AI Use Turns You Into “a very stupid man”. Just Like General Patton

In early 1945 Peter Sichel was twenty-two years old and running OSS operations in Germany. His unit sent German prisoners of war back across the lines to gather intelligence on Wehrmacht troop movements. The operations worked. General George S. Patton opposed them because he wanted armor moving forward. The General saw intelligence work as in his way. Sichel, interviewed at one hundred for the documentary The Last Spy, described Patton in four words.

A very stupid man.

Sichel spent the rest of his career watching the same pattern repeat. Analysts produced correct assessments. Executives ignored them. Then executives did the expensive wrong thing. Then executives blamed the outcome on someone else. He died in February 2025 at one hundred and two. The United States began bombing Iran one year later. The documentary releases this week while the bombs are still falling.

Intelligence Ruins Cognition

The argument that AI is ruining human cognition has evidence behind it, and the evidence has to be clarified. The MIT Media Lab ran a four-month EEG study of fifty-four participants writing essays. The ChatGPT group showed reduced brain connectivity, with some measures cut by more than half. Participants could not quote from their own essays afterward. Teachers called the writing soulless and interchangeable. In a follow-up session, students who had used ChatGPT were asked to write without it. Their neural activity was lower than the group that had gone the other way. The researchers called the AI usage pattern cognitive debt.

A Microsoft and Carnegie Mellon study of three hundred and nineteen knowledge workers found that the more confidence the worker had in the AI, the less critical thinking they applied. Workers reported using no critical thinking at all on roughly forty percent of their AI-assisted tasks. A separate Wharton experiment at the University of Pennsylvania, with one thousand three hundred seventy-two participants across nine thousand five hundred trials, gave the behavior a name. Cognitive surrender. Users accept what the AI says with minimal scrutiny and let it override their own intuition. A Polish study of nineteen endoscopists at four centres in the ACCEPT trial found that after three months using an AI colon cancer screening tool, their unaided ability to spot precancerous polyps dropped from twenty-eight percent to twenty-two percent.

These findings are all in front of us now. The concern comes naturally. Now watch the critics pick the wrong target.

Coverage as cover

The MIT researcher is pushing back against the fog that headlines are trying to build around her work. Nataliya Kosmyna told reporters the study did not measure IQ and found no evidence of brain rot. She launched a FAQ for journalists that names the phrases she is asking the press to avoid, including brain damage, impact negatively, and terrifying findings.

The BBC, doing the exact wrong thing, ran the story under the headline “AI chatbots could be making you stupider” and pushed a fifty-five percent figure as a general decline rather than what the paper actually measured, which was task-specific neural connectivity during one kind of essay writing. CNN and the rest followed the BBC’s framing like a herd of lemmings ready to jump off any cliff they can’t see.

The BBC follows the unthinking executive-class pattern at the media layer. An analyst produces careful work with explicit caveats. The institutions strip the caveats and run the simple version that fits their existing narratives, avoiding any thought. The outlets warning readers about AI-driven cognitive surrender cannot themselves read the paper carefully enough to report what it found. The surrender is the coverage.

Honest executives

Everyone who knows an unaccidental American executive knows someone who aspired to delegate cognitive labor their entire career. Analysts produce the reports. Researchers run the numbers. Lawyers review the contracts. Speechwriters write the speeches. Consultants deliver the strategy. The dream of many executives is to sign off and golf. The documented pattern in the MIT study is cognitive surrender. The documented pattern in the Microsoft study is offloading mental effort as trust in the system exceeds trust in one’s own abilities. The documented pattern in the medical study is skills degrading after three months of reliance on an external tool.

The American executive class has been running this protocol for at least a century. It jumps out in pre-Civil War writing as a flashpoint between the made men who worked their way up (General Grant) and the slavers who lacked cognitive depth (General Lee). The grandfathers delegated. The fathers delegated. Why wouldn’t the descendants of the privileged executive elites delegate? Today’s plantation shadow in American management is no accident, and runs on extraction of cognitive labor from below, where the extractors at the top have spent three generations practicing exactly the form of cognitive offloading that researchers now want us to interpret as brain damage.

The critics of AI end up describing themselves without realizing it. The concern is a self-portrait of the bad habits of an executive class, projected onto the tool that threatens them.

Pirsig’s dashboard

The tension is not only over a century old, it regularly surfaces in popular culture. Robert Pirsig wrote a very useful frame in 1974. There are two kinds of rider. The mechanic understands the machine in a feedback cycle. He has taken it apart. He has put it back together. When the engine makes a new sound, he hears it and knows what it means. The other rider learns the basics of control and sees nothing but a dashboard. When the “idiot light” comes on for the idiot to see, he pulls into a mechanic. Absent the light, made for him by a mechanic, he has control with nothing to assert it with. Take away his light, take away his mechanic, and he is stranded.

American executive culture is the dashboard rider at scale. The class needs the idiot light so they can issue commands based on what they think it tells them. More oil, now! It does not know the engine. It has delegated the engine to everyone below it for so long that it has lost the capacity to evaluate the work being done on its behalf.

I once had to witness a tech startup CEO regularly tell his company that it was all “flux capacitor stuff” to him, so he had hired someone to figure “all that stuff” out for him, and so that he could tell them all what to do. His “idiot light” was a single hire.

Layoffs as a quit mechanism

The research itself splits users into two populations, and this is the finding that the headlines missed entirely. We are not all the same. In theoretical neuroscientist Vivienne Ming’s experiment with seventy-two participants drawn from UC Berkeley and the Bay Area, fewer than one in ten used AI as a tool to gather data that they then analyzed themselves. These participants made more accurate predictions than the rest. The cognitive decline measured in the other ninety percent did not appear in the ten percent who evaluated the output.

The split the research finds is what Pirsig’s split told us since the 1970s.

The ninety percent who surrender to the tool are dashboard riders. The ten percent who use it as an instrument are mechanics. Surrender produces atrophy. Evaluation produces strength. The distinction is the whole story, and the critics keep collapsing it.

The AI user also has something the executive usually does not. A quit mechanism. AI users evaluate the output constantly. They reject it. They switch models. They walk away when the tool produces garbage. The discipline is in the evaluation. The executive cannot quit his delegation stack. He has built a career out of never developing the capacity to evaluate his subordinates’ work at the level of the work itself. He approves or vetoes at the level of mood, ideology, and political convenience. That is the dashboard.

The user who closes ChatGPT because the output is wrong is doing more cognitive work in that moment than the executive who green-lights a regime change operation on the basis of a summary he did not read and could not cross-check. The research shows the difference neurologically. The evaluators’ brains light up. The surrenderers’ brains go dim. The executive class operates in perpetual surrender mode by professional design. The research predicts exactly what their brains should look like, and it’s not great.

The split is even older than Patton

Britain ran this same kind of experiment for at least four hundred years. The mechanic tradition runs from Walsingham’s intelligence service under Elizabeth, through the political officers in Victorian India who actually learned the languages, through SOAS, Bletchley Park, SOE, and the working decades of the Joint Intelligence Committee. The operations Sichel ran in Germany were modeled on British practice. His OSS generation inherited a tradition.

The dashboard tradition produced Anthony Eden at Suez in 1956. The Americans told him the operation would fail. The diplomats told him. His own Foreign Office told him. He ran it anyway, collapsed the pound, and ended British great-power status inside a fortnight. Executive class refusing the analyst. Patton in British form.

The clean historical case is Orde Wingate and T. E. Lawrence. Lawrence got the film, the myth, and the executive-class affection. His self-constructed false persona gave British Arabia the story it wanted about itself. Wingate was the actual mechanic doing the hard work. He learned Hebrew. He lived with the Haganah. He built the Special Night Squads in Palestine and the Chindits in Burma. Moshe Dayan was his trainee. He was abrasive, difficult, disliked by the officer class. He died in a plane crash in 1944 and the myth survived, while the mechanic was buried.

The split operates in the British press today. The Guardian ran the Sichel story because the paper can still evaluate analytical work. The BBC has drifted into Eden’s reflexes. Official sources, conventional framings, dinner-party consensus. Kosmyna’s paper arrives and the BBC strips it to headline fodder. The Guardian runs the complicated story. The BBC runs the story that generates panic. Two institutions, same country, same week, pointing opposite directions on the same underlying mechanism.

The American and British executive classes are expressing their idiot light moment with AI. Both cultures train managers to perform command while delegating the work. Both reward the Lawrence persona over the Wingate competence. Both promote the dashboard rider and exile the mechanic. While the accent differs, the reading is the same.

Sichel as witness

Sichel observed this and reported it across decades, as the structural logic of the American executive class operating in foreign policy. Iran 1953. The analysts assessed that a coup against Mosaddegh would generate long-term blowback. The Dulles brothers ordered the coup. The blowback is still running. The Islamic Republic exists because American executives overrode American intelligence.

Guatemala 1954. Same pattern. Albania. Indonesia. The Congo. Sichel names each one in the documentary. In every case the analysts produced correct assessments. In every case the executives did the expensive wrong thing. He left the CIA at the end of the 1950s because the pattern was uncorrectable from inside.

McCarthy as terminal form

McCarthy is where this fast forwards and reaches its terminal form. Patton refused the analyst. Dulles overrode the analyst. McCarthy purged the analyst for being right.

The China Hands are the clean case. John Paton Davies. John Service. John Carter Vincent. They reported from Chongqing through the 1940s that Chiang Kai-shek was going to lose and Mao was going to win. They were correct. McCarthy destroyed them for it. The State Department’s China desk was stripped of the people who understood China. The United States then spent three decades misreading Asia, and Vietnam came directly out of that gap. The analysts who could have told Johnson what Vietnam was were already gone, hounded out by a senator who had no framework for evaluating the intelligence he was attacking.

McCarthy was dumb in the Patton sense. He could not evaluate the reporting. He had no grasp of communism, Asia, the State Department, or the difference between analysis and advocacy. He operated on mood, ideology, and performance. That is the executive-class cognitive profile in concentrated form, amplified by subpoena power.

McCarthy’s chief counsel was Roy Cohn. Cohn mentored Donald Trump personally, for decades. The executive currently running Operation Epic Fury against Iran is the apprentice of the apprentice of McCarthy. Same class purging the same analysts for producing the same correct reports about the same region. Iran 1953 forward. China 1949 forward. Patton forward.

Sichel’s career was a single long warning. He watched the mechanism from inside for two decades and spent the next sixty years describing it. The documentary is his final deposition. The war is the verdict on everything he said.

The ten percent are wanted

A Pearson and Amazon Web Services survey published this week found that fifty-three percent of employers cannot find graduates with the right AI skills. Seventy-eight percent of university leaders believe they are meeting employer expectations. Twenty-eight percent of employers agree. Fourteen percent of graduates report high proficiency applying AI tools professionally. Sixty-four percent use AI for academics. Thirty-four percent feel confident their use is compliant with institutional policies.

The executive class is asking for the ten percent. It wants mechanics. It wants graduates who can evaluate AI output, apply it in context, and maintain judgment about the tool. This is the exact skill set the executive class has never developed in itself and has spent a century punishing when it appeared in the ranks below.

It’s like posting every entry level job with the requirement of five years experience. You probably know what I’m talking about.

The same report noted that thirty-one percent of business leaders now consider AI solutions before hiring for a role, and eighty-three percent of workers believe AI can perform most entry-level jobs. The executive class is cutting the ladder while demanding graduates arrive at the top of it. Fire the junior analyst. Automate the first rung. Then complain that no one has learned analysis.

This is the plantation South in contemporary form. The system extracted skilled labor from people it refused to educate, then complained about the shortage of educated labor when it needed more of it. The complaint was never about the shortage. The complaint was the extraction mechanism declaring its next demand. The executive class is running the same play with AI, with graduates, and with the remaining rungs of the career ladder. Strip the skill-building positions. Cry about the skill gap. Call for Pearson to build a new pipeline to replace the one the class itself just dismantled.

Source: Antislavery Almanac, 1840

The light at the end of the tunnel

The AI critics are correct about one thing. Cognitive offloading without evaluation produces atrophy. The research confirms it. I’m just saying here that they have picked the wrong target. The target is the class that has practiced cognitive offloading without evaluation for a century, fired the mechanics for being smarter than the “idiot light” riders, and burned down the intelligence function whenever its conclusions were inconvenient.

The tools today getting better for mechanics is just a phase in a repeat cycle. The next generation of idiot lights will be built by the ten percent who can evaluate the current ones. That is how it has always worked. Someone takes apart the machine, someone else gets the dashboard built for them, and the gap between the two widens until the next cycle.

The non-mechanics expecting to maintain control before the next idiot light is made for them are in trouble. They cannot build the instrument. They cannot read the instrument that exists. They can only command.

What Sichel said about Patton is what few are able and willing to say, because saying it reveals that in a dark tunnel they know how to spot the difference early between an exit and a train coming toward them, which way to run for freedom. The people who cannot tell the difference are giving the orders. The people who can are the ones they are firing.

The Ford Mustang Was European First: Just Ask Hitler

American automotive mythology launders European design, Nazi-era theft, and Henry Ford’s antisemitism into an all-American icon. I don’t often hear Americans give way to the fact that the original Ford Mustang was a European design, with a European engine. Give credit where credit is due?

The European open two-seater was well established by 1962, so the Ford copy was, well, basically a copy of European sports cars. Mustang I copied that idiom end to end: mid-engine, lightweight tubular spaceframe, V4 transaxle, two-seater, disc brakes, rack and pinion.

Let’s start with the V4 engine that debuted in the Taunus P4 (12M) in 1962. It was the 1962 Mustang I drivetrain. The Ford Köln plant building this V4 was the same Ford-Werke that built Hitler’s Wehrmacht trucks in WWII (one-third of the 350,000 trucks used by the motorized German Army as of 1942 were Ford-made).

Next, the Mustang I body was a bespoke Troutman-Barnes aluminum design, which looked like Italian concepts on top of the prior Taunus P3 design: raked windshield, smooth uninterrupted flanks, forward-leaning stance, aerodynamic fastback profile.

The Ford Taunus P3 (17M) sold in Europe 1960-1964

It’s now well documented that the Ford Taunus, mixed with European sports car designs, seeded the Mustang. And thus it is most accurate to say the entire “American” Mustang lineage traces to a 1.5-liter V4 drivetrain made in the German Ford plant that supplied Hitler’s invasions, from Czechoslovakia and Poland in 1939 through motorizing the Wehrmacht’s disastrous ill-fated campaigns until 1945 (Hitler unquestionably had lost the war by the January 1942 Wannsee Conference, meaning his next three years before surrender were used by Germans to scale-up genocide until his suicide). The Ford-supplied Wehrmacht trucks were the literal engine of genocide, built on two decades of antisemitic campaigning by Ford.

Ford 1962 1.5-liter V4. Power: 109 hp. Top Speed: 120 mph.

The Mustang I is what gave the entire brand its name, its pony badge, and the Total Performance campaign that launched the production car. And it looked like this:

The Mustang I was Ford catching up to a European sports racer idiom that had been running at Le Mans, the Targa Florio, and Sebring for roughly a decade. Calling it innovative in 1962 is like calling a 2020 Ford EV innovative for having a battery. In fact, Mustang I used Lotus “wobbly-web” wheels, so even those were literal European hardware. Some suggest the 1953 Porsche 550 Spyder was the underlying concept.

Here’s another fun fact from history. The designer we associate with the Mustang I also did a Porsche 911 four-door one-off stretched version in 1968, commissioned by Texas Porsche dealer William J. Dick Jr as a Christmas gift for his wife. Basically 21 inches were added to the wheelbase. People want to call this “original Panamera” when in reality it was just a return to the Czech Tatra, the car the Nazis stole in 1938 and renamed VW.

Hitler admired things about Ford that Americans rarely admit, even though Ford workers protested them at the time.

Ford opposed unions because he believed they were a Jewish conspiracy. American autoworkers and their children in 1941 protest Ford’s relationship with Hitler. Source: Wayne State

Prince Louis Ferdinand recounted Hitler at lunch in 1933 declaring he would put Ford’s theories into practice in Germany. While Ford put hate-filled newspapers on the front seat of every car he sold, he never won an election. Hitler however had used Ford-like hate campaigns to seize an entire state. Ford’s antisemitism was scaled in Germany past anything the Dearborn Independent and The International Jew achieved in America, because Hitler adopted radio and deployed it through institutions that Ford never commanded (Reichsrundfunk was a Nazi state broadcasting monopoly pushing cheap Volksempfänger engineered to receive only its signal).

That is the background to Hitler awarding Ford the Grand Cross of the German Eagle on July 30, 1938, four months before Kristallnacht.

Give credit where credit is due for the Porsche design? Tatra had filed ten very clear patent claims against Porsche, and they were about to settle when Hitler announced that he would “solve his problem”. He illegally invaded Czechoslovakia. Over 500 of the T97s had already been built before production was terminated by Hitler in 1939. So VW and Porsche designs were literally stolen. We know this all because VW settled the case out of court in 1965 at around one to three million Deutsche Marks.

Henry Ford and Hitler.

Porsche and Mustang.

Far more in common than Americans tend to admit. Think about the European history of the Mustang, next time one is near.

The papers of the day somehow didn’t do Ford as much damage as he deserved for being Hitler’s inspiration and supporter.

Software That Dominates: Palantir Wants De-nazification Un-done

Palantir published their manifesto in a 22-point summary of Alex Karp and Nicholas Zamiska’s book The Technological Republic. The company calls this the ideology behind its work.

Read the 22 point manifesto as operational doctrine with a historical understanding. The philosophical framing is thin cover for Nazism.

Buried in point 15 is their core thesis:

The postwar neutering of Germany and Japan must be undone.

Palantir argues the defanging of Germany was an overcorrection that Europe now pays for. Denazification is their complaint.

The claim lives only on the most extreme far right. The AfD platform. Identitäre Bewegung. Alain de Benoist’s Nouvelle Droite. The Nolte and Hillgruber revisionism of the 1986 Historikerstreit. A US surveillance contractor with federal data access has now published Nazism as corporate doctrine.

The rest of the manifesto builds bogus intellectual support around that line. Every point maps to a documented fascist or proto-fascist source. The whole document reads as interwar European far-right theory adapted for Silicon Valley.

Line analysis

Palantir point (paraphrased) Historical precedent
1. Engineers owe the state defense work as obligation. Gleichschaltung. Industry coordinated with state mission. Thyssen, Krupp, IG Farben. Jünger, Total Mobilization (1930).
2. Consumer apps have enfeebled civilization. Spengler, Decline of the West (1918). Jünger, Der Arbeiter (1932). Consumer comfort as civilizational decay.
3. Decadent elites earn forgiveness through economic performance. Mussolini’s productivist fascism. Schmitt on the state of exception overriding constitutional form.
4. Moral appeal has failed. Power runs on software. Schmitt, The Concept of the Political (1932). The friend-enemy distinction as the essence of politics.
5. AI weapons are inevitable. The only question is who builds them. Ludendorff, Der totale Krieg (1935). Interwar armament inevitability doctrine.
6. Universal national service. Volksgemeinschaft through shared sacrifice. Prussian militarism. Jünger’s total mobilization applied to the civilian.
7. The military gets what it asks for. Same for software procurement. Wehrwirtschaft. Private industry fused to war economy. Göring’s Four Year Plan (1936).
8. Government workers hold no priestly authority. Schmitt on parliamentarism as degenerate. Interwar anti-bureaucratic populism of the right.
9. Public figures deserve grace. Nietzsche’s pathos of distance. Elite impunity repackaged as aristocratic privilege.
10. Politics should be hard externality, stripped of interior life. Jünger and Schmitt reject liberal psychology as political solvent.
11. Victory over enemies should prompt pause. Historikerstreit. Relativizing the moral weight of the Allied victory over Nazism. Sets up point 15.
12. Atomic deterrence gives way to AI deterrence. Permanent war as civilizational condition. Schmitt, The Nomos of the Earth (1950).
13. The US has advanced progressive values more than any nation. Sonderweg logic. Civic religion of American exceptionalism as providential mission.
14. American power produced the long peace. Imperial apologetics. Erasure of Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and proxy wars from the ledger.
15. Denazification and Japanese pacifism must be undone. AfD platform. Nouvelle Droite. Nolte-Hillgruber revisionism. The explicit far-right core of the document.
16. Musk’s grand narrative deserves serious engagement. Carlyle’s Great Man theory. Nietzsche’s Übermensch laundered through founder worship.
17. Silicon Valley takes on violent crime where politicians refuse. Freikorps logic. Private force supplanting the state monopoly on violence once the state is framed as weak.
18. Scrutiny drives talent from public service. Elite impunity doctrine. Schmitt on the liberal press as political enemy.
19. Caution in public life is corrosive. Transgression is virtue. Evola and Jünger. Aristocratic transgression against bourgeois timidity.
20. Elite hostility to religion must be resisted. Schmitt, Political Theology (1922). Christian Front of the 1930s. Modern integralism.
21. Cultures rank on a hierarchy of advancement and regression. Gobineau, Essay on the Inequality of Human Races (1853). Chamberlain, Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (1899). Evola, Revolt Against the Modern World (1934).
22. Pluralism and inclusivity are hollow temptations. Schmitt on the homogeneous demos. De Benoist’s ethnopluralism. The open society reframed as the enemy.

WTF

Palantir’s own X bio states this:

Software that dominates.

That is the corporate self-description, published next to a Nazi manifesto arguing for cultural hierarchy and the undoing of denazification.

These two artifacts speak for each other.

Palantir sells the software that executes the politics. ICE runs on Palantir. The US Army runs on Palantir. NYPD runs on Palantir. The company writes the database queries the state uses to decide who to deport, who to arrest, who to target.

The manifesto tells all these buyers what the company believes the end state should be. The product enforces the belief in decline and destruction of democracy.

The denazification line exposed their objective. The rest is just the plan.

WhatsApp Encryption Still a Lie: Feds Arrest Arms Dealer at LAX

Federal agents arrested Shamim Mafi at LAX on Saturday night. The criminal complaint describes Mohajer-6 drones, bomb fuses, and millions of rounds of Iranian ammunition moving through an Oman-registered shell called Atlas International Business to the Sudanese Armed Forces.

This is a story about WhatsApp encryption.

The communication channel was WhatsApp.

Contract terms were on WhatsApp.

Cash logistics were on WhatsApp.

In turkey we can just accept in exchange. And it should be in cash.

The FBI put the private WhatsApp messages in a public filing. How? Why? Meta doesn’t just market WhatsApp as end-to-end encrypted, they send security talking-heads like Alex Stamos around to call WhatsApp privacy better than sliced bread.

Source: Twitter

That’s a lot of nonsense and it literally has gotten people killed for believing it.

Two architectural facts collapse the aggressive marketing. Cloud backups first disproved the claims. WhatsApp synced chats to iCloud and Google Drive in plaintext by default until late 2021. Meta added opt-in encrypted backups then and left the default unchanged. A subpoena to Apple or Google reaches message content through the backup layer. The encryption protected the wire, while a backup always held the plaintext copy out for inspection.

The report button came next, which I consider an intentional backdoor that Signal does not have (WhatsApp encryption is just Signal underneath, with the backdoor added). ProPublica documented it in September 2021. Roughly 1,000 Accenture contractors in Austin, Dublin, and Singapore review user reports. When either party taps report, the client forwards the last five messages plus media to Meta in plaintext. The counterparty whose chats land in the review queue never consents. Meta writes the trigger conditions. Meta can expand the window by software update.

The arrests keep coming. The encryption claim keeps recruiting users who route sensitive communications through Meta. The FBI reads them. Every conviction built on WhatsApp evidence is proof the product worked how Facebook intended, just not as advertised.

Client-side exfiltration with end-to-end marketing on the label is not privacy. Cryptography was sprinkled on the wire while the architecture kept the content readable by third parties … by design