
Doom Debates! Did Eliezer Yudkowsky Really Call for VIOLENCE? — Debate with John Alioto
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Apr 18, 2026 John Alioto, an independent AI engineer with a CS degree from UC Berkeley and 25 years building production AI, debates violent rhetoric in AI conversations. They tackle Eliezer Yudkowsky's TIME wording about airstrikes. Short exchanges cover treaty enforcement, whether enforcement language equals a call to violence, the risk of provocative phrasing, and softer alternatives for persuasion and deterrence.
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Sam Altman Attacks Spark Social Media Backlash
- Liron recounts recent attacks at Sam Altman's house and the Molotov suspect's brief PazAI Discord activity as context for heated online reactions.
- He uses this to explain why people quickly linked violent acts to AI-doomer rhetoric on social media.
Airstrikes Appear In Yudkowsky Time Piece
- Eliezer Yudkowsky's Time article escalates from policy to explicit violent enforcement by naming airstrikes as an option.
- Liron reads the passage including “Be willing to destroy a rogue data center by airstrike,” highlighting how the text moves from moratorium proposals to kinetic enforcement.
Violent Rhetoric Undermines Persuasion
- John Alioto argues violent rhetoric silences persuasion and weakens movements.
- He contrasts 'winning in the area of ideas' (Carl Sagan) with violent tactics (Weather Underground) to show rhetoric shapes long-term influence.
