It is humbling to consider that if we harness just 1 millionth of the Sun’s power for AI, that will be much more than a million times the intelligence of all of humanity
I’ve been sent countless questions since millions of Americans saw my interview with the former IRS agent (now, whistleblower) Joe Banister last week, where he claimed that 99% of Americans are not legally required to file and pay income taxes.
How can Americans really organize a national tax revolt? Won’t we all end up in prison?
Can’t the IRS just seize our bank accounts?
What if my employer takes taxes directly from my paycheck?
I can’t answer those questions for you or tell you what to do, but Peymon Mottahedeh, the founder of Freedom Law School, can!
Elon Musk just explained how Starlink moves the GDP of entire nations.
The formula is so simple it should embarrass every development agency on the planet.
Musk: “GDP is a function of average productivity per person.”
Productivity per person goes up. GDP goes up. That is the whole equation.
Everything else is decoration.
And connectivity is the single largest lever on Earth for pushing that number.
Musk: “If you don’t have access to the internet, or it’s too expensive or low bandwidth, you cannot access the MIT lessons and you can’t sell the goods and services that you produce.”
No internet means no global knowledge. No global markets. No ability to sell to anyone beyond your village or learn from anyone outside of it.
The penalty is total. And it has nothing to do with the person serving it.
There is a child alive right now who is as intelligent as anyone who has ever walked the halls of MIT.
She does not know it. Nobody around her knows it. Because the coordinates of her birth have no connectivity. No library. No signal. No link to the world that would show her what she is.
She will grow old inside a ceiling that geography built for her. Not because of talent. Not because of effort. Because of a satellite that had not been launched yet.
Musk: “Internet connectivity is certainly a candidate for one of the things that would do more to lift people out of poverty than anything else.”
Traditional infrastructure takes decades. Fiber has to be laid. Towers have to be built. Permits have to be approved. Capital has to be attracted to regions that cannot attract it.
Starlink bypasses all of it from orbit. No cables. No permits. No waiting for a government to prioritize your village. A dish goes up. Isolation ends.
Someone who could not access a textbook yesterday downloads MIT’s entire curriculum today. Someone who could only sell to neighbors starts selling to the planet tomorrow.
That is not an upgrade. That is a different life.
Musk: “Starlink will actually move the GDP of countries. Like it’s gonna be that kind of thing.”
He said it like a feature update. But read it again.
Move the GDP of countries. Not a company’s revenue. Not an industry’s output. The gross domestic product of nations. Shifted by one constellation.
The telecom industry spent decades deciding which regions were profitable enough to connect. The rest were written off. Starlink does not make that calculation. It covers the planet. Every farmer. Every welder. Every kid with a clear view of the sky.
The minds that will cure diseases, solve energy, and build things we cannot yet name are already alive. They are already thinking.
They have no signal.
Starlink is the first technology in human history that can reach them at the speed of deployment instead of the speed of bureaucracy.
And when those minds come online, they will not change their own lives. They will change the trajectory of the species.
That is what Musk actually built. Not a telecom company. The largest unlock of human potential ever launched from a single network.
Jensen Huang just described how he plans to outlive his own body.
Huang: “Very soon, I’m going to put a humanoid on a spaceship. And it’s going to be my humanoid.”
His robot. His frame. Launched into deep space while he is still breathing.
Huang: “Take all my inbox, take everything that I’ve done, everything I’ve said. It’s been collecting and becoming my AI. When the time comes, we’ll just send that at the speed of light, catch up with my robot.”
Your body fails. Your data does not.
Every email. Every decision. Every conversation.
Recorded. Compressed. Compiled into a model that thinks the way you think.
And when the biology gives out, that model launches at light speed to meet a titanium frame already cruising through the void.
You do not die. You transfer.
Sounds like fiction. Then he put a number on it.
Huang: “Understanding the biological machine is not 10 years. It’s five years probably.”
Five years to decode the human body the way we decoded software.
Not treat disease. Decode it. Understand the entire machine well enough to patch it like a bug.
Cancer is a bug. Alzheimer’s is a bug. Aging itself is a bug.
And the compute to find the fix doubles every year.
Huang: “It’s a reasonable thing to expect the end of disease.”
He did not say hope for. He said expect.
The man whose chips power nearly every AI system on Earth just told you the end of disease is not a dream. It is a scheduling problem.
Huang: “It’s a reasonable thing to expect that pollution will be drastically reduced. It’s a reasonable thing to expect that traveling at the speed of light is actually in our future.”
He listed these the way someone else lists quarterly targets. Items on a roadmap. Waiting on execution.
But here is the part most people will skip past. And it might be the most important thing he said.
Huang: “I’ve always had a great confidence in the kindness, the generosity, the compassion, the human capacity.”
This is the man building the most powerful computing infrastructure ever constructed.
The man whose hardware will power the intelligence that reshapes every industry, every government, every border on Earth.
And his operating principle is not paranoia. It is trust.
Huang: “Sometimes more so than I should. And I get taken advantage of. But it doesn’t ever cause me not to.”
He has been burned. He kept trusting anyway. Not naivety. Evidence.
Huang: “Vastly I am proven right. Constantly proven right. And often exceeds my expectations.”
The doomers build everything on one assumption. Power corrupts. Humans weaponize every tool they touch.
Huang has spent thirty years handing the most powerful technology in history to thousands of companies, researchers, and governments.
His conclusion is the opposite.
People want to do good. Give them the tools and they prove it.
That is not soft. That is thirty years of data from the dead center of the compute revolution.
Fridman: “What an exciting time to be alive.”
Huang: “How can you not be romantic about that?”
Romantic.
Not optimistic. Not bullish. Romantic.
Optimism is a prediction. Romance is what happens when you look at what is coming and it hits you somewhere deeper than logic.
The end of disease. Consciousness uploaded. A robot carrying your mind past the rings of Saturn.
Underneath all of it, a belief that the species wielding these tools is fundamentally good.
That is what separates Huang from every other voice in this space.
The fearful see AI and ask what could go wrong. Huang sees AI and asks how much suffering can we end.
He is not dreaming out loud. He is reading the trendline and telling you exactly where it lands.
Five years for biology. A lifetime for consciousness.
And past that, a humanoid with your mind aboard, sailing through space at the speed of light.
Built by a man who still believes in people.
The cynics will laugh.
They always do.
Right up until the moment it ships.
🚨 Here is the full 40 minutes of my crew and I exposing California fraud, Minnesota was big but California is even bigger... We uncovered over $170,000,000 in fraud as these fraudsters live in luxury with no consequences. Like it and share it, the fraud must STOP.
We ALL work way too hard and pay too much in taxes for this to be happening. These fraudsters have been able to defraud American taxpayers for years without any pushback from the public and politicians.
It is time to EXPOSE IT ALL and end America's fraud crisis.
Elon Musk just outlined the exact demographic crisis that makes AI deployment mandatory.
The mainstream panic is that artificial intelligence will steal jobs from a growing population.
The population isn’t growing.
Musk: “Earth is gonna face a massive population collapse in over the next 20, 30 years. Massive.”
The panic over autonomous replacement is entirely backward.
Superintelligence and robotic systems aren’t arriving to compete with the biological workforce.
They’re arriving just in time to backfill millions of workers who were never born.
Musk: “The birth rate is very low. In most of Europe, Russia, Japan, Korea, Singapore, it’s well below replacement.”
For the last century, geopolitical dominance was dictated by biological headcount.
That math has permanently flipped.
When a nation faces a collapsing population, it loses its industrial base, its tax revenue, and its military leverage in sequence.
The trillion-dollar investments into national compute clusters aren’t about software efficiency.
They’re about civilizational survival.
The nation that deploys a hyper-scaled autonomous workforce first captures the board. The nations that fail to build it before their demographics collapse don’t fall behind.
They disappear.
Musk: “Is civilization gonna die with a bang or a whimper? This would definitely be dying with a whimper.”
The political establishment views universal basic income as a desperate welfare program.
It’s the mathematical outcome of combining demographic collapse with infinite compute.
A shrinking population has historically guaranteed economic depression. But plug a hyper-scaling AI and robotics engine into the void left by a shrinking workforce and the equation inverts.
Total output goes exponential while the population shrinks.
Universal high income isn’t a charity program. It’s the calculated dividend paid to the remaining humans who inherited a fully automated planet.
The companies that survive the next twenty years won’t be the ones fighting to retain human talent.
They’ll be the ones that transitioned their execution to a synthetic workforce before the demographic floor dropped out from under them.
The AI race was never about competitive advantage.
It’s about plugging the gap before the entire economic model collapses from a shortage of people to run it.