I highly doubt Moore’s suicide had anything to do with message board BS.This is absolutely devastating and I'm sickened over it.
I think sometimes we ALL need to remember these guys are human. Making character accusations about players, making ANY accusations about players for that matter, because they don't perform the way we WANT them to ... I think sometimes we really need to remember that.
Jesus Christ this is so sad
So tragic. He had missed two seasons due to injury. Must have been tough. I feel for his family.
RIP
I'm sure it had nothing to do with it. Just a terribly sad, tragic thing that happened.I highly doubt Moore’s suicide had anything to do with message board BS.
God only knows what happened inside that garage. I suspect CTE played a large role as it did in others’. But I have no clue from this distance and this family is in my prayers.
I am sorry to hear of his passing. Purdue’s victory over #1 OSU with him as the star player & difference maker looms large.
You really do not know what social media he consumed, This board may be tame by comparison. We have seen where AI can lead kids to suicide. Got to imagine that message boards can do similar damageI highly doubt Moore’s suicide had anything to do with message board BS.
God only knows what happened inside that garage. I suspect CTE played a large role as it did in others’. But I have no clue from this distance and this family is in my prayers.
I am sorry to hear of his passing. Purdue’s victory over #1 OSU with him as the star player & difference maker looms large.
I sadly know better than most and looking back itI'm sure it had nothing to do with it. Just a terribly sad, tragic thing that happened.
Also, these boards can be toxic as hell when things don't go the way people want. Let's not ever forget these guys are human and deal with pressures that most of us can never imagine.
I agree that mental health is on the decline, and wholeheartedly that we need to check in on our loved ones.Unfortunately, I see more and more suicides coming from Moore’s generation and millennials. I know a ton of millennials myself who are depressed as ****. A lot of it is post-COVID lockdown craziness and the other is the lack of relationships - women not wanting to have kids, etc. And this doesn’t even take into account the coming unemployment bounce as AI continues to “increase efficiency” while reducing labor.
Always check in on your people!
I’m not talking about white collar workers. You’re right about that. I’m talking blue collar, low skilled workers. They’re cooked. Can’t retrain themselves and no alternative to what they’re doing.I agree that mental health is on the decline, and wholeheartedly that we need to check in on our loved ones.
AI will reduce some jobs and increase others. Even my company “forces” us to use AI, but it’s purely to augment what we do and we’re always busy.
It is just another tool.
So you’re worried about Elon’s robots displacing them?I’m not talking about white collar workers. You’re right about that. I’m talking blue collar, low skilled workers. They’re cooked. Can’t retrain themselves and no alternative to what they’re doing.
My philosophies.Unfortunately, I see more and more suicides coming from Moore’s generation and millennials. I know a ton of millennials myself who are depressed as ****. A lot of it is post-COVID lockdown craziness and the other is the lack of relationships - women not wanting to have kids, etc. And this doesn’t even take into account the coming unemployment bounce as AI continues to “increase efficiency” while reducing labor.
Always check in on your people!
One of the issues is it could reduce a lot of entry level jobs and then where do they get the people for the next level?I agree that mental health is on the decline, and wholeheartedly that we need to check in on our loved ones.
AI will reduce some jobs and increase others. Even my company “forces” us to use AI, but it’s purely to augment what we do and we’re always busy.
It is just another tool.
So true, so sad. And meanwhile some lowlives on here - and other message boards - call injured players “splinter boys” or worse things. Most of them never played and have no idea how brutal it can be on the body.
I’ve been thinking of volunteering for a suicide hotline but the time requirement is difficult between fatherhood, work, and life. I’m often told I have a “good voice” (my mom wanted me to be a vet because I can sometimes calm animals) and I’d like to put it to use helping others.
Never hesitate, call 988
Yes. I went to McDonalds the other day and there was zero counter ordering. Wait until 11 robots are making the food with 1 human manager… what happens to the 10 other employees? They don’t have transferable skills.One of the issues is it could reduce a lot of entry level jobs and then where do they get the people for the next level?
I consider it to be a potentially powerful tool but with the tremendous potential to also be very dangerous. Right now there deem to be no guardrails
Thank God for no counter ordering. I worked at a pizza hut for a brief time in HS and that was the worst part of the job. Making pizzas was where it was at.Yes. I went to McDonalds the other day and there was zero counter ordering. Wait until 11 robots are making the food with 1 human manager… what happens to the 10 other employees? They don’t have transferable skills.
A Reddit-style comment from this source checks outUnfortunately, I see more and more suicides coming from Moore’s generation and millennials. I know a ton of millennials myself who are depressed as ****. A lot of it is post-COVID lockdown craziness and the other is the lack of relationships - women not wanting to have kids, etc. And this doesn’t even take into account the coming unemployment bounce as AI continues to “increase efficiency” while reducing labor.
Always check in on your people!
Why are you such a ******* *******? I was making a serious comment and then you come in here and act like a fool.A Reddit-style comment from this source checks out
Not really. They will have no insurance or health benefits. They work all shifts. Just think California, $25 min wage With benefits likely gets it up to $45-50 per hour. Robots would likely put in 4500-5k hours per year. No calling in sick or arriving late. That means each one replaces $200-250k of labor costs per year and generally results in a lot less headaches. yes CA is an extreme example but you are already seeing fast food companies moving out of there. And it is happening in a lot of other places as wellThank God for no counter ordering. I worked at a pizza hut for a brief time in HS and that was the worst part of the job. Making pizzas was where it was at.
How many customers will trust an entirely robotic customer experience?
Those robots will cost more than the minimum wage they’re paying most employees.
People are obsolete? Interesting takeNot really. They will have no insurance or health benefits. They work all shifts. Just think California, $25 min wage With benefits likely gets it up to $45-50 per hour. Robots would likely put in 4500-5k hours per year. No calling in sick or arriving late. That means each one replaces $200-250k of labor costs per year and generally results in a lot less headaches. yes CA is an extreme example but you are already seeing fast food companies moving out of there.
It will start with some mistrust but over time I would guess that much of that will be overcome as there becomes less and less alternatives,, Especially if it allows the restaurants to charge less and stay in business. Saw a show on about the top fast food restaurants and the difficulties they face,, Pretty much all of the fast food restaurants face similar problems High prices that they have to charge, Heck go to McDonalds (I don't) and the cost for what is supposed to be a cheap meal probably runs closer to $10-15, Food inputs are part of that but labor costs are huge and likely bigger part of the problem,
But it is not just there, Everything from insurance to law will be affected, Much of law is boilerplate forms (you know, entry level jobs) and a lot of that will be automated, You will be hard pressed to find an industry that will not be affected, Face it . People are obsolete
It is somewhat a joke and a warning at the same time, Did not say I liked it, Just as they push further and further into AI as fast as they can with robotics in the sidecar and no guardrails....... It can be a tremendous boon to productivity. But it will also likely cause tremendous upheaval. We are already seeing cases where people have more of a relationship with their AI than they do with actual, you know, people. Carry that to the next step and you have robotic companions that replace people, Not sure how healthy for society that is , People not prepared for the new reality are likely to be left in the dust and this reality is so much more of a change than they have been in the past, There will be winners and losers as there always are. But this time some of the losers will be people that have not been in the past and there are potentially a lot more of them. Software engineers, lawyers, customer service and on and on, Then have too many people idle and....It often does not end wellPeople are obsolete? Interesting take
![]()
I think of it in terms of a curve of which jobs are likely to be disrupted first by AI vs later by AI. Like, even as somebody who isn't overly bullish in the short term on AI adoption I'll tell you i wouldn't want to be a current college student or recent grad in software/tech, accounting/auditing, financial/date analysis, etc. Tools can already replicate the work of junior associate types in those fields pretty well in a fraction of the time... as long as a senior associate or partner is running it .On the other hand, if you do something physical or that primarily deals with people you're more insulated. I deal primarily with people over a very long and complex cycle, so I feel pretty confident what I do will be later down the road from many other functions before it's replaceable.I suppose there are good opinions out there about what jobs will be most protected from the advent of AI and robotics, but pretty much everything I have read is all over the board. I saw CMT's comment on the difficulty in replacing construction workers among others which I thought was insightful and which struck close to home. As I went through my career I saw many a job outsourced overseas but never construction work which in essence is a custom and site specific task. My question is what job traits will AI (and robotics ) have difficulty replacing? My thoughts:
- Work location variable.
- Highly variable physical task.
- Relatively low numbers of positions required.
(Note: Unlike CMT I believe dental assistants are doomed because they fail these three criteria whereas a home healthcare nurse, for example, does not.)
- Strategic vs tactical work (Not sure about this.)
- Positional risk profile that humans refuse to assign to machines.
- Entertainment
I don't think I have scratched the surface and would be very interested in what others think . A lot of good minds here who can bring their experience to bear.
-
Things that are more hands on such as trades and construction work will likely have the most staying power, But the jobs with repeatable tasks whether they are manual labor and or forms will be in danger first,I suppose there are good opinions out there about what jobs will be most protected from the advent of AI and robotics, but pretty much everything I have read is all over the board. I saw CMT's comment on the difficulty in replacing construction workers among others which I thought was insightful and which struck close to home. As I went through my career I saw many a job outsourced overseas but never construction work which in essence is a custom and site specific task. My question is what job traits will AI (and robotics ) have difficulty replacing? My thoughts:
- Work location variable.
- Highly variable physical task.
- Relatively low numbers of positions required.
(Note: Unlike CMT I believe dental assistants are doomed because they fail these three criteria whereas a home healthcare nurse, for example, does not.)
- Strategic vs tactical work (Not sure about this.)
- Positional risk profile that humans refuse to assign to machines.
- Entertainment
I don't think I have scratched the surface and would be very interested in what others think . A lot of good minds here who can bring their experience to bear.
-