How dangerous is AI? These 13 quotes from AI researchers will terrify you.

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Glenn has become one of the most outspoken people warning about the existential threat AI poses to our human species. Sounds like sci-fi hullabaloo, right? What if I were to tell you that HALF of AI researchers believe that there's a chance that AI will result in our extinction?

Glenn has been a supporter of technology that helps humanity and brings life and color to our everyday existence. However, if AI researchers are sounding the alarm bells about AI's threat to the human species, shouldn't we put the pause button on AI to consider the risks?

Don't take Glenn's word for it. The following quotes from AI researchers show the true scope of AI's threat to humanity—in their own words.

Tristan Harris—Co-founder, Center for Humane Technology

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"What’s surprising and what nobody foresaw is that just by learning to predict the next piece of text on the internet, these models are developing new capabilities that no one expected. So just by learning to predict the next character on the internet, it’s learned how to play chess."
“No one is building the guardrails [for AI]. And this has moved so much faster than our government has been able to understand or appreciate.”

Stuart Russell—Professor of Computer Science at Berkeley

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"What I’m finding is that senior people in the field who have never publicly evinced any concern before are privately thinking that we do need to take this issue very seriously, and the sooner we take it seriously the better."
"Just as nuclear fusion researchers consider the problem of containment of fusion reactions as one of the primary problems of their field, it seems inevitable that issues of control and safety will become central to AI as the field matures."

Tyna Eloundou, Sam Manning, Pamela Mishkin, Daniel Rock—University of Pennsylvania

80% of the U.S. workforce could have 10% of their work tasks affected by modern AI. Almost one-fifth of workers could see half their work tasks affected.

Aza Raskin—Co-founder, Center for Humane Technology

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"Researchers don't know what ChatGPT4 is capable of. And yet researchers have deployed it to the public."

The AI Dilemma—Center for Humane Technology

"Corporations are caught in an arms race to deploy their new technologies and get market dominance as fast as possible. In turn, the narratives they present are shaped to be more about innovation and less about potential threats. We should put the onus on the makers of AI—rather than on citizens—to prove its danger."
"Guardrails you may assume exist actually don’t. AI companies are quickly deploying their work to the public instead of testing it safely over time. AI chatbots have been added to platforms children use, like Snapchat. Safety researchers are in short supply, and most of the research that’s happening is driven by for-profit interests instead of academia."
"The media hasn’t been covering AI advances in a way that allows you to truly see what’s at stake. We want to help the media better understand these issues. Cheating on your homework with AI or stealing copyrighted art for AI-generated images are just small examples of the systemic challenges that are ahead."

Geoffery Hinton—AI "godfather" and former Google scientist

OpenAI, “eclipses a person in the amount of general knowledge it has and it eclipses them by a long way."
"I’ve come to the conclusion that the kind of intelligence we’re developing is very different from the intelligence we have."Unlike biological intelligences like human beings, [AI systems] can learn separately, they share their knowledge 'instantly.' So it’s as if you had 10,000 people and whenever one person learned something, everybody automatically knew it. And that’s how these chatbots can know so much more than any one person."

Steve Omohundro—Founder of the Vision and Learning Group and the Center for Complex Systems Research, and inventor of various important advances in machine learning and machine vision

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"We have shown that all advanced AI systems are likely to exhibit a number of basic drives. It is essential that we understand these drives in order to build technology that enables a positive future for humanity. […] The rapid pace of technological progress suggests that these issues may become of critical importance soon."

THESE TOP 10 Founding Fathers' quotes help us remember America's original vision

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Independence Day is one of the few days when Americans come together to celebrate our country and the continued vision that our Founding Fathers crafted in 1776. But what is that vision? It seems with every passing July 4th, Americans lose even more of a sense of what the original intent of our nation was supposed to be. It's becoming increasingly important to read the Founding Fathers in their own words and to remember the vision that they cast for our nation. Here are our TOP 10 favorite Founding Fathers' quotes to help us remember their original views of government, freedom, and the American vision.

"The advancement and diffusion of knowledge is the only guardian of true liberty." —James Madison

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"Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing." —Benjamin Franklin

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"Truth will ultimately prevail where there is pains to bring it to light." —George Washington

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"The people are the only legitimate fountain of power." —James Madison

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"I agree with you that it is the duty of every good citizen to use all the opportunities, which occur to him, for preserving documents relating to the history of our country." —Thomas Jefferson

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“Human passions unbridled by morality and religion… would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net.” —John Adams

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"Those who stand for nothing will fall for everything." —Alexander Hamilton

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“The essence of Government is power; and power, lodged as it must be in human hands, will ever be liable to abuse.” —James Madison

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"I fear that in every elected office, members will obtain an influence by noise, not by sense. By meanness, not greatness. By ignorance, not learning. By contracted hearts, not large souls. There must be decency and respect." —John Adams

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“We must go home to be happy, and our home is not in this world. Here we have nothing to do but our duty.” —John Jay

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Why the media is obsessed with the death of America

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Tomorrow, the United States of America will have its 247th birthday, and the activists in corporate media couldn’t be more miserable about it.

Their joylessness is always the same. So, if you’re looking for a way to be miserable on the 4th of July, a holiday devoted to vibrant, breathtaking explosions in the sky, then scroll through mainstream media. You’ll find tons of editorials by people who will spend tomorrow full of hatred for BBQs, pools, parties, and, well, fun.

Last year, the New York Times celebrated the 4th of July with an article by Paul Krugman, one of the few people smug enough to blame “right-wing” America for the “Climate Apocalypse.” The media is obsessed with apocalyptic language. They love to fantasize about the “end of America.”

The media is obsessed with apocalyptic language.

Way back in 2010, the publication Salonpredicted America would collapse by 2025. These days, they’ve shifted to blaming Christianity and “American fascism.”

The Washington Post has declared the “end of white Christian America.” Christianity, they tell us, is part of the reason America is “racist.” They’ve fantasized about “All the ways America could come to an end.” Over the last six years, they havepublishedmultiplearticlesannouncing “the end of American Exceptionalism.” The most recent one came out the day after the January 6th incident.

They have blamed guns, Republicans, comedy, “transphobia.” They have blamed the “ignorance and irrationality” of people who disagreed with vaccine mandates. They’ve repeatedly blamed anyone who dislikes woke culture. But most of all, they have blamed Trump. They swore he would cause “the end of America’s role as a defender of freedom.” In that article, they actually portrayed Woodrow Wilson as a defender of Democracy.

They’ve repeatedly blamed anyone who dislikes woke culture.

An article in the Guardianargued that the repeal of Roe v Wade brought America one step closer to civil war and that “the left-democratic wing of America is the productive and educated part of the country.” Ahead of the 2020 election, Rolling Stonepredicted Covid would cause the end of the American Era and America would be replaced by Scandinavian socialism and Chinese authoritarianism. During Trump’s presidency, the Atlantic devoted all their energy to proving Trump would cause the end of America, with an endless flow of articles about “How Trump is Ending the American Era.”

Rolling Stone predicted that America would be replaced by Scandinavian socialism and Chinese authoritarianism.

David Brooks loves accusing conservatives of having an “apocalyptic tone” and inventing “apocalyptic menaces,” as he put it in his article, “The Terrifying Future of the American Right.” Despite the fact that he has boosted his career by depicting Trump as the AntiChrist. Or his article about how “The nuclear family was a mistake” for America. Or his article for the New York Timeswarning about “The Coming GOP Apocalypse.”

The Atlantic has devoted entire issues to the inevitable collapse of America, like this one from December of 2021. For the one-year anniversary of January 6th, the theme was “January 6 Was Only Practice.” In it, George Packer wrote, “Are We Doomed?” He argued that “the Republican Party now functions like an insurgency.” Describing Republicans’ election laws, he said “the danger is that the express will of the American people could be overthrown.”

The Atlantic has devoted entire issues to the inevitable collapse of America.

The New York Times is obsessed with the apocalypse of America. On the one-year anniversary of Trump’s election to the White House, Michelle Goldberg wrote about the “Anniversary of the Apocalypse.” She asked:

How can America ever return from this level of systematic derangement and corruption? I wish there was someone I could ask, but we know more about how countries slide into autocracy than how they might climb out of it. It’s been a year, and sometimes I’m still poleaxed by grief at the destruction of our civic inheritance.

In a series devoted to attacking Tucker Carlson, they described Tucker’s worldview as “apocalyptic," only to turn around and push the idea that the apocalypse is everywhere.

They have warned about “The Academic Apocalypse.” They’ve asked, “How Do You Invest in the Face of an Apocalypse?” They’ve described plays and fashion shows as “post-apocalyptic.” In July of last year, the New York Times declared “Apocalypse Right Now.” In February of 2022 they ran an article titled “Apocalypse When?” The author wrote:

I can’t say precisely when the end began, just that in the past several years, "the end of the world" stopped referring to a future cataclysmic event and started to describe our present situation.

They even ran a guide called “How to Survive the Apocalypse.” By the way, you can even find a similar guide on National Geographic Kids, “7 Steps To Surviving An Apocalypse (According To Science!) What would YOU do if the world was ending?”

Remember that one kid when you were growing up who always made up the rules on the fly? Usually because they couldn’t win any other way. The media is that annoying kid—because they only talk about the end of America when things aren't going their way.

As Christians, we talk about the apocalypse, but it’s completely different. In fact, it’s the opposite of what the media is saying, and they can’t see the difference. For us, it’s a matter of faith. We trust in God, in the eternal Light that is bigger and deeper and brighter than we could know. We believe in Truth, in the Truth that moves through us. We believe that the Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.

We trust in God, in the eternal Light that is bigger and deeper and brighter than we could know.

The word “apocalypse” comes from the Ancient Greek word meaning “revelation” or “unveiling,” the discovery of something new that has been hidden or invisible. Christians used the term to describe the Second Coming, when “everything that is hidden will eventually be brought into the open, and every secret will be brought to light.” (Mark 4:22)

The media's religion is everything they accuse Christianity of—a religion of superstition and fear. Only, for them, there is no redemption. Only total destruction. I think we’ll find that we’ve been right all along. I just hope America survives all of the media's doom and violence.

In the face of death, any light counts as survival.

If you're like Glenn, The Chosen completely changed the way you read the Bible. The characters, the apostles, the scenes that you learned over and over again in Sunday school, jump up from the pages in an entirely new way after coming to life on screen. Seeing the humanity of these heroes of the faith renewed the significance of what Christ did during his earthly ministry for many of the millions of people who have watched the award-winning series.

What if there were such a series that brought the Founding Fathers to life in a similar way? Jon Erwin, the producer behind Jesus Revolution and I Can Only Imagine, is trying to do just that.

Jon joined Glenn on The Glenn Beck Program this week talking about his "multi-season TV series" that puts the flesh and bones on the history of the Founding Fathers, bringing our country's founding to life.

Irwin said he wants to create an "accurate and visceral and entertaining account of the founding of the country." With George Washington as the central character, the series will—in the same style as The Chosen—show the humanity of the Founding Fathers, delving into their individual personalities, perspectives, gifts, and flaws.

Erwin described the Founding Fathers as "complex people; flawed people." However, he goes on to say:

But it's an amazing story about a group of ordinary, flawed people, some with extraordinary gifts, [came] together at a unique moment in time, doing something that would outlive them all. I think we can all learn from them.

Erwin says that these stories are going "to come at just the right time," pointing to how our divided nation is at a crisis point:

The Founding Father's greatest fear was, 'Can this country endure?' [...] That has been the question. Can we hold the nation together, and can we stay together as a people? I have not felt more in my lifetime, a time when we're just as divided as we are, [...] that stories [...] will bring us back together.

Our nation is in yet another time of crisis in which the original vision of the Founding Fathers is fading into the obscure recesses of history. Many Americans don't even know who many of the Founding Fathers were, not to mention what their beliefs and principles were. Would you join Jon Erwin and his vision to reignite America's love for the Founding Fathers and bring our nation's history back to life?

To help support Jon Erwin's project and to learn more, click HERE.

Glenn and his museum are on the road in St. George, Utah for the one-of-a-kind "Blueprints of Liberty" event. The museum features the good, the bad, and the ugly of history, from documents from the Pilgrims and Founding Fathers to the shackles worn by Africans kidnapped and shipped to the American slave trade, documents signed by Hitler and Stalin, and artifacts from the Holocaust.

Glenn believes history preserves the truth, and through learning from history's truths, we can gain wisdom and learn from the victories and atrocities of the past.

On this NEW EXCLUSIVE, Glenn walks BlazeTV subscribers through his museum exhibit in Utah and shows YOU his most prized historic artifacts in his collection. He explains the victories and atrocities of history—the good, the bad, and the ugly—so that we can learn from our history and preserve the principles and freedoms that we hold dear. This is Glenn in his element that you will NOT want to miss!

Click HERE if you are already a BlazezTV subscriber to watch this EXCLUSIVE behind-the-scenes special, and click HERE if you aren't a subscriber yet.