š¤š¬Elon Musk and the Rise of the Technocratic Right: From UBI to Universal High Income
Elon Musk will lead the Second Manifest Destiny as AI has become more and more engrained in daily society, what happens when it renders human beings obsolete?
Elon Musk in 2017:
"There will be fewer and fewer jobs that a robot cannot do better. I think we will just end up doing Universal Basic Income. Itās going to be necessary. The harder challenge, much harder challenge, is how do people then have meaning?"
Elon Musk in 2024:
"In a benign scenario, probably none of us will have a job. There will be universal high income - not universal basic income, but universal high income. There will be no shortage of goods or services. The question will really be one of meaning. If the computers and robots can do everything better than you, does your life have meaning? I do think thereās perhaps still a role for humans in this - in that we may give AI meaning."
Notice the evolution. Itās a subtle yet telling shift. The 2017 Musk spoke to the inevitability of UBI as a safety net for the dispossessed, those left behind by automation. The 2024 Musk, however, is singing a different tune. Gone is the talk of a simple basic income. Now, itās about universal high income, a utopia where AI ensures the endless production of goods and services, rendering human labor obsolete. Yet beneath the surface of this promise lies a more unsettling question: whatās left for humanity if machines outperform us at everything?
Thereās an eerie dystopia hidden in plain sight. Musk suggests that our role may be to give meaning to AI, subtly flipping the narrative. Where once technology was a tool in humanityās service, Musk hints at a world where humans exist for the benefit of machines. This is no ordinary futurism, itās the new technocratic right in action, a cold calculus where technology isn't merely embraced but exalted as the new ruler.
Many still believe Musk is "on our side," seeing him as a maverick billionaire challenging the Deep State. But in reality, Muskās partnership with figures like Trump reveals a deeper alignment with the rising technocratic right. These new elites arenāt interested in dismantling power structures, theyāre perfecting them through technology. Muskās vision dovetails perfectly with this ambition, paving the way for a world where AI governs production, and wealth is centralized under the guise of "universal high income."
The challenge Musk identifies, meaning in a post-labor world, is no trivial matter. But notice how that problem is framed. The idea isnāt how we can live with dignity beyond work or reclaim our autonomy from these systems. Instead, itās about how we can best serve their vision, perhaps even by becoming custodians of AIās meaning, like priests tending to a new digital god.
āAI doesn't have to be evil to destroy humanity. If AI has a goal and humanity just happens to be in the way. It will destroy humanity as a matter of course without even thinking about it. No hard feelings.ā ā Elon Musk
Even worse, just this past week Elon Musk ārevealed the futureā with Tesla Optimus, Robotaxi, and Robovan
Hollywood told us what was coming through āiRobotāā the film where AGI hunts down and kills humans who donāt join lockstep with the government agenda. Life imitates āartā.
Hereās a dude talking with one of the Optimus robots on the street.
The voice and responses actually sound pretty realistic. The body movements are still crap though. Then again, this is the tech they show us, not what they actually have.
Humanity is being played.
When Klaus Scwab talks about robots, humanity trembles. But when Elon talks about robots, humanity rejoicesā¦
Do you see whatās going on?
There are two seemingly opposing sides working towards a common end goal: AI Hive Mind, digitizing collective consciousness, humanoids, etc.
Wait until the future, when they tell us they can āsave our relativesā by uploading their consciousness into one of these robots. Humanity will fall for it completely. Just like how occultists ātalk to the deadā through mediums and channelers, humanity will be doing the same through AI.
Thatās why the Optimus bots are called āWeRobot,ā not iRobot. Itās a push for digitized collective consciousness. Both demonic and disturbing.
This isnāt a story of liberation. Itās a story of submission, cleverly marketed as progress. The AI revolution that Musk envisions isnāt one that frees us from the tyranny of labor but one that redefines the nature of human existence itself, locking us into a symbiotic dance with machines, where our worth is measured not by creativity or soul, but by our relevance to the algorithms.
And here lies the great bait-and-switch. Muskās futuristic vision is not about empowering the masses. It's about perfecting a system where control, not freedom, is the endgame. His rhetoric might sound like benevolence, but itās clear which side of the power equation he stands on. This isnāt about escaping the clutches of an old elite. Itās about ushering in a new, tech-enabled order thatās just as hierarchical, just as controlling, only now the hand on the lever is silicon, not flesh.
Muskās subtle shift from UBI to āuniversal high incomeā reflects a deeper ideological evolution, from a narrative of safety nets to one of engineered dependence. The question is, when the robots are working, the algorithms are thinking, and the goods are flowing, what role will we play? And, more importantly, who will decide?