The American people are being lied to about AI.
The Doomers offer apocalyptic prophesies of job loss and oppression; the Utopians promise a future without toil—a life without meaning or mission. They both neglect human agency.
The future of AI is not an inevitability to be endured by the American people—it is for us, the American people, to shape.
I’ve spent the past two decades alongside the men and women building the future of American AI. They include some of the best software engineers in the world, but also college dropouts, veterans, blue-collar autodidacts, and nurses.
They recognize AI is a tool for them to wield to make themselves more productive and our country safer and more prosperous.
Below are some principles and themes I’ve seen informing the people wielding AI effectively and in service of worthy ends.
I. AI is a tool for the American worker, not his replacement.
The promise of AI in the enterprise is to make the American worker 50x more productive—to unleash his taste and agency. Look no further than the maritime industrial base, where AI enabled the manufacturer to open a third shift. Or the ICU where a nurse learned to wield AI so she could spend more time bedside, where she’s needed most.
The future of AI is being built on frontlines and factory floors.
II. The American worker will wield AI to do more with less—and become more productive and valuable as a result.
For a century, American prosperity was underwritten by a simple bargain: when the worker produces more, the worker earns more. That bargain was broken in the 1970s by policy choices that stripped workers of power. We will not repeat that mistake. When AI doubles output, the worker who wields it should see that gain reflected in his paycheck, his equity stake, his share of the enterprise.
III. The American worker deserves world-class tools, not AI trinkets.
The electrical engineer in Georgia who enlisted in the Navy out of high school deserves the same capabilities as the Stanford CS grad in Silicon Valley. He deserves instruments of genuine productivity, not consumer toys.
AI is the printing press of our age. The same technology that serves Fortune 500 companies should serve the American worker.
IV. AI is an American birthright.
AI is the product of American grit, ingenuity, and culture. It is our birthright. Workers should have access to meaningful AI education that helps them bend AI to their will—not the other way around.
V. AI implementation should be shaped by and for frontline users.
The frontline worker understands what the C-suite cannot. Policy should be shaped by practitioners—the nurse, the manufacturing technician, the logistics coordinator. Push power to the tip of the spear and let the American worker do what he does best.
VI. AI should be used to slash bureaucracy and unleash human agency.
AI should eliminate bureaucracy, not add to it. Every layer of process that stands between the frontline worker and their ability to do their job is deadweight to be destroyed.
VII. The development and deployment of AI should prioritize American workers and American industry.
AI development and deployment should prioritize American workers and American industry. China's manufacturing productivity grows at 6% per year. Ours grows at 0.4%. The American worker with AI superpowers erodes China's competitive advantage.
I see these principles embodied every day by men and women who are not invited to speak on panels or record podcasts and publish op-eds. They are quietly leading by example, and proving what is possible when the most powerful technology ever created meets the most capable workforce ever assembled.
I’m proud to share the future they’re building with @FoxNews.
Link to the full piece below.
https://t.co/siwYSvlmat
Here is President Trump’s new Surgeon General of the United States nominee, Dr. Casey Means, exposing the health industry and woke medical schools for six minutes straight.
It’s safe to say she is the perfect pick:
$PLTR
Was profiled in Barrons today on the journey of covering Palantir, their valuation, why retail has supported the company, and much more.
Congrats to everyone on the momentum over the past few years as the company has accelerated into being one of the most vital institutions on the planet.
While others will call it "luck," as this is the new argument I have been seeing it recently, those same people:
- were not doing a 2hr podcast every Friday night for 2 years (and still going) to analyze the company
- were not scrapping through government databases to find deals
- were not LISTENING to Karp when he spoke as he was seen as batshit crazy
- did not understand that a company that provides outcomes will get a multiple that is respected by the market
As a result, I guess they just weren't lucky.
$PLTR +5%
Palantir $PLTR stock is up more than 400% over the last year and is up another 10%+ in after hours today following earnings
CEO Alex Karp just sent out this full letter to shareholders
A thread ⬇️
JUST IN: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has banned the use of Red Dye No. 3, which is used in thousands of food products and is made from petroleum.
Red Dye No. 3 has been linked to cancer in animals. The dye give beverages and foods a bright red cherry color.
“The dye is still used in thousands of foods, including candy, cereals, cherries in fruit cocktails and strawberry-flavored milkshakes,” NBC reported.
Food manufacturers have until January 15, 2027 to fix their products.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been a strong advocate for removing dyes from food products, specifically Yellow Dye No. 5 and Red Dye No. 40.
BREAKING: The FDA bans food dye Red 3, citing cancer concerns.
The dye is still used in thousands of foods, including candy, cereals, cherries in fruit cocktails and strawberry-flavored milkshakes.
MAHA
@elonmusk In Denmark there is a lock and coin system attached on the shopping cart , you want a cart you enter a coin , when done and in proper place you get your coin back ,simple system , you never see floating shopping carts on the parking lot in Denmark like you do here in the US .
$PLTR
PALANTIR CEO ALEX KARP RELEASES A MESSAGE TO EMPLOYEES AND INVESTORS ON S&P 500 INCLUSION:
“People tend to use the term retail investor, which is another way of saying people courageous enough to invest their own money, otherwise own as tendies, in what they believe in.”
THIS WAS THE MOST EPIC MESSAGE EVER BY ALEX KARP.