Sam Altman, CEO of Openaai, celebrates capitalism on July 4th Submit

Sam Altman, CEO of Openaai, speaks on February 3, 2025 at an event in Tokyo with the CEO of the Softbank Group, Masayoshi, at an event in Tokyo.

Tomohiro Ohsumi | Getty Images News | Getty pictures

Sam Altman, CEO of Openaai, released on X Friday and says that he was “politically homeless” because the Democratic Party is no longer aimed at promoting a “culture of innovation and entrepreneurship”.

Altman, whose company is a leader in artificial intelligence, made the post for the celebration of July and said that he was “extremely proud to be Americans” and believes that the United States is the largest country of all time.

He used the post to share part of his political ideology and said he believed in “techno capitalism”.

“We should encourage people to earn tons of money and then find ways to exploit wealth and share the compounding magic of capitalism,” he wrote. “One does not work without the other; they cannot increase the soil and not increase the ceiling for very long.”

The 40 -year -old Altman said that he had believed this ideology since he was 20, and the Democrats were brought into harmony at the time, but since then lost the conspiracy and has completely moved in a different place at this point.

“I would rather hear from candidates about how they will all get things that have the billionaires instead of eliminating billionaires,” wrote Altman.

This comment seems to have been a reaction to the New York democratic mayor candidate Zohran Mamdani, who said this week he didn't think there should be billionaires.

“I don't think we should have billionaires because at a moment it is so much money in a moment of such inequality and ultimately more equality in our city and in our state and in our country,” said Mamdani about NBCS “Meet the Press”.

CNBC has contacted Mamdani's campaign to comment on Altman's statement.

REGARD: Sam Altman, CEO from Openaai

Comments are closed.