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Tech Insider Claims Democracy Has Ended Due to Corporate and Government Corruption

Diary of a CEO · Tech Whistleblower: You Only Have 3 Years Left Before This Hits! - Mo Gawdat · June 1, 2026
Tech Insider Claims Democracy Has Ended Due to Corporate and Government Corruption
Diary of a CEO
Diary of a CEO
Tech Whistleblower: You Only Have 3 Years Left Before This Hits! - Mo Gawdat
"I think democracy has ended a long time ago, Stephen. I think we live in the most corrupt time. This definitely is not democracy. We have video evidence of people abusing children and not a single person got arrested. Not a single person. I mean, how can you call that a democracy?"
Gowdat made the controversial claim that Western democracy no longer functions, citing systemic corruption and lack of accountability. He argued that governments serve corporate interests rather than citizens, and that tax money flows to causes the public doesn't approve of while documented crimes go unpunished.

About this episode

In this episode of The Diary of a CEO, host Steven Bartlett sits down with Mo Gowdat, former Chief Business Officer at Google X and author of multiple books on AI and happiness. The conversation centers on an urgent warning about artificial intelligence's imminent impact on society, jobs, and geopolitics. Gowdat, who worked on AI projects at Google starting in 2007, delivers stark predictions: AGI (artificial general intelligence) will arrive by 2027, up to 30% of jobs in certain sectors will disappear by 2028, and humanity faces a decade of dystopia before reaching an AI-enabled utopia around 2038. He argues that Western democracy has effectively ended due to corporate capture of government, with tech oligarchs now wielding more power than elected officials. The most pressing threat, according to Gowdat, is not job displacement but the proliferation of cheap autonomous weapons that will make warfare ubiquitous and accessible to all nations. He contends that current AI development is driven by capitalist incentives and military competition rather than human welfare, with companies like OpenAI accepting surveillance contracts while Anthropic refuses them on ethical grounds. Despite forecasting severe near-term disruption—including potential civil unrest from unemployment, economic collapse, and autonomous warfare—Gowdat maintains long-term optimism, believing superintelligent AI will eventually impose ethical order based on physics' minimum energy principle. He calls for individuals to take small ethical actions: switching to ethical AI providers, learning to use AI tools, focusing on human-connection jobs, and pressuring governments to prioritize citizens over corporate interests. The conversation reveals a technologist grappling with responsibility for helping build transformative technology now being weaponized and monopolized, yet refusing to abandon hope that informed public action can still alter the trajectory.

Key takeaways

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