Too Doggone Funny

One of the most self-righteous SJWs in science fiction is getting cancelled over her use of AI in writing fiction:

Perhaps the biggest possible scandal among the BlueSky crowd is the use of AI. Traditional publishing has worked itself into a frenzy over the technology tool, and people are out looking for, in many cases, literal blood from people who utilize it. Now, Mary Robinette Kowal is under fire after admitting to using the tool in her latest DEI sci-fi screed.

The world first heard of Mary Robinette Kowal as she was brought into Brandon Sanderson’s Writing Excuses podcast as a co-host. The men there wanted to virtue signal by bringing in a female with feminist leanings as a “new perspective” for their audiences. The show’s tone soon changed from fun to something different, but it propelled Mary Robinette Kowal to some prominence in the industry.

Most of Kowal’s work appeared to be romances billed as sci-fi, for which she started winning the award circuit for her outspoken feminism with the John. W Campbell award for best new writer. Her clout in the industry increased, and soon, her award nominations did as well.

Like many writers in the elites, there’s little information on how much she’s sold or what kind of readership she’s cultivated, but a string of award wins and nominations a mile long.

Eventually, she parlayed her awards into a Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association (SFWA) presidency, where she began the decline of the professional organization into the embattled social club it is today.

Only the old school readers will remember this, but she’s also the woman that John Scalzi confessed to not-creeping on back in the day before serving as his Vice-President. Anyhow, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with writing with AI – I’ve now completed five books with it already, including two that will be absolutely groundbreaking, plus three very high-quality translations, including from Japanese and into French.

But the SJWs hate it, mostly because even vanilla AI writes better than they do. Like every other tool, AI is going to separate the writing elite capable of mastering it and turbo-charging their work from the slow-witted hacks who wouldn’t know their Murakami from their Murakami or their Kawakami from their Kawakami.

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