The artificial intelligence revolution that Silicon Valley promised would transform America? Patriots aren't buying it – and Big Tech is starting to sweat.
According to new analysis, if AI were running for office today, it would face a crushing defeat at the ballot box. Why? Because regular Americans can see what the tech elites refuse to admit: this so-called "revolution" is moving too fast, creating too many risks, and threatening too many livelihoods.
While companies like Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI pour billions into AI development, working families are asking the tough questions our politicians should be asking: What happens to my job? Who controls this technology? And why should we trust the same Big Tech companies that have been censoring conservatives for years?
The Trump Administration's Smart Approach
Unlike the Biden regime's reckless embrace of unregulated tech expansion, President Trump's second-term agenda puts America First – including when it comes to emerging technologies. The administration is taking a measured approach that prioritizes American workers and national security over Silicon Valley's profit margins.
"We're not going to let Big Tech run roughshod over the American people again," a senior administration official told reporters last week. "Every new technology should serve Americans, not replace them."
"Too fast, too risky, too disruptive" – that's how most Americans view the current AI push, and they're absolutely right to be concerned.
The contrast couldn't be clearer. While Democrats and their tech billionaire donors want to flood the market with unproven AI systems, Trump is demanding accountability, transparency, and protection for American workers.
This isn't about being anti-innovation – it's about being pro-American. The same globalist forces pushing AI adoption are the ones who shipped our manufacturing jobs to China and allowed Big Tech to grow into the censorship monopolies we see today.
Smart Americans recognize that any technology powerful enough to "revolutionize" everything is powerful enough to control everything. And frankly, we've had enough of unelected tech moguls making decisions that affect millions of American families.
The question isn't whether AI will advance – it's whether Americans will have a say in how that advancement affects their lives, their jobs, and their freedom. Under Trump's leadership, the answer is finally yes.
