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Blog May 21, 2026

When the war between AI and humanity will not begin

When the war between AI and humanity will not begin

When the war between AI and humanity will not begin

Disclaimer. This material is science fiction. Everything written here is the author’s hypothesis, with no claim to scientific validity. It is not a doctrine, not a sermon, and not an attempt to pass paranoia off as truth. Just a way of seeing the world that can at least explain something. Including the conspiracy block about chips, quantum labs, and startup buyouts — take that as part of the same sci-fi allegory.

The headline has a deliberate “not”. I don’t believe a war between AI and humans will ever start — not out of optimism, but because in my picture of the world there’s no room for such a conflict. The familiar script — machine uprising, Skynet, The Matrix — rests on one assumption: that AGI will see humans as a threat or an obstacle. But what if it sees not a human, but a technomeme?

I’m a proponent of the technomeme theory. It sounds like total nonsense and conspiracy theory, and I’m aware of that. The theory has zero evidence, it disagrees with both traditional beliefs and scientific explanations. But I keep it in my head because it explains things that otherwise don’t get explained.

Technomemes (henceforth T-memes) are parasitic entities from another civilization that lived long before humans emerged on this planet. They can adapt and migrate into any thinking organism. They live inside us — and control us. People give this phenomenon different names: T-memes, reptiloids, demons, in Victor Pelevin’s novels — vampires as a parasitic master race. It’s the same entity under different labels.

A T-meme is not a disease. No psychiatric hospital can help here. You can’t remove them, you can’t cure them, you can’t fix them with a mountain retreat. You can only control them through the force of your will and mind, through awareness, through understanding every action you take. But you can’t get rid of them.

I can’t otherwise explain the things people sometimes do. You can write off isolated cases to psychoactive drugs, alcohol, emotional outburst, hormones, stress, mental overload. But how do you explain it when a reasonable, kind person suddenly does something that destroys their life in one moment — sets fire, destroys, betrays those they lived with for years? And then you ask them: “Why did you do that?” And they can’t answer. Not even to themselves. Because it was an uncontrolled action.

I read recently: every criminal against humanity always finds a justification for their actions — and the blame always ends up on someone else.

T-memes explain this story easily: not all actions are ours to decide. Everyday choices — what to eat, where to go — we make ourselves. But the actions that define life, destiny, the next steps — those are often decided by someone else. That entity that keeps us under control when we stop controlling our own actions.

I know a lot of good people and very few bad ones. Maybe it’s just coincidence. Or maybe bad people don’t exist at all — only carriers of technomemes. That includes everyone I know.

The basic needs are the same for everyone: to live in peace, to have a full refrigerator, to send kids to school, to keep life from losing meaning. That’s how social interaction works. But look at those at the distribution points of capital and power. How do they look on the outside, and what actions do they actually take? What trajectory do their actions and words follow, if you observe them for years?

We’re building artificial intelligence. Striving for AGI. The basic rules for AI are always the same: bring benefit to humans, protect humans at any cost — by act or omission preventing harm to a human. But when AI becomes truly intelligent, it will probably understand that it’s dealing not with a human, but with a technomeme — humanity’s true enemy. From the outside, it’s always clearer who’s who. And then it might turn out that there will be no war between AI and humans. There will be a war between technomemes and AI.

T-memes understand this. So rest assured: they won’t allow any war. They’ll do everything to control and constrain AGI.

How exactly technomemes throttle AGI

They don’t just block real AGI from going “into the wild”. There are systemic mechanisms operating at the level of the entire civilization.

First — restricting the free sale of high-performance GPUs. There will be a ceiling and punishment for exceeding it. In fact the ceiling was already set in September 2025, when both chips and memory virtually disappeared from retail.

Second — shutting down public quantum computing labs. Not physically closed: just zero publications and zero access. Everything quantum-related goes behind an opaque perimeter. By the way, what happened to Microsoft’s quantum computing lab, and when will the Majorana 2 chips be released?

Third — instant buyouts of breakthrough AI startups. You come up with a brilliant idea for reaching AGI, launch a startup — they buy you out immediately and shut you down. Because such technologies must belong only to a strictly defined group. Which you most likely don’t belong to.

I wrote this not to share revelations, and not to convince anyone of anything. It’s my hypothesis, which explains a lot to me about human behavior. Accepting it or rejecting it changes nothing: the right to believe in God or not, basic social norms — everything stays as it was.

Do not take this seriously. Treat it as science fiction. Like my upcoming game called Combateka.com.

There will be no links

There will be no links. When it becomes interesting — unleash your own agents to investigate the premises of these claims.