Tuesday, May 26, 2026

AI Job Apocalypse? Robots Are Coming—But Your Biggest Enemy May Be You

 AI is coming for jobs—but history says panic first, prosperity later. The real disaster may not be robots stealing work, but workers refusing to evolve before the economic bulldozer arrives.



AI is not the first “job killer” in history. The plough, printing press, electricity, and automobile destroyed old jobs too—but made society richer and created new work. Every economic funeral eventually hired new workers.


Yes, AI will kill many jobs. Customer service, data entry, and routine office work are already sweating bullets. But crying “mass unemployment” is like horse drivers panicking when cars first hit the streets.



Civilization gets richer through invention, not fear. Every major invention made life easier, cheaper, and faster. People who fought progress usually lost, while those who adapted often made money and moved ahead.


AI will not just destroy jobs—it will reshuffle them. Old roles will shrink, but new jobs in AI healthcare, cybersecurity, education, data systems, and machine oversight will grow like weeds after rain.


The real danger is not AI—it is stubbornness. Workers who refuse to learn new skills may get left behind. You cannot keep polishing horse saddles when the whole town is building highways.


This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.




The AI Job Apocalypse Is a Scam: Civilization Got Rich by Killing Old Jobs

 


AI is not the first “job killer” in history. The plough, printing press, electricity, and automobile destroyed old jobs too—but made society richer and created new work. Every economic funeral eventually hired new workers. In plain terms, the real danger is not AI—it is stubbornness. Workers who refuse to learn new skills may get left behind. You cannot keep polishing horse saddles when the whole town is building highways.\

Every few centuries, fear puts on a new costume and walks into town pretending to be wisdom. Today, it calls itself the “AI jobs apocalypse.” The sales pitch is simple: robots are coming, white-collar workers are doomed, and unemployment lines will stretch like funeral processions. The message sounds dramatic enough for Hollywood. Too bad history has a habit of humiliating prophets of doom.

Let me call a spade a spade: the idea that artificial intelligence will create permanent, civilization-wide mass unemployment is somewhat a fallacy. Not because AI will be harmless. It will not. Some jobs will die ugly deaths. Some professions will get punched in the mouth. Some workers will wake up one morning and realize the market no longer wants what they sell. That part is real. But the loud claim that AI will destroy the future of human work completely? That story smells more like panic-for-profit than historical truth.

The truth is blunt and stubborn: civilization became rich because somebody somewhere invented something that killed old jobs and created better ways of living.

About 10,000 years ago, somebody invented the plough. Before that, farming was backbreaking misery. Human beings clawed at dirt with primitive tools, praying for food like gamblers praying for luck. Then the plough arrived and changed the game. One person could suddenly farm far more land. Food production increased. Communities grew. Wealth expanded. Civilization stopped crawling and started walking. Imagine the outrage back then. Somebody probably muttered, “This thing is stealing jobs from hand diggers.” Well, thank goodness civilization ignored the professional complainers.

Then came the wheel. Trade stopped moving at the speed of exhausted legs. Goods traveled farther. Markets grew bigger. Villages turned into cities. Cities turned into kingdoms. The economy got steroids before steroids existed.

Fast forward to the printing press. Before Johannes Gutenberg shook the table, books were copied by hand. Scribes spent endless hours hunched over paper like exhausted prisoners. Then the printing press barged in and wrecked the old business model. Scribes lost relevance, yes, but literacy exploded. Schools expanded. Universities multiplied. Writers, editors, printers, publishers, and teachers suddenly became valuable. Knowledge escaped prison and started running through the streets.

Then came the steam engine, and people panicked again. During the Industrial Revolution, many workers believed machines would turn humanity into beggars. In Britain, angry laborers called Luddites smashed factory machines because they believed technology was robbing them blind. They fought progress with hammers. History responded with a shrug. Factories multiplied. Railroads stretched across nations. Steel industries boomed. Millions of jobs appeared in manufacturing, transportation, engineering, and logistics. Standards of living improved dramatically. When fear screams loudest, history often whispers, “Relax, you have seen this movie before.”

Electricity arrived and flipped civilization upside down. Candle makers and oil lamp workers saw their industries wobble. Yet electricity created electricians, engineers, appliance industries, power plants, and entirely new sectors nobody had imagined. Society became safer, cleaner, and more productive.

Then refrigeration crashed into daily life. Before refrigerators, workers harvested giant blocks of ice from frozen lakes and delivered them to homes. That business practically died. But modern food systems emerged. Grocery chains expanded. Cold storage logistics exploded. Food lasted longer. Disease declined. Society became richer because one invention killed one job and gave birth to many others.

Then came the airplane. Travel changed forever. Certain train routes lost dominance, but aviation created pilots, flight attendants, aerospace engineers, airport workers, aircraft manufacturers, tourism industries, and global trade systems. Humanity became faster.

And then came the automobile—the perfect slap in the face to today’s AI panic.

Before cars, transportation belonged to horses. Cities smelled like horse manure because horses were everywhere. Stable hands cleaned them. Coachmen drove wealthy people around town. Carriage drivers earned their living moving passengers. Blacksmiths worked on horseshoes. Feed businesses made money feeding millions of animals.

Then Henry Ford and the automobile walked into history carrying economic dynamite. Did jobs disappear? Absolutely. Stable hands shrank in number. Coachmen became relics. Carriage makers suffered. Horse-based transport industries collapsed. But civilization did not collapse into unemployment hell. It got richer. Cars created mechanics, truck drivers, taxi operators, assembly-line workers, traffic police, insurance companies, auto engineers, gas station workers, highway construction crews, and delivery services. Roads expanded. Travel became easier. Businesses grew faster. Entire suburbs were born because cars made distance cheaper.

The automobile buried some jobs and baptized millions of new ones.

Now enter artificial intelligence, wearing a digital suit and scaring people half to death. Yes, AI will destroy jobs. Let us stop pretending otherwise. Customer service jobs will shrink because chatbots work 24/7 and never ask for lunch breaks. Routine data-entry work will continue to disappear. Some legal research jobs will shrink because software can scan documents faster than exhausted junior associates. Certain forms of copywriting will suffer because machines can already spit out basic content in seconds.

But here comes the part panic merchants avoid discussing: AI will also create jobs and reassign work. Look at healthcare. AI may reduce repetitive paperwork for nurses and doctors, but it will create demand for AI health technicians, healthcare data analysts, digital medical auditors, and specialists who train systems to catch disease patterns faster.

Look at education. Teachers will not vanish. A robot cannot replace the human ability to inspire, discipline, and emotionally guide struggling students. But AI tutors, curriculum specialists, learning analysts, and educational content designers will expand.

Look at cybersecurity. As AI grows smarter, digital criminals will become more dangerous. That means cybersecurity jobs will explode because somebody must defend banks, governments, schools, and hospitals from digital chaos.

Even history itself laughs at the idea that new technology means permanent unemployment. When ATMs arrived in the 1970s, many experts predicted bank tellers would vanish. Yet banks became cheaper to operate, opened more branches, and hired workers for different roles. Tellers shifted into customer service and financial advising. Same worker. New assignment.

Farming offers another brutal truth. Around 1900, roughly 41% of American workers worked in agriculture. Today, about 1% to 2% do. If job destruction alone meant disaster, America should have collapsed a century ago. Instead, workers moved into manufacturing, healthcare, education, finance, entertainment, and technology.

Same economy. Different jobs.

The internet followed the same script. Video rental stores died. Newspaper classifieds collapsed. Travel agencies shrank. Yet software engineering exploded. E-commerce boomed. Social media marketing appeared from nowhere. Entire industries materialized like rabbits pulled from hats.

The smartphone buried maps, alarm clocks, DVD rentals, portable cameras, and even music players. Yet it created app developers, ride-share drivers, phone repair shops, influencers, digital creators, and mobile software companies worth billions.

The pattern keeps repeating because invention is civilization’s real sugar daddy. So, no, I am not joining the choir singing funeral songs about AI.

The real danger is not AI. The danger is stubbornness. If somebody keeps polishing horse saddles while the world builds highways, poverty eventually sends an invitation letter. Workers who refuse to adapt will suffer. Governments that fail to retrain workers will suffer. Schools teaching outdated skills will fail students badly.

But humanity itself? Civilization? Work as a whole?

Please.

Human beings survived the plough, steam engine, electricity, automobiles, airplanes, computers, and the internet. Every time, somebody shouted, “This is the end!” Every time, civilization answered with more wealth, better tools, and new opportunities. The cemetery of failed predictions is crowded with people who mistook change for collapse.

AI is not the angel of death for human work. It is simply the next loud, messy, job-shuffling machine in a long line of inventions that scared people first, killed some jobs second, and made civilization richer afterward.

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Why Some Dreamers Become Millionaires—and Others End Up Ruined

 Optimism can make you rich, healthy, and unstoppable—but blind optimism can bankrupt your dreams faster than fear ever could. Are you climbing the mountain or walking into a trap? In plain terms, the same optimism that builds millionaires can also bury fools. Dream boldly, but if you ignore danger signs, reality may collect its debt brutally.


Optimistic people often live healthier, recover faster from failure, and rise higher in life because they see setbacks as temporary battles, not permanent defeat. Pessimists often stay stuck, expecting the worst before the fight even begins.


Most successful businesses, inventions, and careers were built by people bold enough to believe success was possible. Fear rarely builds empires. But a man who jumps without checking the bridge may land in the river.


Blind optimism is dangerous. People who ignore warning signs often lose money, ruin businesses, or destroy careers because they mistake wishful thinking for smart planning.


The 2007–09 financial crash showed what happens when powerful people become drunk on confidence. Many bankers ignored risks, believed the boom would never end, and millions paid the price.


Pessimism can protect people from danger, but too much of it kills action and progress. The smartest people mix hope with caution, dreaming big while keeping both eyes open.


As a side note for regular readers, I have also written many titles in my Brief Book Series, now available on Google Play Books. You can also read them  here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

Positive Thinking Can Save You—or Destroy You: How Optimism Builds Winners—and Buries Fools

 


Optimism can make you richer, healthier, and harder to break—but blind optimism can wreck your money, career, and future before you even see disaster coming. Simply put, optimists often win bigger, live longer, and rise faster—but when confidence turns delusional, collapse arrives like a thief in daylight.

I have met two kinds of people in life. The first kind walks into a storm and says, “I’ll find a way through.” The second kind looks at dark clouds and whispers, “I knew this would happen.” One usually builds empires. The other builds excuses.

Let me call a spade a spade: optimism works. It pays. It heals. It pushes people upward like a hidden elevator in a building nobody else notices. But optimism also has teeth. Feed it too much fantasy, and it can bite your hand clean off.

Science is not shy about this truth. Cardiologist Alan Rozanski and his colleagues found that optimistic people have a lower risk of cardiovascular disease. That is not motivational-speaker nonsense. That is medicine talking. A healthier heart often begins in the mind. Stress kills silently. Fear poisons slowly. Pessimism sits in the body like unpaid rent, draining energy day after day.

I have watched people survive ugly seasons simply because they refused to surrender mentally. Optimists tend to see setbacks as temporary. They say, “Bad week.” Pessimists say, “Bad life.” That difference matters. A lot.

During the Great Depression of the 1930s, millions lost jobs, homes, and dignity. Yet some people clawed their way back because they believed tomorrow owed them another shot. Walt Disney nearly went bankrupt several times before building an entertainment empire. Thomas Edison failed thousands of times before making the electric bulb practical. Colonel Harland Sanders was rejected more than 1,000 times before Kentucky Fried Chicken became a global brand. A pessimist would have packed up and gone home long before the applause arrived. A man who thinks he is defeated is halfway buried already.

That is why optimism often creates winners.

Research from Munich Business School by Nadine Chochoiek and her team found that entrepreneurs and managers tend to be more optimistic than ordinary employees. Frankly, this makes sense. Nobody starts a business thinking, “I will probably fail, lose my savings, and embarrass myself publicly.” Entrepreneurship runs on belief. Without confidence, capitalism becomes a dead engine.

Even Nobel Prize-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman admitted this uncomfortable truth when he described “delusional optimism” as one of the engines of capitalism. That phrase sounds dangerous because it is dangerous. Yet history shows it is also strangely necessary. Elon Musk nearly drove both Tesla and SpaceX into the ground during the 2008 financial crisis. Tesla was bleeding money. SpaceX had failed multiple rocket launches. Most rational people would have folded the tent. Musk gambled hard, pushed forward, and survived. Today, Tesla became one of the most valuable automakers in history, and SpaceX transformed private space travel.

Sometimes, optimism sounds crazy—until it starts printing results.

Inside workplaces, confidence matters too. Leaders are rarely chosen because they look scared. Nobody wants to follow a person who speaks like doom is standing around the corner holding a baseball bat. The Revised Life Orientation Test, a psychological tool for measuring optimism and pessimism, includes statements like, “If something can go wrong for me, it will.” Let us be brutally honest: would I trust a surgeon, military commander, CEO, or pilot who genuinely believed disaster follows them everywhere like a shadow? Probably not.

Optimists tend to climb the ladder because confidence attracts trust, even when confidence is imperfect.

But now comes the ugly twist in this story. Optimism can become poison. Too much hope can blind smart people. Hope without evidence becomes gambling dressed in expensive clothes. Researchers Manju Puri and David Robinson of Duke University found that extreme optimists often make reckless decisions. They are more likely to smoke and more likely to keep large portions of wealth trapped in risky, illiquid investments. That sounds strange until one understands the psychology behind it. Extreme optimists often believe bad things happen to other people. Cancer? Bankruptcy? Failure? Somehow, they think they are exempt from the laws of reality.

Reality usually laughs last.

Look at the 2007–2009 financial crisis. Before the collapse, many American bankers acted like gravity had stopped working. Mortgage lending exploded. Risk piled up like dry gasoline waiting for a match. Damiano Silipo and colleagues later found that optimism dominated banking culture before the crash. Banks set aside too little money for future loan losses because everyone believed the good times would continue forever.

Then the music stopped.

Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008. The S&P 500 lost nearly 57% of its value from peak to bottom. Around 8.8 million American jobs disappeared. Homes vanished. Savings evaporated. Retirement dreams died quietly in kitchen-table conversations nobody wanted to have.

That is the dark side of optimism. Sometimes people become so drunk on hope that they stop checking whether the bridge ahead actually exists.

I have seen the same mistake destroy small businesses. A man opens a restaurant with borrowed money despite weak planning, terrible location, and fierce competition. Friends warn him. Statistics warn him. The restaurant industry has brutal failure rates, with many businesses collapsing within their first few years. Yet he waves away every warning like a king dismissing peasants.

“Things will work out,” he says. No plan. No backup. Just vibes. Then the bills arrive like wolves. Blind optimism buries people.

This is why smart organizations use something called a “pre-mortem.” Before launching a project, teams imagine it already failed and ask, “Why did this collapse?” It sounds pessimistic, but it saves money, careers, and embarrassment. Good optimism needs brakes. Otherwise, it becomes reckless speed.

Even leadership teams are vulnerable. Research by Ulrike Malmendier from the University of California, Berkeley found that overconfident financial officers often push companies toward risky debt decisions. Worse still, overconfident CEOs tend to hire equally overconfident executives. That creates an echo chamber where nobody says, “This idea stinks.”

When optimism surrounds itself with optimism, disaster sometimes walks through the front door smiling.

Still, I refuse to worship pessimism. Pessimism warns of danger, yes. It sees potholes before optimists trip over them. But pessimism rarely builds cathedrals, invents machines, or launches revolutions. Nobody crossed oceans, started companies, cured diseases, or landed on the moon because they believed failure was certain.

Adrian Gore, founder of Discovery Group, argues that businesses suffer from too much negativity. He believes society trains people to sound sophisticated by predicting doom. People who say, “This might fail,” often sound smarter than people who say, “We can make this work.” Yet progress usually belongs to those willing to risk embarrassment.

The Apollo 11 moon mission in 1969 could have failed catastrophically. NASA faced massive technical risks. Yet optimism carried the mission forward. On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong walked on the moon because somebody refused to let fear sit in the driver’s seat.

That is the balancing act. I believe optimism wins more battles than pessimism. Optimism heals hearts, builds careers, fuels invention, and pushes people through failure. Pessimism often chains people to fear and keeps them frozen. But I also know blind hope is dangerous. Hope can move mountains, but blind hope can bury people under them.

The smartest people I know are not reckless optimists or miserable pessimists. They dream boldly while keeping one eye on the cliff ahead. They believe tomorrow can be better, but they still pack an umbrella when clouds gather.

Because life does not reward fools forever. But it rarely rewards cowards at all.

 

Separate from today’s article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Dangerous AI Power Grab Hiding Behind Billionaire IPOs

The next monopoly may not sell oil or banks—it may control intelligence itself. Too much power in too few hands rarely ends with applause.


The AI kings want your money, not your voice. SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic are building IPO systems where founders keep most of the power, even when public investors provide the cash. Investors may buy shares but still sit quietly in the back seat.


Wall Street may be cheering a future monopoly on intelligence. A tiny group of tech elites could end up controlling tools powerful enough to shape jobs, truth, elections, education, and war. Too much power in too few hands usually ends badly.



Founder worship has burned investors before. WeWork crashed. Theranos fooled smart people. Enron collapsed under weak oversight. Smart founders can build empires, but unchecked power can turn genius into expensive chaos.



AI safety talk sounds good until profit enters the room. OpenAI and Anthropic promise ethics and safety, yet billion-dollar investors and founder influence still shape decisions. When money talks, idealism often whispers.




Governments are moving too slowly while AI races ahead. Regulators are struggling to keep up with technologies that could affect up to 300 million jobs globally. Removing corporate guardrails now is like speeding downhill after cutting the brake line.


On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  “Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series. 


The AI Kings’ IPO Trap and the Dangerous Game Behind the AI Gold Rush

 


AI billionaires are rushing to IPO while quietly rewriting the rules so nobody can stop them. Tomorrow may belong to a few unelected tech kings—and your future is collateral.

I have watched enough of Wall Street’s magic shows to know how this story usually begins. A brilliant founder arrives carrying what looks like fire stolen from heaven. Investors gather like hungry worshippers, staring wide-eyed as the prophet promises to rewrite history. Somebody whispers, “This changes everything.” Somebody else shouts, “Get me in before it’s too late.” Suddenly caution disappears faster than free food at a college conference. Common sense takes a vacation. The media begins polishing halos. Regulators blink like sleepy security guards at a midnight robbery. Then the money starts moving, and once money starts dancing, morality usually leaves through the back door.

That is exactly why the looming IPO wave involving SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic should make serious people nervous. Everybody sees dollar signs. I see something else—a dangerous experiment in corporate power wrapped inside seductive promises about humanity’s future. The public is being invited to buy shares in firms building technologies that could reshape jobs, politics, warfare, education, medicine, and truth itself, while the founders quietly redesign corporate governance to make sure ordinary investors sit in the passenger seat with duct tape over their mouths. The fox is not merely guarding the henhouse anymore; he now owns the alarm system, hired the guards, and wrote the farm rules.

SpaceX may become one of the largest public offerings in modern history, and Elon Musk understands power better than most politicians pretending to lead countries. Nobody should be naïve about what is happening here. Reports tied to the firm’s IPO structure suggest that Musk and insiders will hold shares carrying roughly 10 times the voting power of ordinary stock. In plain English, public investors can bring truckloads of cash, but Musk still controls the microphone, the steering wheel, and the emergency brakes. This model did not appear out of thin air. Alphabet used it. Meta used it. Mark Zuckerberg still controls Meta’s voting power despite owning only a minority share of the company’s economics. Public investors own pieces of the machine, but founders control the direction. Democracy stops at the corporate front door.

Some defenders shrug and say founder control helps innovation. Fine. Let us entertain that argument for a second. They claim short-term investors care too much about quarterly profits, while visionaries need freedom to think decades ahead. There is some truth buried in that argument, just enough truth to make the lie attractive. The global financial crisis of 2008 proved that companies can look perfect on paper and still collapse like cheap lawn chairs in a thunderstorm. Lehman Brothers had committees, oversight, governance frameworks, and enough polished paperwork to wallpaper a football stadium. Yet the company still crashed spectacularly, helping trigger a financial meltdown that erased nearly $16 trillion in American household wealth. Good governance alone does not guarantee good judgment.

But here comes the dangerous twist in Silicon Valley’s logic. Because traditional governance sometimes failed, the new kings of AI seem to believe less accountability is somehow smarter. That argument deserves laughter, not applause. Saying oversight failed before, so let us weaken oversight further, makes about as much sense as saying seat belts failed in some crashes, so cars should remove them completely. That dog will not hunt.

Look at Musk’s recent behavior and the pattern becomes difficult to ignore. After a Delaware court challenged his massive Tesla pay package because of concerns surrounding weak board independence, Musk moved SpaceX incorporation to Texas, where business courts are generally viewed as friendlier toward directors and founders. Then came the merger involving xAI, tightening Musk’s influence over technologies that touch rockets, satellites, and artificial intelligence. None of this is accidental. It is corporate chess played by a man who knows exactly where the kings and pawns stand. Meanwhile, if SpaceX enters Nasdaq using fast-track listing rules, index funds could be forced to buy shares quickly, leaving active investors with little leverage to demand stronger governance protections. By the time critics ask tough questions, the train may already be speeding down the tracks.

Then there is OpenAI, perhaps the most fascinating contradiction in modern capitalism. This is the company that once sounded like a philosophy club worried about humanity’s survival. It spoke endlessly about safety, ethics, and protecting civilization from dangerous AI. Then came the Sam Altman drama in late 2023, and suddenly everybody saw what happens when ideals collide with power. The board removed Altman, apparently believing governance rules still mattered. Employees revolted. Microsoft leaned heavily. Investors panicked. Within days, Altman returned looking less like an executive and more like a political survivor who had just won an election nobody thought possible.

That moment exposed something brutally simple. Founder influence often defeats theory. Corporate documents may look noble, but real power usually belongs to whoever controls loyalty, relationships, and money. OpenAI later transitioned into a Public Benefit Corporation structure, while maintaining nonprofit oversight mechanisms. Sounds reassuring at first glance. But scratch the surface and things look less comforting. The nonprofit still technically controls board appointments, yet overlap between board members and operational leadership raises obvious questions. The people supervising the machine increasingly sit close enough to touch the controls. It starts to resemble a referee who also happens to play quarterback for one of the teams.

Anthropic presents itself as the careful adult in the room, the company obsessed with AI safety rather than reckless expansion. Its Long-Term Benefit Trust sounds thoughtful, even admirable. Independent experts supposedly influence governance over time to ensure safety remains central. Wonderful slogan. But slogans are cheap. Fine print matters. Trustees hold short terms and consult leadership regarding appointments. More importantly, shareholders retain power to dismantle the trust through supermajority voting. And let us not pretend Amazon and Google, major financial backers, are investing billions merely for spiritual fulfillment. These companies want influence, leverage, and profit. Nobody writes billion-dollar checks because they suddenly discovered sainthood.

Why does all this matter? Because frontier AI is not another social media app selling digital nonsense to teenagers. Goldman Sachs estimated in 2023 that generative AI could affect up to 300 million jobs globally. McKinsey projected trillions of dollars in annual economic impact. This technology already drafts legal documents, writes code, diagnoses medical conditions, creates propaganda, manipulates images, and influences public conversations with frightening speed. Entire industries are bracing for disruption. Workers fear replacement. Governments struggle to keep pace. Regulators often look like grandparents trying to understand cryptocurrency after two glasses of wine.

Yet amid all this uncertainty, corporate governance is moving in the opposite direction of caution. Humanity is being asked to trust a handful of founders whose power increasingly resembles monarchy dressed in startup clothing. That should concern anyone paying attention. We have seen this movie before, and it rarely ends with applause.

Remember WeWork. Adam Neumann sold investors dreams, yoga-flavored business language, and grand promises about reinventing work. The valuation soared toward $47 billion before reality punched through the ceiling. Governance collapsed under scrutiny because the emperor had ambition larger than accountability. Theranos offered another painful lesson. Elizabeth Holmes wrapped fantasy science in black turtlenecks and inspirational language while respected board members nodded politely. Investors and regulators learned the hard way that charisma is not evidence.

Of course, Musk, Altman, and Anthropic’s leadership are smarter than those examples. Nobody denies their intelligence. But intelligence alone has never protected humanity from arrogance. Some of history’s greatest disasters were engineered by clever people absolutely convinced they knew better than everybody else. A brilliant fool still breaks things—he simply uses expensive tools.

The Musk versus Altman legal feud offered the public a rare backstage pass into the world of AI’s elite. Weeks of arguments exposed uncomfortable realities involving ambition, betrayal, ego, and shifting promises. The case ended procedurally, but the damage was done. Behind the polished speeches about humanity stood ordinary human weaknesses. Pride. Competition. Fear. Greed. The same ingredients that have wrecked kingdoms, companies, and countries for centuries.

Investors are beginning to notice the danger. Institutional groups, including public pension funds, increasingly push for limits on dual-class share structures because concentrated power rarely ages gracefully. They understand something ordinary investors often forget during IPO mania: unchecked authority eventually grows comfortable ignoring criticism. Markets love founders until founders stop listening. By then, shareholders usually discover they own tickets to a show where somebody else controls the script.

I am not arguing that SpaceX, OpenAI, or Anthropic will fail. They may become some of the most influential companies humanity has ever built. Musk may push civilization deeper into space. Altman may transform how people work and learn. Anthropic may genuinely advance safer systems. But hope is not governance. Admiration is not accountability. Good intentions are not insurance policies.

Governments should stop acting like nervous spectators at a billionaire talent contest. Regulators must understand that the greatest danger surrounding AI may not be some rogue machine suddenly waking up and deciding humanity is unnecessary. The greater danger may be painfully human—a tiny priesthood of founders controlling technologies powerful enough to shape civilization while operating behind governance systems specifically designed to limit outside interference.

That is the real scandal hiding inside these IPOs. Wall Street sees opportunity. I see concentrated power moving quietly behind smiling press releases. Investors may rush into these offerings chasing fortunes, and maybe many will make money. But somewhere between the excitement and the opening bell, a dangerous question remains hanging in the air like smoke after a gunshot:

Who exactly elected these men to decide what tomorrow looks like?

 

Separate from today’s article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Thursday, May 21, 2026

The Ebola Virus Is Winning: No Vaccine. No Control. No Mercy

 The Democratic Republic of Congo is bleeding from war while Ebola spreads without a vaccine. The scariest part? The world looks broke, distracted, and tired.




The world is sleepwalking toward another Ebola disaster, and this time the timing stinks like a corpse in tropical heat. In eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, people are already dying in mining towns, roadside clinics, and crowded border communities while politicians in rich countries argue about budgets, visas, and optics. Ebola does not care about any of that nonsense. The virus cares about blood, panic, weak governments, broken hospitals, and human stupidity. Right now Congo has all 5 in bulk supply.



In eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, armed groups, broken roads, corrupt checkpoints, and weak local authority are helping Ebola move faster than doctors can contain it.




The Democratic Republic of Congo is facing a dangerous outbreak because medics know the Ebola playbook, but the Bundibugyo strain has no licensed vaccine and no quick test.



In rich countries like the United States, China, and Europe, border bans may calm voters, but they will not stop Ebola. Viruses do not respect passports, borders, speeches, or political theater. Yes - President Donald Trump’s administration has tightened travel restrictions connected to the outbreak. Jean Kaseya of Africa CDC warned that borders alone cannot stop epidemics. He is right. Viruses do not care about passports, campaign slogans, or election-year talking points. Ebola moves through bodies, fear, chaos, and neglect.


If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “BriefBook Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: BriefBook Series.



AI Job Apocalypse? Robots Are Coming—But Your Biggest Enemy May Be You

 AI is coming for jobs—but history says panic first, prosperity later. The real disaster may not be robots stealing work, but workers refusi...