HILARIOUS: Point Form Of Dem Platform Given To AI … Here Are The Parties They Matched With

It was a very simple experiment. Write a list of key Dem positions, feed it to AI without any party affiliation… and ask it to name the past and present parties that most closely resemble it.

Credit for the experiment goes to someone who is NOT typically a friend of traditional conservativism: Eric Weinstein.

Here’s the original post. You can see for yourself how much effort was made to keep the language objective and unbiased.

‘Worldwide and throughout history’ opened up possibilities that made this experiment so much more interesting.

Can you guess what the answers were?

For a party working hard to brand itself as ‘defenders of democracy’… the answers weren’t good. (Screencaps are ‘clickable’ to see the original.)

A whole heap of people joined the fun and posted their results. Here’s a sample:

Here’s Seán Ono Lennon‘s reply (irony noted):

The party you’ve described has characteristics that are historically and globally associated with certain authoritarian or collectivist political movements, particularly those that prioritize state power, group rights, and ideological control over individual liberties.

Here are some political movements or parties with similar elements:

1. **Communist or Socialist Parties** (20th Century, various countries):
– These parties have historically promoted state-controlled education and collective control over child-rearing, often reducing parental authority.
– Equality of outcome (rather than equality of opportunity) has been a hallmark of socialist and communist ideologies, where economic and social leveling is pursued through central planning.
– Restrictions on free speech for the sake of societal security have been common, often under the justification of maintaining ideological purity or preventing dissent.
– Candidate selection has often been controlled by party elites rather than through open elections.
– Some socialist and communist regimes have endorsed policies related to reproductive control, although the extent and focus vary.

2. **Fascist Parties** (e.g., Mussolini’s Italy, Franco’s Spain):
– These movements often emphasized the state’s role in controlling educational and social systems, placing the collective good above individual or familial rights.
– While not promoting equality of outcome in the same way as communists, fascist regimes were similarly anti-liberal in their control of speech and dissent, prioritizing national or state interests over individual freedoms.
– Candidate selection was generally controlled by party elites in these regimes.

3. **Modern Progressive Movements** (in some Western democracies):
– Elements such as the promotion of speech restrictions for the sake of public safety, emphasis on equality of outcome (sometimes framed as equity), and shifts in control from individuals (e.g., parents) to institutions (e.g., the state) are seen in certain progressive policies.
– Resistance to voter ID laws and the inclusion of topics like gender identity and reproductive rights in school curricula are more common in modern progressive or left-leaning parties in democracies, although interpretations and degrees vary across countries.

While no single political party in history perfectly matches this description, there are aspects of these policies found in various authoritarian regimes as well as in modern progressive movements, depending on the specific context and nation.


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By Kate Stephenson
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