@pluralistic your post got me thinking (which is why i read them) about the bigger picture, so i fired up a (local) chatbot and filled it in on recent geopolitics, and it really struggled to be positive. but eventually, it came up with two solutions: grassroots movements and decentralised systems.
so, as usual, it didn't tell me anything i didn't already know. hopefully i didn't just put a car fire's worth of co2 in the atmosphere to get there.
as penance, i'll buy some (audio)books that may have been used in the training to reach that conclusion. but i already have most of yours.
oh, and i'm a tinkerer at heart, which is why this post got my attention. when listening to the internet con, all i could think of as a part of the solution, is for people just to have a little bit of literacy around how computation works. computers used to start in basic, forcing the user to have some semblance of understanding of how a computer worked.
we've spent 40-50 years going from fascination with things computers could do that humans can't do, to essentially selling functionality based on how many humans it replaces. i'm sure the roman empire heard similar arguments to today, when slaves gradually replaced workers who paid taxes.