This week in the French Alps, the G7 summit achieved something previously thought impossible: making international diplomacy feel like a Series B pitch deck. The world's most powerful heads of state—you know, people who actually control armies, currencies, and nuclear arsenals—made room at the table for CEOs of American AI companies, who were seated and treated as equals to nation-states. Not as guests. Not as consultants. As peers in the global power structure. This is what happens when Silicon Valley's gravity well becomes so dense that it bends reality itself.
Let's establish what we're actually dealing with here. These are executives of companies that, while undeniably valuable and culturally significant, have existed in their current form for less than a decade in most cases. They've built extraordinary products—LLMs, inference engines, whatever—and they've accumulated substantial market capitalizations through a combination of genuine innovation and the kind of speculative fervor that historically precedes financial corrections. But here's the thing about nation-states: they have borders, populations, tax bases, legal systems, standing armies, and centuries of institutional legitimacy. They issue currency. They enforce contracts. They exist whether or not their stock price is up. An AI CEO, by contrast, exists at the pleasure of venture capital cycles and the attention economy.
This isn't the first time we've watched tech founders mistake market success for geopolitical authority. The crypto boom gave us blockchain evangelists arguing they'd invented money. The metaverse era produced manifestos about replacing physical reality. WeWork's Adam Neumann positioned himself as a visionary reshaping human connection while losing $47 billion in shareholder value. Each cycle, the pattern repeats: extraordinary financial success creates the illusion that the rules have changed, that the old order of nation-states and boring democratic institutions is obsolete. Each cycle, reality reasserts itself.
The optics here deserve their own audit. Axios describes this as 'historic' and 'jarring'—code for 'deeply weird but we're reporting it straight.' The founding narrative appears to be that AI's importance to global policy demands that its corporate stewards have a voice equivalent to elected leaders. Buried in that framing is the assumption that shareholder-controlled companies should have nation-state-level influence over decisions affecting billions of people. The 'treatment as equals' part is especially rich: these CEOs were granted symbolic parity, which costs governments nothing and gives tech companies exactly what they've always wanted—the appearance of legitimacy without accountability.
What could go wrong? Well, start with the precedent. Once you've seated AI CEOs at the G7, you've implicitly validated the broader claim that whoever controls the most transformative technology deserves a permanent seat in global governance. Tomorrow, it's synthetic biology CEOs. Next week, it's quantum computing executives. Within a decade, national governments become one constituency among many competing interest groups. The last time we tested whether multinational corporations could match nation-state power, we got the East India Company—a private entity that ended up governing India. It took colonialism, famine, and structural collapse before we decided that maybe concentrated corporate power shouldn't supersede democratic legitimacy.
This moment captures something essential about our current moment: the complete inversion of accountability structures. These AI CEOs built products using compute, data, and talent. They did not build nations, nor did they win elections, nor do they answer to electorates. Yet here they sit, at the table where decisions affecting billions are made, their presence treated as natural and earned rather than extraordinary and troubling. It's the founder class's most delusional fantasy made briefly real: the belief that innovation exempts you from the rules everyone else follows.
The French Alps saw something genuinely historic this week—just not in the way anyone meant it. They witnessed the moment when the distinction between corporate power and state power officially stopped mattering.
"Seated as equals"
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