Critics, including some AI safety advocates and
political figures like Steve Bannon, argue that Sacks's views and actions pose
a danger.
Accelerationism and Deregulation:
Sacks is described as an "accelerationist" who favors rapid AI
development with minimal regulation. He has advocated for a single federal
framework that would override stricter state AI laws, which opponents argue
creates a regulatory vacuum that allows for harms like mass copyright theft,
biometric extraction without consent, and algorithmic discrimination without
meaningful accountability.
Conflicts of Interest:
As a prominent venture capitalist and a White House adviser, Sacks has faced
scrutiny for retaining hundreds of investments in AI-related companies, leading
to concerns that his policies may benefit himself and his friends at a cost to
the public interest.
Downplaying Existential Risk:
Sacks dismisses "doomer narratives" about AI spiraling out of human
control or causing mass job losses as "misguided" and part of a
"Doomer Industrial Complex". Critics fear this stance ignores genuine
existential threats and prioritizes tech dominance over safety.
Inside
MAGA's growing fight to stop Trump's AI revolution
Steve
Bannon is warning the issue could cost Republicans in 2026 and 2028
By Will Steakin
November
24, 2025, 9:40 PM
Last
week, President Donald Trump took the stage at the United States-Saudi
Investment Forum, where he touted his administration's efforts to supercharge
artificial intelligence in the United States.
Trump
said he was proud to have "ended the ridiculous Biden-era
restrictions" and vowed to "build the largest, most powerful, most
innovative AI ecosystem in the world."
But as
Trump stood there boasting of his administration's extensive agenda for AI --
which he has previously described as "one of the most important
technological revolutions in the history of the world" -- some of his most
loyal supporters within the MAGA base were denouncing his effort to accelerate
the AI revolution.
Over on
Steve Bannon's show, War Room -- the influential podcast that's emerged as the
tip of the spear of the MAGA movement -- Trump's longtime ally unloaded on the
efforts behind accelerating AI, calling it likely "the most dangerous
technology in the history of mankind."
"I'm
a capitalist," Bannon said on his show Wednesday. "This is not
capitalism. This is corporatism and crony capitalism."
Bannon
blasted legislators and industry leaders over the lack of regulation regarding
AI, the next-generation computer technology capable of performing human-like
reasoning and decision-making that's already available in offerings ranging
from virtual assistants to self-driving cars. Bannon would go on to dedicate
the rest of the week's shows to sounding
the alarm over reports that Trump was considering an executive order that would
overrule state laws regulating AI.
"You
have more restrictions on starting a nail salon on Capitol Hill or to have your
hair braided, then you have on the most dangerous technologies in the history
of mankind," Bannon told his listeners.
'The
greatest crisis we face'
For years
Bannon was one of the few voices on the right railing against the perceived
threat of unchecked artificial intelligence and big tech -- but as President
Trump barrels toward supercharging the technology in the United States,
empowering tech billionaires and signing off on a massive expansion of the
industry in the coming years, a growing list of some of the most influential
voices in Trump's MAGA movement are voicing deep concerns in what could
indicate a fundamental fracture within the broad coalition that swept Trump
into office in 2024.
The rift
underscores the sheer number of competing forces now working to shape the
administration's approach to AI, from Bannon, who was Trump's 2016 campaign
chief, to Elon Musk, his one-time DOGE lead and top donor, to AI CEOs like Sam
Altman, to David Sacks, who Trump has established as his own AI czar inside the
administration.
"History
will know us for this," Bannon said in an interview with ABC News.
"Even more than the age of Trump, [the MAGA base] will be known for this.
So we've got to get it right."
For
voices like Bannon, the brewing battle over AI will be the political fight that
defines not only the MAGA base moving forward, but potentially shapes the 2026
midterms, the 2028 presidential election, and beyond.
On one
side of the issue stand the tech billionaires and Silicon Valley executives who
poured millions into Trump's campaign, some of whom now occupy influential
positions in his administration and out, and have continued to push for rapid
AI development with minimal regulation, often stressing the need to maintain
national security and economic competitiveness and to beat China in the
so-called AI race. "We have to embrace that opportunity, to be more
productive," Sacks argued at a White House event in June were he said AI
technology would promote innovation across the economy. "Our workers need
to know how to use AI and be creative with it."
On the
other side stand popular MAGA voices who are increasingly sounding the alarm on
their concern that AI technology will eliminate jobs and reshape American
society.
"AI
is probably the greatest crisis we face as a species right now but it isn't
being addressed with any urgency at all," popular conservative podcaster
for Daily Wire Matt Walsh said in a post on X last week. "We're just
sleepwalking into our dystopian future."
Tucker
Carlson in October released a nearly 2-hour podcast that critically looked at
the rise of AI, comparing it to occult and discussed how AI could lead to the
"mark of the beast," a reference to Bible verses in the book of
Revelation.
Sens.
Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, and Marsha Blackburn, a Republican from
Tennessee, have emerged as prominent elected officials sounding alarms about
AI, introducing legislation to restrict AI's use in critical decisions
affecting Americans' lives, from loan approvals to medical diagnoses. Hawley
argues that without aggressive intervention, AI will concentrate power in the
hands of a few tech companies while decimating the working class.
'Tech
bros' vs. the working class
Some of
the president's most loyal supporters are increasingly seeing artificial
intelligence as a sweeping transfer of wealth and control to tech titans like
Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Peter Thiel, who have drawn the ire of large parts
of the president's base. From what Bannon has observed on the ground level, the
MAGA base has grown more and more concerned about the country marching toward
an AI takeover, with fears mounting on the right about working people losing
their jobs, and the lack of proper regulation or reforms in place to protect
those workers.
Some
experts have predicted AI will reshape large swaths of the American economy,
particularly impacting entry-level work as recent college graduates enter the
job market. Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, which created an AI model called
Claude, told Axios earlier this year that technology could cut U.S. entry-level
jobs by half within five years.
"The
technology is advancing without regulation," Bannon said, predicting a
coming "jobs apocalypse" that would hurt working people, many of
which, he points out, are Trump supporters.
The
sentiment runs deep in the MAGA base. By Bannon's estimate, an overwhelming
majority among rank-and-file Trump supporters has grown to loathe the push
behind AI, taking issue with the lack of regulations and the close relationship
AI tech companies and CEOs have built with the president.
There is,
Bannon argues, "a deeper loathing in MAGA for these tech bros than there
is for the radical left, because they realize that radical left is not that
powerful."
"[The
MAGA base] see all these tech oligarchs that tried to suppress their voices ...
and then all of a sudden being the President's new best friends. They just
don't buy it," Bannon said.
The War
Room host plans to make combating AI his main focus in the coming months and
years ahead, he told ABC News, and is working to build a coalition on the
right, from the bottom up, to challenge the surge of artificial intelligence in
time to save his movement, from not only the jobs he says will ultimately
cripple the working-class American, but to try and retain the base of support
the president built in 2024.
"I
will get 100 times more focused on this," Bannon said. "We are going
to turbo-charge this issue. This is the issue before us."
'This is
where we're going to lead the resistance'
A key
player in Bannon's mission to take on AI in the coming years is Joe Allen, his
show's resident AI expert, who regularly appears to deliver searing rebukes to
the War Room audience, which Bannon says have become some of the most popular
segments.
Bannon
didn't find Allen as his MAGA crusader against artificial intelligence at a
think tank or on Capitol Hill -- but instead at a concert venue.
Allen,
whose official title is "transhumanist editor" for the War Room,
previously worked as a touring rigger, spending his days hoisting massive light
and speaker setups for musical acts ranging from Rascal Flatts to the Black
Eyed Peas, calculating weight loads, securing speaker arrays, then breaking it
all down to head to the next city. At night, he was devoted to deep research
into AI and transhumanism, publishing his writings in conservative outlets like
the Federalist.
In 2021,
Bannon reached out to Allen after coming across his work, and invited him on
his show before quickly offering him a permanent role as the show's AI expert.
Since
then, with help from Bannon, Allen has published a book in 2023 critiquing
superintelligence titled "Dark Aeon: Transhumanism and the War Against
Humanity" and has become an emerging voice on the right sounding the alarm
against AI.
Bannon
grew so reliant on Allen's work that earlier this year he insisted he relocate
to Washington, D.C., full-time, having him work out of Bannon's so-called
"Embassy" as a base of operations.
"I
can't have you in Knoxville or out in Montana," Bannon said he told Allen.
"This is where it's happening, and this is where we're going to lead the
resistance."
While
Bannon often frames his opposition to AI in economic and political terms,
Allen's critique at times focuses more toward the philosophical and spiritual.
He argues that AI is not merely a tool that will lead to job displacement, but
sees it as a force that will reshape humanity itself -- intellectually,
socially, and perhaps most importantly in his mind, in ways that threaten the
soul.
"People
are being trained to see AI as the source of authority on what is and isn't
real," Allen told ABC News in an interview. "In every case, you have
zealous leaders who are counseling their followers to eliminate themselves for
the sake of an alien intelligence. Same energy as [Heaven's Gate]," he
said, comparing the push to the deadly cult.
Allen
warns of what he calls the "inverse singularity," a future where
human intelligence collapses as people grow dependent on machines that
"decide what is and isn't real." He speaks about a coming
"transhumanism" future that he feels the likes of Elon Musk and other
tech titans are looking to bring about with the merging of humans with
"the Machine," which he sees as "anti-human" and threatens
humanity's existence.
And
leading voices like Musk, who recently said he believed one day humans would be
able to upload their consciousness into his AI powered Optimus robot, have made
clear they see the technology is heading in that direction.
Nvidia
defies AI bubble fears but some analysts remain worried
"Long
term, the Al's going to be in charge, to be totally frank, not humans. So we
need to make sure it's friendly," Musk, who himself has at times has
warned of the perils of AI, said at a recent Tesla all-hands event.
To spread
the warning, Allen has taken his message on the road, traveling the country
giving lectures at churches, conservative conferences, and MAGA gatherings,
working to convince everyday Americans of the dangers of AI technology
Bannon
sees Allen as a key force in his mission to galvanize the MAGA base from the
ground up, to spread the warning about AI and big tech and to build enough
support among the grassroots voices around the country to challenge the AI
push.
"He's
going to every conference possible, meeting people ... and I told him, I want
you to go to every church that asks you. I want you to go to churches. I want
you to go to MAGA, Tea Party meetings. I want to get the base in the loop on
this at the ground floor," Bannon said. "And I want them to take
ownership. They took ownership in 2021 with President Trump's comeback. If they
take ownership here, we literally can't be beaten."
"It's
their fight, and the only way we win this is with them," he said.
Taking on
Congress
Perhaps
the movement's biggest win yet was over the summer when an insurgent team
including Bannon, Mike Davis, and others worked publicly and behind the scenes
to kill the inclusion of a proposed 10-year moratorium on state-level AI
regulation as part of President Trump's major legislative package known as the
"One Big Beautiful Bill."
Meanwhile,
some of the large tech giants behind AI products have started to take notice
and have begun reaching out privately to influential voices in MAGA world to
try and smooth out the anti-AI sentiment, sources tell ABC News.
But the
anti-AI movement on the right faces formidable opposition. The Trump
administration remains committed to accelerating AI projects nationwide, and
the president's closest advisers on technology -- the very people Bannon and
his allies are fighting against -- hold positions in the administration and
have his ear.
Chief
among them is Sacks, the venture capitalist and podcaster who serves as both
Trump's crypto and AI czar. Sacks has become one of the most influential voices
in the administration on technology policy, arguing that American dominance in
AI is essential to national security and economic competitiveness, particularly
when it comes to beating China.
Sacks has
compared the United States' pursuit of AI domination to the space race that saw
the United States land a man on the moon -- arguing the AI race is "even
more important."
In an
interview following Trump's address at AI summit in July, Sacks said, "I
think it was the most important technology speech by an American president
since President Kennedy declared that we had to win the space race."
Sacks and
other tech leaders in Trump's orbit frame the debate in stark terms: Either
America moves fast on AI development, or China will dominate the technology
that shapes the future.
"If
the U.S. leads, continues to lead in AI, we will be, we'll remain the most
powerful country, but if we don't, we could fall behind our global competitors
like China, and I think President Trump laid out a plan for winning this AI
race," Sacks said.
But to
voices in the MAGA movement like Bannon, Sacks is the embodiment of everything
wrong with the AI push. Bannon told ABC News that Sacks is the most articulate
-- and therefore "most dangerous" -- spokesman for what he calls the
"accelerationists," big tech voices pushing rapid, unregulated
advancement of artificial intelligence.
A few
weeks ago, Allen said he gave a lecture that he felt had gone
"disastrously." He said he could feel his message failing to connect
-- that as he delivered his theological and analytical critiques warning of the
emerging AI plague, many of the students' faces were glowing with the light of
their phones.
"Even
while I'm discussing, hey, one of the big problems is that you're hypnotized by
your devices ... a couple of people looked up from their phones with a
quizzical look," he recalled.
But he
said that as he was packing up his things, one student walked up to him and
made the whole trip worth it.
Allen
said she told him she agreed with much of what he had -- and she felt her
growth as a student was being stifled as everyone around her, all her
classmates, relied more and more on AI to write their papers and complete their
projects.
"How
am I supposed to compete if I am being the kind of student that has always
succeeded in the past, and people cheating are going to get ahead?" Allen
said she asked him.
Allen
said he couldn't deny it was a tough question.
She was correct. "In the near term, many of these cheaters will
outperform you on a numerical level," Allen said he told her.
"But,"
Allen said, "long term, the depth of character and the type of human being
you become from studying and creating from your own soul -- you're going to
win. Maybe not economically in the near term, but you're going to win."

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