Tuesday, June 16, 2026

overstimulated dopamine system

 

A 6 year old losing his mind over a tablet is doing something his brain is physically incapable of stopping. The apps kids use run on a variable ratio reinforcement schedule. The reward lands after an unpredictable number of taps. Sometimes the next level, sometimes a new character, sometimes nothing. Behavioral scientists proved in the 1950s that this exact pattern produces the most compulsive, hardest to extinguish behavior of any reward structure ever tested. It is the same schedule slot machines run on. Now point that at a 6 year old. The prefrontal cortex, the part that handles impulse control and delayed gratification, does not finish wiring until the mid 20s. In a 6 year old it is barely online. So the parent is asking a child to self-regulate against software tuned by teams of adult engineers to be maximally compelling, using the one reinforcement pattern evolution made hardest to resist. "No amount of time was ever enough" is tolerance. The reward system adapts to the dose, the same screen time stops landing, the brain demands more. Standard addiction curve. "A fight every single day" is what happens when you cut off a variable ratio reward. The behavior spikes before it fades, because the brain learned that pushing harder eventually pays. The tantrum is the system working as designed, not the kid being difficult. "3 hours later he was a different kid" is the tell. That is roughly how long a young, overstimulated dopamine system needs to settle back toward baseline. The flat, irritable version was withdrawal. The child who showed up after lunch was the actual child. The kid was never the problem. He was outgunned by software the smartest behavioral scientists alive helped design, carrying a brain that will not have the hardware to fight back for another 20 years.


The iPad kid epidemic is going to be looked back on as one of the biggest parenting mistakes of the 2010s and 2020s....





What would you do with your life if you didn’t have to spend it surviving.

 

Jeff Bezos doesn’t think AI will cause mass unemployment. He thinks it will cause mass labor scarcity. That single inversion collapses the entire doomer thesis. Bezos: “I think what’s actually gonna happen is we’re gonna have labor scarcity as a result.” The pessimists are projecting scarcity economics onto a machine engineered for abundance. They see the future as today with fewer paychecks. They’re ignoring the collapsing cost of survival itself. A two-income household is not a cultural achievement. It is a thermodynamic requirement. Two adults grinding forty hours a week just to cover the baseline cost of housing, food, and energy. When AI saturates the supply chain, the cost of producing anything craters toward zero. One income covers what two could barely sustain. Bezos: “Two-earner households, perhaps one of those earners will decide not to be in the job market… Maybe some people who are working overtime will stop working overtime.” The workforce doesn’t shrink because workers get replaced. It shrinks because workers finally get the freedom to walk away. The media calls this mass unemployment. Physics calls it emancipation. This is the oldest pattern in civilization. The plow was supposed to starve farmers. The loom was supposed to end the textile trade. The assembly line was supposed to make human labor obsolete. Every prediction was wrong. Every time, the opposite happened. Living standards surged. Child labor ended. The weekend was invented. The workweek collapsed from seventy hours to forty. Productivity didn’t eliminate workers. It gave workers enough leverage to eliminate the conditions they hated. Bezos: “If I take you back to the plow, they can’t help but be shared that way. These inventions drive fundamental progress.” You don’t hoard a fundamental technology. You scale it until it becomes the operating system of the species. Bezos: “Somebody invents penicillin, and it does help everyone. The iPhone doesn’t get reserved for just a few people. It’s the inventions themselves that spread throughout society and improve lives.” AI will follow the same arc. Because the arc has never broken. Not once in ten thousand years. Bezos: “I know why people are pessimistic. They’re pessimistic because a bunch of smart people are telling them to be pessimistic. But those people are wrong.” Every generation has believed its technology was the one that would finally break the pattern. Every generation was wrong. Leverage requires desperation. Abundance destroys leverage. We built an entire civilization around the assumption that constant human exhaustion is a virtue. It was never a virtue. It was just the only math that worked. The machines aren’t coming to steal your labor. They’re coming to delete the requirement for it. The hardest part of the AI revolution won’t be losing your job. It will be answering a question that ten thousand years of survival never gave us time to ask. What would you do with your life if you didn’t have to spend it surviving.



As he lays off thousands. If he told the truth you would hang him. It makes zero sense. You literally invent the automation to counter human inefficiency and ineffectiveness. Pie in the sky dreaming thinking that creates jobs. Why wouldn’t those jobs be automated?

Bezos comparing AI to the plow and penicillin is clever — and misleading. There's one fundamental difference he conveniently ignores: The plow couldn't design a better plow. The loom couldn't build the next loom. Penicillin didn't recursively improve itself. AI can. And will. Claude is already writing code for Anthropic. Humanoids will soon build humanoids. Recursive self-improvement breaks every historical analogy Bezos leans on. Meanwhile, Amazon is already testing Digit humanoids in its warehouses. Labor costs are Bezos's single biggest expense after last-mile delivery. When he says "labor scarcity," he means "I won't need your labor anymore, but I'd rather you feel empowered than unemployed." "What would you do with your life if you didn't have to spend it surviving?" — beautiful question. But it assumes the abundance gets shared. Who decides that? The man who built a trillion-dollar empire on warehouse workers earning $15/hour? The iPhone spread because selling it to billions was profitable. Abundance spreads when sharing is profitable. When it's not — it stays behind gates. Ask any European who just lost access to Fable with one phone call.





Give kids a broom

 

Translated from French
In 1938, Harvard researchers launched the most ambitious study in history by tracking the lives of 724 people, from their adolescence until their death, in order to discover what truly makes a person happy and fulfilled. For decades, they analyzed their brains, their salaries, their relationships, and their traumas. After 85 years of data, they uncovered a surprising correlation that no one had expected. Professional success in adulthood did not depend on IQ, nor on parental wealth, nor on school grades. One of the most powerful predictors of success was something very simple: doing household chores during childhood. Taking out the trash or washing the dishes is not just a matter of cleanliness; it’s brain training. The study, known as the Grant Study, revealed that household tasks teach a lesson that no school can replicate: “the ethic of contribution.” When a child has to stop playing to set the table, they learn that the world does not revolve around them. They understand that they are part of an ecosystem and that their effort is necessary for the group to function well. The researchers found that children who participated in chores became adults who: – know how to recognize what needs to be done and do it without being asked (initiative); – feel more empathy for others’ work; – manage frustration and delayed gratification better. In the era of “helicopter parenting,” where we prevent children from getting bored or working, Harvard warns us that by protecting them from boring tasks, we are stripping them of the foundations of their future professional competence. If you want your child to become a fulfilled adult, don’t buy them more educational toys. Give them a broom. Source: Harvard Study of Adult Development (Grant Study) and Julie Lythcott-Haims (How to Raise an Adult). Universo Sorprendente.


overstimulated dopamine system

  Aakash Gupta @aakashgupta A 6 year old losing his mind over a tablet is doing something his brain is physically incapable of stopping. Th...