Elon Musk sells a future without work or money, but robots require supervision, systems break, scarcity survives, and money outlives every miracle. His “post-money” paradise is just communism wrapped in steel.
I sat with Musk’s words for a moment—“work will be
optional” and “money will be irrelevant”—and they hit me the way a bright neon
sign hits a man walking into a dark alley. It blinds first, dazzles second,
then reveals absolutely nothing behind it. It sounded good on paper, clean like
a manifesto drafted in a quiet room by someone who knows the world mainly
through spreadsheets, simulations, and stainless-steel dreams. But that is the
problem. Communism also sounded good on paper. And we all know how ugly the
application became—breadlines, fear, empty shelves, and a mass of ordinary
people crushed under a promise that never matched reality. Musk’s version is
the same fantasy wearing a shinier suit.
He says work will be optional in ten to twenty years
because robots will handle the heavy stuff. I almost laughed. Even if every
factory, office, and street corner is swarming with robots and AI systems,
someone still has to watch them. Supervising machines is not optional any more
than watching a toddler with scissors is optional. You don’t get to wander off.
Machines fail, and they fail spectacularly. The Boeing 737 Max crashes—born
partly from automated system errors—killed 346 people and showed the world what
happens when humans trust machines too much. That is not optional work. That is
survival.
Then there is the cold truth AI engineers whisper when
the cameras are off: AI makes mistakes like it’s being paid to. Every LLM
hallucination, every misclassified image, every faulty robotic movement, every
software bug—those errors don’t fix themselves. Someone has to correct them.
Someone has to retrain them. Someone has to update them. That is labor. That is
work. And pretending it can be turned off like a video game is either naïve or
reckless.
And I haven’t even started yet. Even in Musk’s fantasy
world, robots have to be built. They need raw materials. They need parts. They
need cooling systems and electricity. They need engineers, programmers, safety
inspectors, cybersecurity teams, and technicians who crawl into tight places
with a wrench and a prayer. Try telling any of those people that their work is
“optional” and watch the expression on their face. Even when Amazon introduced
warehouse robots, the company hired more humans because robots create more
complexity, not less. That’s the irony Musk doesn’t talk about: automation
expands work; it doesn’t erase it.
Now let’s talk money—the part where Musk’s dream drifts
into full-blown science fiction. “Money will stop being relevant,” he says. My
first instinct was to check if this was satire. Money is not just paper or
digits. Money is the social glue that allows humans to exchange value without
chaos. Nature itself runs on exchange. Energy for survival. Effort for reward.
You eat because you exchanged something for something. Nothing in nature gets a
free ride except parasites, and even they eventually get hunted down.
If Musk truly believes money will vanish because robots
make everything abundant, then he misunderstands the entire point of economics.
Abundance does not erase scarcity; it shifts it. Even if robots produced a
mountain of goods, someone controls the robots. Someone owns the
infrastructure. Someone owns the land the factories sit on. Someone owns the
energy grid. And ownership is power. Power demands exchange. Exchange requires
value. Value requires money. The idea that robots can delete money is like believing
smartphones can delete hunger. It is sweet, hopeful, and hopelessly false.
Look at history. When the printing press was invented,
people said books would become so abundant that education would equalize across
all of society. Instead, information became the new currency, and those who
controlled it became the new elite. When electricity arrived, some believed it
would bring universal comfort. Instead, energy became the most fought-over
resource on earth, triggering wars, cartels, and entire national strategies.
When the internet exploded, some claimed it would democratize opportunity.
Instead, data became the new oil, and a handful of companies—ironically
including Musk’s friends—became trillion-dollar giants.
Robots and AI will follow the same pattern. They will not
erase money; they will make it more powerful. Ask yourself: if robots produce
unlimited goods, who sets the price? Who manages distribution? Who owns the
robots? Who maintains the network? Who controls access? Even in Star
Trek—Musk’s favorite utopia—resources were still allocated by hierarchy, and
scarcity existed everywhere outside the Federation. He skipped that part.
Let me give you something practical. You want food? You
pay for seeds, storage, electricity, distribution, land, water, transportation.
Robots don’t change that; they complicate it. You want healthcare? You pay for
machines, drugs, technicians, power, research, maintenance. Robots don’t change
that; they raise the cost of failure. You want a house? You still need land.
Land is finite. Robots don’t create more land. They don’t negotiate with zoning
boards. They don’t make political fights disappear. In Musk’s world, money
doesn’t vanish—it becomes sharper.
And the biggest flaw in Musk’s fantasy is the same flaw
that destroyed every utopian dream before it: humans. We don’t live like
machines. We compete. We desire. We hoard. We envy. We compare. We fight for
advantage. The moment you suggest money is irrelevant, someone will invent a
new form of currency—status, access, influence, rarity, land, power, identity.
The currency changes; the system doesn’t.
That’s why Musk’s vision feels like communism with
Wi-Fi—a promise of freedom built on a foundation of illusions. The world
doesn’t run on dreams. It runs on incentives, value, effort, and consequence.
You can automate work, but you cannot automate human nature.
And maybe that’s the twist Musk didn’t expect. AI won’t
make money irrelevant. It will make it matter even more. Because when machines
handle the labor, the only thing left to fight over will be who owns the
machines.






