Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Thoughts on the PAWS AI protest. By Phil. Published on March 6, 2026. On Saturday, February 28, 2026, I attended my first ever protest. It was jointly organized by Pause AI, Pull the Plug and a handful of other groups I forget. I have mixed feelings about it. To be clear about where I stand, I believe that AI labs are worryingly close to developing superintelligence.
I won't be shocked if it happens in the next five years, and I'd be surprised if it takes 50 years at current trajectories. I believe that if they get there, everyone will die.
Chapter 2: What motivated the host to attend the Pause AI protest?
I want these labs to stop trying to make GLLMs smarter. But other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, I'm pretty bullish on AI progress. I'm aware that people have a lot of non-existential concerns about it. Some of those concerns are dumb, war to use, but others are worth taking seriously, deepfakes, job loss. Overall I think it'll be good for the human race.
Again, that's aside from the bit where I expect AI to kill us all, which is an important bit. The ostensible point of the march was trying to get Sam Altman and Dario Amadei to publicly support a pause in principle, to support a global pause on AI development backed by international treaty. I think this would be great.
Demis Hassabis has already said he would, though I think his exact words were I think so and I'd rather he be a bit more committed. I think a global pause treaty would be bad for the economy, and through it, bad for the people who participate in the economy, and I don't like the level of government oversight I think it would require.
But on the other hand, global human extinction would be pretty bad. My point estimate is that about 300 people showed up. 80% confidence interval. 200 to 500. We started outside OpenAI HQ.
Chapter 3: What are the host's concerns about the development of superintelligence?
My girlfriend and I were given orange and black placards, pause AI colors, with messages we endorsed. Pause AI, if you can't steer, don't race, just don't build AGI until there's expert consensus it won't cause human extinction a dot.
I think about half the placards were like that, a third were pull the plug branded, with pull the plug, or with sad looking electrical sockets and no text, and the rest were assorted individual ones. Fuck AI. Fuck it to death. A pig with a Vichat GPT logo for a butthole. I'm pretty sure there were also ones I liked. A few of the organisers gave brief talks, then we walked to Meta.
Two invited guests gave talks there, and we walked to DeepMind. One more talk, and off to Google proper. Two more talks. And then there was a people's assembly, more on that later. I kinda like the walking. It felt kinda good to be walking in a crowd of people where a bunch of them seemed to be on board with not committing suicide as a species.
Unfortunately, most of the speeches were frankly dumb. One speaker spent some time talking about how monopoly power is bad and companies having a fiscal duty to shareholders is bad. Since neither OpenAI nor Anthropic has a monopoly on cutting-edge AI or is publicly traded, I'm not sure why she thought this was relevant.
One speaker complained that new data centres were going to be powered by nuclear reactors, as if we're supposed to think nuclear power is a bad thing. One of the hosts repeatedly mentioned threats to children, women and young girls. This was the morning that Pete Hegseth had declared Anthropica supply chain risk, but someone said that Anthropic had folded to their demands.
The organisers can't be blamed for this one, but someone was handing out anti-designer babies leaflets. I am pro-designer babies. Mostly I felt like the vibe was a sort of generic lefty anti-big tech thing, which is not something I want to lend weight to.
There were a few references to human extinction, and I liked the speech given by Maxine Fawns, global head of Pause.ai, but I felt like the sensible stuff got overshadowed by the dumb. How did it turn into this? I don't have much sense of whether the attendees were mostly brought in by Pause.ai or by Pull the Plug.
but my guess would be that most of the speakers were organised by pull-the-plug or the other organising groups, maybe one speaker each, and speakers set the tone more than marginal attendees. Should I hold my nose and join in anyway? I think it's important for different groups to be able to rely on points of common interest, even if they have deep enduring disagreements.
But this didn't particularly feel like the other group was cooperating with me on that. And I'm not really a fan of uncomplicatedly supporting the lesser evil, even if the stakes are high. I don't know how to thread the needle between Northern Conservative Baptist Great Lakes Region Council of 1912? Die, heretic, and I don't like Kang, but at least he opposes Kodos.
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Chapter 4: What is the purpose of the global pause in AI development?
Pauseae. Cause we don't wanna die. Even better. Pull the plug. Pull the plug. A. I'd think this was okay, less good than pause AI, because it's less specific, but fine. But it's the name of a group that by this time I thought was kinda dumb, and I didn't want to promote that group, so I didn't join in this chant. Stop the slop. Stop the slop. Nah, slop is not what I'm worried about.
CEOs, back in the basement. Tech bros, back in the basement. Fuck you, arseholes. Unintelligible, freedom. For humans, not for clankers. Admittedly this was only one guy, but he shouted it a few times.
My snap judgment of this guy, look, I don't think this sort of snap judgment is super reliable, and talking this kind of shit about randos, even anonymous ones, feels like not something I want to lean into. But I also want to talk about my experience of this protest, and snap judgments I made during it are part of that, so here goes.
My snap judgment of this guy is some combination of, if the LLMs start walking around in robot bodies, he'll happily take a baseball bat to them forward slashed he's probably an okay guy as long as he isn't required to treat any member of a group he doesn't like as a moral patient. That's the end of the list. Occasionally there would be a call and response like, do we want bad thing to happen?
No. Are we gonna stop it? Yes. I don't remember if I chimed in on the predictive claims about the future. I felt kinda conflicted about it if I did.
I know we weren't really being asked to make snap predictive judgements about the future and all come to the same answer and yell it out simultaneously, and I don't think anyone's going to hold it against my briar score if we fail to stop bad thing, but... I dunno. Autism.
I endorse protest organizers continuing to use these calls and response until someone comes up with some better technology to do the thing they do. At one point a few people crossed through the walking line, and one of them said we're not counter-protesters, we're just crossing. I thought that was mildly funny and mildly confusing, because why would we have thought they were counter-protesters?
A few moments later one of them said they didn't find that funny in a tone that sounded to me like they thought we were offended. After the protest was a people's assembly. I think this bit was fully organised by Pull the Plug, and it's not the public-facing bit of the event, so it's worth talking about separately from the protest.
The format of this part was that people sat in small groups around a dozen or so tables and had a facilitated conversation about what are our concerns about AI and what do we think should be done about it. Then each table picked someone to summarize our conversation for the room, some of whom noticed that no one was giving them rounded-up police hand gestures and took advantage of this fact.
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Chapter 5: What were the key messages on the protest placards?
Not sure. I did not come away from this experience thinking that people's assemblies are the future of intelligent governance. I feel like I come across pretty snarky and conceited in this. I'm not gonna say that's not me, because, well, I don't think I get to call lots of people dumb and expect readers not to infer that I'm the type of person who thinks lots of people are dumb.
I do think this is kind of out of distribution for my writing and not how I want to usually write. But if I tried to write something more measured here, I think it would be less honest and I probably would never publish. But also, this piece more than most of what I write is about me. I could say, I can see why you'd be tempted to chant CEOs, back in the basement.
Tech bros, back in the basement, but I'm not a fan because. But I think it's more important, here, to say that my reaction to it is fuck you, assholes. If protest organizers want people like me to feel good about attending protests, they should know that that's my reaction to that chant. This article was narrated by Type 3 Audio for Less Wrong. It was published on March 6, 2026.
The original text contained eight footnotes which were omitted from the narration.