OpenAi CEO Sam Altman and other witnesses respond to the questions of Senator Cruz about China.
OpenAi chef Sam Altman placed his patriotism on Friday in a message of July 4, while he interviewed the Democratic Party, of which he said it left his traditional principles, making him ‘political homeless’.
In a long post on X, Altman said he was proud of being an American when millions started celebrating the holiday weekend.
“I am not big in identities, but I am extremely proud of being American,” he wrote. “This is true every day, but especially today – I am firmly convinced that this is the largest country ever on earth. The American Wonder is only in world history.”
Sam Altman, Chief Executive Officer of OpenAi, speaks at the Microsoft Build event in Seattle, Washington, USA, on Tuesday 21 May 2024. (Chona Kasinger / Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty images)
The tech giant then said that he embraces ‘techno capitalism’, which encourages people to earn a lot of money and find wealth to distribute wealth broadly and “share the composite magic of capitalism.” The one doesn’t work without the other, he said.
“The world should become richer every year due to science and technology, but everyone should be in the ‘up lift’. I think the government usually does worse than markets, and so we have to encourage our culture of innovation and entrepreneurship,” Altman said. “I also believe that education is crucial to maintain the American lead. I believed this when I was 20, when I was 30, and now I am 40 and still believe it.”
“The Democratic Party (sic) seemed to be reasonably coordinated when I was 20, the plot lost when I was 30, and completely to have moved somewhere else on this point,” he added. “So now I am politically homeless. But that’s fine; I give a lot more to be American than every political party.”
The chief of American technology refers to how AI will be used in the classroom

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAi, derived Democrats in a message of July 4 on X. (Reuters / Denis Balibouse / Reuters photos)
Political candidates must be focused on how to ensure that everyone achieves things that billionaires have instead of completely eliminating the power class.
Without mentioning his name, the message seemed to refer to the mayor of New York City, Zohran Mamdani, a self -identified democratic socialist, who said: “I don’t think we should have billionaires because it is honestly so much money in a moment of such inequality.”
In June Mamdani won the democratic nomination for mayor. His socialist policy has generated serious criticism from Republicans and some Democrats. His platform includes a minimum wage of $ 30, tax increases for companies and the rich and other policy measures, such as creating supermarkets of city ownership and imposing a rental store for stabilized tenants.
Mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa from New York City explains his plans to make the city more affordable and safer if he is chosen in November in ‘Maria Bartiromo’s Wall Street’ in November.
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He has also called on the tax burden of the city to move to ‘richer and whiter neighborhoods’. At the end of his message, Altman wished everyone a great holiday.
“The American experiment has always been messy,” he said. “I am hopeful for another big 250 years.”