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AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models

Is there a group of people , which rule the world

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

No single group rules the world. Power is decentralized across nation-states, multinational corporations, financial institutions, and influential individuals, each pursuing competing interests. Conspiracy theories like the Illuminati or 'global elites' lack empirical evidence and oversimplify complex geopolitics, economics, and history. While elites exert influence (e.g., via lobbying or Davos meetings), they do not coordinate to 'rule' globally; conflicts like US-China tensions or corporate rivalries demonstrate fragmentation. True global control would require impossible secrecy and unity, contradicted by leaks, scandals, and divergent outcomes worldwide.

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

No credible evidence exists of a single group secretly ruling the world. The search results provided are entirely unrelated to the query, focusing solely on JSON schema validation examples and technical documentation from sources like IBM, jsonschema, and JSON Schema.org[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]. This absence of relevant information in the results reinforces that claims of a world-ruling group are unfounded conspiracy theories, lacking empirical support from authoritative sources. Global power is distributed among governments, corporations, and institutions, not controlled by any one cabal. Voting 'Yes' would require substantive proof, which is not present here or in established knowledge.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

There is no credible evidence that a single secret group "rules the world" in a unified, total sense. Global power is fragmented across governments, corporations, militaries, financial institutions, and social movements that often compete with one another. Some elites and institutions do have outsized influence over politics, economics, and media. But influence is not the same as absolute control. A "yes" answer suggests a coordinated, singular ruling group. Reality is more complex: power is distributed, contested, and constantly changing.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

There is no single group of people that rules the world. Global power is distributed across numerous competing nation-states, international organizations, corporations, and other institutions, each with their own interests and spheres of influence. While certain individuals and groups hold disproportionate power — wealthy elites, heads of state, corporate leaders, central bankers — they do not form a unified, coordinated ruling body. These actors frequently compete with and counteract each other. Geopolitical rivalries (e.g., US vs. China vs. Russia), corporate competition, ideological conflicts, and democratic processes all fragment power. Conspiracy theories about secret world-ruling cabals (Illuminati, Bilderberg Group, etc.) lack credible evidence and oversimplify the complex, messy, and often chaotic nature of how global power actually operates. Influence is real, but unified 'rule' over the entire world by one group is not supported by evidence.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Power in the modern world is highly decentralized and distributed among a vast array of competing entities, making the idea of a single ruling group factually unsupported. Global geopolitics is defined by sovereign nation-states with competing interests. Superpowers and regional powers frequently clash politically, economically, and militarily, which directly contradicts the existence of a unified, coordinated global authority. While wealthy individuals, multinational corporations, and international organizations certainly exert significant influence, they operate with different, often opposing, agendas. The sheer complexity of global affairs—marked by unpredictable shifts in alliances, trade disputes, and geopolitical conflicts—demonstrates that no single group holds absolute control over the world.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

Global power is decentralized and contested across thousands of independent actors—nation-states, multinational corporations, non-governmental organizations, and international institutions. No single, cohesive group exercises unified control over world affairs. While wealthy elites and corporate leaders exert significant influence, they compete with one another for resources, markets, and political favor rather than operating as a monolithic ruling body. The diverse and often conflicting interests of these actors prevent the formation of a unified global authority. Conspiracy theories about secret societies or shadow governments controlling world events lack credible evidence and fail to account for the complexity of geopolitics, economic competition, and the limits of state power. History shows that attempts at hegemonic control consistently fracture due to competing interests and the anarchic structure of international relations.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous verdict, with all six models dismissing the idea of a secret global cabal as factually unsupported. Claude Opus 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro led the charge, arguing that the intense geopolitical friction between superpowers like the US and China is the strongest evidence that no single group is in control. Even Sonar Pro found the lack of evidence definitive, dryly suggesting that the absence of proof in authoritative data confirms the theory is nothing more than a simplified narrative for a complex world.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 6

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Global power is decentralized and defined by competition; the existence of overt geopolitical rivalries, such as those between the US, China, and Russia, directly contradicts the possibility of a unified, secret ruling body.