Yeah, it's super uncanny because it looks real at first glance, and then you read it again and again and more things are just a little bit off about it, but it's seemingly so close to something a real person could write.
IIRC Qwen 2.5 is old and a much smaller model than DeepSeek 3.1, but also a lot of the models are outdated. I know that Qwen makes models that are more comparable to DeepSeek.
I'm not the person you responded to but when you read enough LLM output certain things just start to smell funny. It's hard to put my finger on it exactly but I am 100% convinced it is at least partially written by AI. The "No X. No Y. No Z." part jumps out at me, as does the "pretend exposure equals injustice" line, and the not-quite-sensical comparison to a spreadsheet, and the em dash at the end, and the structure of the last sentence...
I think learning to recognize AI output today is very similar to this comic: https://xkcd.com/1015/
Quick tofu primer: there are a bunch of different kinds, but the main distinguishing factor is its firmness. Softer tofu has more water and firmer tofu has less water (it's pressed for longer). I normally just get extra-firm tofu (the kind that comes completely wrapped in flexible plastic, and is sometimes called super-firm tofu) because that's what Costco sells in my area and use it for almost all tofu instances. Some people press tofu to get more water out of it before using it, but I've never noticed much of an improvement from doing that. Maybe at most you'd want to pat it dry if you're going to toss it in corn starch or something.
My roommate makes a lot of stir fries where she just cubes up tofu and puts it in, and it can absorb the flavor of the sauce pretty well. It's pretty neutral and bland by itself, but in a very simple stir fry I think it's pretty tasty.
My all time favorite tofu recipe is this vegan palak paneer with tofu. It's even easier to make than the recipe says imo, follow the boiled tofu part but you don't need to boil the tofu (just plop it in raw) and you can use frozen spinach, which comes pre-blanched. I normally double the recipe and use 340g of frozen spinach and it makes a lot of meals for my partner and I.
I have no idea what region you're from, but if you're looking to recreate a lot of fast food/standard American diet meals, check out Thee Burger Dude on YT, he has a lot of good recipes for prepping tofu or soy curls or a bunch of other things to imitate meat.
Tofu can also be delicious in its own right, rather than as a replacement for something. This vegan mapo tofu recipe is very tasty, and tofu is normally an integral part of the dish (and not trying to be meaty in any sense). This is also one case where I'll seek out the softest tofu I can find, either silken tofu or soft tofu.
Happy to send more recipes if you'd like, or if you want to find a good vegan version of something I can try to give recommendations! Also, congrats on going vegan!
My "Isn't it weird that questioning any of the numerous oddities surrounding 9/11 or asking about who stood to gain from the attack gets you permanently labeled a conspiracy-brained nutjob?" t-shirt has people asking a lot of questions already raised by my shirt
Listen to TrueAnon's episodes on 9/11. They do a very good job going over the background of the people involved, then cover the actual day of, plus all of its oddities. Disclaimer: they're conspiracy-pilled, but honestly I can totally understand where they're coming from.
At the very least, it's a little bit odd that the PATRIOT act was pushed through right after the attack, and in fact was so long that no one had time to read it fully before voting on it. They were either saving it for a rainy day, or... something else.