<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/may/03/tech-oligarchs-musk>


Tech oligarchs are gambling our future on a fantasy 

It’s tempting to believe that tech billionaires’ embrace of Donald Trump and 
the far right is a sudden rupture with the usual political ideology of Silicon 
Valley. Op-eds in the New York Times and elsewhere have made this case. Even 
Marc Andreessen, one of the billionaires in question, claims that this is what 
happened – he said that it was a change in the Democratic arty that pushed him 
and his fellow oligarchs into the arms of the GOP.

Yet this is a serious misunderstanding of the situation. There wasn’t a sudden 
shift in the politics of tech – it was a homecoming. While it’s true that 
Silicon Valley has long supported Democratic candidates for political office – 
and that rank-and-file tech workers still vote overwhelmingly for Democrats – 
the fundamental ideology underpinning the culture of Silicon Valley’s venture 
capitalists and CEOs has always had a far-right libertarian core. This is even 
true for Andreessen: while he likely believed what he said while he was saying 
it, his own words and actions make it clear that he wasn’t giving an accurate 
assessment of his own motivations, much less anyone else’s. His venture capital 
firm, Andreessen Horowitz, has long opposed government regulation of any sort 
that touches on their investments; Andreessen himself posted a “techno-optimist 
manifesto” that, despite its claim to be politically neutral, promotes an 
authoritarian vision of unfettered power for tech oligarchs. He even lovingly 
paraphrases Filippo Marinetti, the co-author of the Fascist Manifesto.

But the place where the longstanding rightwing ideals of the leaders of the 
tech industry are most obvious are in their visions of the future. Elon Musk 
dreams of Mars; Sam Altman claims super-intelligent AI is around the corner. 
It’s easy to dismiss these as fantasies, deliberate distractions from their 
present actions. But this is another mistake, closely related to the first. 
These futures are central to the tech billionaires’ worldview. And these ideas 
about the future have always contained a political element aligned with dreams 
of total autocratic control.

Take Mars. Musk has been fairly specific about it: he says he wants a million 
people living on Mars by the year 2050 in a self-sufficient colony, serving as 
a backup for humanity in the event of a catastrophe on Earth. He has framed 
this as an existential struggle, claiming that SpaceX’s Starship rocket “is the 
key to making life multi-planetary & protecting the light of consciousness”. 
Jeff Bezos has derided Musk’s plans for Mars, instead saying that we should aim 
at having a trillion people in space several generations from now, living in a 
fleet of giant space stations, each with interiors the size of a major city. 
The alternative, he says, is a brutal future of population control, rationing 
and “stagnation”.

Bezos is right to pan Musk’s plans for Mars: they will not work. Mars is awful. 
The gravity is too low, the radiation levels are too high, there’s basically no 
air and the dirt is made of poison. But Bezos’s plans don’t work either, for a 
similar litany of reasons. And more fundamentally, there’s no good argument for 
humans to leave Earth in the first place. The idea of Mars as a backup for 
humanity in the event of a disaster on Earth is laughable, precisely because 
Mars is so awful – there’s in effect no disaster, not even nuclear war or a 
massive asteroid strike, that could make Earth less hospitable for humans than 
Mars. And the math behind Bezos’s fears of stagnation and rationing – which are 
really fears about the end of growth – aren’t significantly alleviated by going 
to space, where resources are just as finite as they are here on Earth.

What these fantasies of space do allow are visions of total corporate control 
free of governments, a libertarian paradise. Musk’s Starlink user agreement has 
a clause maintaining that “the parties recognize Mars as a free planet and that 
no Earth-based government has authority or sovereignty over Martian 
activities”. (This is in direct violation of international treaties governing 
space.) Residents of Musk’s Mars colony would be wholly dependent on SpaceX for 
everything, even the air they breathe; it would be a more total company town 
than any possible here on Earth. Meanwhile, Bezos’s fleet of space stations 
wouldn’t be a company town – they would be a company civilization. And with the 
constant peril of decompression and asphyxiation at hand, Musk and Bezos (or 
their corporate heirs) would have a ready-made excuse to exercise autocratic 
control over the residents of these space habitats.

Space is the location of the tech billionaires’ futuristic dreams, but AI is 
the magic that fuels them. Such AI is always depicted as being able to do as 
least as much as humans can, if not more. Yet there’s little reason to think 
that AI like that is coming anytime soon. In a recent survey of AI researchers, 
76% said that neural networks, the general architecture that underlies nearly 
all advanced AI, are fundamentally unsuitable for creating “AGI”, a 
hypothetical AI that can do everything humans can do. Even more of those 
researchers said that “the current perception of AI capabilities” is overblown. 
Nonetheless, in the world of Silicon Valley CEOs and venture capitalists (and 
among credulous journalists and policymakers), there is a widespread belief 
that AGI is coming very soon, within a few years.

This unquestioned faith in AGI is linked to a broader myth about the future of 
technology in general. Once AGI arrives, the story goes, it will quickly and 
inevitably become super-intelligent, far surpassing individual humans or even 
humanity as a whole in its capabilities. This will lead to an explosion in 
scientific and technological development that dwarfs the Industrial Revolution, 
known as the Singularity. The Singularity will reshape the lives of all humans, 
enabling seemingly magical results like easy space travel, immortality or 
near-immortality, perfect virtual reality and limitless energy, all within a 
few years or less – and the AI’s super-intelligent beneficence will render 
democracy obsolete.

This vision of technological salvation is baked into the heart of Silicon 
Valley’s collective unconscious, and has been for decades. Futurist groups in 
the 1980s and 90s whispered promises of a singularity powered by machine 
intelligence over early internet email lists, alongside diatribes against 
democracy and affirmative action and paeans to free markets. The idea of a 
singularity and all its attendant miracles can be traced back through these 
groups to mid-20th-century science-fiction – with its trappings of robots and 
rocket ships conquering the final frontier – and back beyond that to 
apocalyptic Christian religious movements of the late 19th and early 20th 
century. These ideas about the future were originally about using technology to 
ascend to heaven and live forever in the presence of God. They have come down 
to today’s tech oligarchs with AI playing the role of the deity and space as a 
substitute for paradise, but they are no less of a religion than they were a 
century ago.

The tech billionaires’ unshakable faith in this religion of technological 
salvation leads them to believe the end of this world, and the advent of a 
perfect one, is nigh. AI and space colonization will lead to utopia, 
algorithmically guaranteed. This is why they need to believe that AI is 
amazing, beyond the fact that it’s propping up a bubble – it’s central to their 
entire worldview. They must believe that AI can be used to replace essential 
government workers, improve productivity in the workplace and accelerate 
scientific research, despite all evidence to the contrary.

Tech billionaires are even gambling the planet on the imminent arrival of AGI. 
Eric Schmidt, the billionaire venture capitalist and former CEO of Google, 
claims that pursuing AGI is the best path forward to solve the climate crisis, 
despite the enormous carbon footprint of AI data centers, because of his 
certainty that AGI will fix the problem for us after its imminent arrival. Sam 
Altman agrees, and he’s even explained how he thinks that would work. “I think 
once we have a really powerful super-intelligence, addressing climate change 
will not be particularly difficult for a system like that,” he says. “If you 
think about a system where you can say, ‘Tell me how to make a lot of clean 
energy cheaply,’ ‘Tell me how to efficiently capture carbon,’ and then ‘Tell me 
how to build a factory to do this at planetary scale’ – if you can do that, you 
can do a lot of other things too.”

Altman’s plan to solve global warming by asking a nonexistent machine for three 
wishes is not something our civilization can afford to indulge. The tech 
oligarchs are confident that their godhead will arrive and deliver us to 
paradise. This offers them moral absolution for their actions and gives them a 
sense of meaning. But their faith offers nothing for the rest of us, who cannot 
afford to live anywhere other than the real world.

Adam Becker is a science journalist, astrophysicist, and author of More 
Everything Forever: AI Overlords, Space Empires, and Silicon Valley’s Crusade 
to Control the Fate of Humanity

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