Without paying, people face a usage limit on how much they are allowed to use it;
No, they don't. Read the license carefully: firstly, Clause 2 does not distinguish between non-commercial use and commercial use, despite the "Additional Commercial Terms" title, and secondly, the restriction is based on the monthly active users on the Llama 2 version release date.
This means that if you had 700 million monthly active users on the Llama 2 version release date, you are not permitted to use Llama 2, whether commercially or non-commercially, regardless of how many users you have at the moment you use Llama 2, unless you obtain a special license from Meta.
This also means that if you did not have 700 million monthly active users on the Llama 2 version release date, you are permitted to use Llama 2, whether commercially or non-commercially, regardless of how many users your organisation grows to. If, like almost everyone, you fall in that category, nothing in Clause 2 will ever limit you, and Llama 2 is free for commercial use for you.
You have a real problem with terminology. Subordinate, worker, underling, all these words mean what they mean, and they do NOT imply the boss yelling or berating or barking. If that's how you interpret them, then that's on you, not me.
Subordinate and underling do both have definitions that are inappropriate to use to refer to your employees, and in my own personal experience, those definitions are how the words are most commonly used nowadays. Your experience may be different. You're not wrong if you use the words the way you do, but I suspect you will be more likely to encounter other people who also do not understand what you mean.
(and elements of the suit are still being litigated)
It would be useful to know which elements of the suit are decided already and which elements are still being litigated; it is hard to find up to date information about this. The most up to date news on this I can easily find is that "[a] skeptical Fourth Circuit panel signaled it may nix the music industry’s $1 billion copyright infringement award against Cox Communications Inc." (https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fnews.bloomberglaw.com%2Fip-law%2Fcox-appeal-probes-1-billion-music-copyright-loss-for-cracks)
If its not 'intended' than it is by definition neutral on the subject.
That's not how the law works and the rest of your message already somewhat disagrees with this. The keyword to search for is "disparate impact". Discrimination on something that is not itself protected but that has a "disparate impact" on a protected group, is still illegal in many places including California, regardless of intent. You're right that there is an exception when there is a legitimate reason for it, but the burden of proof for that lies with the employer (per the Civil Rights Act of 1991), I'm not convinced your example would qualify as a legitimate reason, and in the case we were originally talking about, board members, I'm convinced no legitimate reason could exist. Proving that such discrimination happened though, that's difficult.
Long computations which yield zero are probably all for naught.