Playing to Lose: Autonomic Cultural Narratives as told by some random guy on the internet
Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2021 4:03 am
A friend of mine sent me a screen shot yesterday of a comment left on a discussion board about the stock market. I don't really know where to find the link itself and I don't feel like trying but I will include the transcribed text in full below. The comment is really more of a short article in length but I've kept it basically verbatim, other than cleaning up some grammar. The content is obviously not a piece of professional journalism, but I think the "author", whoever it is, has some pretty interesting insights into the relationship between the free market and social narratives, and I think it ties in well with some of the other discussions about capitalism, and I'd love to hear you guys' thoughts.
The text here requires a bit of context first. The thread is about the recent and ongoing Gamestop (GME) stock buying frenzy occurring on Wall Street, and has been all over the business news. I'm not sure how well aware any of you might be with that story, so I'll try to summarize briefly.
Essentially what has been occurring is that the company Gamestop (a video game retail chain in the US) had been projected be become insolvent by this year. Lots of large financial firms and hedge fund managers on Wall Street "shorted" the companies stocks over the past couple of years (they bought insurance on the company's well being in order to get cashed out when the company inevitably fails) and were expected a big payday for the money they invested in the shorts. Over the past couple weeks, however, a surprisingly large group of amateur arm chair day traders rallied together using sites like reddit and 4chan to purchase at huge mark ups Gamestop stocks even though they knew the company is essentially worth nothing at this point. This of course caused the stock valuation of the company to soar up to the tune of $10 billion almost overnight. When this happened, the hedge funds who had shorted Gamestop and were expecting a huge payout, suddenly found themselves owing tons of money to their investors and had to continue to pay premiums of the shorts they had purchased that they hadn't exactly budgeted for. Now, all the average joes from reddit and 4chan and wherever else that had bought stock, knew quite well that it was worthless, but enough of them did it to artificially inflate the company's valuation. Basically they played the stock market to intentionally lose their own money, because they knew it would screw over large banks and hedge fund managers and they rallied enough people behind them to do it. Now the Wall Street elites are begging the government to step in and regulate against people buying stocks they know are worthless, and apparently the irony of Wall Street requesting government regulation is lost on them. As of today, nothing has really been done in a legislative sense that I'm aware of, but I do know that some major apps that amateur investors use for day trading have blocked the purchasing of Gamestop stocks, which is apparently illegal market manipulation, but the government doesn't seem to care. In all likelihood this is the beginning of the end of private citizens being able to trade stocks on their own without going through a broker, but who knows.
Personally, I don't actually follow the stock market at all or business news in general, but I found this whole ordeal very intriguing for some reason, especially within the context of allowing unfettered capitalism. What happens when enough people get together to play the capitalist game, except they intentionally lose out of spite? It's not just a hypothetical question now, its actually happening.
Another interesting thing to come out of this so far is the way its at least brought together otherwise very opposing political groups. The people that started this Gamestop stock buying campaign were mostly just an offshoot of alt-right Trump supporters looking to stick it to someone, but they garnered a lot of momentum quickly from a lot of camps. Many political figures on the more extreme left, both in Washington and in the media, are praising the tactics since they like the fact that its hurting big banks, and the alt-righters love it because they don't really differentiate between big banks and big government. Personally, I'm not really sure what I think exactly, but anything that gets 4chan incels, woke redditors, Trump sycophants, and AOC on the same page must really being striking a nerve somewhere.
Anyway, that was probably way longer than necessary as a preface, but the content of the text below is basically looking at the broader picture of what the person sees as actually occurring in the economy as a whole and how it effects American/Western culture. I'd love to know what you guys think. Maybe its just tinfoilery, maybe I just don't understand it.
Okay, so back in the day some computer nerds made machines that would take in a bunch of outside data, process it, and try to predict the future. To fund it, they predominantly sold the information to people who wanted to buy and sell stocks. Enough people started doing this that they started making the machines send out stock reports themselves, which other machines took in as data to further sell, and report on stock themselves.
This eventually created a massive feedback loop of stock data being managed by autonomic intelligence (not the same as artificial intelligence) that outright blocked out the human element, and right now the open secret is that the market is out of human control. If anyone tried to remove these data loops, even one out of sync chain link could cause the world economy to collapse overnight.
So basically, in tandem with this technology, the internet happened and a load of marketers started moving to “content marketing”, which is the idea that the product and the marketing are the same thing and that you’re selling a lifestyle story, which is why if you pay attention, most companies that used to just sell a product have made massive investments into media space. This is fine in and of itself, the 80s had a similar version of this. The problem is that the easy proliferation of consumer data reaches these autonomic intelligences, and they begin to report on what kind of narratives sell vs what ones don’t. Simple, right? Well, not really. Y’see, we live in a post hypernormalization world, a Soviet term for propaganda that keeps saying things are something when the reality is different. When you mix in marketing and propaganda with feedback loops, and add on top of that Google’s ad program that essentially bubbles people into feedback loops, and only give them what they want to hear so you can sell them something, it basically creates a mass psychological dissonance between different groups of people that, consciously or not, have their life’s context formed around media narratives. It’s one reason why the social justice stuff is hitting so hard now despite the fact that America is an otherwise pretty prosperous country with no major problems causing anyone to starve.
Anyway, the implication is that you basically have cultural narrative context being created by literal abstract machinations who may or may not be intelligent. That’s no good, because there’s no moral parameter to stop the data from trying to get everyone to kill each other. See, people keep thinking the robot revolution is going to be Terminator, but it’s going to be more like The Shining.
So people have their lives contextualized by inhuman machinations, which, okay, it’s pretty bleak but not outright destructive, right? Just a bunch of consumers being taken for a ride, right? Well no. You see, the consequence of religion more or less falling out of style in the public consciousness is that there’s no longer a single common cultural narrative. So you just don’t get to see Timmy at Sunday school, so what? Well the larger point of contention is that there’s always been a considerable percentage of any population that gives way to fanatic behavior, which in antiquity meant religious fanaticism. But if the narrative of religion is weakened, and the only other alternatives to the narrative are autonomically generated content marketing narratives too shallow to really make a lifestyle out of, you run into a phenomenon where a percentage of the population essentially migrated between brands in a pseudo-idolatrous methodology. When you really come down to it, a fanbase is literally just the same thing as a cult. They both act as a community that brings people together to discuss a specific narrative. Except the religious ones actually at least try to offer the illusion of being beneficial to society at large while the autonomic models are there purely for profit and offer hedonistic sensory overload to compensate for any shallowness.
Did you ever stop to think about how we live in a world where a bunch of people do crazy shit over cartoons, harass people, send death threats, sell cars for chicken nugget sauce, etc? Do you really think that’s just normal behavior? No! Those sorts of people would have been in a monastery a couple hundred years ago. They’re fanatics, pure and simple. Nothing wrong with being a fanatic if it’s constructive, but these narratives don’t have any interest in mind.
So, to put it quite bluntly, we quite literally live in a society where abstract mathematical formulas are in charge of a market that pretty much doesn’t sell products anymore, and is more focused on selling narrative scams based on parameters from these algorithms, and a bunch of wackos who in another lifetime would’ve been witch burners who have nothing to spiritually satisfy their intrinsic obsessive tendencies, who are now replacing a common cultural narrative with many different smaller ones. This is how you end up with Nazis and Commies in a prosperous capitalist country thinking the end of the world is next week, literally creating their own problems.
One could argue that we have too much freedom of choice when it comes to information about narratives, and it’s actively harming society. The Russians use avant garde techniques in their propaganda to give their population so much bizarre data to sift through, they just conform with no goal in mind. The Chinese just censor and have less overall data fed to their population. But Americans simultaneously have too much data, and too little diversity in the data, making it easy to context to corral them into a specific mindset. All it takes is a pair of eyes to see that the current mindset for American populations is apathetic vs messiah complex murderousness.
The silver lining is that these marketers don’t know they’re playing with fire. I don’t think its entirely out of the question that some day soon a crowd of angry people will actually lynch content creators for not towing their own narrative complex, and very soon they may begin to live in fear. People think this Gamestop stuff is a big happening, but I think its only going to be a drop in the bucket that’ll be the 2020s. If not apocalyptic, they’ll be at least interesting times.
The text here requires a bit of context first. The thread is about the recent and ongoing Gamestop (GME) stock buying frenzy occurring on Wall Street, and has been all over the business news. I'm not sure how well aware any of you might be with that story, so I'll try to summarize briefly.
Essentially what has been occurring is that the company Gamestop (a video game retail chain in the US) had been projected be become insolvent by this year. Lots of large financial firms and hedge fund managers on Wall Street "shorted" the companies stocks over the past couple of years (they bought insurance on the company's well being in order to get cashed out when the company inevitably fails) and were expected a big payday for the money they invested in the shorts. Over the past couple weeks, however, a surprisingly large group of amateur arm chair day traders rallied together using sites like reddit and 4chan to purchase at huge mark ups Gamestop stocks even though they knew the company is essentially worth nothing at this point. This of course caused the stock valuation of the company to soar up to the tune of $10 billion almost overnight. When this happened, the hedge funds who had shorted Gamestop and were expecting a huge payout, suddenly found themselves owing tons of money to their investors and had to continue to pay premiums of the shorts they had purchased that they hadn't exactly budgeted for. Now, all the average joes from reddit and 4chan and wherever else that had bought stock, knew quite well that it was worthless, but enough of them did it to artificially inflate the company's valuation. Basically they played the stock market to intentionally lose their own money, because they knew it would screw over large banks and hedge fund managers and they rallied enough people behind them to do it. Now the Wall Street elites are begging the government to step in and regulate against people buying stocks they know are worthless, and apparently the irony of Wall Street requesting government regulation is lost on them. As of today, nothing has really been done in a legislative sense that I'm aware of, but I do know that some major apps that amateur investors use for day trading have blocked the purchasing of Gamestop stocks, which is apparently illegal market manipulation, but the government doesn't seem to care. In all likelihood this is the beginning of the end of private citizens being able to trade stocks on their own without going through a broker, but who knows.
Personally, I don't actually follow the stock market at all or business news in general, but I found this whole ordeal very intriguing for some reason, especially within the context of allowing unfettered capitalism. What happens when enough people get together to play the capitalist game, except they intentionally lose out of spite? It's not just a hypothetical question now, its actually happening.
Another interesting thing to come out of this so far is the way its at least brought together otherwise very opposing political groups. The people that started this Gamestop stock buying campaign were mostly just an offshoot of alt-right Trump supporters looking to stick it to someone, but they garnered a lot of momentum quickly from a lot of camps. Many political figures on the more extreme left, both in Washington and in the media, are praising the tactics since they like the fact that its hurting big banks, and the alt-righters love it because they don't really differentiate between big banks and big government. Personally, I'm not really sure what I think exactly, but anything that gets 4chan incels, woke redditors, Trump sycophants, and AOC on the same page must really being striking a nerve somewhere.
Anyway, that was probably way longer than necessary as a preface, but the content of the text below is basically looking at the broader picture of what the person sees as actually occurring in the economy as a whole and how it effects American/Western culture. I'd love to know what you guys think. Maybe its just tinfoilery, maybe I just don't understand it.
Okay, so back in the day some computer nerds made machines that would take in a bunch of outside data, process it, and try to predict the future. To fund it, they predominantly sold the information to people who wanted to buy and sell stocks. Enough people started doing this that they started making the machines send out stock reports themselves, which other machines took in as data to further sell, and report on stock themselves.
This eventually created a massive feedback loop of stock data being managed by autonomic intelligence (not the same as artificial intelligence) that outright blocked out the human element, and right now the open secret is that the market is out of human control. If anyone tried to remove these data loops, even one out of sync chain link could cause the world economy to collapse overnight.
So basically, in tandem with this technology, the internet happened and a load of marketers started moving to “content marketing”, which is the idea that the product and the marketing are the same thing and that you’re selling a lifestyle story, which is why if you pay attention, most companies that used to just sell a product have made massive investments into media space. This is fine in and of itself, the 80s had a similar version of this. The problem is that the easy proliferation of consumer data reaches these autonomic intelligences, and they begin to report on what kind of narratives sell vs what ones don’t. Simple, right? Well, not really. Y’see, we live in a post hypernormalization world, a Soviet term for propaganda that keeps saying things are something when the reality is different. When you mix in marketing and propaganda with feedback loops, and add on top of that Google’s ad program that essentially bubbles people into feedback loops, and only give them what they want to hear so you can sell them something, it basically creates a mass psychological dissonance between different groups of people that, consciously or not, have their life’s context formed around media narratives. It’s one reason why the social justice stuff is hitting so hard now despite the fact that America is an otherwise pretty prosperous country with no major problems causing anyone to starve.
Anyway, the implication is that you basically have cultural narrative context being created by literal abstract machinations who may or may not be intelligent. That’s no good, because there’s no moral parameter to stop the data from trying to get everyone to kill each other. See, people keep thinking the robot revolution is going to be Terminator, but it’s going to be more like The Shining.
So people have their lives contextualized by inhuman machinations, which, okay, it’s pretty bleak but not outright destructive, right? Just a bunch of consumers being taken for a ride, right? Well no. You see, the consequence of religion more or less falling out of style in the public consciousness is that there’s no longer a single common cultural narrative. So you just don’t get to see Timmy at Sunday school, so what? Well the larger point of contention is that there’s always been a considerable percentage of any population that gives way to fanatic behavior, which in antiquity meant religious fanaticism. But if the narrative of religion is weakened, and the only other alternatives to the narrative are autonomically generated content marketing narratives too shallow to really make a lifestyle out of, you run into a phenomenon where a percentage of the population essentially migrated between brands in a pseudo-idolatrous methodology. When you really come down to it, a fanbase is literally just the same thing as a cult. They both act as a community that brings people together to discuss a specific narrative. Except the religious ones actually at least try to offer the illusion of being beneficial to society at large while the autonomic models are there purely for profit and offer hedonistic sensory overload to compensate for any shallowness.
Did you ever stop to think about how we live in a world where a bunch of people do crazy shit over cartoons, harass people, send death threats, sell cars for chicken nugget sauce, etc? Do you really think that’s just normal behavior? No! Those sorts of people would have been in a monastery a couple hundred years ago. They’re fanatics, pure and simple. Nothing wrong with being a fanatic if it’s constructive, but these narratives don’t have any interest in mind.
So, to put it quite bluntly, we quite literally live in a society where abstract mathematical formulas are in charge of a market that pretty much doesn’t sell products anymore, and is more focused on selling narrative scams based on parameters from these algorithms, and a bunch of wackos who in another lifetime would’ve been witch burners who have nothing to spiritually satisfy their intrinsic obsessive tendencies, who are now replacing a common cultural narrative with many different smaller ones. This is how you end up with Nazis and Commies in a prosperous capitalist country thinking the end of the world is next week, literally creating their own problems.
One could argue that we have too much freedom of choice when it comes to information about narratives, and it’s actively harming society. The Russians use avant garde techniques in their propaganda to give their population so much bizarre data to sift through, they just conform with no goal in mind. The Chinese just censor and have less overall data fed to their population. But Americans simultaneously have too much data, and too little diversity in the data, making it easy to context to corral them into a specific mindset. All it takes is a pair of eyes to see that the current mindset for American populations is apathetic vs messiah complex murderousness.
The silver lining is that these marketers don’t know they’re playing with fire. I don’t think its entirely out of the question that some day soon a crowd of angry people will actually lynch content creators for not towing their own narrative complex, and very soon they may begin to live in fear. People think this Gamestop stuff is a big happening, but I think its only going to be a drop in the bucket that’ll be the 2020s. If not apocalyptic, they’ll be at least interesting times.