The Man Building Technology He Says Could Kill Us All
Is Sam Altman genuinely trying to save humanity?
Or is he using that story to justify building the most powerful empire in history?
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He runs an $800 billion company. He earns $76,000 a year. He has no equity. And he went on record with Congress — out loud, on camera — and told them his own technology could cause catastrophic harm to the world.
Then he shipped it to 100 million people anyway.
Sam Altman is either the most important person alive right now or the most dangerous. After going deep on his full story, Andrew Moullin and Chad Carrodus still can't decide. And by the end of this episode, you'll understand why nobody can.
This isn't the highlight reel version. This is the whole story.
The kid from St. Louis who took apart his first computer at 8 years old — not to play with it, to understand it. The Stanford dropout who built a company, sold it for $43 million, walked away with $5 million, and immediately reinvested every dollar instead of going to the beach. The Y Combinator president who tripled the number of startups processed per batch and pushed the portfolio into energy, biotech, and hardware when everyone else was building apps.
And then the moment everything changed.
1. Sam Altman, Elon Musk, and a handful of others co-found an AI research lab as a nonprofit. No equity. No financial returns. The explicit goal: make sure artificial intelligence benefits humanity instead of destroying it.
By 2023 that nonprofit is worth hundreds of billions of dollars. And everything that happens next is one of the strangest stories in the history of Silicon Valley.
His own CTO spent months collecting screenshots, Slack messages, and documented conversations — building a legal case against her own CEO. His own co-founder, one of the most respected AI researchers in the world, grew increasingly uneasy and helped orchestrate what came next. Four of six board members voted in secret to remove Sam Altman using Gmail's self-destructing email function.
He thought it was a routine check-in call.
It wasn't.
He was fired on a Friday. Microsoft — OpenAI's largest investor — found out one minute before the public announcement. His co-founder and president resigned immediately. And then something nobody expected happened. 645 of approximately 670 OpenAI employees signed a letter. Bring him back or we walk.
Within five days, Sam Altman walked back through the doors of OpenAI as CEO.
What do the people who work closest to him know that his board didn't?
Then there's Elon Musk. Co-founder. $38 million donor. True believer that AI could end humanity. By 2018 he's trying to take over the company, merge it with Tesla, install himself as CEO. He gets rejected. He walks. And in 2023 he files a lawsuit seeking $135 billion in damages — arguing Altman defrauded him and broke every promise that OpenAI was built on.
That trial starts April 27th. The evidence already unsealed rewrites the story everyone thinks they know.
And then there's what Sam Altman is building right now that most people still aren't paying attention to.
In January 2025 he stood in the White House next to President Trump and announced a $500 billion AI infrastructure project. Data centers. Compute. Six continents. The largest AI infrastructure investment in human history. He believes AI will begin making meaningful scientific discoveries in 2026. Cancer research. Drug development. Climate modeling.
The man running all of this takes home $76,000 a year.
He also keeps gold, guns, and a gas mask at a property in Big Sur. In 2016 he said he was preparing for civilizational disruption.
The man most likely to cause it is also prepping for it.
Pioneers is built for non-technical founders, operators, and builders who want the real story behind the most important companies and people in the world. No fluff. No highlight reels. Just the full picture — and you decide what to think.
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