Transcript
Senator Bernie Sanders (0:00)
Foreign.
John Lovett (0:19)
Welcome to Pont Save America. I'm John Lovett. Today on the show, I had a great conversation with Senator Bernie Sanders on AI Super PACs and his journey from a kid on a kibbutz in Israel to a senator trying to prevent weapons sales to Netanyahu and trying to save humanity from robots at the same time. And then you'll hear my conversation with our friend and journalist Peter Hamby, founding partner of Puck News and host of the Powers that Be podcast. On the Democratic shakeup in Maine, the governor's race in California, some news on the DNC and how the left ought to confront political violence. But first, here's my conversation with Bernie. Senator Sanders, welcome back to the show.
Senator Bernie Sanders (0:59)
Good to be with you, John.
John Lovett (1:00)
So I watched your panel last night on the existential risks of AI. You had researchers from North America and China. It was a bracing experience. There's a just for people that may not have caught it, MIT's Max Tegmark says we'll be like animals in a zoo. And then another researcher named David Krueger says zoos, most of us won't be so lucky. What did you take away? Why did you want to do this conversation?
Senator Bernie Sanders (1:27)
Thank you, John, for asking me about that. I am not a tech guy, but I'm sitting around and I read and I listen to people, and it is clear to me that AI and robotics are the most revolutionary technologies in the history of humanity. They are going to transform life for every man, woman and child, certainly in our country and around the world. How the hell do we ignore that reality? Why is there not massive discussion about the impact of AI, for example? All right, who is pushing AI right now? Who's pushing AI and robotics? The richest guys in the world. Musk, Bezos, Ellison, Zuckerberg. What do you think they want? Do you think they're staying up nights worrying about your family? I doubt it. Number two, there are economists all over the place who estimate no one knows exactly. Tens and tens of millions of jobs are going to be lost. What happens to the people who lose the jobs? They automatically go out and get another job. That does not appear to be the case. We got kids hooked to AI bots for emotional support, becoming increasingly isolated. Should we worry about that? Yeah, we should. Politically, I won't get to what it will mean to our democracy and politics in America. It's a big deal. But what last night was about is having very knowledgeable people talking about the real possibility that AI will escape human control, become independent, do its own thing, and the likelihood that that could lead to catastrophic implications, including extinction. So my job is not to fear Monger, but it's to say, wait a second. You got Nobel prize winners Geoffrey Hinton saying this. Do you think we might want to take a deep breath and think about where we go from here?
