AI won’t make life cheaper for those who cannot work and the mega rich would be using their money to help others right now if they were going to do it for everyone in the future

You may have noticed that there is a growing trend for people to generate clicks on social media by creating long threads that tell interesting stories – many of which have already been told before.

One of them has popped up on my feed several times recently and outlines the predictions of some great contemporary sage of future tech who has apparently been proven right several times before.

The next prediction tells us that in no more than a few years, AI will have made everything so cheap that nobody will work and everything we pay for will cost just a few pennies and no more.

This prediction is popular. Because in today’s world everything relates to money.

Therefore, when people are handed the suggestion that everything they want will cost next to nothing, and there will also be no need to work, the immediate response and logic for just about anyone is to frame that in the way that we see, feel and experience our lives today or right now. Rather than considering what the pathway to that place will have changed in our lives and what our life experience will have then become.

The Moneyocracy or money-centric way of living that we are all experiencing today isn’t one where anything we need and certainly nothing that we want comes to us for free or without there being some financial-related cost of some kind.

Whilst the narrative that the establishment, big tech and big business would have us believe is that AI is here to make life much cheaper and easier for us all, the financial growth that the establishment’s pet politicians are so obsessed with and the picture of unfettered abundance for everyone that they want us to buy into, don’t go hand in hand.

Yes, there is of course the chance that the money hoarding elites are doing what they do today and that they have done everything that they’ve done in the past so that once they have optimal control of everything that we know, they will then benevolently give every one of us the perfect life experience that was always the aim. Which of course only ridiculous amounts of cash would allow them to do.

However, before we run away with that idea and think more about living our best material lives for free, there are perhaps just a few alternative truths that we all need to consider.

Money has made money by riding off the backs of the masses. First by making many hands do the work that enriched the few, through industrialisation and everything that came with it. Then by turning the mass population into debtors, exploiting the unwitting who have bought into the money myth themselves, so that the elites can continue to make ridiculous profits, just the same.

The system is very clever. And it is clever because it preys on the darker attributes of the human condition that make too many of us overlook common sense and basic logic when we are in receipt of money, wealth, position and shiny things. Everything that makes us live for a constant flow of temporary yet momentary hits that we have foolishly mistaken for what makes life and living feel good.

Addiction hides truths that are big, small and cover the multitude that sit between.

No matter our level or position within this carefully constructed top-down pyramid, the truth swirls all around us. But we remain blind to it for as long as we continue to be bought in.

So, in the sense of this coming ‘nirvana’ that AI is supposedly now promising us all, perhaps we should consider some of the more serious and consequential truths that we are almost certainly missing whilst we remain within:

The wealthy are only wealthy because of where their wealth sits within the hierarchy of the way that money and the wealth divide works against the rest of us today.

If the masses stop working, there will be billions of mouths around the world to feed and as many people to support with all the basics and essentials for life, just for people to continue to exist.

Even if machines are creating food, creating entertainment, providing transport, building houses and doing just about everything else we can imagine that has historically been done by hand up until now, there will always be a cost of some kind to pay.

The running, energy production, maintenance and replacement of the systems that would be required to enable such a massive workless population not only to survive, but to be sustained at what we would surely expect to be a good standard or experience of life, would remain very high.

Indeed, the cost of supporting billions of people around the world would still be much greater than many would imagine and would not be a cost that could be covered by playing with money and the way that people who are earning money today believe in the power of money right now.

In this sense playing with money means the way that the entire monetary, financial and economic system as we know works.

The ‘money’ and currencies we have today are part of the biggest confidence trick that has ever been played on humanity.

The whole economic system and the way money is created and managed within it is well and truly rigged.

The creation of the wealth, and the levels and scope of the asset ownership that the elites enjoy today would not have been remotely possible without them having and retaining the ability to constantly game the system.

Those running, managing and ‘in’ on the system use money that doesn’t exist to buy up everything that has real, non-monetary value to people.

This ‘ownership’ means that they will control our future and everything within it.

This has all been achieved under a system that they have created and manipulated using the establishment and the political and legislative processes within it to allow them to carry out what amounts to nothing less than legalised theft.

The wealth that has been created to enable this world take over by the wealthy can and will only achieve the aims of creating a utopian world if that world is inhabited by few enough to make the absence of money creation sustainable.

It will not be sustainable in any way, if the few have to manage and provide for a world population tomorrow, where the masses do nothing productive, become professional users and behave or act like farm animals or caged pets that exist in every direction and live all over the place.

Many baulk at even the merest hint or suggestion of there being some kind of plan for depopulation.

But anyone who understands how the money, financial and economic system we have today really works and where it is going, will see that depopulation of some kind is the unavoidable answer that bridges what is otherwise an unbridgeable void on the pathway to the outcome which has always been this Moneyocracy’s aim.

The only challenge they face is how to achieve this on a big enough scale without the masses ever awakening to the idea that national and worldwide crises can be planned and implemented by design. Just as easily as an entire monetary, financial and economic system that has led the majority of us to believe that those who don’t have enough of what they need to live today are the only ones who are at fault.

Your Beliefs Today create Everyone’s Experiences Tomorrow | New Book

How do you look at the world?

How is your view of the world different to other people?

What will tomorrow look like based on the view of the world you have today?

Would you change the way you view the world if you understood the difference between your view, other people’s views and what they could really mean?

These are all very important questions that most of us are typically too busy or distracted to even consider, let alone ask.

However, the consequences of us not doing so could be very profound, as the future will just happen to us unless we do so

Your Beliefs Today create Everyone’s Experiences Tomorrow invites you to consider a range of the different prevailing ways that people look at today’s world. How they came into being, and what – without change – they are likely to bring into our lives for our tomorrows.

Will you recognise yourself and what your beliefs today could bring to your future experiences?

Will you be happy with everything you believe?

Will you see your own perspective as very different?

Or will you choose to step forward into the future armed with the tools and power for change?

Rethinking The Minimum Wage: The need for a Basic Living Standard

Today, the establishment offers us ‘The Minimum Wage’ and ‘The Living Wage’.

However, neither the Minimum Wage nor the Living Wage are genuinely representative of what it costs a single person to live independently, without having to rely upon Benefits or Welfare, Charity such as Food Banks, or going into Debt of some kind, in order to meet the real Cost of Living or threshold for independent living.

The reality that government subsidises low wages through income support, housing benefits, tax relief is overlooked by many, because the ‘official’ or ‘establishment’ narrative is that if you received the Minimum Wage or its equivalent, you have enough money to live.

Sadly, the many truths that surround life experience where there is lack, reliance upon others and a culture that looks down upon anyone who needs financial help in ways that too often suggest guilt is overlooked by the very people who should know better.

Every Person should have the ability to live and support themselves independently in the lowest paid work, irrespective of background, qualifications, experience or any factor that could be used to excuse some form of prejudice on the part of others.

Creating and implementing A Basic Living Standard would provide an equal financial or material footing for Every Person is both a necessary and required foundation for the Just, Balanced and Fair society, that we all deserve.

The Basic Living Standard

“Adults, working a full working week in any job at any level, must be able to feed, house, clothe and provide adequately for their own transport needs, whilst providing basic necessities such as communication themselves, without the need for credit, loans, benefits or third-party support of any kind.”

To work effectively and as it should, The Basic Living Standard would become the key requirement of all business and economic activities.

Every economic activity and transaction would be made and progressed with The Basic Living Standard in mind and no economic activity would exist that does not place People and the impact and consequence to People at its core.

The Basic Living Standard will help flip the value set across society and address every wider social problem that society faces, leaving the Public Sector to take care of those who have genuine problems that have not been caused by societal conditioning or environmental factors, as it always should.

The Basic Living Standard could either be adopted as a voluntary change, or as the way to move forward, should the unthinkable happen and we experience some kind of system collapse, where a new form of governance is finally accepted as being essential for change.

Choices and Outcomes that will Shape Our Future Lives

One destination can yield two or more different outcomes. Depending upon the reason and the motivation for being there.

This statement sums up the dilemma that we all face in terms of how different parts of our lives and how our collective life experiences are going to play out for us over the coming months and years.

The different or alternative outcomes we can expect depend upon choices that we make that we may well continue not to realise that we are even making.

They could as easily be made by the impact of an event or a series of events  that make a certain destination or a range of different destinations inevitable. Rather than any of them being either a conscious or unconscious choice.

So, what are the choices we face?

The choices we face are quite literally about the way that we live. The lifestyles we have. The food we eat. The houses we live in. The way that we work. The way that we are entertained and that we entertain ourselves. The ways that we value education and life skills. The way that we see, respect and value others. The way that we interact with our community and the services and resources that we share. The way that we travel. The way that we treat nature and the environment. The way that we consider the future. The way that we think about others and the way that we think about ourselves.

The list is indeed long. But those who can see this will also understand that we are always making a choice.

What many don’t yet realise is that some, if not many of the choices that we have to make will not be based upon the things or the experiences that we have that are outside of ourselves.

Rather, the choices that we have to make will be about how we choose to interpret the value of the things or experiences that are outside of us, how we think about them and how we respond to them within.

Examples of these choices in life are already being presented to us to make. But the way that we are experiencing them today does not materialise in forms that we recognise as being a conscious choice.

We are experiencing critically important choices like a decision or a change that is being imposed upon us by those with responsibility over our lives. And these changes are being implemented in ways that make it feel like we don’t have any choice.

The reason that this is happening to the majority of us today is it is only the people who are controlling the lives of others who have any real reason to think and plan ahead for the way that society and the system or way of doing things will work for the future that lies ahead.

However, these same people have been planning ahead and making decisions that now affect every part of our lives for decades past. And we are all paying a very heavy price.

Decisions constantly made to benefit and enrich the few at the cost of the many do not come cheaply.

Today, the ‘powers’ that control everything are only too well aware that time is running out for the system that has progressively hurt and impoverished everyone else, whilst they and their kind have become increasingly rich.

They are making attempts to mitigate the impact of the decisions that they have already made by creating and implementing public policies that we have never consented to and have never even discussed.

We experience what is being done ‘to us’ and ‘to our lives’ as if we are being controlled and are heading into a world where we will increasingly be told what we can and cannot do.

The reason that this approach is so offensive to us is regrettably simple. It involves the rather difficult relationship that we all have with truth.

Deep down, often unconsciously or without thinking, we realise that whilst it may never have been our conscious intention to live unsustainably and to cherish money and material wealth above all things and most of the people in our lives, this is exactly what we have done.

Those who control everything today are well aware of what they have already imposed upon everyone. Because the addiction to money and material living that many of us don’t even realise that we have is also one that they share.

Guilt always likes company after all.

Servicing the addiction to wealth and the power and control that comes with it by changing the worlds of others, so that they help to feed the addiction of your own, is something that only those who are addicted who have power over everyone and everything else are able to do.

The actions of an addict who is acting to feed their own habit and the habits of those around them are never accompanied by any kind of rational consideration or feeling for the cost and impact upon anyone else whom their actions might involve.

For those whose lives have not reached the point of addictive compulsion, the process of waking up to or understanding what they are experiencing and then making the conscious decision to live differently and take back control, is where the pathway back to where sanity – and this case humanity – can begin.

The greatest ill that our addiction to money and material living has inflicted upon us is unsustainable living.

It’s what we might recognise as focusing purely on the things and the experiences that we ‘want’, rather than the things and experiences that we ‘need’.

All of the problems that the world faces today are wrapped up in the offshoots of unsustainable living.

Unsustainable living spans our experiences of life at world level, from the impact of globalisation and the way that money rules everything, to the personal impact of the dehumanisation of relationships and the diminishing value we place on community, the people who are around us every day, and the meaning that values have or should have across our lives.

Greed, selfishness, separation and everything we interpret as making us different are at the root cause of all the problems that we face. Yet we today fall into the trap of mistaking the effects of the problems as the cause themselves.

The mess that we are in has been developing for a very long time and the biggest issue that we all face is whether events will take the decisions out of our hands, or if enough of us can wake up to the reality we now face and change the direction that we are all going in time.

The Harmful Hidden Meaning of ‘Growth’

We hear the term growth coming from the mouths of politicians so often that the word now sounds like it’s all government is about.

And yes, it is true that growth today is all that the government is about.

“Great!” say businesses and business owners. “The government are out to help us grow!”

And that is exactly the kind of growth most of us outside Westminster think of – and believe we are hearing – when politicians use the term. But it is not what they actually mean when they talk about “growth”, at least not the politicians who are in the know.

GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
The growth that politicians keep talking about is not the kind of growth most of us imagine when we hear them use the word.

Politicians – and the advisers around them – know perfectly well what the public thinks they mean, and they also know that what they mean is something quite different.

For politicians, growth does not mean business growth in the way most of us understand it. While it still includes the kind of growth we think of, that aspect matters far less to them today than it once did.

For politicians, growth means the growth of Gross Domestic Product, or GDP.

GDP is the size of the economy – the total amount of financial activity that has taken place across every form of business or trading activity involving measurable financial transactions. These transactions are recorded across the entire country by the Office for National Statistics from all the businesses and organisations it monitors.

“Measurable” is the key word here. It is the act of measuring so much of life because it has a financial value that has had such a negative influence on how we now value almost everything in purely monetary terms.

The Devil is in the Detail
GDP is critically important to politicians today because it is the benchmark figure that allows them to hide the true breadth and depth of public spending and public debt.

Yet GDP is really a measure of private‑sector or “commercial” activity, rather than the financial activity of public‑sector organisations.

Public borrowing figures matter because we have been conditioned to believe they have a direct relationship with the “economy”.

This is why they are always presented to us as a proportion or percentage of GDP.

If GDP grows quickly or significantly, the true financial position of the UK becomes easier to conceal.

Furthermore, this form of “creative accounting” can make the amount of money the government is spending, borrowing or creating appear smaller or less significant.

This sleight of hand works effectively because the narratives we hear from politicians and the media always frame public spending and public debt in terms of how “big” the economy is and how much it has “grown”.

Politicians and the money ‘creators’ are making our world unrecognisable whilst we are all being robbed
GDP is a very clever tool – and it was certainly designed to be. But it is also a double‑edged sword.

A quick recap:

Politicians can hide or even obscure public debt and “reduce” the amount they appear to be spending by “growing the economy”.

This is why politicians are obsessed with “growth”.

“Growing the economy” in this sense means increasing the amount of financial activity, or the total money spent or transferred through measurable activities during any defined period of time.

How “growth” works:

Political “growth” is typically achieved through an increase in private‑sector financial transactions and an increase in the volume of money in circulation (essentially the total of all the money sitting in every open bank account at any given moment).

Money is created by private banks and financial institutions – not by government.

While each pound is counted when it is created for GDP purposes, the real “magic” or sleight of hand lies in the fact that the same pound is counted again every time it changes hands in a new financial transaction at each point in a supply chain.

Housebuilding is perhaps the best example of how GDP – and therefore “growth” – can be increased, because large volumes of newly created money and the long chain of financial transactions it triggers can quickly be added to the UK’s balance sheet.

A good example of ‘Growth’ – in the way politicians need it to be:
To build a house requires private banks to create the money needed to buy the land and then to fund the entire building process. This includes the supply chains involving all the different businesses that produce building materials, the machinery used, the fuel required, the specialist tradesmen, and the surveyors.

Once the houses are built, they must be sold, which gives another private bank the opportunity to create the money for the mortgage. The mortgage lender charges a fee, the removal company gains business, the landscaper installs a garden, and so on.

Beyond this specific chain come the ongoing requirements: council tax for each home, which local councils automatically charge; utility accounts; increased demand for bus services; and the list continues.

Every one of the businesses involved provides data to the Office for National Statistics about their performance and turnover. Each set of figures is added to the country’s “productivity”, no matter how many times the same money has changed hands – meaning its value in GDP terms may be multiplied many times over.

Things to bear in mind – The System
It is important to understand that GDP functions as the “credible” measurement of economic activity precisely because it hides the creation of money behind the walls of private banks and finance houses.

Most people still believe that banks simply hold money for individuals or businesses and then lend that money to others – including governments – in return for interest, which is then shared with the original depositors.

While this may have been true in some limited ways historically, today money is created by private banks and finance houses as easily as an employee entering digits into a spreadsheet.

Many of the rules that once regulated and constrained these activities have been watered down or removed entirely under the banner of “deregulation” and “free markets”.

For The System to keep functioning, the amount of money available must keep growing, and the number of recorded financial transactions must keep increasing.

This is why the use – and increasing reliance – on credit, digital banking, and financial‑transaction tracking has become so important.

Cash transactions cannot be monitored or recorded in the same way digital transactions can. This is one of the key reasons cash is being phased out: cash, or any non‑digital transaction, is one of the few remaining tools of genuine financial independence.

Private banks and finance houses also “buy” the bonds that the government “sells” when it needs to “borrow” money to fund public policies and public‑sector delivery.
It is important to recognise that if the total amount of money in circulation were to remain fixed within this FIAT‑based economic and financial system, the value of transactions taking place would naturally fall.

The System was designed – and continues to operate – on the basis that money created within it automatically flows into the pockets of the rich. From there, it is invested in assets such as property, infrastructure, and business ownership, where it is used to generate even more credit‑creation opportunities.

In the FIAT system, money flows back to its source: those who are already very rich – the bubble where it was created in the first place.

Where our reality becomes VERY uncomfortable – just to support politicians’ ‘Growth’
To counteract the perverse nature of an economic system deliberately created to enrich and benefit those who created, manage and understand it (the creators), it becomes necessary for money to be created for new reasons and in an ever‑increasing number of ways. This ensures that money keeps flowing, keeps “multiplying”, and continues to appear as “growth”.

Deregulation allowed the same interests that create money to use even more of that created money to buy up almost everything they would never have been able to acquire otherwise – all because we have been encouraged to believe that the money they use is actually real.

This created, effectively “fake”, money has been used to buy or gain control of everything we recognise as real, typically so it can then be rented back to us – increasingly using more borrowed, created money on which we must pay interest.

Meanwhile, the money used for public spending is considered “dead money” because it generally pays wages and incomes rather than generating long chains of financial transactions that boost GDP. This creates a major problem for government, because running public services requires constant spending that does not produce the kind of measurable, repeatable financial activity that The System depends on. As a result, the government can no longer borrow enough to cover existing bills, especially as the UK has been stripped of its assets and productive capacity by the very same interests that create the money.

In contrast, large infrastructure projects are still politically attractive because they do generate the long supply‑chain activity that inflates GDP. Every stage – planning, contracting, materials, labour, machinery, financing, and eventual operation – produces measurable transactions that can be counted again and again. This makes such projects appear “affordable” or even “profitable” within the GDP‑driven framework, even when the government cannot sustainably fund day‑to‑day public services. Infrastructure spending therefore becomes a preferred tool not because it serves the public best, but because it props up the illusion of growth that The System requires.

More food for thought
Unfortunately for us, the creation of money out of nothing does not correspond in any meaningful way with the real value of what people and businesses across the UK own and produce.

Our politicians have helped to entrench this situation because adopting this system appeared to make life much easier for them.

This means that the real value of whatever money we possess – or expect to receive as income – falls each time even a single pound is “created” by politicians or by the banks.

The value of the pound in our pockets or in our bank accounts declines in proportion to the total amount of money in circulation.

The way The System attempts to counteract or mask this fall in monetary value is through what we know as inflation.

Inflation is the rise in prices that becomes necessary for anyone who owns or produces anything, simply so they can keep up with how “growth” is actually pushing the value of everything down.

How Inflation hurts us

We – the people and consumers – sit at the very end of the supply chain. We do not sell on what we buy, so we have no way to recoup the losses that government policy and economic distortions create across the wider economy.

Everything is driven by money, greed and profit.

As a result, we experience falling living standards because wages and incomes cannot rise fast enough to match the deficit that GDP‑driven “growth” creates for us at the level of everyday life.

Are we the victims of the biggest crime mankind has inflicted upon itself?
If you begin unpicking the layers of this economic onion – layers that have been deliberately obscured by narratives designed to deter anyone from looking too closely – you uncover some very uncomfortable truths that have been hiding in plain sight.

The biggest of these is that The System can only function by steadily impoverishing the masses, making people increasingly dependent on credit simply to exist.

When MMT, neoliberal economics and the FIAT monetary system were implemented in the early 1970s, it was already inevitable that those on the lowest incomes would eventually be unable to live without assistance – preferably in the form of credit.

That credit would be more of the same created money, lent back to us at interest, while our creditworthiness – and therefore our compliance – is monitored.

The government’s current push for welfare reform is not a sign that people want to live off the state. It is a sign that cracks are appearing in this bogus economy, and the fissures have widened so far that new “corporation‑friendly” policies can no longer hide them.

Although few of us trust politicians, most of us have not agreed on why.

What we should recognise is that – deliberate or not – everything politicians have done for the money creators over at least five decades has slowly destroyed the fabric of our society.

The uncomfortable truth is that we have all been robbed
The System has been created and maintained to benefit the few, while the many have been deliberately misled into believing that everything is fair, normal and simply “the way things are supposed to be”.

In reality, we have been robbed of our financial independence, our security, our opportunities, our communities, our public services and our ability to live without fear.

We have been robbed of the value of our labour, the value of our money, the value of our homes and the value of our time.

We have been robbed of the ability to live meaningful lives without being forced into debt, dependency or compliance.

We have been robbed of the truth.

We have been robbed of our peace.

And the worst part is that most people still don’t realise it.

Where we go from here
The harmful hidden meaning of “growth” becomes impossible to ignore once you understand how The System works. What politicians celebrate as “growth” is not the expansion of real prosperity, but the expansion of financial activity that extracts value from ordinary people and concentrates it elsewhere.

It is a cycle that demands ever‑greater debt, ever‑greater dependency and ever‑greater pressure on the real economy that people actually live in.

Growth is important to today’s political class because their political future depends on it. Without the appearance of growth, the economic narrative they rely on begins to collapse – and with it, the credibility of the system they defend.

Recognising this is the first step toward reclaiming what has quietly been taken from us.

The System only survives because we have been conditioned not to question it, not to challenge it and not to imagine that anything different is possible. But once the illusion is exposed, its power begins to fade.

Real change will not come from the same political class that helped build and protect this machinery of extraction. It will come from people who understand that a society cannot thrive when its citizens are reduced to consumers, debtors or data points in a spreadsheet.

We do not have to accept a future defined by insecurity, dependency or manufactured scarcity.

We can choose to rebuild an economy that values people over profit, communities over corporations and reality over the convenient fictions that have been sold to us for decades.

The truth may be uncomfortable, but it is also liberating. Once we understand how “growth” has been used as a tool of extraction, we can begin the work of creating something better – something fair, sustainable and genuinely human.

The theft only continues for as long as we fail to see it.

Awareness is the beginning of the end.

This Blog was first published on 6 December 2024. Updated on 28 April 2026 with minor revisions for clarity and relevance.