Tomorrow's tech news, today's hangover. (about)


May. 1, 2026

Two Cups of Sand



The woman at the laundromat was reading something on her phone and laughing. I asked what was funny. She showed me a recipe for “traditional Italian pasta water” generated by some chatbot. The instructions included boiling the noodles in red wine and adding two cups of sand. “Two cups of sand,” she said, wiping her eyes. “For texture.”

I didn’t laugh. I wanted to, but something about it sat wrong. This is what we’ve built. Trillion-dollar companies serving up digital sand in our food and calling it abundance.

There’s a guy over at The Guardian, name of Mike Pepi, and he’s suggesting we tax this garbage. A “slop tax.” One percent on the biggest AI companies — your Nvidias, your Googles, your Metas — to fund the artists and writers and musicians they’re busy replacing. The idea is that if you’re going to flood the world with machine-generated sludge, you ought to pay for the humans who still remember what sand tastes like.

It’s not a terrible idea. It’s just the kind of idea you have when you’ve already lost.

“Slop” was Merriam-Webster’s word of the year. Think about that. We made a word for the grey goo these machines spew, and the best solution our bright boys in Washington can come up with is a tax. Like it’s cigarettes. Like it’s alcohol. Like the problem is just a market inefficiency that needs a little nudge.

But here’s where Pepi’s got something. He’s right that slop isn’t like other technological disruptions. The printing press didn’t pretend to be Shakespeare. The camera didn’t claim it could paint Guernica. But this stuff — this slop — it’s designed to impersonate. It’s a forgery machine running on stolen souls. Every fake band on Spotify, every LLM-generated “novel” on Amazon, every hallucinated Google answer is a little heist. Not of money. Of presence. Of the quiet dignity of having made something with your own two hands and your own ruined brain.

The politicians are flailing. Bernie wants to pause AI like you can just hit the brakes on a runaway train. The tech bros want universal basic income, which is just a polite way of saying “we took your job, here’s your allowance, now disappear.” Pepi’s slop tax is smarter than both because at least it admits who’s getting robbed. But it’s still a bureaucratic answer to a spiritual wound.

And that’s the part that keeps me up. Not the tax itself — taxes are just the scoreboard. It’s what happens to the money. Pepi wants to send it to museums, schools, local papers, community theaters. He calls these places “institutions that exist to nurture human flourishing.”

I’ve never trusted a man who uses the phrase “human flourishing.”

Let’s say the money flows. The community theater gets its grant. The local paper hires one more reporter. The museum mounts a new exhibition.

What kind of art gets made when art is funded by the thing it’s trying to survive?

I remember reading about the Federal Writers’ Project during the Depression. The government paid desperate writers to document America. Steinbeck, Wright, Algren — they all took the money. And some produced real work. But the work that lasted was the work that bit the hand that fed it. The Grapes of Wrath wasn’t a thank-you note to Washington. It was an indictment. A slop tax buys you survival, but it doesn’t buy you honesty. And honest art is always inconvenient.

The original Luddites weren’t afraid of machines. People get that wrong. They were artisans who smashed looms because the looms made shoddy cloth and called it progress. They weren’t anti-technology. They were anti-degradation. Anti-the-lie-that-cheaper-is-better. That’s a lineage I understand. I’ve spent my life in rooms with people making things because they had to, not because a grant committee approved their trauma. The Luddites lost, of course. They always lose. But they were right about the cloth.

The machine slop doesn’t need to be good. It just needs to be ubiquitous. Tired people, distracted people, people trying to get through the day — they stop noticing. That’s the real hell. Not that the machines will replace us. That we’ll stop being able to tell. That the difference between a poem I wrote at three in the morning because some woman left me and a poem generated in 0.4 seconds by a statistical parrot will become a distinction without a difference. That sand in your pasta water will just taste like Tuesday.

Pepi says a slop tax could fund a cultural renaissance. Maybe. But I’ve seen what renaissance looks like when it’s grant-funded. It looks like safe topics and workshopped empathy and press releases about “impact.” It doesn’t look like someone bleeding onto a page because they have no choice. The Medicis funded Michelangelo, sure. But the Medicis also decided what was worth funding. Patronage is just censorship with a better tax attorney.

A one percent tax on $18 trillion in market cap. That’s real money. That’s “keep the lights on” money. That’s “maybe the local paper can afford one more reporter” money. But it’s also “build the slop into the budget” money. The government gets addicted to the revenue. The institutions get hooked on the grants. And the AI companies keep churning out garbage, only now it’s officially sanctioned garbage. Regulated slop. Taxable slop. The kind of slop you can cite in a funding application.

I think about that woman at the laundromat. She laughed at the sand in the pasta. But I keep wondering what she was looking for when she found that recipe. She wasn’t trying to cook with sand. She was trying to feed someone. Herself, probably. A husband. A kid. And instead she got a machine’s best guess at what humans want to hear. “Boil your grief in wine. Add sand for texture.”

The dryers stopped spinning. She folded her phone into her pocket and started gathering her warm sheets. I watched her hands. Calluses. Real hands. Hands that knew what hot fabric felt like, what it meant to stand in a room full of strangers and do something ancient and necessary while machines hummed all around her.

She caught me looking. “What?” she said.

“Nothing,” I lied. “Just thinking about taxes.”

She laughed. Not the desperate kind, the real kind. “Good luck with that,” she said, and hauled her basket toward the door. I sat there listening to the machines. They didn’t care if she left. They’d keep running with or without her. Empty or full.

That seemed like the whole problem, right there.


Source: It’s time to tax AI slop | Mike Pepi

View all posts →