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The defense against slop and brainrot
12 CharlesW 6 8/26/2025, 8:27:11 PM pauljun.substack.com ↗
The thing that alarms me about this post is that this person clearly believes that each individual needs to engage in the war for our attention and has the means to do so. When the reality is that the regimen he proposes is beyond the "average" person for a variety of reasons, be they physical, emotional, or mental. For high-school dropouts working two full-time jobs, exhausted parents, and the vast majority of people generally lodged in the gears of the machine and burdened by everyday life, the time and more importantly, energy that is consumed by this routine just does not exist.
I would like to know how much time this routine takes out of each day and week, and what other obligations and opportunities he is forgoing to pursue it. Self-improvement is a noble goal if it benefits the fabric of society, our friends, family, loved ones, but if it simply results in the production of more "engaging content" then perhaps the time would be better spent elsewhere. Nobody will care how ripped or intellectually well-rounded you were when you are dead if your life did not make a positive impact on others.
What happened to making life enjoyable for oneself? That’s also a noble goal. And if being intellectually well rounded makes you happy, then go for it.
This isn’t a defense against slop and brain rot. It’s just basic attention whoring.