09/24/2025
There's too many brown people. Just look at NASA. They hire the highest GPA's from around the world yet can't get past 40 years of Space Shuttle.
Mark Zuckerberg isn’t just betting on social media anymore, he’s pouring billions into building what many are calling the most elite “superintelligence” team on the planet. This isn’t about small tweaks to Meta’s platforms. It’s about reshaping the future of artificial intelligence, robotics, and digital interaction at a scale few have dared to imagine.
Behind closed doors, Meta has recruited some of the brightest AI minds, including researchers, engineers, and visionaries from leading labs. Their mission? To push beyond today’s large language models and lay the foundation for an AI system that operates with unmatched reasoning, adaptability, and creative problem-solving skills. In short, Zuckerberg wants to move from machines that follow instructions to machines that think, adapt, and innovate.
The investment is massive, but so is the potential. Supporters say this team could unlock breakthroughs in medicine, education, and communication, creating tools that redefine how humans and technology work together. Critics, however, argue that concentrating this much power in one company’s hands raises ethical, social, and political concerns. Who controls superintelligence, and who gets to benefit from it?
What’s undeniable is that Zuckerberg’s move signals a new era of competition. The race for superintelligence has begun, and Meta’s gamble places it squarely in the spotlight of the most ambitious technological challenge of our time.