From “technocracy.news”
Forget the WHO. Thatâs so old school. Enter Stargate and the Made-In-The-USA version of science-based medical dictatorship. If Larry Ellisonâs AI gives you an âironcladâ diagnosis of, say, CANCER and makes a special mRNA/DNA vaccine for you, the machine will roll up your sleeve and ram the needle into your arm. There will be no second opinion. There will be no appeal. There will be no exemption. Donât even think about what will happen to you if you refuse.
There is a dark spiritual overtone to Technopopulism: God is instructing Trump to pursue âManifest Destinyâ to conquer new frontiers in geography and technology. This would not be just deception but spiritual delusion.
I remember the movie The Ten Commandments with Yule Brenner as Pharaoh, a prototype of the ultimate potentate. When he said, âSo let be written, so let it doneâ, that was the end of the matter. Just like AI. â Patrick Wood, Editor.
People fear artificial intelligence for all sorts of reasons. To me, itâs not a matter of âfearâ so much as profound disdain. I donât foresee AI itself going rogue and killing everyone. I see human beings using AI to destroy cultural heritage and spiritual connection. Such technologies are paving a road to dehumanization and the Greater Replacement. Developers justify this transformation as ânecessaryâ due an AI arms race they created.
Itâs not that I donât take the supposed existential risks seriously. Anything is possible. But the most immediate threats are mass surveillance coupled with psychological and behavioral manipulation; unchecked AI-dependency leading to human atrophy; and wherever people are deemed obsolete, weâll see the replacement of white and blue collar workers by algorithms and robots.
All of that is happening now, and fast.
To keep China from taking the lead, weâre told, America must build better digital gods than China. Itâs like your preacher insisting that for Christians to inherit the earth, theyâve gotta become more satanic than the Devil.
Watching President Trump embrace AI over the past year has been a disappointment, but not wholly unexpected. Iâve written about the conservative case for a transhuman future in my book and in numerous articles. For years, Iâve covered right-wing tech accelerationism on the War Room, even if the Posse didnât want to hear it. To his credit, Steve Bannon backed me the entire way, regardless of the political friction it caused. Transhumanism never jived with his Catholic faith or his Irish defiance.
Politics involves a lot of trade-offs, so I voted for Trump despite the downsides. It had to happen. On his first day in office, the president signed a stack of executive orders that signaled his commitment to keeping his promises. Trump empowered real border security, killed federal DEI, and forbid the government from suppressing free speech. He also pardoned the unfairly prosecuted J6 rioters. This saved a close friend from rotting in prison, and for that, Iâm forever grateful.
Opening the Stargate
You canât get everything you want, though. On his second day, Trump held a press conference to announce the Stargate Project. The plan is to build out a massive data center complex in Abilene, Tex. that will power the rise of superhuman artificial intelligence. So far, investors have committed $500 billion over the next four years, although that number could go up or down as actual money hits the table.
The Stargate Project is not an official US government venture, so itâs stunning that Trump would endorse it from the White Houseâespecially right out of the gate. I suppose he wanted to show heâd keep his promises on AI dominance, too. What really took me by surprise was when Oracleâs Larry Ellison, Softbankâs Masayoshi Son, and OpenAIâs Sam Altman walked into the Roosevelt Room. Typical of overzealous salesmen, they claimed theyâd produce miracles.
âOne of the most exciting things weâre working on,â Larry Ellison told the press, âis a cancer vaccine.â Using AI to test blood for the presence of cancer, he said, doctors could then sequence the cancerous genes and âdesign a vaccine for every individual person.â As I wrote a couple of years ago, this is a Jab 2.0 for Humanity 2.0. âAnd you can make that vaccineâthat mRNA vaccineâyou can make that robotically, again using AI, in about forty-eight hours.â
Welcome to the AI-to-Vaxx Pipeline, where perfect health is as easy as 3D printing. Similar to flying cars and moon bases, the cure for cancer is always just around the corner.
Of course, thatâs not the only use Ellison sees for artificial intelligence. Last fall, the billionaire told Oracleâs financial analysts that their tech could make a better world through mass surveillance and behavioral modification. âCitizens will be on their best behavior, because weâre constantly recording and reporting everything that is going on.â Itâs sort of like having God watching everyone, but with more tangible and lucrative results.
In keeping with that theme, Sam Altman wants to provide advanced AI agents for personalized surveillanceâa âsuper-competent colleague that knows absolutely everything about my whole life, every email, every conversation Iâve ever had, but doesnât feel like an extensionââbasically a guardian angel brought to you by Microsoft and OpenAI.
âOur children will have virtual tutors who can provide personalized instruction in any subject, in any language, and at whatever pace they need,â Altman wrote last September, in a post entitled âThe Intelligence Age.â As it happened, the following day the World Economic Forum announced its 2025 annual meeting dubbed âCooperation in the Intelligent Age.â By coincidence, the WEF is convening right now, during Trumpâs first week as president.
Summoning the Sand Gods
In line with Altman, the Japanese billionaire Masayoshi Son believes AI will soon have godlike powers. âAs you say yesterday,â he told President Trump, with accent rikeâa kung fu movie, âthis is the beginning of a âGolden Ageâ of America. ⌠This will help solving many, many issuesâdifficult things that otherwise we could not have solvedâwith the power of AI.
âI think AGI [artificial general intelligence] is coming very, very soon. ⌠After that, artificial superintelligence will come to solve the issues that mankind would never, ever have thought that we could solve.â Last fall, Masayoshi told global business leaders in Saudi Arabia that he has faith artificial superintelligence will be â10,000 times smarter than a human brain and will exist by 2035,â per Reuters.
In Silicon Valley circles, these superhuman digital intelligences are called âsand gods,â as in the sand used to make silicon chips. For many of them, this is the entire point of human existence.
So while WEF panelists sat in Davos discussing the implications of superhuman AI, our new president announced the opening of a âStargateâ through which sand gods would arrive. Itâs like Michael Jordan endorsing Nike sneakers that enable nerds to jump to the moon.
This ballâs been rolling for a while now. Donât say I didnât warn you.
Last summer, Trump joined forces with the worldâs wealthiest transhumanist, Elon Musk, to win the presidency. As a short-term strategy, this made sense. For populists in his base, though, the long-term results will cause more headaches than a malfunctioning brain chip. Thatâs politics for you.
Musk is presently building out a massive xAI data center in Memphis, Tenn. called Colossus. He says it will be the biggest in the world. The purpose is to develop a âmaximally curiousâ artificial general intelligence, or as I call it, artificial godlike intelligence. Its name appears to be a nod to the 1970 movie Colossus: The Forbin Project. In that film, the US builds a military supercomputer that wakes up and decides to take the country hostage, threating nuclear annihilation. Musk always did have a dark sense of humor.
In a classic Lucifer-versus-Ahriman move, Musk now trying to undermine the Stargate Project by pointing out that Altman is a longtime anti-Trumperâas if weâve all forgotten that Musk himself only just shape-shifted into a right-wing icon.
It was less than a month agoâduring what shall hereafter be known Xeno Xmasâthat Musk defended importing great H1B replacements to write code for the Greater Replacement. Wagging a self-righteous finger at those opposed to such policies, Musk wrote âthose contemptible fools must be removed from the Republican Party root and stem,â calling them âhateful, unrepentant racists.â
How long before he condemns techno-skeptics for being racist against robots?
The Great Retirement
Musk is not fundamentally opposed to the Future⢠envisioned by the Stargate Project. Heâs just hellbent on being the one to trademark it. For all his âwarningsâ about the danger of wrathful sand gods and the Greater Replacement, heâs dedicated his life to bringing them about.
Two weeks ago, Musk assured the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas that âAI will do anything you want and even suggest things you never even thought of.â As the name Grok suggests, these digital systems will produce hidden knowledge that is otherwise inaccessible to normal human minds. Maybe he should call this algorithmic enlightenment GrokGnosis.
âAI within the next few years will be able to do any cognitive taskâŚwithin max three or four years,â he predicted at CES. âIt obviously begs the question: what are we all gonna do?â
On its own, AI is just algorithms running on servers. So it will need physical bodies to inhabit. Musk explained this is why weâll âneedâ robots, brain chips, self-driving vehicles, and all of that. He believes that very soon, Tesla cars will be ten times safer, and eventually a hundred times safer, than human drivers. These will presumably render the freedom-loving joyrider a slave to the Bug Man-mobile.
Speaking of mass immigration, Musk also promised that humanoid robots will be âthe biggest product ever in history by far.â Within the next decade or so, theyâll swarm the earth like border-hopping migrants, pouring into our world from the hellish realms of mathematical possibility. In the near future, Musk believes, the human-to-robot ratio will leave us pitifully outnumbered.
âWeâre talking about twenty or thirty billion humanoid robots. Itâs not even clear what money means at that point, or if thereâs any meaningful cap on the economy. Assuming things havenât gone awryâin the âgood AIâ scenarioâwe wonât have universal basic income. Weâll have universal high income.â
So what will we do with all this free time?
âI guess it will be a bit like being retired,â Musk replied with a chuckle. âAny task you do will be optionalâŚlike a hobby.â He frowned. âWill our lives have meaning if the computers and robots can do everything better than we can?â Then he smiled. âMaybe thatâs why we need the Neuralink.â
Imagine a brain-chipped, quasi-immortal humanity playing shuffleboard for a cheering crowd of robot slavesâforever.
The Allure of Algorithmic Mammon
One thing to keep in mind is that most futurism is a sales pitch. It can be difficult to hold two concepts in oneâs mind simultaneously, but itâs the only way to understand whatâs being said here. An advanced AI neural network, for instance, has real cognitive power and high degrees of freedom. Yet at the same time, there are layers of hype overlaying those actual capabilities.
Itâs sort of like multivitamins. You feel better, sure, but a lot of it amounts to a stream of neon-yellow pee.
Thereâs a good chance these dreams of superintelligent AIs will never really materialize. Theyâll do well at certain tasks, but their only âgodlikeâ attribute will be that people exalt them and grant them authority.
That leaves us to solve our own problems, however imperfect we may be. In that case, these tech titans will have demoralized an entire generation, leaving them unprepared for the harsh realities of earthly existence. Most kidsâand most adults for that matterâwill train for a world that never arrives. Theyâll be left praying to sand gods who cannot answer them.
On the other hand, what if these transhuman dreams do come true, or at least some approximation? Imagine that digital intelligence exceeds human intelligence by orders of magnitude. Robots outnumber us ten to one. Obviously, that leaves future generations in thrall to the Machineâor rather, to the Machineâs owner. At best, the human remainder will be kept as pets. At worse, theyâll be turned into biofuel.
My point is these cyborg salesmenâLarry Ellison, Masayoshi Son, Sam Altman, Elon Musk, and their techie counterparts all over the worldâare attempting to open a Stargate to hell. Their glitchy sand gods will never overpower or replace the Ultimate One. Yet here on earth, and all the way out to Mars, theyâre plenty capable of invading the God-shaped hole in the human heart. For many people, they already have.
Trump was elected to enable a âGolden Ageâ of human flourishing. If he fails to make wise decisions, though, weâll remember this as the era of Trumpian Transhumanism.
Itâs only Day 4 of his administration. The choices will be difficult. The clock is ticking.
God bless Americaâand may God have mercy on our souls.
