Gender Gap and Diversity



From Cheers to Boos: America's AI Backlash Is Real

Something has shifted. The same country that celebrated ChatGPT's launch is now booing AI executives at graduation ceremonies, bombing data center supporters' homes, and watching poll numbers turn ugly — fast.

Eric Schmidt stepped to the podium at the University of Arizona in cap and gown, urging graduates to embrace a technology that would "touch every profession, every relationship." He got booed. So did Big Machine Records CEO Scott Borchetta at Middle Tennessee State. His line — "hear me now or pay me later" — landed with more jeers.

The mood didn't come from nowhere. Seventy percent of Americans think AI is moving too fast. Over half hold negative views of it. Only 18 percent of young people say they feel hopeful — the same young people saddled with student loans, now watching AI eat the jobs those degrees were supposed to unlock.

The anger isn't just abstract. Data centers — AI's physical footprint — have become a genuine flashpoint. They drive up electricity bills, drain water supplies, and generate noise. Voters have already punished local officials who backed them. Last month, someone threw a Molotov cocktail at Sam Altman's California home. In Indiana, a city council member who supported a data center project found his door shot and a note under his mat: No Data Centers. A Gallup poll found that data centers are now less popular than nuclear power plants.

Even the Trump administration, which spent 2025 rolling back Biden's AI safety rules and dismissing regulation as anti-competitive, is quietly changing its tune. The White House now wants to vet AI models before release, has urged Congress to pass nationwide rules, and has opened guardrail talks with China. Asked directly about AI risks on Fox News, Trump said: "There are a lot of good things, but we have to be careful with it."

That's a long way from the victory lap of a year ago. The backlash, experts say, isn't going away — it's heading straight for November's midterms, and possibly 2028.