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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAI as the new avatar of American capitalism (Brian Merchant, Blood in the Machine, May 15, 2026)
This new piece from Brian is a response to the news of a clueless pro-AI commencement speaker being booed recently. See https://www.democraticunderground.com/100221232529 .
https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/ai-as-the-new-avatar-of-american
-snip-
The commencement speaker clip is a particularly striking artifact, though. It resonates particularly deeply, I think, because it reflects the generational and economic breakdown of who AI is for, and who it harms. Here is an executive with one of the most impressively generic corporate managerial titles I have encountered, blithely repeating a line about AI being the next industrial revolution that she has likely uttered many times in other circumstances, to hundreds of young people who have now been hearing for years about how AI is both erasing their career prospects and is the future. (By one count, the entry level job market is the worst that its been in nearly four decades.)
-snip-
AI is after all being blamed for deskilling or even decimating a lot of industries that college graduates may well have wanted to work in: the arts, entertainment, tech, gaming. I too would loudly boo at the prospect of this next industrial revolution if I was in my early twenties, unemployed, and had aspirations for my future greater than entering prompts into an LLM. Its yet another reminder that enthusiasm for AI tends to break along age and class position, as recent polling has demonstrated, and brings to mind that recent NBC survey that showed that Gen Z respondents (ages 18-34) gave AI a favorability rating of negative 44, while one of the only groups that found it favorable were those earning over $200,000 a year. All of this seems pretty straightforward to me, and I noted as much in my recent post about what was motivating the increasingly violent backlash to AI.
-snipping paragraphs about journalists and pundits starting to use the term "AI populism"-
Directionally, as a tech guy might put it, its not wrong. There is undoubtedly anger at out-of-touch billionaires helping companies execute mass layoffs, and many people dont think ChatGPT is useful enough to warrant the social (or economic and environmental) burdens it imposes. The problem is that Suns coinage aims to position AI as a project that can be considered novel, or even apart, from the political economy from which it emerged. But I dont think most people are formulating a new worldview in which AI is a boogeyman political project hatched by billionaires. I think theyre more likely to understand AI as an extension of an already inequitable system, and as an accelerant of that inequality. At a time when consumer sentiment is stuck at all-time lows, housing costs are sky-high, the price of basic goods is spiking, entry level jobs are disappearing, tech firms have concentrated enormous power and broligarchy was shortlisted for Dictionary.coms 2025 word of the year, AI has become the avatar of the ills of unrestrained capitalism. AI populism is really just 21st century populism or just, populism.
-snip-
So we have AI looming over our withering creative industries, a generation of young people who are angry and disillusioned by the lack of opportunities, and precarity and anxiety nearly everywhere. In exchange, we get a new batch of tech oligarchs, new shady billion-dollar businesses that employ no one at all and use AI to evade consumer protection lawsthat pretty unequivocally leave the world worse off in the wake of the founders mad dash to personal enrichmentand new tools for the unscrupulous to accumulate wealth at the expense of those still following the rules, whether in stock trading, prediction markets, or even online poker. That and Claude Code.
-snip-
The commencement speaker clip is a particularly striking artifact, though. It resonates particularly deeply, I think, because it reflects the generational and economic breakdown of who AI is for, and who it harms. Here is an executive with one of the most impressively generic corporate managerial titles I have encountered, blithely repeating a line about AI being the next industrial revolution that she has likely uttered many times in other circumstances, to hundreds of young people who have now been hearing for years about how AI is both erasing their career prospects and is the future. (By one count, the entry level job market is the worst that its been in nearly four decades.)
-snip-
AI is after all being blamed for deskilling or even decimating a lot of industries that college graduates may well have wanted to work in: the arts, entertainment, tech, gaming. I too would loudly boo at the prospect of this next industrial revolution if I was in my early twenties, unemployed, and had aspirations for my future greater than entering prompts into an LLM. Its yet another reminder that enthusiasm for AI tends to break along age and class position, as recent polling has demonstrated, and brings to mind that recent NBC survey that showed that Gen Z respondents (ages 18-34) gave AI a favorability rating of negative 44, while one of the only groups that found it favorable were those earning over $200,000 a year. All of this seems pretty straightforward to me, and I noted as much in my recent post about what was motivating the increasingly violent backlash to AI.
-snipping paragraphs about journalists and pundits starting to use the term "AI populism"-
Directionally, as a tech guy might put it, its not wrong. There is undoubtedly anger at out-of-touch billionaires helping companies execute mass layoffs, and many people dont think ChatGPT is useful enough to warrant the social (or economic and environmental) burdens it imposes. The problem is that Suns coinage aims to position AI as a project that can be considered novel, or even apart, from the political economy from which it emerged. But I dont think most people are formulating a new worldview in which AI is a boogeyman political project hatched by billionaires. I think theyre more likely to understand AI as an extension of an already inequitable system, and as an accelerant of that inequality. At a time when consumer sentiment is stuck at all-time lows, housing costs are sky-high, the price of basic goods is spiking, entry level jobs are disappearing, tech firms have concentrated enormous power and broligarchy was shortlisted for Dictionary.coms 2025 word of the year, AI has become the avatar of the ills of unrestrained capitalism. AI populism is really just 21st century populism or just, populism.
-snip-
So we have AI looming over our withering creative industries, a generation of young people who are angry and disillusioned by the lack of opportunities, and precarity and anxiety nearly everywhere. In exchange, we get a new batch of tech oligarchs, new shady billion-dollar businesses that employ no one at all and use AI to evade consumer protection lawsthat pretty unequivocally leave the world worse off in the wake of the founders mad dash to personal enrichmentand new tools for the unscrupulous to accumulate wealth at the expense of those still following the rules, whether in stock trading, prediction markets, or even online poker. That and Claude Code.
-snip-
I was amused by that final sentence fragment. It's true that coding is hyped as one area generative AI can actually help with, and Claude Code is supposed to be especially useful. But I've seen enough complaints about AI coding tools including Claude Code on Hacker News and various coding and AI forums on Reddit to know there are lots of problems with AI coding beneath the hype. Though it's probably less obviously flawed than other types of genAI.
Anyway, much more at the link. It's an important piece with a message that liberals need to keep in mind before they join the "AI is inevitable" chorus the tech bros are trying to force everyone to join.