Larry Page: Google's Ghost, His Billions & The Epstein Questions
Page's Billions: Great for Him, Useless for Us
So, Larry Page is now richer than Bezos. Big freaking deal. Another tech billionaire hoarding wealth while the rest of us are fighting over scraps. Oh, and it's because of Google's new AI, Gemini 3? Color me shocked.
Let's be real, who actually benefits from this? Does Gemini 3 cure cancer? Solve world hunger? Nah. It probably just helps Google sell more targeted ads, lining Page's pockets even further. The guy was already obscenely wealthy, sitting pretty at a cool $246.2 billion. Now he's just... more obscenely wealthy. Like, congrats, you passed Bezos. Now what?
Born in Michigan, dad was a computer science professor, mom taught programming. Sounds like a privileged upbringing to me. Lego inkjet printers and solar car teams at the University of Michigan? Good for him. Not exactly a rags-to-riches story, is it? He basically won the lottery of being born into the right family at the right time. Larry Page education and career path: The Stanford grad and Google founder who is now the world’s third-r - Times of India He attended Stanford.
And PageRank? Don't even get me started. Sure, it revolutionized search. But it also paved the way for the algorithmic hellscape we live in today, where misinformation spreads like wildfire and our every move is tracked and monetized. All thanks to Larry and Sergey.
The Illusion of Innovation
Google reorganized into Alphabet in 2015, and Page became CEO. He stepped down in 2019. So what? He's still pulling the strings, raking in the cash, and probably laughing all the way to the bank. Meanwhile, actual innovation—the kind that benefits humanity, not just shareholders—is struggling to get off the ground. We’re supposed to believe that this AI will change the world? Please.
And where is Larry Page these days anyway? Last I heard, he was chilling on some island, far away from the consequences of his creations. I’d bet he doesn’t even use Google search anymore. Too busy sipping cocktails and counting his billions.

It's the same old story, ain't it? Tech bros get rich, promise to change the world, and then disappear, leaving us to clean up the mess. I mean, look at Elon Musk. Another billionaire who thinks he's saving the world when he's really just building a personal brand. Are these guys really that different?
Then again, maybe I'm the crazy one here. Maybe I'm just jealous that I don't have a few hundred billion dollars sitting in my bank account. But honestly, I'd rather have a world where everyone has enough than a world where a few people have everything.
The Real Cost of "Progress"
Let's talk about the human cost of this "progress". All this AI stuff is going to automate jobs, displace workers, and widen the wealth gap even further. And who's going to pay the price? Not Larry Page, that's for sure.
I read somewhere that he proposed a driverless monorail system back in college. Sounds like a real visionary, right? But vision without empathy is just… well, it's what we have now. A world run by algorithms and billionaires who are completely disconnected from reality.
I spilled coffee on my keyboard this morning. That’s the level of technological advancement I can relate to right now. All this talk about AI and net worth is just noise. Meaningless numbers in a world that's burning. And offcourse, the media will be all over it, breathlessly reporting every new milestone in the billionaire olympics. They expect us to believe this nonsense, and honestly...
So, What's the Point?
Larry Page's net worth going up is about as useful as a screen door on a submarine. It's a symptom of a broken system, not a sign of progress. Until we start measuring success by something other than wealth, we're all just going to keep spinning our wheels.
