The Internet’s been a landfill for decades. Now that robots are helping us shovel, suddenly everyone’s a damn art critic?
Welcome to the Series Where I Say the Quiet Parts Out Loud
Look, I’ve never been what you’d call a consensus guy. I tend to zag when others zig. Or more accurately: I throw a brick at both paths, set up camp on a median, and start yelling about hypocrisy into a diesel-powered megaphone.
So I’m kicking off a new series called “Unpopular Opinion.” It’s part rant, part devil’s advocacy, and part me screaming into the void hoping it echoes back something interesting. Let’s talk tech, culture, and the deeply flawed operating systems running both.

Slop is Not New (We Just Like Pretending It Is)
There’s a rising moral panic about “AI slop”… the term hurled at machine-generated content clogging up your feeds, timelines, and search results. It’s the new digital boogeyman. Lazy. Derivative. Inhuman.
Cool. Quick question:
What the hell do you think we were looking at before this?
Let’s review some of humanity’s greatest hits, shall we?
- That guy who lip-syncs his dog’s thoughts with a baby voice
- Influencers crying for clicks over things they caused
- “Hot chip and lie” TikToks
- Facebook minion memes where your aunt threatens to slap people with Jesus
- A 47-minute video essay about a cartoon reboot no one asked for
That was all before the robots joined the circus.

The Hypocrisy Algorithm
Here’s what’s happening: we’ve collectively realized that AI can now mimic us… and that includes our tendency to create garbage. But instead of recognizing the mirror, people recoil in horror.
It’s not about quality. It’s about origin. People are tagging content with “looks AI” and dismissing it outright, even when it’s clever or creative. We’ve replaced taste with a witch hunt.
Ironically, this means we’ve created a new form of lazy judgment to fight what we call lazy creation.

Maybe Slop is the Cure
Here’s my fever dream:
AI slop becomes so overwhelming that social media implodes under the weight of its own gluttony. Engagement drops. Platforms die. Like actual cockroaches scurrying from the bright light, we return to smaller, interest-based forums. Maybe even *gasp* real-life conversation.
Maybe, just maybe, AI kills the content machine by feeding it so much crap that it finally chokes. And you know what?
I welcome it.

Final Thought (or Throwing a Match on the Pile)
Let’s not pretend AI ruined the party. It just showed up with a bigger shovel to dump on the same burning dumpster fire we’ve been roasting marshmallows over for two decades.
So if you’re mad that an LLM wrote a mid-tier self-help tweet, maybe check the mirror… we trained it on our own digital vomit.


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