong rabbit holes at times, or indulge whatever your train of thought is without having the human capability to extricate itself at some point. So whether it’s a web search or checking something it said to you against another real person, you can use this to ground yourself more so on how you’re engaging with it. It’s not that different from talking to other real people in that way (the main difference is I would recommend having a much stronger baseline skepticism of anything an LLM tells you than with a person). Even with the people we trust the most in life, it’s still healthy to get second opinions, get perspective beyond them, work through the reasoning of what they’ve said, etc. No one source, computer or human, knows it all.