AI “Progress”: When Public Dollars Mask Private Decline
When Government-Backed “Innovation” Stops Looking Like Innovation
Let’s cut through the noise. The real danger isn’t just that AI might disappoint. It’s that we are letting the state — with all its power to tax, regulate, subsidize, and socialize risk — become the primary engine behind what’s sold to us as “progress.”
Subsidies Are Not Innovation
Data centers, supercomputers, national AI labs — when these get built with taxpayer backing, what we’re witnessing isn’t market demand meeting supply. It’s the heavy hand of government allocating capital. True innovation in a liberal-market sense happens when individuals and entrepreneurs risk their own capital because they believe there’s real demand. Not when bureaucrats funnel public debt into trendy infrastructure.
Risk Should Be Private — Not Hidden Behind Pensions and Bonds
When ordinary saver’s retirement funds, municipal bonds, or government-backed debt become entangled with AI companies, any collapse in value won’t hit venture capital firms — it’ll hit grandma, the schoolteacher, the small‑town firefighter. A free-market framework insists that risk and reward go hand in hand, but it also insists that risk remains visible, voluntary, and borne by those who accept it. What we’re doing with AI is hiding risk behind broad financial blankets, then telling people it’s all “growth.”
Productivity Must Be Real — Not Just on Paper
If AI truly revolutionized the way we work, we’d expect to see wage growth, rising living standards, and a surge in meaningful consumer goods and services. Instead we’re seeing capital-intensive infrastructure get built — and a lot of talk. That smells a lot like past “miracles” that evaporated when the subsidies dried up. Genuine prosperity comes not from government‑funded platforms, but from real enough returns that individuals freely choose to invest, hire, build.
Central Planning + Technology = Centralized Power
When AI becomes a national strategy — built through mandates, tax breaks, and public‑private entanglement — you don’t just get technological infrastructure. You get a political lever. A system that doesn’t reward good service or real value, but compliance, connections, and licensing. The more the economy depends on state-backed AI, the less individual freedom there is — and the more power centralized institutions acquire to shape jobs, media, speech, finance.
What Should Free Minds Do Instead
- Demand transparency: If firms want incentives to build AI infrastructure, it must come as open competition, not hidden subsidies or back‐door guarantees.
- Insist that risk stays with private capital — investors or entrepreneurs who choose to build— not with pensioners, taxpayers, or public debt.
- Favor incremental, user-driven innovation: Software, services, tools that succeed because they solve real problems for real people — not grand megaprojects that exist because somebody pressed “approve” on a bond issuance.
- Reject the conflation of technological hype with economic health. GDP spikes from construction mean little if they don’t translate into real improvements in living standards, consumer goods, or meaningful job creation.
Final Thought
If the AI boom truly delivers — if it genuinely empowers workers, cuts real costs, unlocks productivity — then it will survive and thrive in the open market, without turning public credit into undeclared debt, without pension funds becoming hostage to algorithmic faith, and without transforming every citizen into an indirect shareholder in a techno‑bubble.
But make no mistake: once we let government underwrite “the future of AI,” the future no longer belongs to us. It belongs to whoever controls the routers, the servers, and the funding flows.
Protect your freedom. Protect your savings. Don’t let the next grand tech push become your bill.
Download Seven Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure by Bill Brocius — so you stay free when the next bubble pops.


