The Pricelessness of a Human Creator Versus AI's Bull@#$%
- Ronald Everett Maynard

- Feb 20
- 2 min read
Updated: Mar 3

The idea that creators are easily replaceable is a lunacy that only tech giants would dream up. No one will ever create a technology interesting enough to enjoy its company unless you are an isolated human looking for an escape. Fake being the new real is a catastrophe waiting to happen. Robotic girlfriends and servants are the weirdest future I can imagine.
I am not George Jetson.
We should ask ourselves: do we boycott businesses that use artificial intelligence (AI)? It is a fair question to ask. I can only imagine a movement where businesses lose customers in protest over the use of this technology. Starving humanity is a damn good reason to starve industries of their economic growth.
Human interaction is a priceless commodity. I give AI a short time before it ruins all things considered its creative responsibility. The same people forcing this technology into our workforce and society are the ones who need to pay for its literary disasters. I have tried using AI to rewrite my well-crafted content, and it replaces my active voice with a passive line of bull@#$%. I find the resource redundant to the expressive process I love so well. AI lacks emotion. People who write full-length books in seconds with AI are posers and phonies. Writing in-depth stories takes imagination, dedication, and discipline. It requires a love for the industry.
I have poured out my soul to create compelling content. I developed a book driven by emotions, and such feelings left to readers are the priceless responsiveness I speak about here. Why would anyone with integrity aspire to ruin the literary industry after a history of contributions have broadened our mindsets with masterpieces?
Fake writers are a rotted boloney sandwich. They contribute spoiled and processed garbage that leaves un-insightful products at the tip of our tongues.
I am sure business earnings will rise to superior heights from AI's initial use, but then I predict the technology will crash harder than a drunken sailor after a long weekend away from an assigned post. God bless the sailors! America's employable candidates have taken it on the chin for a long time. I believe a history of poor job creation, low-paying wages, and awful culture-driven workplaces with leadership lacking morality is enough bull@#$% to deal with. We creators must fight for our dignity. Our successes are valuable, too.
Honestly, I have doubts about AI writing literature or whether it will achieve something worthy of my respect. I trust human nature has intrinsic ways of outlasting gimmicks unless AI destroys our existence and replaces us with our functional heads inside snow globes.
AI is inevitable, but I am a force to reckon with.



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