Tomorrow's tech news, today's hangover.

History Does Not Pass the Hat

By the time the rich decide to share, the decision has usually been taken away from them.

I do not recommend the taking. It brings cops, speeches, and men who discover a deep respect for law five minutes after the law stops protecting only them. But history has poor table manners. Ignore its hunger long enough and it reaches across the cloth.

Let me tell this one backward.

First come the taxes.

They arrive in a suit, carrying percentages. Five percent of this. Seventy-nine percent of that. A levy, an assessment, a corrective measure. The words are dry because the thing underneath them is not. Underneath is a crowd that has looked through the restaurant glass too many nights and finally noticed the people inside cannot possibly eat all that food.

Before the taxes come the warnings.

A venture capitalist, one of the successful ones, says the money produced by artificial intelligence will be redistributed. Voluntarily or involuntarily, he says. He hopes voluntarily.

I admire a man who can hear the train while sitting in first class. Most of them complain only when the whistle interrupts dessert.

Before the warning comes the philanthropy.

A hospital wing. A university building. An institute with the donor’s name cut into stone deep enough to survive the department it replaced. A foundation. A photograph of a very rich man handing a large check to a less rich man while both hold the corners like pallbearers.

Some of this money does good. I am not stupid enough to sneer at a vaccine because a billionaire paid for the refrigerator. A child does not care whether the medicine arrived through justice, vanity, guilt, or a tax deduction. The fever breaks the same way.

But charity is a strange form of government. Nobody votes for the donor. Nobody can fire him. The public gets what interests him, in the amount that flatters him, on the afternoon his accountant finds agreeable.

A king throws bread from a balcony and calls the cheering proof that monarchy works.

Before the charity comes the fortune.

This is where we are now.

Elon Musk has crossed the trillion-dollar line, a number so stupid it makes ordinary greed look like a jar of coins under the bed. The newest crop includes dozens of AI billionaires worth trillions together. Workers at two machine companies may soon hold enough wealth to buy nearly a third of the homes around San Francisco.

I wrote recently about a house willing to take AI shares instead of money. I thought the house was the joke. It was only the appetizer.

The real joke is that a civilization can produce fortunes large enough to purchase a third of a city’s shelter and then ask whether generosity might solve the atmosphere in the room.

I have known men who offered to buy a round after winning the rent money in a card game. They believed this made them princes. The loser drank because the drink was free and because murder requires energy.

That is philanthropy at its most honest: the winner buying a drink with a little of what used to be yours.

Before the fortune comes the machine.

Not magic. Not a metal god descending in clean light. Warehouses full of chips. Electricity. Water. Engineers. Stolen sentences. Public research. Tax breaks. Roads. Universities. Workers training systems, labeling data, cleaning offices, laying cable, cooling servers, moderating the filth, and delivering dinner to the people teaching software how to imitate thought.

The fortune appears at the top as if it rained there.

Down below, everybody is told to bring an umbrella.

The machine boom has been sold as a broad human advance, which is convenient because broad human advances qualify for public patience. We are all building the future, they say. Humanity will benefit. Disease will retreat. Work will become optional. Knowledge will spill over every border.

Then the ownership papers come out, and humanity’s name is missing.

The public paid for roads, schools, research, law, power, and the long peaceful arrangement in which a young genius can become obscenely wealthy without hiring his own army. The public supplied language itself, every book, argument, joke, confession, manual, prayer, and bad poem the machines consumed. The public is now invited to subscribe.

If the fortunes were merely large, maybe the old ceremony could continue. A gala. A pledge. A tasteful announcement about giving back.

Giving back is another beautiful phrase. It wanders into the room wearing innocence. It never says what was taken, who took it, or why returning a chosen fraction should confer sainthood.

Give back a library and keep the town.

Give back a clinic and keep the drug price.

Give back scholarships and keep the ladder narrow.

Give back enough to have your name engraved above the door, then enter through every door without knocking.

The Giving Pledge was supposed to encourage billionaires to surrender half their fortunes. The early years brought crowds of signatures. In 2024, it brought four families. Four. The richest age in human history has begun patting its pockets and looking surprised that it left compassion in the other trousers.

Musk says his companies themselves are philanthropy.

That is efficient. I once knew a drunk who claimed his presence was the party. Nobody else had to bring vomit.

The defenders of the feast will say a wealth tax makes rich people leave. They are right. Rich people can move with a speed unavailable to the cashier, teacher, nurse, mechanic, or old woman whose rent rises because the new money wants her block. The billionaire hears five percent and discovers Florida. The worker hears twenty percent and discovers a second job.

This mobility is presented as a law of nature, like migration or rain. It is closer to a loaded pistol placed on the table during negotiation.

Be reasonable, the pistol says.

I am not certain which tax works. I have lived too long to confuse a slogan with plumbing. Governments waste money with both hands. Politicians can turn a public purse into a private trough before lunch. A bad law can punish paper wealth, wreck useful companies, enrich lawyers, and still leave the hungry man outside smelling dinner.

But a difficult remedy does not make the disease imaginary.

When nineteen households hold wealth equal to a vast piece of the whole country’s annual output, the moral question has already missed its appointment. We are into engineering now. Pressure, load, fracture. How much weight can the beam take before the ceiling introduces itself to the guests?

The venture capitalist hopes his peers choose the easy path. He wants the money to come back out voluntarily. Fine. I hope so too. I also hope bookmakers return the losing bets, landlords lower rent after the mortgage is paid, and bosses notice fatigue before the ambulance arrives.

Hope is pleasant company. I would not put it in charge of payroll.

The story began with the machine, then the fortune, then the gift, then the warning. If history keeps moving backward, we know what comes next because it has come before: the law enters after politeness fails, and anger enters after law arrives late.

The people inside will call this envy. They always do. Envy is cheaper than admitting the banquet was laid with somebody else’s hours.

Outside the glass, the crowd is not asking to become saints. It wants rent, medicine, time, schools, a place to sleep, and some proof that the future being built in its name has remembered the name.

Inside, the check is being signed for charity.

The donor pauses to make sure the photographer can see the amount.

Beyond him, through the clean high window, history is crossing the street without an invitation.


Source: Neil Rimer thinks the AI money is coming back out

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