It’s the looming threat of automation and centralization that I’m primarily discussing. Again, I’m not dismissing the jobs that *are* being produced by these employers. But these jobs will not sustain the entire country, and the more influence these producers specifically have in crafting economic policy, the more the economy is bound to specifically work for them. We’ve seen this with Trump’s tariffs, where they can run small businesses out of the market through a system where we make things prohibitively expensive for everyone except the companies that can lobby for exemptions. Google creates wonderful jobs, and there are great consumer products that come as a result. But if smaller businesses can no longer afford raw material because it’s ostensibly been made cheaper for certain businesses and industries by the government, I think it’s a net negative for the American worker.
And I don’t think it’s unethical, which is a big part of the messaging I hate. You’re right that we get cool things and people can create great wealth. But there’s a creeping divide between the health of the economy and the downstream benefits of that growth. The MAGA wing has wrongly embraced protectionism as a solution to that divide, and the left has wrongly embraced a war on billionaires. I don’t find either to be effective, but I think there’s still a problem to be solved.