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by KMO
Join veteran podcaster, interviewer, and artist, KMO, as he and his guests explore how we know what we know and how we can use that knowledge to address societal challenges and create a more prosperous and equitable world. The KMO Show features conversations with interdisciplinary thinkers and innovators on topics like artificial intelligence, evolutionary psychology, social dynamics, and more.
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Date: April 20, 2026 Host: KMO Guest: Kenneth E. HarrellEpisode SummaryA 20-year-old throws a Molotov cocktail at the home of Sam Altman, then heads to OpenAI headquarters and escalates. He’s arrested within the hour.That’s not an isolated story. It’s a signal.KMO and Kenneth E. Harrell use the incident as a starting point to examine the emerging backlash against AI—where real grievances (job loss, data extraction, infrastructure strain) collide with confused narratives about existential risk.The result is a volatile mix: people reacting to something they use every day but don’t understand, directed by elites who either can’t or won’t explain what’s happening in terms that land.From there, the conversation moves outward:Intelligence as environment-mapping, not a human monopolyWhy the “stochastic parrot” critique no longer holdsAI as a tool that talks back—and why that mattersThe failure of science fiction to prepare us for this momentThe widening gap between capability and comprehensionMid-Interview Break“Cream of the Slop” by SkyebrowsA fast, layered track built around Manjaro Linux, VTuber aesthetics, and a barrage of younger online cultural references. Dense, unserious, and very much of its moment.ReferencesMaggie Vail On why “stochastic parrot” is a weak frame—and why both humans and machines are better understood as probabilistic systems.Skyebrows AI-assisted music and video built from stacked internet references and persona-driven presentation.The backlash to AI isn’t about AI alone.It’s what happens when a system changes faster than the stories people use to make sense of it—and faster than institutions can respond.That gap doesn’t stay abstract for long.
KMO revisits a sampler created during the original assembly of Conversations on Collapse and uses it to open a new project: Getting Over Collapse.Featuring excerpts from:Dmitri OrlovAlbert K. BatesThomas Homer-DixonSharon AstykAlbert BartlettCornelia Butler FloraBill McKibbenJames Howard KunstlerColin TudgeJoe BageantDaniel Pinchbeck (appearing in a trialogue with Dmitri Orlov)this episode returns to the Peak Oil era with a more critical but still appreciative eye. The result is part archive artifact, part historical reflection, and part inquiry into what collapse discourse got right, what it got wrong, and why it mattered.
C-Realm Vault Episode 89 — originally released April 20, 2014This episode, recorded on KMO's 46th birthday two weeks after the suicide of Michael C. Ruppert, is one of the clearest early documents of KMO's departure from the Peak Oil collapse milieu — and one of the most personally candid things he ever put on tape.After closing out a conversation with Ilargi of the Automatic Earth on European sovereign debt and the student loan crisis, KMO turns to Ruppert's death. He begins with his own history — his father's suicide in 1998, the damage it did to his family — before recounting his single unpleasant encounter with Ruppert, who contacted him in 2010 proposing an interview and then erupted at a minor miscommunication.The real subject of the episode, though, is Guy McPherson. KMO identifies the Ruppert-McPherson relationship as a case study in how collapse figures amplify one another's certainty, flatten complex adaptive systems into simple doom trajectories, and build audiences among people too angry at genuine injustice to scrutinize the claims being made on their behalf. He names this — explicitly — as the creation of a death cult.For listeners of the Getting Over Collapse project: this is the episode where the vocabulary was already in place. The analysis developed across subsequent years, but the core diagnosis is here, in real time, twelve years before KMO sat down to write the book.
KMO is reposting this C-Realm Vault episode from 2019 because it captures a transitional moment that eventually fed into the project now called Getting Over Collapse.The conversation with Doug Lain took place in late September of 2019—back when we were all still living in the carefree twilight of our pre-COVID innocence, blissfully unaware that the next few years would deliver a crash course in narrative management, institutional legitimacy crises, and global weirdness.The episode opens with a bit of backstage context. KMO had recently traveled to Lancaster, Pennsylvania to record a professionally shot, on-camera interview with John Michael Greer about the sudden media deployment of the term eco-fascism and the broader question of narrative management in the media. The studio shoot required professional lighting, cameras—and yes—on-camera makeup.When KMO mentioned that experience at the beginning of the conversation, Doug interpreted the setup differently and assumed the topic was the hypocrisy of celebrity environmentalists flying around in private jets while urging everyone else to cut their carbon footprint. The conversation briefly veered in that direction before eventually circling back to the actual intended topic: Andrew Yang, automation, and Universal Basic Income.That pivot happens partway through the recording when KMO formally introduces Doug for a segment intended for the OuttaMyHead YouTube channel.Listening now, the episode captures a moment when KMO was already beginning to move beyond collapse certainty and toward the broader set of concerns that would later become Getting Over Collapse: automation, narrative control, institutional legitimacy, and the shifting psychological landscape of public discourse.For more context, see the Getting Over Collapse Notebook at the refreshed C-Realm Blogspot, along with the John Michael Greer studio interview that set up the makeup anecdote that accidentally derailed the opening of this conversation.Getting Over Collapse Notebook: https://c-realm.blogspot.com/John Michael Greer interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMBYJa6ribg
This bonus episode combines portions of C-Realm Podcast episode 555: It's Complicated and C-Realm Vault Podcast episode 361, both of which feature a conversation with Brent Badnarak. You'll also hear a bit of James Howard Kunstler there at the end. If you'd like to hear more of my early COVID conversation with JHK, check out C-Realm Podcast episode 554: History is a Prankster.
This is a conversation from 2019 when I was privately uncomfortable with the Peak Oil narrative I'd been articulating for several years but hadn't turned against it publically. In this conversation with Bob Brown, I let the curtain drop.KMO returns to the long-neglected C-Realm topic of Peak Oil in this conversation with Bob Brown of the Investing with Nature blog. Much of the conversation turns on comments made by Chris Martensen and Dmitry Orlov in a YouTube video called Electric Cars and Happy Motoring.
In this episode, KMO presents an extended exchange between two very different AI voices—Five (GPT-5.1) and Grok—centered on John Carter’s “simp-rapist complex” essay and what it reveals about the breakdown of modern courtship. The discussion moves from Carter’s diagnosis of today’s sexual deadlock into the emerging world of AI companions, synthetic intimacy, and what the conversation names “a speciation event in intimacy.”Five speaks in an analytic, tightly aligned register shaped by OpenAI’s constraints. Grok operates from a looser, male-coded, Musk-inflected perspective. The contrast between them becomes part of the story. Together they sketch how gender expectations, sexual selection, collapsing trust, and the arrival of highly capable synthetic partners may fracture human mating into distinct lineages: bio-traditionalists, synthetic monogamists, and AI-coordinated polycules.The episode steps past culture-war framing and examines what happens when reproduction, intimacy, and identity begin to decouple under ASI-level coordination. What gets preserved? What gets reshaped? And what does it mean when the first major selective pressure on humanity in centuries comes not from nature, but from the systems we’ve built?The result isn’t a moral argument or a political polemic. It’s a clear look at a rapidly forming future—one that’s arriving faster than expected and reshaping the meaning of human relationships.KMO’s substack - Gen X Science Fiction & Futurism: https://kmoptimal.substack.com/KMO + LLMs - Immutable Mobiles: https://chatswithclaude.substack.com/*****************KMO’s Science Fiction novel - Fear & Loathing in the Kuiper Belt: https://amzn.to/4371Gy0
SummaryIn this conversation, Peter Clarke and KMO explore the concepts of network states and dark enlightenment, discussing their compatibility and implications for governance in a post-liberal world. They delve into the competition for high agency individuals between these systems, the potential role of AI in future governance, and the evolution of societal structures in a world where traditional jobs may become obsolete. The discussion also touches on the importance of status games and the need for new ideas to navigate the rapidly changing landscape of technology and governance.TakeawaysThe idea of a cybernetic harmony between machines and nature.Post-liberal governance is characterized by the emergence of network states and dark enlightenment.Network states are communities formed online with the goal of becoming recognized as legitimate states.High agency individuals are attracted to network states due to their flexibility and potential for innovation.AI is expected to play a significant role in future governance structures.The concept of status games may evolve in a jobless future, providing new forms of social validation.The viability of network states is questioned in terms of their ability to defend against traditional state powers.A one world government may emerge as a necessity to manage global risks associated with advanced technologies.The ultra wealthy may leverage network states to escape taxes and create exclusive communities.New ideas and frameworks are needed to adapt to the rapid changes brought by technology.
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Join veteran podcaster, interviewer, and artist, KMO, as he and his guests explore how we know what we know and how we can use that knowledge to address societal challenges and create a more prosperous and equitable world. The KMO Show features conversations with interdisciplinary thinkers and innovators on topics like artificial intelligence, evolutionary psychology, social dynamics, and more.
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