When the Spectacle Ends: AI Race to the Top vs Working Class Race to Survive
Written by Julie Telgenhoff
There was a time when the symbols of government were meant to project stability, restraint, diplomacy, and seriousness. Whether people trusted politicians or not, there was still an understanding that leadership was supposed to carry a certain weight.
Now cranes assemble a UFC cage on the South Lawn of the White House for the upcoming “UFC Freedom 250” event scheduled for June 14, while the internet circulates side by side comparisons to dystopian movie scenes depicting societal collapse unfolding beneath massive entertainment spectacles.
And honestly, the comparison resonates because it captures something many people already feel deep down.
Everything feels cinematic now. Like it's scripted, performed, and engineered for some king of reaction.
Politics is no longer grounded in governance as much as performance. Public life increasingly resembles a fusion of reality television, influencer culture, branding campaigns, professional wrestling theatrics, and emotional audience manipulation.
And every day brings another viral moment, another outrage cycle, another carefully packaged narrative designed to keep the public emotionally engaged and permanently distracted.
Meanwhile, beneath all the spectacle, structural economic changes continue to accelerate at a pace most people can barely process.
The middle class, once considered the backbone of a healthy and vibrant economy, has been slowly hollowed out for decades. Some trace the beginnings back to the aggressive globalization policies of the 1990s, when manufacturing jobs were steadily shipped overseas in the name of efficiency and profit. Entire towns across America slowly deteriorated as stable careers disappeared and were replaced with lower wage service sector work.
Then came the financialization of the economy, where corporations increasingly prioritized shareholder value over workers, communities, and long term national stability. Small businesses struggled while giant corporations expanded their dominance.
![]() |
| Source: Google AI |
While countless independent, small businesses were forced to close permanently, massive corporate chains remained open and absorbed even more market share. Many local restaurants, gyms, shops, and family owned businesses never recovered. Wealth consolidated upward while millions of ordinary people fell further behind financially, emotionally, and psychologically.
Now another massive transformation is arriving under the banner of artificial intelligence.
The public is told this acceleration is necessary because America must “beat China” in the AI race. And perhaps China truly is a legitimate competitor. But the urgency of that narrative is also being used to justify rapid deregulation, aggressive deployment, and corporate freedom to reshape entire industries with minimal public discussion about the long term societal consequences (read my article on the two AI initiatives called, "Winning the AI Race" and "The Genesis Mission" affecting everyone's lives, here).
![]() |
| These two initiatives fast-track AI and job loss: "Winning the AI Race" and "The Genesis Mission" |
White collar workers who once believed automation only threatened factory labor are beginning to realize they may be first in line for displacement. Entry level office work, customer service, marketing, coding, design, research, and administrative positions are already being affected. Entire career paths that once provided middle class stability now sit under a cloud of uncertainty.
And yet while these massive structural shifts unfold, the public sphere becomes increasingly theatrical. Politics transforms into spectacle.
The lines between government, entertainment, media, branding, and psychological manipulation continue to blur together until many people no longer know where one ends and another begins. Citizens become audiences. Leaders become performers. Viral moments replace meaningful discussion. Emotional reaction becomes more valuable than thoughtful analysis.
This is why the image of a UFC cage being assembled on White House grounds feels so symbolically powerful to so many people. It visually captures the strange era we are living through today. A civilization confronting massive "by-design" job loss, instability, division, economic uncertainty, technological disruption, and cultural exhaustion while simultaneously turning everything into entertainment.
Policymakers and corporations fully understand that widespread AI-driven job displacement will further erode what remains of the middle class, increasing dependence on government intervention, yet continue advancing these initiatives anyway under the belief that accelerated AI development is strategically and economically necessary.
Call it for what it is: Bread and circuses for the digital age.
And while the public remains emotionally consumed by the show, the foundations underneath society continue shifting in profound ways.
What will the job market look like once the spectacle fades and the United States achieves its goal of winning the AI race to the top, while millions experience the race to the bottom simply trying to feed their families?
And the show goes on...






