Remember 1999? When everyone and their cousin’s roommate was throwing money at anything with “.com” in the name? Yeah, that ended with the Nasdaq losing 78% of its value and taking 15 years to recover. Spoiler alert: we’re doing it again, except this time it’s called AI, and it’s somehow even more expensive.
Don’t get me wrong—the AI boom is real. Nvidia’s printing money like it’s a central bank. Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta are collectively spending over half a trillion dollars this year alone on AI infrastructure. OpenAI and Anthropic are eyeing $1 trillion IPOs. SpaceX is approaching $2 trillion. This is genuinely transformational stuff.
But here’s the thing nobody wants to talk about: every boom creates its own backlash. And this one’s already building.
## The Energy Bill Problem
Every time a hyperscaler announces another data center, somewhere in America, a family’s electricity bill goes up. Georgia Power hiked rates six times in three years—average monthly bills jumped 50%. Near data centers, people are paying 267% more for electricity than five years ago. One woman CBS News interviewed is literally wearing a ski suit inside her own home because she can’t afford heating. She’s subsidizing Amazon’s data center.
That’s not a tech story anymore. That’s a kitchen-table story. And kitchen-table stories win elections.
## The Layoff Accelerant
Block’s CEO cut 40% of his workforce and explicitly credited AI. Amazon eliminated 14,000 corporate jobs—largest in company history—with AI cited as the reason. Meta’s cutting 8,000 people. Oracle’s erased 30,000 positions. Salesforce’s CEO literally said “I need less heads.”
In 2025, AI was explicitly cited for nearly 55,000 U.S. layoffs. In 2026, we’re seeing 860 tech layoffs per day. That’s not a statistic—that’s a political movement waiting to happen.
## The Meta Moment
Here’s where it gets spicy: Mark Zuckerberg buys a $170 million mansion on Miami’s private island while Meta simultaneously announces layoffs and installs tracking software on employees’ computers to harvest their behavioral data for training AI bots that’ll eventually replace them. One group gets fired. Another gets surveilled. Meanwhile, the CEO’s buying compounds with private police forces.
That’s the campaign ad that wins in 2028.
## The Timeline
Over the next 12-18 months, these pressure points compound. Public concern about AI keeps rising. More states battle over data center construction. More CEOs cite AI for layoffs. By 2027, this becomes a dominant political narrative. In 2028, candidates in both parties incorporate anti-AI messaging. Some win. In 2029, legislation arrives: AI taxes, data center restrictions, energy regulations, labor displacement provisions.
The market prices this before the bills even exist. AI infrastructure stocks—which will have had a spectacular run by then—start rolling over.
## The Bottom Line
Make your money now. The window for transformational wealth in this cycle is the next two to three years. The fundamental thesis is intact and powerful. But be clear-eyed: every boom has an expiration date. This one’s ticking.