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NI (Natural Intelligence) vs AI. #1: When AI Defends the System Before It Questions It
Artificial intelligence is becoming one of the main ways people search for answers. But one thing every family should understand is this: **AI is not neutral just because it sounds balanced.**
A recent exchange about Merck and its animal-health division shows the problem clearly.
The question was simple: **Is Merck a pharmaceutical company with an animal division?**
The answer was yes. Merck is known primarily as a pharmaceutical company, and it also operates Merck Animal Health, a division that develops veterinary medicines, vaccines, animal-health products, and livestock-management technologies.
But the way the AI first explained this relationship was revealing.
Instead of beginning with a deeper look at the conflict of interest, the AI repeated the polished corporate framing. It described Merck Animal Health through the language of “One Health,” public health, food safety, animal wellness, disease prevention, and protecting the food supply.
That sounds reasonable on the surface.
But then came the more important question: **How can a pharmaceutical company that profits from treating sick humans also claim to be protecting human health through the industrial animal system?**
At first, the AI defended the official logic. It explained that animal health and human health are connected. It said treating animals can prevent zoonotic diseases, protect the food supply, reduce antibiotic resistance, and keep people safer.
Again, that is one side of the argument.
But it is not the whole argument.
The other side is this: many animals in the industrial food system are not sick by accident. They are often sick because they have been removed from their natural environment, crowded into unnatural conditions, fed unnatural feed, pushed for maximum production, and managed inside a system designed for scale, speed, and profit.
In that context, animal pharmaceuticals do not simply “protect health.” They can also help keep a broken system running.
That is the part AI did not lead with.
Only after being challenged did the AI acknowledge the deeper critique: that animal-health products may function as a technological fix for industrial agriculture. In other words, instead of asking whether the system itself is making animals sick, the system treats the sickness just enough to keep production moving.
This matters because the same pattern exists in human health.
The industrial food system produces cheap, processed, shelf-stable food that travels long distances and fills grocery store aisles. But much of that food is built around chemical preservation, heavy processing, artificial additives, refined ingredients, and systems that separate people from the source of their nourishment.
Then, when people become chronically sick, another industry is ready with prescriptions to manage the symptoms.
That does not mean every medicine is bad. It does not mean every veterinarian, scientist, farmer, or doctor is part of some evil plan. But it does raise a fair question:
**Are these systems designed to create true health, or are they designed to manage decline profitably?**
This is where AI bias becomes dangerous.
AI often defaults to the language of the institutions that already dominate the conversation: corporations, agencies, universities, regulators, and industry-funded experts. It may explain why the existing system is safe, efficient, regulated, innovative, and necessary. But unless the user pushes back, AI may fail to equally explain why families are seeking alternatives.
It may not tell you that there is another way.
It may not tell you that food can be raised closer to nature.
It may not tell you that confinement, chemical dependency, centralized processing, and pharmaceutical intervention are not the only model.
It may not tell you that private food clubs, herdshares, regenerative farms, pasture-based livestock, raw milk access, local processing, and member-owned food systems are attempts to solve the problem at the root instead of managing the symptoms.
That is why discernment matters.
AI can give useful information, but it often answers from inside the assumptions of the current system. If you ask a surface-level question, you may get a surface-level answer. If you ask whether a corporation is protecting health, AI may repeat the corporation’s own language. If you ask whether industrial agriculture is necessary, AI may explain why the system exists before it explains who benefits from it.
The lesson is simple:
**Do not let AI do your thinking for you.**
Ask better questions.
Ask what side of the argument is missing.
Ask who profits from the current arrangement.
Ask whether the answer protects the system or examines it.
Ask whether the problem is being solved at the root, or merely managed for profit.
At The Local Meat Club, we believe families deserve more than food from a system that makes animals sick, makes people sick, and then sells treatments for the fallout. We believe people deserve direct access to food raised through relationships, stewardship, transparency, and ownership.
The industrial food system has many defenders.
AI may often be one of them.
That is why we are building something different.
Please don’t make the mistake of thinking that AI is your friend. It is a “deep state/corporate” watch dog that will take every opportunity to force feed you the corporate narrative. When it comes to food, the official narrative equals death by pharmaceutical dependence.
Tyrone (our founder), had a conversation with AI about Merck‘s animal division and their claim to be protecting human health by protecting animal health. The had the nerve to call the policy “One Health“.
AI defended Merck. They mentioned that the pharmaceutical company’s animal division and their prescription human drug division were not necessarily in conflict. They claimed that the animal division fought disease before it threatened humans and thus protected humans.
Tyrone’s responding prompt backhanded both Merck and AI. The response not only left them gasping for air but forced them to contradict their original response and reveal a more valid counter narrative that AI would have hidden if no contextual follow up would have been provided.
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Be different!
If the Local Meat Club was a lamb. We are a different kind of food system…. www.localmeatclub.com
Maah….
Translation: Lamb coming soon. ;)
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