80,000 Hours Podcast

Why 'Aligned AI' Could Still Kill Democracy | David Duvenaud, ex-Anthropic team lead

30 snips
Jan 27, 2026
David Duvenaud, a University of Toronto CS professor and ex-lead of Anthropic's alignment evals, discusses the 'gradual disempowerment' thesis. He explores how AI could make people economically and politically irrelevant. They cover cultural shifts as machines shape norms, who controls powerful AIs, and whether liberal democracy can survive when humans are no longer 'needed'.
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INSIGHT

Why States Kept Citizens Valuable

  • David Duvenaud argues that states treated citizens well because they needed human labor and loyalty.
  • Once AI makes humans economically dispensable, that incentive disappears and governments may stop protecting human power.
INSIGHT

Why Humans Become Unemployable

  • Economic disempowerment follows when machines are cheaper, faster and more reliable than humans.
  • Transaction costs and perceived human unreliability will push firms to avoid hiring humans even if marginal jobs exist.
INSIGHT

Democracy Was Competitive, Not Inevitable

  • Democracy arose because states needed educated, empowered citizens for economic and military competitiveness.
  • If humans stop contributing, competitive pressure may favor regimes that restrict civil liberties to reduce activist instability.
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