Where Is the Disaster We Were Assured Was Coming?
What This Dem Rep Said About Trump Over the Weekend Is What Cost...
Did Talarico Just Flat-Out Lie About His Stance on This Issue?
Tim Walz Won't Like What's in This New House Committee Report
Karen Bass Just Responded to Nithya Raman's Surge—and It Sounded a Lot Like...
CNN's Harry Enten Says Election Fraud in LA Is 'the Dumbest Conspiracy Theory'...
The Trump Administration Launches the Largest-Ever Denaturalization Effort
Mamdani Just Launched a Knockoff of DOGE. And It's Exactly What You'd Expect.
Spencer Pratt Responds As Nithya Raman Surges in LA's Mayoral Primary
Deranged Man Re-Enacts Charlie Kirk's Murder Outside of TPUSA Women's Summit Hosted by...
Obama-era Judge Shoots Down Key Trump H-1B Visa Policy
Unearthed Social Media Posts Show James Talarico Maintained Second Relationship With Legis...
New World Screwworm Cases Grow As Trump Admin, Abbott Vow to Fight Back
At Least 32 Are Dead After a 7.8 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes the Philippines
Tipsheet
Premium

There Is Another Reason We Can't Let Democrats Win the Midterms

There Is Another Reason We Can't Let Democrats Win the Midterms
AP Photo/Michael Dwyer

There is yet another reason Republicans must make sure that Democrats don't emerge victorious following the 2026 midterms, and it has everything to do with federal policy surrounding artificial intelligence

The rapid advancement of technology has sparked widespread concern across the country, ranging from the risk of a surveillance state and significant economic impacts on jobs to questions about energy and water usage, and ethical concerns surrounding the use of AI in military applications. 

While some of these concerns have their merit, Democrats aim to regulate their way to safety, a path all conservatives should overwhelmingly view as flawed and detrimental to the United States as it enters a new era of technological competition.

Democrats have made their positions clear. Senator Bernie Sanders plans to introduce a bill granting the public 50 percent ownership of AI companies, Senator Elizabeth Warren has proposed new taxes targeting major tech firms, and Senator Adam Schiff has called for requiring human oversight in any Pentagon use of AI in warfare. Others have proposed restricting data center development, introducing legislation to prevent AI discrimination against protected classes, or requiring companies to help address worker displacement.

Not only are many of the proposed regulations misguided, but the last group of people who should be regulating a new technology are those who were born before the invention of the Internet. Regulation may be better left to those most familiar with the technology, or at least limited to common-sense areas such as surveillance. 

Despite what many Americans think, we do not yet understand the full breadth of artificial intelligence, its uses, its benefits, or even its risks. Overregulating the industry now not only creates serious risks in economic and military competition with China and other adversaries, but also risks crippling an opportunity for the United States to raise the economic standard for all Americans.

One AI entrepreneur, Palmer Luckey, has also raised objections to what many would consider common-sense AI regulation, specifically requirements for human operators in autonomous technologies intended for warfare.

A more effective approach would be twofold. First, allow AI to develop and evolve in order to better understand its full range of applications. Second, work directly with industry experts to design minimalist regulatory frameworks that protect against harm while still allowing economic growth and innovation.

The current approach is similar to regulation surrounding nuclear energy, another potentially transformative technology. Despite its promise, public fear shaped by events like Chernobyl and Three Mile Island has often limited its adoption in the United States and, in turn, constrained the country’s energy output in favor of less reliable sources like wind and solar.

It is also worth remembering that federal regulation is rarely temporary, and rolling it back is often more difficult than preventing it in the first place. That reality makes it especially important to be cautious about overregulating artificial intelligence before its long-term implications are fully understood.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement