Open AI CEO Sam Altman speaks during a talk session with SoftBank Group CEO Masayoshi Son at an event titled “Transforming Business through AI” in Tokyo, on Feb. 3, 2025.
Tomohiro Ohsumi | Getty Images
THE AI GODS ARE AT WAR—and they are burning the planet to do it. As Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang BOASTED of his total dominance over OpenAI, a shocking POWER GRAB was unfolding behind the scenes. OpenAI, in a desperate bid to escape Nvidia’s stranglehold, is signing DEATH-DEFYING deals worth OVER $1.4 TRILLION, locking the world into an AI infrastructure race that threatens to CONSUME entire nations’ power grids and hand UNCHECKED CONTROL to a handful of Silicon Valley titans.
Huang’s claim that “Everything that OpenAI does runs on Nvidia today” now reads as a THREAT, not a fact. OpenAI’s response? A frenzied rush into the arms of AMD, Broadcom, and the shock $10 BILLION deal with tiny, struggling Cerebras. This isn’t diversification—it’s a SCORCHED-EARTH strategy to hoard all global computing power BEFORE anyone can stop them.
Their goal is MONSTROUS. The Nvidia deal alone aims for 10 gigawatts of power—enough for EIGHT MILLION HOMES. Combined with their other pacts, OpenAI is on a path to commandeer a SMALL COUNTRY’S worth of electricity, all to fuel Altman’s god-like ambition for artificial general intelligence. This is an ECOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC COUP, masked as innovation.
And what of the public? The shareholders? While Wall Street marvels at a $500 BILLION valuation, the fine print reveals a chilling truth: these deals are vaporware, with “NO ASSURANCE” they’ll ever materialize. It’s a speculative PONZI SCHEME built on promises of future chips, with CEOs like Broadcom’s Hock Tan casually admitting revenue is years away. Meanwhile, ENTIRE INDUSTRIES are being reshaped to serve this single company’s voracious appetite.
The final, terrifying question hangs in the air: when the last kilowatt is claimed and the final chip is forged, who will own the future? Not humanity, but the DATA CENTER KINGS we foolishly crowned. We are not building a better world—we are wiring our own obsolescence into the very fabric of the planet.




