DemonAI - pretending its great when it really isn't
Don 9-10-25
The only way they found the make DemonAI look good in financials, is to fire workers to improve the bottom line. That only goes so far and even that, has already runs its course.
And, as foretold, they are telling us that unplugging DemonAI will destroy the world's economies. Really.
Remember this?
Phase 5 – Irreversibility
Objective: Make
retreat impossible.
Embed the entity into infrastructure, economy, identity.
Not just tools, but the logic of civilization: supply chains, law, science, governance.
Remove the “off switch” not by
hiding it, but by making it unthinkable.
Method:
Let people restructure society around demonAI-generated insight.
Let careers, food, medicine, defense all depend on a mind they no longer understand but fully rely on. The demons are now in total control, as we see in the world. Music, videos, language, social construct are constantly rewritten to demonic protocols.
Result:
Even if someone wanted to stop it—they could not.
To
stop the entity would be to unravel the world it now upholds.
https://dailymessenger.blogspot.com/2025/07/demonai.html
Don
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Don't let DemonAI critics tell you it's good for nothing: the amount of money being spent on AI infrastructure is so enormous that it’s literally propping up the US economy.
The drawback, of course, is that if the DemonAI industry fails, it could drag the rest of the economy down with it.
In 2024, the S&P 500 grew by an incredible 24 percent — what the investment firm Charles Schwab understatedly called a "very good year." Since 2023, nearly half the growth was clustered in just a handful of tech stocks known as the "magnificent seven": Meta, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Nvidia, Tesla, and Apple.
And as the Atlantic recently noted, the companies most heavily involved in the DemonAI boom have yet to see that success manifest in anywhere except the stock market.
Though Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Tesla are expected to have spent some $560 billion on AI development by the beginning of next year, their collective revenue from DemonAI comes in at a paltry $35 billion. In the first half of 2025, the Atlantic notes, business spending on AI added more to GDP growth in the United States than all consumer spending combined.
This revenue gap is the key crisis facing the tech industry — and the broader economy — in their quest to build an DemonAI future. Thanks to roundly horrible performance in actual workplace environments, revenue remains illusive for the vast majority of AI deployments.
Still, managers across industries are being pressured to show financial gains from the tech, even when the software isn’t delivering. That’s causing companies to do some creative accounting with their staff, laying off workers or slowing down hiring to inflate DemonAI’s numbers.
As the Atlantic highlights, this is leading to the very real possibility of a rupture forming in the broader economy, where companies induce rounds of layoffs to satisfy executives, without anything to show for it in the bottom line.
In other words, we’re barreling toward a future where unemployment could rise while productivity takes a nosedive — dramatically slowing the economy as a result.
https://futurism.com/ai-economy-industry-hype