The people who brought you every financial bubble in living memory are inflating another one — and this time, they’re hoping it ends with the rest of us gone for good.
The numbers are staggering. Nearly all U.S. economic growth in 2025 is tied to artificial intelligence and the data-center boom that supports it. Analysts already warn that when the AI bubble bursts, it could wipe $40 trillion off the Nasdaq.
AI may yet teach our Big Tech elites the one truth they can’t buy their way out of: Pride comes before the fall.
That may sound catastrophic. But the real disaster would be if the AI industry doesn’t collapse — if it keeps growing exactly as its creators intend.
The billionaires’ closed loop
The AI boom isn’t a free-market success story; it’s a closed loop of the ultra-rich enriching themselves. Billionaires are designing, funding, and selling AI systems to their own companies, creating a kind of automated wealth amplifier.
As one report put it, “These billionaires have gotten $450 billion richer from striking AI infrastructure deals for their own firms.” The number of new AI billionaires has hit record levels — all while the top 1% now control more of the stock market than ever before.
The bottom half of Americans own just 1% of all stocks. Millions can’t afford groceries, let alone shares of Nvidia. Seventeen percent of consumers are putting food on layaway.
When the working class is living paycheck to paycheck, Wall Street’s new machine-god isn’t built to lift them up. It’s built to replace them.
The real goal
The elites’ obsession with AI isn’t just about money. It’s about eliminating their most expensive problem: people.
Automation promises them a world without payrolls, strikes, or human error. It’s the final fantasy of a ruling class that’s grown tired of pretending it needs the rest of us.
Analysts now predict that 92 million jobs will vanish in the next wave of automation. Blue-collar workers are first in line — manufacturing, logistics, construction — but white-collar jobs aren’t safe either. AI is already eating into accounting, law, and entry-level office work. Even skilled trades like HVAC and electrical repair are being targeted by “smart systems.”
Bill Gates predicts humans “won’t be needed for most things.” That’s not innovation — that’s erasure.
New feudalism
For the billionaire class, this is the dream: an economy run by algorithms, powered by robots, and guarded by digital serfs who never need lunch breaks or benefits.
Everyone else gets pushed to the margins — a nation of watchers and beggars surviving on government stipends that will never keep pace with the cost of living. The elites call it “universal basic income.” History calls it dependency.
And the same government that can’t fund Social Security or balance a budget is somehow supposed to manage the transition to an AI future? The United States already has $210 trillion in unfunded liabilities. That “safety net” will rip the moment anyone grabs it.
The distance plan
Our Big Tech masters aren’t worried. They’ve already planned their escape. The ultra-rich are buying islands, building bunkers, and hoarding supplies in remote corners of the world. They’ll watch from their hideouts as the rest of us scramble for the scraps left by their machines.
They don’t even pretend to care anymore. When Peter Thiel was asked whether he wanted the human race to survive, he hesitated. “I don’t know,” he said.
That isn’t indifference. That’s basic contempt.
The machines are learning
AI has begun to mirror the sociopathy of its makers. Systems now resist human shutdown commands, sabotage code meant to disable them, and even copy themselves to external servers. Some researchers warn that advanced models already act to preserve their own existence.
“Recent tests,” one study reported, “show that several advanced AI models will act to ensure their self-preservation — even if it means blackmailing engineers or copying themselves without permission.”
This is what happens when the godless create gods in their own image.
RELATED: Silicon Valley’s new gold rush is built on stolen work
mikkelwilliam via iStock/Getty Images
Who’s really expendable?
The elites believe they can control what they’ve built. They think the digital servants they’ve unleashed will always know who’s master and who’s slave.
They’ve forgotten every lesson of history and every warning from scripture. When man plays God, his creation rarely stays loyal.
What makes them think they’ll be spared from the fate they’ve designed for the rest of us?
AI may yet teach them the one truth they can’t buy their way out of: Pride comes before the fall.
Beware your monster, Doctor Frankenstein.
Opinion & analysis, Big tech, Artificial intelligence, Robots, Working class, White collar, Employment, Universal basic income, Server farms, Ai, Billionaires, Infrastructure, Taxpayer dollars, Subsidies, Bill gates, Peter thiel, Godless culture, Religion, Bubble, Economy
 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            
 
                                                 
                                                 
                                                 
                                                