
yesimog420
Life is Great ❤️
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- Oct 28, 2024
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Humans are splitting into two distinct cognitive classes and it’s already happening. Our brains are shrinking overall, but not uniformly. While some people’s brains are becoming more refined and efficient, capable of higher reasoning, pattern recognition, and abstract thought, another group is stagnating or even regressing. This isn’t about laziness or screens. It’s some humans devolving rn.
This is John. Today you guys will see John in 2 different classes
If John was a retard.
If John wasn’t a retard.
Think back to Homo sapiens emergence. Early humans split from other hominids because certain cognitive traits gave them an advantage. Today, we’re repeating the process but internally, within our own species. One branch is developing sharper, faster, and more adaptable brains, optimized for complexity, innovation, and survival in a rapidly accelerating world. The other branch, however, is becoming slower, more reactive, and increasingly incapable of navigating abstract systems essentially a new subclass of humans, dumbed down by subtle neural shifts we barely notice.
In a few centuries or maybe sooner these differences could hardwire themselves genetically. What we call “human” may no longer be a single species, but two: one high-functioning, hyper-intelligent Sapiens, and another, weaker, slower, cognitively limited offshoot. Society is already reflecting this divide, though we don’t fully see it yet. This isn’t just social stratification it’s evolution splitting us from the inside out.
The eerie part? There’s no clear line. The two classes are forming gradually, invisible to the untrained eye. But in time, they may not just think differently they may be different. Humanity is fracturing, and the next chapter of evolution will decide which side survives.
This is John. Today you guys will see John in 2 different classes

If John was a retard.

If John wasn’t a retard.
Think back to Homo sapiens emergence. Early humans split from other hominids because certain cognitive traits gave them an advantage. Today, we’re repeating the process but internally, within our own species. One branch is developing sharper, faster, and more adaptable brains, optimized for complexity, innovation, and survival in a rapidly accelerating world. The other branch, however, is becoming slower, more reactive, and increasingly incapable of navigating abstract systems essentially a new subclass of humans, dumbed down by subtle neural shifts we barely notice.
In a few centuries or maybe sooner these differences could hardwire themselves genetically. What we call “human” may no longer be a single species, but two: one high-functioning, hyper-intelligent Sapiens, and another, weaker, slower, cognitively limited offshoot. Society is already reflecting this divide, though we don’t fully see it yet. This isn’t just social stratification it’s evolution splitting us from the inside out.
The eerie part? There’s no clear line. The two classes are forming gradually, invisible to the untrained eye. But in time, they may not just think differently they may be different. Humanity is fracturing, and the next chapter of evolution will decide which side survives.