There is a recurring impulse in modern politics to treat success not as something to be emulated, but as something to be redistributed. The latest iteration comes in the form of a proposal attributed to Senator Bernie Sanders: confiscating 50 percent of the profits from artificial intelligence companies for a single year, ostensibly “for the good of the people.” At first glance, the idea may sound like a bold corrective to perceived inequality in a rapidly advancing technological sector. But when examined more closely, it raises serious ethical concerns that strike at the heart of property rights, innovation, and the proper role of government.
The most immediate ethical issue is the notion of confiscation itself. Stripping half the earnings from private companies—particularly in a targeted, one-off fashion—crosses a line from taxation into something far more arbitrary and punitive. Taxes, in principle, are meant to be predictable, evenly applied, and grounded in law that respects the rights of citizens and businesses alike. A sudden, politically motivated seizure of profits undermines that stability. It sends a clear message: success in certain industries can be retroactively penalized when it becomes politically convenient.
That unpredictability is not a minor concern. Ethical governance requires consistency and fairness. When the rules change based on political winds, the moral contract between the government and the governed begins to erode. Businesses invest billions of dollars into research, development, infrastructure, and talent, particularly in a field as complex and capital-intensive as artificial intelligence. These investments are made with the understanding that the legal and financial frameworks will remain reasonably stable. A one-year confiscation shatters that expectation, effectively punishing companies not for wrongdoing, but for succeeding in a sector deemed lucrative.
Supporters of such a proposal might argue that extraordinary profits justify extraordinary measures, especially if the benefits are redistributed to the public. But this argument hinges on a troubling ethical premise: that the government has a superior claim to the fruits of private enterprise simply because it can deploy them differently. That assumption overlooks a fundamental principle of a free society—that individuals and companies have a right to the value they create, within a framework of fair and consistent taxation.
Moreover, targeting AI companies specifically raises additional ethical questions about selective enforcement. Why single out one industry? Artificial intelligence is not a monolith; it encompasses everything from medical research and logistics optimization to consumer applications and national security tools. Many of these innovations provide broad societal benefits. Penalizing the sector risks slowing progress in areas that could improve lives, enhance productivity, and even save lives. Ethically, it is difficult to justify a policy that could hinder beneficial innovation simply to achieve short-term redistribution.
There is also the issue of incentives. Ethical policymaking must consider not just immediate outcomes, but long-term consequences. If companies believe that breakthrough success will be met with confiscatory measures, they may scale back investment, move operations to more predictable jurisdictions, or avoid high-risk, high-reward research altogether. This is not theoretical—it is a predictable human response to uncertainty and punitive policy. The result would likely be less innovation, fewer jobs, and diminished global competitiveness for the United States in a field that is rapidly shaping the future.
Another layer to consider is the precedent such a policy would set. Once the door is opened to seizing profits from one sector “for the good of the people,” it becomes easier to justify similar actions elsewhere. Today it might be AI; tomorrow it could be energy, pharmaceuticals, or finance. The ethical boundary between taxation and expropriation becomes blurred, and the principle of secure property rights begins to weaken. That is a slippery slope that history has shown can lead to broader economic and political instability.
None of this is to suggest that the rapid growth of artificial intelligence does not raise legitimate concerns about inequality, workforce displacement, or the concentration of power. Those are real issues that deserve thoughtful, measured responses. But there is a meaningful difference between addressing those concerns through consistent, transparent policy—such as tax reform, regulatory oversight, or targeted public investment—and resorting to ad hoc confiscation.
At its core, the ethical question is whether ends justify means. Even if one accepts the premise that redistributing wealth from AI companies could produce some public benefit, the method proposed undermines key principles that sustain a free and prosperous society: predictability, fairness, and respect for property. Policies that compromise those principles in pursuit of short-term gains risk doing more harm than good.
A society that values innovation and opportunity must be careful not to punish the very mechanisms that drive progress. The challenge is not to seize success, but to ensure that its benefits are broadly shared without eroding the foundations that made it possible in the first place.

