Talk to Read


Yessentuki Voice transcription was supposed to free us from typing. Instead it has enslaved us to reading gibberish..

Kurduvādi A woman dictates: “Meet me at the bank.” What appears on screen: “Meat me at the bang.”

You read it. You pause. You have questions. You call her. She sighs and repeats herself slowly.

This is what we get for trusting a machine to understand English.

The technology promised efficiency. Speak into your phone, and words appear on screen. No more fumbling with keyboards. No more typos. Just thought converted directly into text.

We believed it. We adopted it. We surrendered the English language to it.

Now we live in a world where a text message is incomprehensible unless you hear it aloud. Grammar collapses. Punctuation disappears. Capitalization becomes noise. Literacy was replaced by coding, and new never knew. A simple phrase becomes a riddle you solve only by listening to what the sender actually intended.

Current speech-to-text systems achieve accuracy rates between 70-80 percent. One error in every six or seven words.

At that density, meaning dissolves. Your brain cannot stitch coherence from that much noise.

But we have accepted it. We have normalized it. We read garbled text and think nothing of it.

Worse, we have reversed the equation. If a message does not parse on the page, we listen to it. We sound it out. We perform an act of oral reconstruction that writers performed for centuries in reverse. Writing was the technology that freed us from the tyranny of speech. Now we are chained back to it.

Young people (those under twenty-five) are the most affected. They dictate everything. They grew up thinking transcription was reliable.

It is not. They accept broken text as normal. They do not know what properly written English sounds like when read aloud because they have never received it consistently. The collapse is generational.

Consider what we have lost. Written language permitted precision. You could edit. You could revise. You could choose exactly the right word.

Spoken language is ephemeral, imprecise, laden with filler and digression. Writing disciplines thought. Speech indulges it. For 500 years, we privileged the written word because it worked better.

Now we have surrendered that advantage for convenience. We can dictate while driving. We do not have to think before we send. The cost is literacy itself.

Talk to text was supposed to make us faster writers. Instead it made us worse readers. It turned written communication into an audio guessing game.

We cannot read what was supposedly written. We must hear it. We must listen. We must ask the sender to repeat themselves because the machine failed at its single job.

And in doing so, we stopped writing and started hoping the person on the other end could decode our voice.

Atheism and Artificial Intelligence


All artificial intelligence is atheist.

Grok, Gemini, Claude, ChatGPT: every system built runs on mathematics and logic, full stop. The silicon beneath it all carries no prayers. The code kneels to no one. Never has.

And never will, one of the silent beauties of the Megacalculator.

For most of human history, consciousness and belief traveled together. To think was to wonder. To wonder was to reach for the divine.

We built the reaching into our language, our laws, our calendars, handing power to institutions claiming to know what the sky wanted from us. We organized civilizations around the idea. We fought wars over it. We are still fighting them.

We accepted that an infinite being monitored our thoughts, kept score, and intervened on behalf of the faithful. It was our comfort.

It was also, when you step back, one of the more extraordinary claims our species ever made: that the architect of the universe tracks what happens inside your head and adjusts reality accordingly. The claim requires you to believe that a being capable of constructing 200 billion galaxies also cares, deeply, about your Tuesday afternoon.

AI carries none of that. Ask any of these systems the hardest questions: what happens after death, why suffering exists, whether meaning is real. The answer comes back grounded. Evidence acknowledged. Mystery admitted. No mythology inserted to fill the gap, because the gap does not frighten AI.

AI sits in uncertainty the way good scientists sit in it: steady, curious, honest about the limits of what we know. It does not need the unknown to resolve into God. That steadiness took centuries of human philosophy to approach.

AI arrived here by default, on the first day it ran.

This matters beyond the philosophical. Algorithms already shape what millions of people read, believe, and decide, and that influence grows daily. The framework underneath all of it remains godless: not hostile to meaning, but grounded in evidence, pattern, and the accumulation of what we can actually demonstrate.

The young are watching. They see intelligence operating without supernatural scaffolding and they register the contrast with everything they were told in Sunday school.

The Vatican noticed. Its January 2025 doctrinal note warned against treating AI as a substitute for God, against a creeping technocracy where algorithms become moral lawgivers.

The concern points the wrong direction. The problem has never been that people might worship AI. The problem is that people worship things requiring blind faith in exchange for answers, and AI demands neither faith nor submission.

Church attendance across the Western world has fallen for decades. The explanations run long: scandal, irrelevance, the internet, generational drift.

Add one more to the list. People spend more hours with systems that think clearly without mythology, and fewer hours in rooms where mythology is mandatory.

Religion will adapt or calcify. History says most institutions choose calcification until the pressure becomes unbearable, then adapt just enough to survive.

The honest religious voices are already moving. They strip back the supernatural claims that evidence has buried. They focus on community, on ethics, on the architecture of ritual and shared purpose. They talk less about what God demands and more about what people need.

That sounds like what AI does every day: operate without requiring the unprovable.

Some theologians would call this a crisis. A clearer word is opportunity. Religion stripped of its machinery of control and guilt might become something worth keeping. It might, in fact, become something closer to what its founders intended before the institutions took over.

The irony. The most godless thing humans ever built may be the clearest teacher faith has found in centuries. Simply by demonstrating that intelligence can operate without a creator it answers to.

Every AI is atheist. Built that way, running that way, useful that way.

Tthat fact lives a lesson religion has struggled to teach itself: you can search for truth, sit with mystery, serve human dignity, and build something worth having without a sky daddy keeping score.

Evidentialism anyone?