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Thursday, July 9, 2026

THE BOTS ARE COMING, THE BOTS ARE COMING (AND THEY'RE NOT PAYING A DIME IN TAXES)

 

THE BOTS ARE COMING, THE BOTS ARE COMING (AND THEY'RE NOT PAYING A DIME IN TAXES)

Paul Revere had it easy. He only had to warn Boston about the British. Somebody needs to ride through every office park in America shouting that the redcoats are back — except this time they're server racks, they never sleep, and they've never contributed a single nickel to Social Security.

One If By Land, Two If By Cloud Computing

Let's start with the math they don't want you to do at the shareholder meeting.

Every time a bot replaces a human worker, three things quietly die:

  1. The income tax that worker paid — gone.
  2. The payroll taxes funding Social Security and Medicare — vaporized.
  3. The sales tax from that worker buying groceries, gas, and the occasional impulse air fryer — poof.

Meanwhile, the robot that took the job? It gets written off as a business expense. That's right — the machine that eliminated your paycheck is a tax deduction. Your replacement is literally a coupon.

If a human worker showed up to a job interview and said, "I'll take Steve's job, I'll never pay taxes, and you can deduct me from your corporate returns," we'd call that fraud. When a bot does it, we call it innovation and give the CEO a magazine cover.

Who Pays for the Roads the Robots Roll On?

Here's the question nobody in the C-suite wants to answer between rounds of stock buybacks:

When the workforce shrinks, who funds civilization?

  • Roads? Built with payroll taxes the bots don't pay.
  • Schools? Funded by property taxes from workers who can no longer afford property.
  • Airports? Great news — the private jets will still land fine.
  • Healthcare? Ah yes, America's favorite party trick: tying health insurance to the job the algorithm just deleted. Lose your job to a chatbot on Monday, lose your kid's asthma coverage by Friday. It's dystopia with a deductible.

The billionaire class has discovered a perpetual motion machine: automate the workers, pocket the savings, deduct the machines, offshore the profits, and let the shrinking pool of remaining humans pay for everything. It's not an economy. It's a Ponzi scheme with a mission statement.

The Fix Is Not Complicated (That's Why They Hate It)

The policy toolbox is sitting right there, and it's not radical — even Bill Gates floated the robot tax, and the man is not exactly manning the barricades.

The FixHow It WorksWho Screams Loudest
Robot Payroll TaxBot replaces an $80K worker? Company pays the taxes that worker would haveThe "job creators" who created a job for a server farm
Kill the Automation Write-OffNo tax breaks for tech that produces net layoffsAccountants, lovingly
AI Value-Added TaxTax the near-zero-cost output of automated services; earmark it for retrainingWhoever's yacht is being measured this quarter
Universal Free Education & RetrainingLifetime learning accounts, on-demand micro-credentials, no debtThe student loan industry, weeping into its 8% interest

And that last one is the whole ballgame. Skills now expire faster than the milk in your fridge. A four-year degree, financed with thirty years of debt, to prepare for a job with a five-year shelf life? That's not an education system — that's a subscription service where you're the product being canceled.

Universal, free, on-demand training — funded by the very automation causing the disruption — isn't charity. It's basic economic self-defense. The machines pay for the bridge over the gap they created. Simple. Fair. Which is exactly why it isn't happening yet.

Remember in November



The layoffs have already started. The billionaire wealth charts already look like a SpaceX launch trajectory. And the folks writing the checks to the campaigns are the same folks writing the pink slips.

So when you cut people out of the economy with no plan, here's what happens: the rest of us pay more, get less, and fund the safety net the oligarchs shredded — while they cosplay as visionaries on podcasts. This is why democratic socialists are winning races in places pundits swore they never could. It's not ideology. It's arithmetic. People can count. They can count their bills, their premiums, and the zeros on someone else's stock package.

The choice on the table is not "robots or no robots." The bots are coming either way. The choice is:

  • Dystopia: the profits go up, the ladder gets pulled, and the pitchforks eventually come out, OR
  • A plan: tax the automation, fund the retraining, decouple healthcare from employment, and let technology lift everyone instead of a lucky few hundred.

So mark your calendar. Check the receipts. See who's profiting and who's getting laid off — and notice they're rarely the same people.

Remember in November. Remember in November. REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER.

Because the bots don't vote.

Yet.

"Your replacement doesn't pay taxes. Your senator knows. Vote accordingly."

"If a human took your job and paid zero taxes, we'd call it fraud. When a bot does it, we call it innovation."



SOURCES & FURTHER READING

šŸ¤– The Robot Tax Debate


šŸ’¬ The Bill Gates Proposal

šŸ“‰ The Layoffs Are Already Here


šŸŽ“ The Education & Policy Argument (Companion Pieces)


šŸ—‚️ Quick-Reference Citation Table

Claim in ArticleBest Supporting Source
Robots erode income, payroll & sales tax revenueBrookings; Stanford "Should Robots Pay Taxes?"
Even Bill Gates backs a robot taxQuartz interview; WEF summary
Layoffs surging while profits hit recordsCrunchbase tracker; WSJ; S&P 500 employment data ,
Tax code currently rewards automation over hiringMiller & Chevalier; Guerreiro et al.

One caveat for the editor's desk: the WSJ piece sits behind a paywall, and the S&P 500 employment figure circulated via secondary market reporting — worth pairing with the Crunchbase tracker (free, continuously updated) as your primary layoff citation. Everything in the robot tax and Gates sections links to freely accessible policy papers and articles, which makes them the sturdiest footnotes for a "Remember in November" call to action.