Bernie Sanders Warns AI and Robotic Soldiers Could Shift Power to Billionaires

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 days ago
Senator Bernie Sanders cautions that billionaire-funded AI investments and the development of robotic soldiers could reshape warfare and concentrate power among the wealthy, raising questions about job displacement and democratic influence.

When you don't have to worry about soldiers coming home in body bags, does the calculation around going to war change completely? That's the uncomfortable question Senator Bernie Sanders is raising as AI and robotics technology races forward faster than anyone expected.

The Robot Soldier Problem

Sanders told NBC News recently that we're getting close to seeing robotic soldiers become reality. The Vermont independent isn't just thinking about cool military tech here. He's worried about what happens when political leaders can make war decisions without weighing human casualties.

"If you don't have to worry about loss of life, and what you worry about is loss of robots, what does that mean for issues of war and peace globally?" Sanders asked. He noted that politicians "at least sometimes — have to worry about loss of life when they decide to go to war." Remove that constraint, and the math changes entirely.

Billionaires Building the Future

Sanders, who's spent decades hammering on wealth inequality, sees AI as the next frontier of power concentration. He pointed out to NBC News that the top 1% of Americans now hold more wealth than the bottom 93%. And now those same ultra-wealthy tech titans are pouring resources into the technology that could shape humanity's next chapter.

According to Sanders, leaders like Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk, Oracle Corp. (ORCL) co-founder Larry Ellison, Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) founder Jeff Bezos, and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) CEO Mark Zuckerberg are investing "hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars" into AI and robotics. The concern isn't just the money itself, but who ends up controlling the technology that results from it.

Sanders argues these massive investments could push even more power toward the top while weakening democratic systems and institutions.

The Investment Frenzy Accelerates

AI spending has ramped up dramatically in recent months as major tech companies race to dominate the space. The trend got a boost from the Trump administration's push to keep the U.S. AI ecosystem "unencumbered by bureaucratic red tape," according to the White House's America's AI Action Plan.

But Sanders wrote in a recent Fox News opinion piece that there are sharp disagreements over AI's impact, particularly around who benefits and who gets left behind.

The technology is advancing faster than previous technological revolutions, Sanders told NBC News, citing researchers. That speed has lawmakers scrambling to catch up. Both state and federal officials have begun expanding oversight efforts, with a House subcommittee holding a hearing earlier this month on AI chatbot safety as concerns grow about accuracy, misuse, and emerging risks.

There are social dimensions too. Sanders mentioned that some families worry about teenagers developing emotional attachments to AI tools instead of real human relationships. The long-term effects on social behavior remain unclear as young people spend increasing time with systems designed to simulate human connection.

The Job Displacement Question

Sanders told NBC News that AI could trigger "massive, massive job dislocation," and he's not alone in thinking this. Business leaders themselves are sounding the alarm.

Take Musk, who recently posted on X that "AI and robots will replace all jobs. Working will be optional." He repeated the prediction last week at the U.S.–Saudi Investment Forum.

Sanders responded with the obvious follow-up question: "But what the hell does that mean if it's going to replace all jobs? If I'm a factory worker today, if I'm working in an office, how am I going to feed my family? How am I going to pay the rent? Who is talking about that?"

It's the kind of practical concern that gets lost when tech leaders talk about AI's utopian potential. Sure, work becoming optional sounds great if you're already wealthy. But for most people, work isn't just about fulfillment or purpose. It's how they survive. And nobody in power seems to have a good answer for what happens to everyone else when the robots take over.

The tension Sanders is highlighting runs through every AI debate right now: the technology is advancing incredibly fast, the people funding it are incredibly wealthy and powerful, and the systems meant to ensure it benefits everyone are way behind the curve. Whether you agree with his politics or not, those are questions worth wrestling with before robotic soldiers and job-replacing AI become everyday reality.

Bernie Sanders Warns AI and Robotic Soldiers Could Shift Power to Billionaires

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 days ago
Senator Bernie Sanders cautions that billionaire-funded AI investments and the development of robotic soldiers could reshape warfare and concentrate power among the wealthy, raising questions about job displacement and democratic influence.

When you don't have to worry about soldiers coming home in body bags, does the calculation around going to war change completely? That's the uncomfortable question Senator Bernie Sanders is raising as AI and robotics technology races forward faster than anyone expected.

The Robot Soldier Problem

Sanders told NBC News recently that we're getting close to seeing robotic soldiers become reality. The Vermont independent isn't just thinking about cool military tech here. He's worried about what happens when political leaders can make war decisions without weighing human casualties.

"If you don't have to worry about loss of life, and what you worry about is loss of robots, what does that mean for issues of war and peace globally?" Sanders asked. He noted that politicians "at least sometimes — have to worry about loss of life when they decide to go to war." Remove that constraint, and the math changes entirely.

Billionaires Building the Future

Sanders, who's spent decades hammering on wealth inequality, sees AI as the next frontier of power concentration. He pointed out to NBC News that the top 1% of Americans now hold more wealth than the bottom 93%. And now those same ultra-wealthy tech titans are pouring resources into the technology that could shape humanity's next chapter.

According to Sanders, leaders like Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk, Oracle Corp. (ORCL) co-founder Larry Ellison, Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) founder Jeff Bezos, and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) CEO Mark Zuckerberg are investing "hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars" into AI and robotics. The concern isn't just the money itself, but who ends up controlling the technology that results from it.

Sanders argues these massive investments could push even more power toward the top while weakening democratic systems and institutions.

The Investment Frenzy Accelerates

AI spending has ramped up dramatically in recent months as major tech companies race to dominate the space. The trend got a boost from the Trump administration's push to keep the U.S. AI ecosystem "unencumbered by bureaucratic red tape," according to the White House's America's AI Action Plan.

But Sanders wrote in a recent Fox News opinion piece that there are sharp disagreements over AI's impact, particularly around who benefits and who gets left behind.

The technology is advancing faster than previous technological revolutions, Sanders told NBC News, citing researchers. That speed has lawmakers scrambling to catch up. Both state and federal officials have begun expanding oversight efforts, with a House subcommittee holding a hearing earlier this month on AI chatbot safety as concerns grow about accuracy, misuse, and emerging risks.

There are social dimensions too. Sanders mentioned that some families worry about teenagers developing emotional attachments to AI tools instead of real human relationships. The long-term effects on social behavior remain unclear as young people spend increasing time with systems designed to simulate human connection.

The Job Displacement Question

Sanders told NBC News that AI could trigger "massive, massive job dislocation," and he's not alone in thinking this. Business leaders themselves are sounding the alarm.

Take Musk, who recently posted on X that "AI and robots will replace all jobs. Working will be optional." He repeated the prediction last week at the U.S.–Saudi Investment Forum.

Sanders responded with the obvious follow-up question: "But what the hell does that mean if it's going to replace all jobs? If I'm a factory worker today, if I'm working in an office, how am I going to feed my family? How am I going to pay the rent? Who is talking about that?"

It's the kind of practical concern that gets lost when tech leaders talk about AI's utopian potential. Sure, work becoming optional sounds great if you're already wealthy. But for most people, work isn't just about fulfillment or purpose. It's how they survive. And nobody in power seems to have a good answer for what happens to everyone else when the robots take over.

The tension Sanders is highlighting runs through every AI debate right now: the technology is advancing incredibly fast, the people funding it are incredibly wealthy and powerful, and the systems meant to ensure it benefits everyone are way behind the curve. Whether you agree with his politics or not, those are questions worth wrestling with before robotic soldiers and job-replacing AI become everyday reality.