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AI is about to move from a tech debate to a political battleground in the U.S., shaping regulation, jobs, and public opinion. Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff discuss how parties, voters, and leading tech companies are likely to respond—and why this friction is setting up a new golden age for entrepreneurs.
Show Notes:
There’s always a pause before politics fully catches up to a breakthrough technology like AI, but once it does, the debate quickly becomes intense and adversarial.
Around AI, three early camps are emerging: build as fast as possible, emphasize safety and oversight, and resist on populist grounds that cut across party lines.
We’ve seen this pattern before with industrialization—massive change first, political sorting later.
Big institutions are still trying to figure out AI while individual entrepreneurs are already running hands-on experiments.
A smart move is to keep a sharp human brain between you and the technology so your judgment stays in charge.
Wherever big organizations are slow, confused, or scared to move, entrepreneurs can step in and create new value.
Many business owners are using AI to automate repetitive, low-value activities so their teams can focus on higher-value thinking.
Even when jobs change or disappear, every person is still a buyer and a voter, so backlash is guaranteed.
Entrepreneurs who help clients think clearly about AI and their real problems will become the most important partners in their lives.
When services aren’t being delivered and problems aren’t being solved, that’s where entrepreneurs can build new kinds of value.
Resources:
Who Not How by Dan Sullivan with Dr. Benjamin Hardy
The Great Meltdown by Dan Sullivan
Learn more about Jeffrey Madoff
Dan Sullivan and Strategic Coach®
By Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff4.6
1111 ratings
AI is about to move from a tech debate to a political battleground in the U.S., shaping regulation, jobs, and public opinion. Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff discuss how parties, voters, and leading tech companies are likely to respond—and why this friction is setting up a new golden age for entrepreneurs.
Show Notes:
There’s always a pause before politics fully catches up to a breakthrough technology like AI, but once it does, the debate quickly becomes intense and adversarial.
Around AI, three early camps are emerging: build as fast as possible, emphasize safety and oversight, and resist on populist grounds that cut across party lines.
We’ve seen this pattern before with industrialization—massive change first, political sorting later.
Big institutions are still trying to figure out AI while individual entrepreneurs are already running hands-on experiments.
A smart move is to keep a sharp human brain between you and the technology so your judgment stays in charge.
Wherever big organizations are slow, confused, or scared to move, entrepreneurs can step in and create new value.
Many business owners are using AI to automate repetitive, low-value activities so their teams can focus on higher-value thinking.
Even when jobs change or disappear, every person is still a buyer and a voter, so backlash is guaranteed.
Entrepreneurs who help clients think clearly about AI and their real problems will become the most important partners in their lives.
When services aren’t being delivered and problems aren’t being solved, that’s where entrepreneurs can build new kinds of value.
Resources:
Who Not How by Dan Sullivan with Dr. Benjamin Hardy
The Great Meltdown by Dan Sullivan
Learn more about Jeffrey Madoff
Dan Sullivan and Strategic Coach®

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