Technology

Get Off Tinder and Have a Baby

The JD VANCE career will never happen if it was not for the financial generosity of some powerful technical industrialists, that is, the right billionaire Peter Thil. Now, when journalist Vans asks a punk question about technology, he says somewhat stupid.

In an interview with the New York Times, column writer Ross Dothat, Vice president, asked whether he was ever worried about artificial intelligence and his ability to stimulate the feeling of “statute of limitations” in humans (this seems to be a symbol of “people’s jobs”). Given the fact that Donald Trump’s recent presidential campaign was partially funded by people with deep financial interests in the booming artificial intelligence industry, it is not surprising that Vans decided the conversation axis to a different kind of technical works. Veep told the newspaper that it does not really believe that Amnesty International is a threat to Americans’ jobs or well -being, and that the real societal threat posed by technology comes from dating applications. Vice President said:

“If you look at the basic dating behavior among young people – and I think many of this is that dating applications may be more destructive than we fully appreciate – I think part of it is that technology has made it difficult for young women and young women more difficult to communicate with each other.

It is clear that Vans kill two birds with one stone here. On the one hand, he evades the question about the destructive capabilities of Amnesty International. On the other hand, the issue of dating applications is used as a way to encourage young people to adopt the traditional concept of dating and the nuclear family, which was an integral part of the Trump administration’s vision of American society. Vans long discussed his concern about the national birth rate, saying in 2019, “Our employees do not have enough children to replace themselves. It should bother us.” In 2021, the famous complained that the country was run by “cat women without children”, which he described as “miserable”.

However, (and I hate admitting this), Vance has a point about dating applications. It is true that there is a lot of resentment when it comes to dating online. Women seem to hate it, and most men cannot secure an appointment to save their lives. In short: It is difficult, and applications do not lead to satisfactory results for most American youth.

The enthusiasm for dating applications also faded, companies struggled at the forefront of that industry. Match Group, The Dating App Kingin, which owns Tinder, Bumble, hinges, and other popular sites, has been significantly stumbled in recent years. The company’s profits decreased this year, and earlier this month, CEO of Match Spence Rascoff said he intends to reduce about 13 % of the company’s employees, in an attempt to compensate for losses. The company announced this week that it had planned to replace the current CEO of Tinder, Faye Losotaluno, with RASCOFF, as she is looking for a more permanent successor.

It remains to see whether the American youth on board with everything in the Trump administration everything in everything. Vans may be an incomplete bowl for this message, given the fact that it was never good in the Internet’s navigation (as you know, the place where young people get all their information). Since he was chosen as a colleague in Trump, web users have been accused of mercy in every turn – whether it accuses him of being a “sofa sofa”, accusing him of admiration of porn in dolphins, or turning it into a terrible inflated version of himself through Mim pump, or suggests that he kill the door.

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2025-05-23 16:47:00

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