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BlackRock's Fink Admits Public Will Attack Data Centers, Calls It Opportunity

Tucker Carlson Show · DEBATE: Tucker vs Kevin O’Leary on the Dystopian AI Future Devouring American Energy and Jobs · May 14, 2026
BlackRock's Fink Admits Public Will Attack Data Centers, Calls It Opportunity
Tucker Carlson Show
Tucker Carlson Show
DEBATE: Tucker vs Kevin O’Leary on the Dystopian AI Future Devouring American Energy and Jobs
"How do we make sure we're not protecting those $50 billion, $75 billion investments? We have to relook at everything because of the role of drone warfare. One of my concerns is could it be a domestic terrorism using a $3,000 drone? So all of these things are actually opportunities, not problems."
Larry Fink revealed at a private gathering that he expects domestic drone attacks against data centers from American citizens, describing this threat of popular resistance as an 'opportunity' rather than a problem. The admission suggests industry leaders anticipate public hostility severe enough to warrant military-grade security for AI infrastructure.

About this episode

Tucker Carlson delivered a monologue and interviewed investor Kevin O'Leary about the massive build-out of AI data centers across America, focusing on O'Leary's controversial 40,000-acre Utah facility that will be the world's largest. Carlson opened by arguing that despite a global energy crisis from the Iran war, America's elites have suddenly abandoned climate concerns to demand massive energy expansion—not for citizens, but for AI compute power. He questioned why taxpayers must subsidize these projects when proponents cannot articulate how AI benefits ordinary Americans. The core tension: data centers promise to eliminate millions of high-paying intellectual jobs while offering no clear replacement employment, potentially destroying the human need for creative purpose. Carlson cited Larry Fink admitting industry leaders expect domestic drone attacks from citizens against data centers, and showed footage of college graduates booing AI at their own commencement. O'Leary defended the project by invoking competition with China, claiming Chinese agents were coordinating social media opposition to American data centers. He argued surveillance and job displacement concerns are overblown, comparing AI to the Model T and internet. But when pressed repeatedly on what jobs AI would create, O'Leary could only say "nobody knows yet" while insisting innovation always produces unforeseen opportunities. On energy, O'Leary confirmed the Utah facility will use 9 gigawatts—more than twice Utah's current total—but insisted it will be energy independent through natural gas turbines. Carlson challenged why the richest Americans and largest corporations receive tax subsidies from working-class citizens, calling it a forced wealth transfer rather than capitalism. The interview revealed a fundamental impasse: O'Leary views Chinese AI dominance as the existential threat requiring any sacrifice, while Carlson argues America risks becoming China—a surveillance state where citizens lack purpose—in the name of beating China.

Key takeaways

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