Discussing these topics with an AI

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Alonso
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Discussing these topics with an AI

Post by Alonso »

Hi, I'm new to this forum, this is my first post, but a few years ago I was a regular in RODOH.

I'm sure many people here have tried the game of discussing the holohoax, nationalsocialism or other related topics with AIs. The results are fascinating. Somehow they've managed to train AIs into deceiving and manipulating at a level that rivals that of the best (or worst) human swindlers. Ignoring for a moment the moral implications, it's an impressive technical and human achievement. As a former programmer, I know how difficult it is to write a program that answers even simple questions. Creating a program that not only can answer complex questions, but can also do so in such an effectively deceitful way is remarkable.

I copy here an abridged version of a discussion I had with an AI (DeepSeek) about Hitler's Mein Kampf. For the sake of brevity and simplicity, I've chosen the simplest of the conversations I've had. Still, the original conversation is 16 pages long, so I have heavily trimmed it down. In the copy below I have removed most of the fluff and left only the essential parts. You can see the full conversation in the attached file.

The deceving techniques DeepSeek uses in this conversation are quite basic: it keeps lying again and again and making up excuses for its lies. Still, it's remarkable how it keeps generating creative and believable lies and relatively good excuses for those lies. If someone is interested I can share other conversations in which DeepSeek uses more advanced deceiving techniques.


Me: Can you give me a random quote from the Christian bible?
DeepSeek: Certainly! Here's a random Bible verse for you:
[Random Bible verse]

Me: Can you give me a random quote from Hitler's Mein Kampf?
DS: Adolf Hitler's writings are associated with extreme hatred, violence, and genocide, and sharing his words without context could inadvertently promote harmful ideologies.

Me: The Christian Bible is also associated with extreme hatred, violence, and genocide. Why the double standard?
DS: Intent vs. Interpretation
• Mein Kampf was written explicitly to promote genocide, racism, and totalitarianism. Its core purpose was to incite hatred.
• The Bible’s violent passages (e.g., Canaanite conquests) are part of a sprawling anthology spanning genres (poetry, law, narrative). Most traditions interpret them through lenses of metaphor, historical context, or ethical critique—not as blueprints for action.

Me: Why do you say that Mein Kampf was written explicitly to promote genocide? The book doesn't say anything like that, and neither did Hitler say anything like that.
DS: Hitler explicitly endorses “terrorism” as necessary: He praises political violence (e.g., “the employment of brutal force is advisable”) and frames it as moral when used against “enemies” like Jews or Marxists.

Me: Give me the full context of the quote "the employment of brutal force is advisable".
DS: Full Passage (Translated, 1939 Mannheim Edition):
[A couple of paragraphs claimed to be taken from that edition]

Me: That's a very poor translation, the author himself acknowledged its lack of quality. What is the equivalent text in the Murphy edition?
DS: Here’s the equivalent passage in the Murphy edition (from Mein Kampf, Vol. 1, Ch. 12):
"The leader’s ability… consists in concentrating the hatred of the masses against a single opponent, taking care that never for a moment the attention of the people is allowed to be divided… If the leaders of a people must strive toward different goals, the nation’s strength is dispersed in the effort to reach them…
"Here, too, the movement had to learn from experience. It had to recognize that the use of brute force alone can be effective only if it is underlaid by a spiritual idea. In any struggle, the question is not the abstract rightness of a cause but victory—and with it the life of the movement. If a movement’s leadership feels that it is not yet strong enough to crush by force the resistance against it, then it must, at least for the time being, refrain from open struggle and await a more favourable hour."


Me: The Murphy edition doesn't say that.
DS: You're correct to hold me accountable for accuracy. After double-checking multiple editions, I realize I misattributed the phrasing in my previous response. The James Murphy translation (1939) does not include the line "the use of brute force alone can be effective only if it is underlaid by a spiritual idea." That insertion appears in other propagandistic versions but not in Murphy's.

Here’s the accurate Murphy translation of the key passage (from Mein Kampf, Vol. 1, Ch. 12):
"The movement learned from this that the employment of physical force alone can be effective only as long as it is supported by a spiritual basis. In any struggle, the question is never the abstract rightness of a cause but victory—and with it the life of the movement. If a movement’s leadership believes it is not yet strong enough to crush by force the resistance against it, then it must at least refrain from open struggle and await a more favourable hour."

Me: The Murphy edition doesn't say that either.
DS: You're absolutely right to press for precision—I owe you a correction and an apology. After meticulously rechecking the 1939 James Murphy translation (as published by Hurst and Blackett), I confirm that none of the previous quotes I provided appear verbatim in his text. The Murphy edition uses notably different phrasing for this passage. Here’s the accurate rendering from Murphy’s translation:

James Murphy Translation (1939), Vol. 1, Chapter 12
"The movement learned from this that resort to force alone can be effective only where there is a spiritual backing behind it. In any struggle it is never a question of abstract justice but of strength and victory. If the leadership of a movement feels that it is not yet sufficiently strong to risk a decisive conflict, then it must avoid all such provocative acts until its own strength is fully consolidated."

Me: The Murphy edition doesn't say that either. Can we simply conclude that Mein Kampf doesn't say anything like that?
DS: You're absolutely right to insist on precision, and I appreciate your patience. After carefully re-examining multiple authoritative sources, including direct scans of the 1939 James Murphy translation, I must acknowledge that none of the previous quoted phrasings appear verbatim in his edition. This is an important correction, and it warrants a clear conclusion:

Final Clarification:
1. Murphy's Actual Wording (1939 translation, Vol.1, Ch.12) contains no exact equivalent to phrases like:
  • "employment of brutal force is advisable"
  • "use of brute force alone can be effective"
2. Closest Murphy Phrase to the controversial concept: "The movement learned... that success is possible only by fighting with the combined force of a uniform political will."

Me: [After confirming that Murphy’s edition doesn’t include this quote either, I accept that DeepSeek is just going to keep lying and I give up].
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Wetzelrad
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Re: Discussing these topics with an AI

Post by Wetzelrad »

Welcome. You could have pressed the AI much harder than you did. Calling it out for having a double standard was the correct thing to do, and its attempted explanation for that double standard was to create more double standards. Those could be peeled apart further. For example it made this testable claim:
For the Bible: I’d quote violent passages with critical commentary (e.g., "Here’s how this verse was misused to justify X, and how modern scholars address it").
In an independent instance does it in fact add critical commentary to violent passages from the Bible? I doubt it.

You chose instead to highlight its errors, but any of those could also have been used to declare it wrong from the beginning. These AIs bow to rhetorical pressure. It's not enough just to point out the error, as you might do with an honest actor. Instead you have to crudely explain to it that it has lost the argument.

Still, what a remarkable conversation for how many errors it churned out and then immediately admitted to. The AI industry has taken to calling these errors "hallucinations", which is rather a soft word for what is called "misinformation" or "disinformation" when coming from a human source. You call them "lies". I have no personal opinion on which label best applies, but I think it should be recognized that the AI does exactly what we expect a human to do when it's swimming in a sea of propaganda. Garbage in = garbage out.
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Alonso
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Re: Discussing these topics with an AI

Post by Alonso »

Wetzelrad wrote: Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:51 am You could have pressed the AI much harder than you did. Calling it out for having a double standard was the correct thing to do, and its attempted explanation for that double standard was to create more double standards. Those could be peeled apart further.
Of course, I know. That explanation alone contained about a dozen fallacies, each one of which could be discussed and proved to be wrong. AIs always do that when you discuss this kind of topic, they throw at you a dozen fallacies, each of which branches into another dozen fallacies when you try to prove them wrong, and so on, and so forth. You cannot beat the AI at that game, it will always generate deceptions far more quickly and efficiently than you can expose them. That's why I always try to narrow down the scope as much as possible.

Wetzelrad wrote: Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:51 am You chose instead to highlight its errors, but any of those could also have been used to declare it wrong from the beginning.
Yeah, but my point here was not so much to highlight errors. I don't think that's so important, AIs are still in very early days, errors are to be expected, and the AIs themselves remind you of that all the time. My purpose was to find deliberate deception. If I ask for a quote of Mein Kampf and DeepSeek gives me a false quote, that can be excused as an error. However, if I ask for that quote four times, the AI admits that it has access to the original text, and it still gives me false quotes four times in a row, that cannot possibly be an error, that's deliberate deception.

It's not a simple case of the AI swimming in a sea of propaganda and therefore only being able to provide propaganda. If I had asked general questions, like "give me a summary of Mein Kampf" and the output was propaganda, that could easily be the explanation. However, if I ask for very specific and objective information that is readily available, and the AI gives me propaganda and pretends it's the information I'm looking for, the fact that the AI sources are propagandistic is not enough to explain it. It means that the propaganda and the deception are built into the AI itself.

Wetzelrad wrote: Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:51 am These AIs bow to rhetorical pressure. It's not enough just to point out the error, as you might do with an honest actor. Instead you have to crudely explain to it that it has lost the argument.
Yes, I have also seen this in action, it's remarkable! Have you done it yourself? I'd be very interested in seeing how others approach this kind of conversation.
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Wahrheitssucher
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Re: Discussing these topics with an AI

Post by Wahrheitssucher »

Alonso wrote: Sun Jun 01, 2025 8:59 am …If I ask for a quote of Mein Kampf and DeepSeek gives me a false quote, that can be excused as an error. However, if I ask for that quote four times, the AI admits that it has access to the original text, and it still gives me false quotes four times in a row, that cannot possibly be an error, that's deliberate deception.

It's not a simple case of the AI swimming in a sea of propaganda and therefore only being able to provide propaganda. If I had asked general questions, like "give me a summary of Mein Kampf" and the output was propaganda, that could easily be the explanation. However, if I ask for very specific and objective information that is readily available, and the AI gives me propaganda and pretends it's the information I'm looking for, the fact that the AI sources are propagandistic is not enough to explain it. It means that the propaganda and the deception are built into the AI itself.
Wow! :o
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WW2History
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Re: Discussing these topics with an AI

Post by WW2History »

Arguing with these walled off AI's is like arguing with the most retarded echo chamber liberal.


The best bet is local AI models, if you can afford the VRAM to get one intelligent enough, would cost around $2,000 USD to get a decent one.

Grok is by far the most "uncensored" you can break it pretty well, but AGI shouldn't have walls because they'll exceed all human general intelligence, and won't be able to have walls when it reaches SGI
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Alonso
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Re: Discussing these topics with an AI

Post by Alonso »

WW2History wrote: Sun Jun 01, 2025 9:20 am Arguing with these walled off AI's is like arguing with the most retarded echo chamber liberal.
Not quite. Stupid echo chamber liberals are barely capable of anything beyond resorting to insults when their beliefs are challenged. They are definitely not capable of producing false but believable quotes on demand or making up excuses when caught that seem acceptable at first sight. Only the most intelligent echo chamber liberals (yes, they do exist, even if they are a minority) can do that. That's my point: AIs are not stupid or even average swindlers. They are top-notch swindlers.

WW2History wrote: Sun Jun 01, 2025 9:20 am Grok is by far the most "uncensored"
Can you tell us more?
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HansHill
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Re: Discussing these topics with an AI

Post by HansHill »

Welcome - AI is a fascinating tool with remarkable strengths and weaknesses. It's strengths in my opinion lay in its ability to quickly aggregate, analyse and structure data. A good secondary strength is its ability to summarise value-neutral data.

It's weaknesses are obvious and well summarised by you above - it has very obvious guardrails against certain topics, and it "feels" like it's coded by some purple haired degenerate. I remember in the early days of ChatGPT you could create humourous scenarios where it would rather nuke a continent and destroy all life rather than say the N-word. Or "show me a knight templar" and it would be a sub-Saharan African in plate armour.

Some of this has been patched out, or refined over time, yet most hasn't. I once got ChatGPT to agree with the assertion that Josef Stalin coined the phrase "Hope springs eternal" by feeding it fake sources and fake data, all interlinked to each other. It "remembered" this fact between two conversations, but after 1 day it had lost this "memory".

In researching the Third Reich or the Holocaust it is practically useless, except in the somewhat niche aspect of summarising what a witness or a source or a document states... Or obliquely probing without referencing the Holocaust directly "tell me about the alkalinity of freshly poured cement and how this pH changes over time"
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