Brilliant analysis here. The Contact analogy really nails the core issue, spending trillions on somthing nobody truly understands the endpoint for. What stands out most is the disconnect between the "global communist utopia" rhetoric from hardcore capitalists and thier actual track record on wealth distribution. I worked in tech policy for a bit and saw this exact pattern where companies would promise universal benefit while structuring deals that concentrated gains at thetop.
Thanks for reading and for the great comments. I agree that the track record tells an important story here. We need to ask the right questions and not simply rely on tech leaders telling us “just build more.”
Brilliant analysis here. The Contact analogy really nails the core issue, spending trillions on somthing nobody truly understands the endpoint for. What stands out most is the disconnect between the "global communist utopia" rhetoric from hardcore capitalists and thier actual track record on wealth distribution. I worked in tech policy for a bit and saw this exact pattern where companies would promise universal benefit while structuring deals that concentrated gains at thetop.
Thanks for reading and for the great comments. I agree that the track record tells an important story here. We need to ask the right questions and not simply rely on tech leaders telling us “just build more.”