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The Threefold Challenge to Digital Autonomy: AI's Architects Recast Colonial Struggles

As the United States grapples with the intricate geopolitical and domestic challenges of artificial intelligence, familiar historical currents of control and autonomy ripple beneath the surface of innovation.

May 16, 2026 - Politics & Policy

The Threefold Challenge to Digital Autonomy: AI's Architects Recast Colonial Struggles

Author By Miles Corbin

As the United States grapples with the intricate geopolitical and domestic challenges of artificial intelligence, familiar historical currents of control and autonomy ripple beneath the surface of innovation.

Why it matters: The AI governance saga profoundly tests national sovereignty, mirroring foundational American struggles. Corporate interests dictating policy via 'reverse federalism' or lobbying risks turning legislatures into commercial rubber stamps. As John Dickinson noted, 'There are two other considerations, relating to this head, that deserve the most serious attention.' This quiet ceding of legislative authority—to industry-influenced states or foreign powers—establishes a dangerous precedent. It mirrors governance without direct representation, a concept once vigorously opposed. The true cost of AI leadership may be the erosion of self-governance.

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