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Pope Francis Releases 235 Page AI Encyclical Warning Against Power Centralization

All-In Podcast · Anthropic's Digital God, Pope vs AI, Job Loss Narrative Flips, Open Source Crackdown Coming? · May 30, 2026
Pope Francis Releases 235 Page AI Encyclical Warning Against Power Centralization
All-In Podcast
All-In Podcast
Anthropic's Digital God, Pope vs AI, Job Loss Narrative Flips, Open Source Crackdown Coming?
"Technology is never neutral, and technology takes on the characteristics of those who build, finance, and control it."
Pope Francis issued a 42,000-word encyclical on AI titled Magnificent Humanity, warning business leaders that AI will concentrate power in the hands of elites. He called for regulation and was joined by Anthropic co-founder Chris Olah despite pushback from Amazon, Google, and Meta lobbyists who tried to soften the language. The Pope's core question was whether AI will serve everyone or consolidate control.

About this episode

In episode 275 of the All-In Podcast, hosts Jason Calacanis, Chamath Palihapitiya, and David Sacks were joined by venture capitalist Bill Gurley for an intense debate on AI regulation, job displacement, and the philosophies driving frontier AI labs. The episode opened with discussion of Pope Francis's 235-page encyclical on AI warning against power centralization, with Sacks arguing the real threat is government overreach rather than private companies. Gurley delivered the episode's most striking revelation, calling Anthropic's leadership modern-day Dr. Frankensteins who believe they are midwifing a deity rather than building software, citing their Constitution document and Machines of Loving Grace manifesto as evidence of messianic delusion. Sacks predicted Anthropic is laying groundwork to ban open-source AI models through regulatory capture, warning this would isolate America while the world runs on Chinese models. The conversation shifted to heated disagreement over AI's labor impact, with Sacks claiming vindication for his January prediction that AI would create jobs rather than destroy them, pointing to 15% year-over-year growth in software engineering postings despite code automation. Calacanis countered that CEOs are using AI as cover for justified layoffs, citing Meta's 8,000 cuts and Amazon's elimination of 600,000 future positions, predicting painful displacement in trucking and warehouse work. Gurley argued competition would prevent monopoly profits, forcing productivity gains to flow to consumers through lower prices rather than shareholders through margin expansion. The group discussed Fortune 1000 companies building AI abstraction layers to avoid vendor lock-in, with Palihapitiya revealing enterprise fears about being subject to frontier labs' political philosophies. Gurley also dismantled the Pope's invocation of Leo XIII's 1891 anti-Industrial Revolution encyclical by showing technology delivered the opposite of predicted harms: shorter work weeks, 8-10x real wage growth, and poverty reduction from 75% to under 10% globally.

Key takeaways

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