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<h1>intertwined</h1>
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<p>
[...]<br>
Je bavarde pour ne pas écrire sur ce qui me tracasse dans le fond,<br>
ce à quoi j'assiste de ma part ma place dans ce... monde?<br>
Ce qui me tracasse, c'est un gars qui dort à la rue, qui explique comment être dans un appartement le rendrait fou, qu'il n'en peut plus de rencontrer que des personnes voulant le voir être hébergé quelque part; c'était un routard avec d'être un clochard; il vit parfois dans un camion, quelques temps, avant d'être tellement à bout qu'il y fout le feu.</p>

<p><br>
<p>
Il est plutôt sympathique, discret, il fait les cent pas dans la ville, je l'ai apperçu, alors que j'étais en train de servir du café à d'autres personnes, jouer au jeu de ne pas toucher les lignes des trottoirs.<br>
Parfois, il part rapidement après qu'on lui serve une boisson, parfois quand il est plus tard, que les rues ou la gare sont vides, on s'arrête et on discute plus longuement.<br>
<br>
La dernière fois que sa colère l'a emporté, il s'est retrouvé incarcéré, mais peut-être était-ce l'hiver qui était froid et le 115 tellement inhospitalier et inconstent que certains préfèrent la prison.</p></p>
<p>Depuis quelques jours, sa colère se transforme en persécution; il est persuadé de quelque chose (dont il a peur ?). Il cherche depuis des années à voir/protéger son fils, l'histoire reste floue pour nous, des bribes de temps à autre. Il pense que son fils est abusé, son souhait ne serait pas tant de récupérer sa garde que de le savoir placé dans un endroit sécurisé.</p>

<p>
Est-ce la révolte ambiante sur les violences sexuelles ? Comment fait-on pour que les hommes cessent de violer ?<br>
Est-ce les collages sur les murs à propos des incestes ?<br>
Est-ce des conversations attrapées au vol qui se transforment en message direct, en signaux qui s'alimentent et nourrissent la peur, peut-être réactivent un trauma silencieux ?</p>

<p>
J'assiste au déploiement d'un sentiment immense de persécution, <br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
les bras ballants,<br>
<br>
<br>
-<br>
</p>

<p>-<br>
Dans le travail social se développe en ce moment la "pair-aidance". Inspiré des médiateur·ices de santé pair·es pour la psychiatrie, il s'agit d'embaucher des "expert·es du vécu". <br>
Beaucoup de choses sont à dire, et sont écrites d'ailleurs un peu partout, vis à vis de ce truc.
Là où je travaille, un travailleur pair bosse depuis plusieurs années; c'est un chouette type, un collègue et un camarade.</p>

<p>
Les réflexions à ce propos sont d'actualité car l'association va embaucher un·e nouvel·le pair-aidant·e.
Parfois, je me situe de ceux qui disent que c'est une politique pour faire du travail social à bas coût (car bien entendu, les salaires de ces travailleurs·ses sont plus faibles tu crois quoi).<br>
La critique va plus loin: au-delà de la classification dans une grille de salaire, il y a l'idée de diplôme<br>
de formation<br>
d'enseignement<br>
qui donne le papier qui permet à l'autre d'exercer<br>
d'avoir une activité rémunérée</p>

<p>
Dans l'idéal de mon centre social autogéré imaginaire, on récupère les subventions habituelles, on les met dans le pot commun, et on répartit le tout. Comme dans le centre de santé communautaire de Grenoble.
</p>

<p>
On embauche qui veut.<br>
La notion de pair-aidance s'efface, car qui n'est pas pair-aidant ?
</p>

<p>
Je me pose cette question, et je divague sur des scènes où j'envisage de parler de "mon côté pair-aidant" à une échelle qui est la mienne:<br>
je suis psychologue<br>
j'ai passé deux semaines en psychiatrie il y 3-4 ans, je suis sortie contre avis médical, je ne dormais plus (entre autre), je suis devenue folle, et on m'a emmené aux urgences, on m'a assomé de médocs, et je me suis réveillée le lendemain dans un endroit inconnu, seule, dans une chambre.</p>

<p></p>
<p>
à un moment dans ces deux semaines, quand je devais encore porter le pyjame bleu ciel, j'étais convaincue que c'était une méthode de recrument<br>
_ j'étais au chômage, en recherche éperdue d'emploi à cette période _<br>
un des premiers soirs, j'ai défait le néon de la salle de bain et je me suis promenée avec dans les couloirs pour trouver la sortie</p>
<p>
avant d'atterir en psychiatrie, quand je trébuchais doucement dans cet onirisme trop lointain, (c'est de la manie on dit)<br>
des coïncidences devenaient des évidences à suivre
</p>
<br>
<p>
Alors maintenant, <br>
je me renseigne sur les luttes anti-psychiatrie, j'explore les outils fabriqués par des personnes "psychiatrisées", j'imprime des zines au travail //si c'est contraint, c'est pas du soin// pour les filer à des collègues qui pourraient être sensibilisées à ce genre de propagande,<br>
<br>
j'apprends, depuis ma place <br>
quelqu'un avec un diplôme de psychologie clinique <br>
quelqu'un qui travaille dans "le social"<br>
quelqu'un avec une micro-expérience de la violence psychiatrique, individuellement et dans le recueil des histoires des vies (j'en porte un bout pour alléger le poids en face?)</p>
<p>
Alors,<br>
parfois je n'arrive pas à bien m'endormir car je me demande si j'ai encore le temps, avant que le gars brûle son camion ou qu'il retourne en taule, de poursuivre avec lui le lien - le travail de parole qui décale en évitant les oppressions - <br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
.<br>
.<br>
.<br>
C'est toujours le même souhait: que chaque earthling dispose des conditions matérielles et psychiques qui permet la réparation, la révolte, le rêve.</p></p>
</article>


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cache/2021/021daad615b67d995cb291d6f676ff67/index.md View File

title: intertwined
url: https://ricochets.ninja/notes-de-bas-de-rage/mix.html
hash_url: 021daad615b67d995cb291d6f676ff67
<p>
[...]<br>
Je bavarde pour ne pas écrire sur ce qui me tracasse dans le fond,<br>
ce à quoi j'assiste de ma part ma place dans ce... monde?<br>
Ce qui me tracasse, c'est un gars qui dort à la rue, qui explique comment être dans un appartement le rendrait fou, qu'il n'en peut plus de rencontrer que des personnes voulant le voir être hébergé quelque part; c'était un routard avec d'être un clochard; il vit parfois dans un camion, quelques temps, avant d'être tellement à bout qu'il y fout le feu.</p>
<br>
<p>
Il est plutôt sympathique, discret, il fait les cent pas dans la ville, je l'ai apperçu, alors que j'étais en train de servir du café à d'autres personnes, jouer au jeu de ne pas toucher les lignes des trottoirs.<br>
Parfois, il part rapidement après qu'on lui serve une boisson, parfois quand il est plus tard, que les rues ou la gare sont vides, on s'arrête et on discute plus longuement.<br>
<br>
La dernière fois que sa colère l'a emporté, il s'est retrouvé incarcéré, mais peut-être était-ce l'hiver qui était froid et le 115 tellement inhospitalier et inconstent que certains préfèrent la prison.</p>
<p>Depuis quelques jours, sa colère se transforme en persécution; il est persuadé de quelque chose (dont il a peur ?). Il cherche depuis des années à voir/protéger son fils, l'histoire reste floue pour nous, des bribes de temps à autre. Il pense que son fils est abusé, son souhait ne serait pas tant de récupérer sa garde que de le savoir placé dans un endroit sécurisé.</p>
<p>
Est-ce la révolte ambiante sur les violences sexuelles ? Comment fait-on pour que les hommes cessent de violer ?<br>
Est-ce les collages sur les murs à propos des incestes ?<br>
Est-ce des conversations attrapées au vol qui se transforment en message direct, en signaux qui s'alimentent et nourrissent la peur, peut-être réactivent un trauma silencieux ?</p>
<p>
J'assiste au déploiement d'un sentiment immense de persécution, <br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
les bras ballants,<br>
<br>
<br>
-<br>
</p>
<p>-<br>
Dans le travail social se développe en ce moment la "pair-aidance". Inspiré des médiateur·ices de santé pair·es pour la psychiatrie, il s'agit d'embaucher des "expert·es du vécu". <br>
Beaucoup de choses sont à dire, et sont écrites d'ailleurs un peu partout, vis à vis de ce truc.
Là où je travaille, un travailleur pair bosse depuis plusieurs années; c'est un chouette type, un collègue et un camarade.</p>
<p>
Les réflexions à ce propos sont d'actualité car l'association va embaucher un·e nouvel·le pair-aidant·e.
Parfois, je me situe de ceux qui disent que c'est une politique pour faire du travail social à bas coût (car bien entendu, les salaires de ces travailleurs·ses sont plus faibles tu crois quoi).<br>
La critique va plus loin: au-delà de la classification dans une grille de salaire, il y a l'idée de diplôme<br>
de formation<br>
d'enseignement<br>
qui donne le papier qui permet à l'autre d'exercer<br>
d'avoir une activité rémunérée</p>
<p>
Dans l'idéal de mon centre social autogéré imaginaire, on récupère les subventions habituelles, on les met dans le pot commun, et on répartit le tout. Comme dans le centre de santé communautaire de Grenoble.
</p>
<p>
On embauche qui veut.<br>
La notion de pair-aidance s'efface, car qui n'est pas pair-aidant ?
</p>
<p>
Je me pose cette question, et je divague sur des scènes où j'envisage de parler de "mon côté pair-aidant" à une échelle qui est la mienne:<br>
je suis psychologue<br>
j'ai passé deux semaines en psychiatrie il y 3-4 ans, je suis sortie contre avis médical, je ne dormais plus (entre autre), je suis devenue folle, et on m'a emmené aux urgences, on m'a assomé de médocs, et je me suis réveillée le lendemain dans un endroit inconnu, seule, dans une chambre.</p></p>
<p>
à un moment dans ces deux semaines, quand je devais encore porter le pyjame bleu ciel, j'étais convaincue que c'était une méthode de recrument<br>
_ j'étais au chômage, en recherche éperdue d'emploi à cette période _<br>
un des premiers soirs, j'ai défait le néon de la salle de bain et je me suis promenée avec dans les couloirs pour trouver la sortie</p>
<p>
avant d'atterir en psychiatrie, quand je trébuchais doucement dans cet onirisme trop lointain, (c'est de la manie on dit)<br>
des coïncidences devenaient des évidences à suivre
</p>
<br>
<p>
Alors maintenant, <br>
je me renseigne sur les luttes anti-psychiatrie, j'explore les outils fabriqués par des personnes "psychiatrisées", j'imprime des zines au travail //si c'est contraint, c'est pas du soin// pour les filer à des collègues qui pourraient être sensibilisées à ce genre de propagande,<br>
<br>
j'apprends, depuis ma place <br>
quelqu'un avec un diplôme de psychologie clinique <br>
quelqu'un qui travaille dans "le social"<br>
quelqu'un avec une micro-expérience de la violence psychiatrique, individuellement et dans le recueil des histoires des vies (j'en porte un bout pour alléger le poids en face?)</p>
<p>
Alors,<br>
parfois je n'arrive pas à bien m'endormir car je me demande si j'ai encore le temps, avant que le gars brûle son camion ou qu'il retourne en taule, de poursuivre avec lui le lien - le travail de parole qui décale en évitant les oppressions - <br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
.<br>
.<br>
.<br>
C'est toujours le même souhait: que chaque earthling dispose des conditions matérielles et psychiques qui permet la réparation, la révolte, le rêve.</p>

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<article>
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<h1>Self-Driving Cars are Self-Driving Bullets</h1>
</header>
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<p>Why even Elon Musk has been forced to admit that navigating streets is hard</p>
<p>A car is a just a slow-moving bullet with a stereo system.</p>
<p>When we drive a car, we typically think our main task is navigating from point A to point B. But mostly what we’re doing is trying to keep from killing someone. That is Job One. Everything else is secondary. If you were to get into a car and fail to get from point A to point B, that would suck. But if you were to kill someone, that would be orders of magnitude worse.</p>
<p>So 99% of what you’re doing when you’re behind the wheel of a car is attempting to not commit homicide.</p>
<p>This is a useful point to keep in mind whenever you read about the imminent arrival of “self-driving cars”. Because when tech folks tell you they’re building a self-driving car, what they’re really promising is to make a self-driving bullet that can weave through city streets without hitting anyone.</p>
<p>Kind of clarifies the stakes, doesn’t it?</p>
<p>Indeed, this is why tech executives have been so chastened by the challenge. They don’t like to admit defeat. But cars and roads are an environment where they cannot bluster and Powerpoint their way out of mistakes — because this time their errors quite directly injure people, with the unforgiving physics of two-ton hurtling chunks of steel.</p>
<p>I thought of this when I read Elon Musk’s tweet last weekend about Telsa’s FSD, their “full self-driving” software …</p>
<p>“Didn’t expect it to be so hard”: There’s an epitaph you could chisel on the tombstone of self-driving car hype.</p>
<p>The buzz started in 2005 when a Stanford team won the DARPA Grand Challenge, creating a vehicle that drove itself over 175 miles of desert. Over the next decade, companies from Google/Waymo to Uber to Tesla and old-school automakers ploughed boatloads of R&amp;D into the cause.</p>
<p>The hype ran hot, because upending global transportation would offer obscene profits. Uber execs dreamed of robot taxis (with no drivers to pay!); automakers imagined commuters chilling with Netflix while their car whisked them to work. “If you’re well versed in robotics and you’re not working on self-driving cars,” as the head of a major university robotics lab told me in 2015, “you’re either an idiot or you have a passion for something else, because self-driving cars are a multi billion dollar industry.” Breathless articles proclaimed self-driving cars Would Change Everything; I wrote some of them.
“Waymo self-driving car”, by zombieite</p>
<p>Musk expertly surfed this wave of hype. Like many automakers, Tesla had begun offering driver-assistance tech — an “autopilot” that helped keep you stay in your highway lane, say — in 2015. But Musk went much further, moistly promising that self-driving cars would arrive any day now. Back in 2016 he claimed that within two years a Tesla would be able to drive itself from NYC to LA, ye gods.</p>
<p>But self-driving dreams soon crashed to earth. Why? Well, the software folks began to discover that the physical world is painfully complex. They were accustomed to working on the Internet, where bits generally do what they’re told. Now they had to worry about atoms: Cameras and sensors getting clogged up by rain and snow and dirt, pedestrians behaving unpredictably. And while self-driving engineers made some genuinely remarkable breakthroughs in AI image-recognition, they still don’t know how to give their AI the “common sense knowledge” that humans use to navigate the world — our generalized know-how about, say, the way ice and dogs and bicycles and skateboarders and floating plastic bags behave. Deep-learning AI can do pattern-recognition at light-speed, but human cognition is more than mere pattern recognition. To navigate the messy reality of city streets, we also reason about things, using our Extensive Knowledge About Stuff. That’s how we deal with the unexpected. Self-driving cars can’t yet do that. No AI can.</p>
<p>So that’s part of why autonomous systems have injured and killed people — from the Uber car that slammed into a pedestrian walking her bicycle across the street to the many times that Tesla’s “autopilot” AI has failed to steer a car away from a brutal accident, as a recent New York Times investigation revealed. In one case, a Tesla driving on autopilot failed to stop before ploughing into a truck ahead of it, causing the truck to roll over, killing a 15-year-old boy riding inside.</p>
<p>These days, self-driving car-makers have become a slightly more cautious crew. The head of Waymo has said that fully autonomous cars might be “decades” away. Uber unloaded its self-driving car division.</p>
<p>It’s taken Musk longer to admit reality. Back in January he was still breathlessly proclaiming that Tesla would release self-driving software “at least 100% better than a human” by the end of this year. His own engineers were trying to tamp down these delusions; in a memo to California authorities, they admitted this wasn’t remotely possible. To get a sense of how far away Tesla is from this goal, behold this March 2021 video of Tesla’s “fully self driving” software attempting to navigate Oakland, in which the car engages in far too many inexplicable and terrifying moves, like swerving the car into the wrong lane during a turn …</p>
<p>Yowsa. So I felt a sliver of almost-hope when I saw Musk’s tweet this July 4th weekend, in which he admitted that wow bruh, fully self-driving cars are super hard, who knew? Maybe he’s finally realizing that he’s not running a company that makes cars, but running a company that makes slow-moving bullets.</p>
<p>Frankly, it’d be good if he dialed back the futuristic hype even further. Tesla should focus instead on improving its actually-existing AI, its autopilot system. After all, the general idea of using computers to help humans avoid collisions is very good; we kill over 36,000 people a year with cars, so anything that drives that number down is worthwhile. One study found simple crash-avoidance tech — like rear-end collision-warning — reduces accident frequency by about 3.5%. Tesla’s autopilot seems to offer a similar improvements, though as this analysis by Brad Templeton notes, it’s hard to know for sure.</p>
<p>Alas, because Musk has been for years bombastically touting Telsa’s fully-self-driving goals, too many users are already treating the autopilot as if it were a self-driving “solution”— and pulling stunts, occasionally ruinous, like riding in the backseat while convincing the software to keep going. Officially Tesla doesn’t approve such idiotic uses of its technology, but it could do much more to thwart and discourage it. This is an area where, from top to bottom, we could use more defensive driving.</p>
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title: Self-Driving Cars are Self-Driving Bullets
url: https://themobilist.medium.com/self-driving-cars-self-driving-bullets-955dfd2c5150
hash_url: df1a769924b63c144614f3d8e5b0d004

Why even Elon Musk has been forced to admit that navigating streets is hard

A car is a just a slow-moving bullet with a stereo system.

When we drive a car, we typically think our main task is navigating from point A to point B. But mostly what we’re doing is trying to keep from killing someone. That is Job One. Everything else is secondary. If you were to get into a car and fail to get from point A to point B, that would suck. But if you were to kill someone, that would be orders of magnitude worse.

So 99% of what you’re doing when you’re behind the wheel of a car is attempting to not commit homicide.

This is a useful point to keep in mind whenever you read about the imminent arrival of “self-driving cars”. Because when tech folks tell you they’re building a self-driving car, what they’re really promising is to make a self-driving bullet that can weave through city streets without hitting anyone.

Kind of clarifies the stakes, doesn’t it?

Indeed, this is why tech executives have been so chastened by the challenge. They don’t like to admit defeat. But cars and roads are an environment where they cannot bluster and Powerpoint their way out of mistakes — because this time their errors quite directly injure people, with the unforgiving physics of two-ton hurtling chunks of steel.

I thought of this when I read Elon Musk’s tweet last weekend about Telsa’s FSD, their “full self-driving” software …

“Didn’t expect it to be so hard”: There’s an epitaph you could chisel on the tombstone of self-driving car hype.

The buzz started in 2005 when a Stanford team won the DARPA Grand Challenge, creating a vehicle that drove itself over 175 miles of desert. Over the next decade, companies from Google/Waymo to Uber to Tesla and old-school automakers ploughed boatloads of R&D into the cause.

The hype ran hot, because upending global transportation would offer obscene profits. Uber execs dreamed of robot taxis (with no drivers to pay!); automakers imagined commuters chilling with Netflix while their car whisked them to work. “If you’re well versed in robotics and you’re not working on self-driving cars,” as the head of a major university robotics lab told me in 2015, “you’re either an idiot or you have a passion for something else, because self-driving cars are a multi billion dollar industry.” Breathless articles proclaimed self-driving cars Would Change Everything; I wrote some of them.
“Waymo self-driving car”, by zombieite

Musk expertly surfed this wave of hype. Like many automakers, Tesla had begun offering driver-assistance tech — an “autopilot” that helped keep you stay in your highway lane, say — in 2015. But Musk went much further, moistly promising that self-driving cars would arrive any day now. Back in 2016 he claimed that within two years a Tesla would be able to drive itself from NYC to LA, ye gods.

But self-driving dreams soon crashed to earth. Why? Well, the software folks began to discover that the physical world is painfully complex. They were accustomed to working on the Internet, where bits generally do what they’re told. Now they had to worry about atoms: Cameras and sensors getting clogged up by rain and snow and dirt, pedestrians behaving unpredictably. And while self-driving engineers made some genuinely remarkable breakthroughs in AI image-recognition, they still don’t know how to give their AI the “common sense knowledge” that humans use to navigate the world — our generalized know-how about, say, the way ice and dogs and bicycles and skateboarders and floating plastic bags behave. Deep-learning AI can do pattern-recognition at light-speed, but human cognition is more than mere pattern recognition. To navigate the messy reality of city streets, we also reason about things, using our Extensive Knowledge About Stuff. That’s how we deal with the unexpected. Self-driving cars can’t yet do that. No AI can.

So that’s part of why autonomous systems have injured and killed people — from the Uber car that slammed into a pedestrian walking her bicycle across the street to the many times that Tesla’s “autopilot” AI has failed to steer a car away from a brutal accident, as a recent New York Times investigation revealed. In one case, a Tesla driving on autopilot failed to stop before ploughing into a truck ahead of it, causing the truck to roll over, killing a 15-year-old boy riding inside.

These days, self-driving car-makers have become a slightly more cautious crew. The head of Waymo has said that fully autonomous cars might be “decades” away. Uber unloaded its self-driving car division.

It’s taken Musk longer to admit reality. Back in January he was still breathlessly proclaiming that Tesla would release self-driving software “at least 100% better than a human” by the end of this year. His own engineers were trying to tamp down these delusions; in a memo to California authorities, they admitted this wasn’t remotely possible. To get a sense of how far away Tesla is from this goal, behold this March 2021 video of Tesla’s “fully self driving” software attempting to navigate Oakland, in which the car engages in far too many inexplicable and terrifying moves, like swerving the car into the wrong lane during a turn …

Yowsa. So I felt a sliver of almost-hope when I saw Musk’s tweet this July 4th weekend, in which he admitted that wow bruh, fully self-driving cars are super hard, who knew? Maybe he’s finally realizing that he’s not running a company that makes cars, but running a company that makes slow-moving bullets.

Frankly, it’d be good if he dialed back the futuristic hype even further. Tesla should focus instead on improving its actually-existing AI, its autopilot system. After all, the general idea of using computers to help humans avoid collisions is very good; we kill over 36,000 people a year with cars, so anything that drives that number down is worthwhile. One study found simple crash-avoidance tech — like rear-end collision-warning — reduces accident frequency by about 3.5%. Tesla’s autopilot seems to offer a similar improvements, though as this analysis by Brad Templeton notes, it’s hard to know for sure.

Alas, because Musk has been for years bombastically touting Telsa’s fully-self-driving goals, too many users are already treating the autopilot as if it were a self-driving “solution”— and pulling stunts, occasionally ruinous, like riding in the backseat while convincing the software to keep going. Officially Tesla doesn’t approve such idiotic uses of its technology, but it could do much more to thwart and discourage it. This is an area where, from top to bottom, we could use more defensive driving.

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