Paramendra

The AntiChrist Is A Tendency

The economy has three parts: financial capital (aka money), physical capital (aka technology), and human capital (people). The AntiChrist tendency is to displace the human being with the other two.

If you use Palantir technology in 1998 to prevent 9/11, that is pro-people. But if you use Palantir technology in 2026 to make issuing and collecting speeding tickets as efficient as possible, that is anti-human. But you can use that same Palantir technology to enhance democracy to a level like never before. For lack of a better term, I call it reverse surveillance.

For example, making it super easy to vote. Just vote from your phone. The voting rate goes to 90%. Every vote, and every policy stand taken by a politician is at the fingertips in easy-to-understand ways. All policy proposals are served to all voters in ways they can understand. Every bill is scrutinized by AI on behalf of We The People. Every dollar in political donation is accounted for, and every citizen has access to the information. The power goes to the citizen.

The best way to uproot the cartels in Mexico might be to adopt Aadhar and UPI across Mexico. The best way to tackle immigration in the US might be to take Aadhar and UPI across all Americas.

Technology is but tool. You can use it for the people. You can use it against the people.

If the idea is to algorithmically maximize returns on financial capital, the BlackRock supercomputer figured out to turn homeowners into renters. There are enough empty houses across America that all of Australia could migrate but there is a housing crisis in America. Such is the banking dystopia.

AI is not alive. It is physical. It is material. It is not human. The greatest anti-AntiChrist move tech bros could make is to end poverty through direct cash transfers globally. Forget wealth tax, forget governments, forget the NGOs. Build. Direct cash transfers through the Aadhar UPI framework. So naturally you start in India. And might as well, although India has the largest middle class in the world, and more billionaires than most Asian countries, it also has a sub-Sahara size poor population. You start in India, and you build the Aadhar UPI framework in every other country that seeks to participate, and you do cash transfers there also. Zero leakage.

Where does the money come from? Every unicorn and beyond tech company volunteers to give 10% ownership to a Foundation. That Foundation has a one-point agenda: direct cash transfers to the poorest. Tech bros may consume all they want to consume, on to two generations. Why not three? Because there will be no more money, no more currency in the third. The economy will have become moneyless.

And then the tech bros get to split their shares. Consume all you want to consume. What you will not consume give away. But since you do need to run your companies, split the shares. You keep the voting power; the Foundation gets the money and does cash transfers.