Butlerian Jihad
The Butlerian Jihad is a fictional conflict from Frank Herbert's 1965 novel *Dune* in which humanity wages a centuries-long war against thinking machines, ending with the total ban on artificial intelligence4. Online, the term is used as a half-serious, half-ironic rallying cry for slowing or stopping real-world AI development, with usage spiking sharply alongside the rise of large language models and AI-generated content in the early 2020s3.
TL;DR
The Butlerian Jihad is a fictional conflict from Frank Herbert's 1965 novel *Dune* in which humanity wages a centuries-long war against thinking machines, ending with the total ban on artificial intelligence.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Butlerian Jihad meme typically works in a few formats:
As a reaction phrase: When someone shares news about AI replacing jobs, generating art, or making mistakes, reply with "Butlerian Jihad when?" or "The Butlerian Jihad can't come soon enough." The implication is that humanity needs to destroy all thinking machines, *Dune*-style.
As an image macro: Pair a screenshot or fan art from the *Dune* universe with text about real-world AI. Common setups include characters looking determined with captions about deleting ChatGPT or banning AI art.
As a label for real events: When platforms ban AI content, companies roll back automation, or governments propose AI regulation, users frame the event as the beginning of the Butlerian Jihad. The October 2022 r/Dune AI art ban tweet is the classic example of this format.
As a Warhammer 40K crossover: Some users blend the Butlerian Jihad with Warhammer 40K's "Men of Iron" lore (a parallel conflict where sentient machines rebelled against humanity), creating memes that mix both fictional universes. This crossover has been a recurring discussion topic on Reddit since at least 2016.
The tone is flexible. Some users post Butlerian Jihad memes with genuine conviction that AI development should stop. Others use it purely as a joke, leaning into the absurdity of invoking a fictional techno-crusade while typing on a smartphone.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The Butlerian Jihad is named after Samuel Butler, whose 1872 novel *Erewhon* featured a society that destroyed all machines out of fear they would evolve beyond human control. Herbert embedded the reference in the name itself.
After the Jihad in the *Dune* universe, humanity didn't achieve utopia. Instead they built a feudal theocracy with Mentats (human computers), Navigators (spice-mutated pilots), and the Bene Gesserit (genetic manipulators). Herbert's point was that eliminating machines doesn't eliminate the desire for control.
In Warhammer 40K's version of the same story, the aftermath of the AI rebellion led to all artificial intelligence being banned as "Abominable Intelligence," and mechanical labor is now performed by servitors: lobotomized cyborgs with no independent thought.
The phrase appears on Urban Dictionary with the example sentence: "These new imitation artificial intelligence programs like Siri should be eliminated by the new Butlerian Jihad".
Derivatives & Variations
Warhammer 40K crossover memes:
Redditor /u/Tnynfox posted memes mixing Butlerian Jihad and 40K lore to r/AdeptusMechanicus (September 2020, 170+ upvotes) and r/Dune (October 2020, 300 upvotes), blending the two universes' anti-AI mythologies[4].
DeviantArt crusade art:
Users like FedNetWorking created original artwork depicting Butlerian Jihad warriors executing "traitors" who sided with thinking machines, framing anti-AI sentiment as fictional holy war roleplay[2].
"Clanker" adjacent memes:
While technically a separate meme, the anti-AI slang "clanker" often appears in the same posts and conversations as Butlerian Jihad references, forming a shared vocabulary of machine hostility[5].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (6)
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- 2
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- 4Butlerian Jihad - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5Clankerencyclopedia
- 6Butlerian Jihad - Urban Dictionarydictionary