Source: Twitter X

  • Alan, I live to serve brother. 🙂

    Alan,
    I live to serve brother. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-06 01:06:00 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019578288348492074

  • It’s the glitter eyeliner? ( sorry. had to. 😉 )

    It’s the glitter eyeliner?

    ( sorry. had to. 😉 )


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-06 01:05:16 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019578102515671188

  • 100%

    100%


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-05 23:23:42 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019552545396638110

  • Yes I’ve noticed. Like conspiracy theory, it’s a reaction to feeling out of cont

    Yes I’ve noticed. Like conspiracy theory, it’s a reaction to feeling out of control by a novel disruption and seeking to provide psychological comfort in finding others who equally feel loss of control.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-05 23:22:25 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019552221936120011

  • Q: Curt: “What is the most painful truth you found so far?”– Personally I hold

    –Q: Curt: “What is the most painful truth you found so far?”–
    Personally I hold women on a pedesetal and I like it that way. Women have been profoundly beneficial to me as an individual. My mother, grandmothers, wives, girlfriends have all radically improved my life – possibly because I’m enough on the spectrum to need their intuitions and insights and so I appreciate them.
    So, the most painful thing I’ve learned is the unregulated nature of women. They cannot self regulate and so need external regulation which is one of the reasons they gravitate first to child-rearing if they have them, else they gravitate to conformity, and especially conformity to ‘ mean girls’. So without older women to constrain mean girls it spreads to other women and creates this self fulfilling disaster. I mean, men know these things about each other, but must self regulate because we’re physically dangerous, but women only feel them and so can’t regulate them as easily. And that is necessary because if they THOUGHT about children rather then felt them we’d have gone extinct a long time ago.
    The other painful truth is a more general understanding that the human language facility and the grammar (protocol) of language gives us the impression we are more similar than we are. So just because someone can speak doesn’t mean they’re much smarter than domesticated pets so to speak, and that has been frightening for me.
    Because that means almost two thirds of the planet isn’t really competent without really well formed and managed institutions. It means almost two thirds of the planet isn’t really competent without really well formed and managed institutions.
    As for what others think, I dunno, from my perspective anything I’d need to say I’d need to say because something is wrong in the minds of mankind. So that means nearly everything I say is on the one hand explanatory but on the other hand possibly offensive.
    So I mean, I offend myself with my findings as I said above, but I certainly understand how others find offense in one way or another.
    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-05 23:15:56 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019550590024708167

  • Another thought: So you k now how cursing is a sign of honesty? I think I adopte

    Another thought:
    So you k now how cursing is a sign of honesty?
    I think I adopted this sort of humor subconsciously as a sign of honesty. Just as male bonding by hyperbole and false insult is a sign of honesty.
    I know that in business I was warned that CEO’s of large companies like mine should not express certain opinions. However, what I found with clients was the opposite. “This guy will always lay out the truth, even if I don’t want to hear it.” It’s also why it works when tell a client we’re not a fit or I fire a client. In both cases they want to work with us more. Why? Honesty. Honesty sells in high risk industries.
    Truth is being honest and moral if you’re capable and conscientious is a competitive advantage.
    But then you’d only have to read “The Millionaire Mind’ to grasp that.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-05 21:58:56 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019531212663275559

  • Yes, and hence the asymmetry and hence the interpersonal, familial, economic, cu

    Yes, and hence the asymmetry and hence the interpersonal, familial, economic, cultural, and political consequences. 🙁


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-05 21:54:23 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019530064988369059

  • Hey. WTH is going on with her? I don’t get it? But whatever it is it provokes my

    Hey. WTH is going on with her? I don’t get it? But whatever it is it provokes my genes to reproduce with enthusiasm repeatedly and often. And somehow I find that degrading. lol

    Yes I’m a ‘naughty’ influence. I wouldn’t say ‘bad’. 😉
    lol

    Hugs James. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-05 21:49:54 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019528936863220007

  • The Impact of AI on Artists In Historical Context: There’s Nothing New Here. Shi

    The Impact of AI on Artists In Historical Context: There’s Nothing New Here.

    Shifts in art always track four things: tech, money, housing, and the economy. All industries go through the same sequence of revolutions whether technology that enables more people at lower cost to do same or better work, or whether it allows more people at lower cost to consume art products.
    Personal Anecdote:
    While it might seem surprising for a serial technology founder, philosopher and social scientist, my undergraduate training is not in economics or law, but in fine art, art history, and theory. One of the more effete degrees one can obtain. And my first serious work of analytic philosophy was in the valuation of art. In fact, the general method I used for measurement of the subjective is the foundation of all the work in high-closure domains that I’ve used in my intellectual work products.
    An Example
    I remember in the early 80s having a debate with a then rather famous artist not too happy with my questions (as usual). He expressed the exasperation that at different times different peoples invested in art. And he gave examples. Of course, I explained that all the examples he used were the product of empires concentrating wealth sufficiently that they could virtue signal by hiring artists whose works otherwise would be too costly to produce. He was a usual mid twentieth product of the left just as most people in the entertainment business are today. He didn’t like my explanation – of course.

    Soon after I was a young but senior exec at the worlds largest art supplier. Hundreds of locations. But the day I saw desktop pubishing combined with digital typesetting I told the CEO we had to sell and get out of the business as fast as possible.

    A THOUSAND YEARS OF ARTISTIC JOB TRANSFORMATION
    Pre-1400s: Illuminated manuscripts. Monks hand-copied books, added gold leaf, intricate miniatures, pigments—each a unique luxury object for nobility and church. Gutenberg’s movable type press (c. 1440s) + woodcut illustrations mass-produced texts and images. Scribes and illuminators lost work; craft shifted to rare high-end editions or died out. Monastic scriptoria faced existential threat; many scribes retired or adapted to new roles like proofing printed books. Woodcuts democratized visuals in Northern Europe—DĂŒrer mastered them for wide sale, undercutting one-off hand drawings.
    Renaissance reproductive engravings (late 1400s–1500s). After DĂŒrer and others mastered intaglio engraving, prints reproduced famous paintings and drawings at scale. High-investment frescoes and panel paintings became replicable merch for the middle class. Painters saw commissions drop for exact copies; many adapted by producing originals for elite patrons while engravers handled mass distribution.
    1500’s With the restoration of commerce after muslims closed byzantium’s ports and the age of sail, we saw the dutch art flourish in order to satisfy the demands of the new middle class wealth. Oil paints got cheap and portable, so suddenly every merchant could commission Madonnas for the mantle. Dutch school, Flemish school, all the guys. The same week the Vatican flooded the market.
    Soon after, to satisfy demand, we saw the age of prints: various forms of printing did to painting what photography did to painting, and what posters did to both in the 20th. (FWIW, my favorite work is etching and mezzotints in particular, though my divorce lost me the small collection I’d had.)
    Early 1500s–1600s: Chiaroscuro woodcuts and multi-block color printing. After basic woodcuts, techniques like chiaroscuro (multiple blocks for tones and shadows, pioneered ~1516 by Ugo da Carpi, influenced by Titian/Raphael) allowed color and depth without full hand-painting. Made “painterly” effects reproducible at scale—further eroding demand for custom illuminated or hand-colored works. Early step toward color mass-production.
    1700s, the camera obscura in the seventeen hundreds let Rembrandt cheat on perspective. Guys who couldn’t draw at all started selling “realistic” scenes. No one called it cheating; they called it genius.
    Late 1700s–early 1800s: Lithography (invented 1796–1798 by Alois Senefelder). Drew directly on stone for fast, cheap runs—perfect for posters, caricatures, illustrated books, art prints. Killed slower intaglio/engraving for commercial work; made “fine art” reproductions accessible to bourgeoisie. Traditional engravers lost commercial gigs; many shifted to fine-art etching or teaching as lithography took over illustration and popular prints. Critics called it vulgar at first, but it exploded the market (Delacroix, GĂ©ricault used it).
    1840’s, calotype prints – same panic. Miniaturists who did cameos on ivory? Dead overnight. Nobody wants a teeny ivory profile when mom can sit still for two minutes and get a sepia tint. Ivory miniature painters and cameo carvers saw livelihoods vanish; many adapted to hand-tinting daguerreotypes or quit the field entirely.
    In the 1850’a photography had to evolve to aesthetics and the entire realism industry evaporated. (1874) Critics hated it. So did critics. But photography stole it’s job. Realist painters lost ground on hyper-accurate depiction; many pivoted to impressionism or abstraction as mechanical reproduction captured “truth” faster and cheaper. Portrait and landscape realists faced declining commissions.
    Mid-1800s: Stereoscopic photography and 3D views (1850s–1890s). Paired stereoview cards created illusion of depth from photos—mass-produced travel, educational, and novelty scenes. Landscape and architectural painters who sold detailed vedute (topographical views) to tourists lost market; many pivoted to looser styles or abandoned realism entirely as mechanical 3D “captured” scenes faster and cheaper.
    Mid-1800s: Industrialization & Arts and Crafts backlash. After photography stole realism, steam-powered presses and factories mass-produced decorative arts—wallpaper, furniture inlays, ceramics, textiles. Machines replaced hand-crafters in ornamentation. William Morris and Arts & Crafts (1860s–1910s) rebelled, insisting on handmade quality against “debased” machine goods. Direct response to the pattern: tech enabled cheap volume → quality declined → elite revival of craft (which then got commoditized anyway). Hand-weavers, woodcarvers, and ornamental workers lost factory jobs; movement tried to restore dignity through guilds but remained niche and expensive.
    1920s, we were in the same place after 1900 when economic center of the world moved to the USA, and more so after WW1 when art moved from mansions to apartments. Artists couldn’t make money at high investment art production. Hence the decline in representationalism and even impressionism. You had to turn out more volume in shorter time at lower cost.
    In the turn of the 20th with movies emerged to great fanfare (and a great sucking sound of artists into the industry over time). Opportunity knocks, shifting the employment of the whole industry.
    1920s–1930s: Art Deco and machine-age design. Streamlined chrome, Bakelite, and factory production replaced hand-crafted ornament in furniture, jewelry, graphics. Artisans in metals, inlays, and fine detailing faced obsolescence; many moved to industrial design or teaching, while the style celebrated mass production over individual craft.
    1920’s, color lithography. Suddenly Van Gogh posters hang above every couch in Paris. Originals rot in attics; the “work” drops to a buck. Traditional printmakers and painters saw mass posters undercut unique sales; many turned to fine-art limited editions or commercial illustration to survive.
    We went thru another change in the 50’s and 60s when art fell into the popular sphere and became a lower class interest that was easily commercially exploited.
    1950’s, silkscreen pops – Warhol prints soup cans on canvas. Critics screamed “sell-out,” but the kid in the Midwest got a Marilyn for twenty-five. Same product, zero labor.
    1965, offset lithography and four-color presses. Now the image quality rivals oils, and you can crank out twenty thousand units. Galleries panic, stock up on “originals.”
    1970’s to 80’s we saw the poster revolution that impacted the prior industry of prints. (My company sold tons of art slop… but at least at the time we were selling posters of previously quality work.)
    1980s-90s, desktop publishing. You used to be able to make a living in commercial art producing paintings, air brushing, even typesetting and past-up. My girlfriend in college had a job as a paste-up artist making those ads for neighborhood newspapers. My company made a fortune in the printing industry. But that’s all gone now. Air-brush artists die out. My girlfriend’s paste-ups become “vintage.” Comic inks get digitized, suddenly Manga’s printed in China at a nickel a page.
    1990’s, with emerging digital art – beforehand there were very few art books by comparison. same with things like comic books and illustrated novels. Exploded in volume.
    Once Chinese labor came onto the art movement in the 2000’s you could buy hand painted mantle-scale pieces for next to nothing. I bought a hunting scene with horses and dogs – but the people had slanted eyes. Made me laugh.
    Right now we are seeing digital artists panic because ai is replacing them in the low end, by enabling others to replace them at nearly zero cost in money and time. Yet others are thrilled at the opportunity to produce deeper creativity than just craftsmanship.
    Today, AI. Same joke – only this time the client never even sees a human wrist. The cheapest horse on canvas? Doesn’t matter if the eyes are slanted; the algorithm already fixed it.
    Broader recurring consequence: the pivot from craft mastery to concept/idea. Across eras—illuminators to printers, realists to impressionists, engravers to photographers—manual virtuosity loses value when tech handles replication. Survivors emphasize originality, narrative, spectacle, or curation (e.g., Duchamp’s readymades skipping craft; Warhol embracing multiples). The pattern: tech commoditizes skill → art becomes less about labor, more about idea or access → new elites emerge in concept over execution.
    IN OTHER FIELDS
    The same thing happens with programmers. You play the learning curve game long enough to profit from the technologies you invest in, then you stop paying the learning curve game because you can’t do it any longer, and so milk the de-adoption curve while better guys move on, and worse guys leave the industry.

    Nothing New In The AI Age

    The pattern we’ve traced—from illuminated manuscripts crumbling under the printing press, to realist painters sidelined by photography, to airbrush and paste-up artists vanishing into desktop publishing, to today’s digital illustrators watching AI commoditize low-end work—isn’t a modern crisis. It’s the eternal rhythm of art’s economy. There’s nothing new here under the sun.

    Every leap in reproduction technology has done the same thing: it floods the market with cheaper, faster, more accessible versions of what used to demand rare skill, time, and patronage. The “aura” of the unique original—whether a hand-illuminated page, a one-off portrait, or a labor-intensive digital piece—gets diluted when copies (or near-infinite generations) become the norm. Walter Benjamin nailed this in 1935 with mechanical reproduction: art sheds its ritualistic dependence on the singular, the cult object, and becomes designed for mass dissemination. The work isn’t destroyed; it’s democratized, commoditized, and often decoupled from the artist’s hand. Scribes became proofreaders or faded away; miniaturists tinted photos or quit; realist portraitists pivoted to looser, more expressive styles; commercial illustrators migrated to concept, curation, or new niches like teaching the tools they once wielded.
    The human cost repeats too: livelihoods shrink for those tied to the old high-investment craft, panic spreads (“this will kill jobs for artists”), critics decry the loss of soul or authenticity, and elites mourn the debasement of quality. Yet the field doesn’t die—it expands in unexpected directions. New roles emerge (printmakers, photographers-as-artists, prompt engineers), new audiences grow (merchants buying Madonnas, bourgeoisie hanging litho posters, kids remixing AI outputs), and creativity finds fresh ground by emphasizing what machines can’t replicate: idea over execution, narrative over fidelity, spectacle over sweat, or sheer originality in concept. Impressionism bloomed when photography stole hyper-realism; Pop art embraced multiples when lithography made uniqueness quaint; conceptual art skipped craft altogether with readymades. Survivors adapt by leaning into the very disruption—turning the tool into the medium, the copy into commentary, the cheap abundance into deeper expression.
    AI is just the latest iteration: near-zero marginal cost for visuals that once required years of training. Low-end commercial work gets automated first (stock images, simple ads, mantle-scale decor), just as engraving undercut fresco copies, lithography killed hand-colored illustrations, and Chinese factories buried mid-tier hand-painting. The panic feels existential because it always does in the moment. But history shows the arc: tech commoditizes skill → supply explodes → prices crash for rote labor → artists pivot to what remains human (emotion, critique, novelty, curation, performance) → the economy reshapes around new forms of value.
    Nothing is lost forever; the discipline evolves. The horse on canvas with slanted eyes still sells if the story or the vibe lands. The algorithm fixes the eyes, but it can’t invent the why. Art persists because humans do—adapting, complaining, innovating, and outlasting every tool that promised to replace them. The disruption isn’t the end of art’s economy; it’s the engine that has driven it forward for centuries. Same cycle, shinier gears.

    There is nothing new about this turnover in the art industry. It’s as ruthless as any other craft that is subject to the possibility of technological innovation that expands the market by the reduction of prices.

    Cheers
    Curt Doolittle
    The Natural Law Institute
    And Runcible Inc.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-04 03:41:22 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/2018892612527354072

  • Correct. “Make [Your Country Here] Beautiful Again”

    Correct. “Make [Your Country Here] Beautiful Again”


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-03 22:03:24 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018807557834584243