AUTOMATED INTELLIGENCE—A TOOL FOR ALL, CONTROLLED BY THE FEW
AI isn’t empowering us. It’s extracting from us.
AI was promised as a tool for equity—expanding knowledge, opportunity, and mobility. Instead, it has become a mechanism for consolidating power.
🔹 AI isn’t leveling the playing field—it’s deepening inequality.
🔹 AI isn’t redistributing wealth—it’s extracting value.
🔹 AI isn’t empowering workers—it’s eroding their leverage.
The Triad of Control: Legal, Economic, and Algorithmic Power
Systems of control weren’t built to be fair. They were built to consolidate power.
The Supreme Court: Masks governance under the guise of neutrality.
AI Algorithms: Dictate who is heard, silenced, or erased.
Economic Policy: Decides who prospers and who is left behind.
Together, they form an extraction economy—where human labor and data are harvested for profit without consent.
🚨 AI Doesn’t Create—It Extracts:
AI doesn’t replace—it repackages human labor as automated control.
📌 AI’s Human Labor Pipeline:
ChatGPT, Bard, & AI Art Models → Trained on human-created content, raising ethical concerns over data ownership and credit.
AI Hiring & Workplace Surveillance → Workers monitored, evaluated, and sometimes dismissed based on algorithmic decisions.
Financial AI & Market Prediction → Algorithmic trading shifts economic power to those who control AI-driven investment models.
This isn’t digital progress—it’s an economic restructuring that benefits those who control AI models.
📉 The Human Cost: Extraction Over Innovation
The greatest threat isn’t job loss—it’s the loss of worker autonomy and collective power.
AI-Driven Job Displacement: 300 million jobs impacted (Goldman Sachs, 2024).
AI in Workplace Surveillance: Automated performance tracking that can lead to layoffs without human oversight.
Janus v. AFSCME (2018): Supreme Court ruling that weakened union power, reducing workers’ ability to negotiate fair conditions.
AI isn’t making labor efficient—it’s restructuring power in favor of corporations.
🧠 AI as an Extraction Economy:
AI models are built on human labor—every article, post, and line of code scraped without consent.
They say it’s Artificial Intelligence.
We call it Automated Intelligence—because it’s human knowledge, repackaged under corporate control.
💡 This Is About Control, Not Technology:
The conversation isn’t about stopping AI—it’s about ensuring AI serves collective progress, not concentrated power.
Who owns the datasets? Corporate entities.
Who profits from automation? Major shareholders and AI companies.
Who loses bargaining power? The workforce.
🛑 Addressing the 'Alarmism' Concern
Some might argue this perspective is alarmist—but AI’s role in economic and social decision-making is no longer theoretical. It's already shaping hiring, lending, and access to opportunity.
Instead of dismissing these concerns, we should be asking: Who benefits from keeping the public disengaged from AI’s governance?
Algorithmic bias in hiring has already led to discrimination cases.
AI-driven misinformation is influencing political and financial markets.
Automated surveillance models are being used to monitor and suppress labor movements.
Raising awareness isn’t fear-mongering—it’s necessary to ensure AI is developed with democratic oversight.
🛑 AI’s Limitations: Why “Superintelligence” Is a Myth
AI is often framed as an unstoppable force, but its capabilities are limited by data, bias, and corporate control.
✔ AI is not autonomous – It requires human inputs, datasets, and reinforcement learning.
✔ AI models reflect biases in their training data – Without diverse, representative data, AI can perpetuate systemic discrimination.
✔ AI is not inherently neutral – Algorithms are shaped by the economic and political interests of those funding their development.
This isn’t an all-powerful intelligence—it’s a machine optimized for extraction, programmed by those who seek control.
🛑 AI & Government-Controlled Internet: What’s Next?
🚨 Jon Stewart asked: Could the U.S. implement AI-driven internet censorship like China, Russia, and North Korea?
If AI dictates financial oversight, tax policy, and market participation—why wouldn’t it govern who gets to speak, what information is prioritized, and who disappears from search results?
Musk’s Financial AI Control & Internet Speech Suppression → If AI determines economic participation, it can also determine who is financially punished for dissent.
Algorithmic Regulation of Content → Governments have already tested AI-driven content suppression to silence activists and whistleblowers.
Surveillance Meets Economic Blacklisting → AI-driven systems already flag people as economic risks based on their speech and associations.
If you control the money and the information flow—you control society. That’s what’s next.
🔹 Actionable Solutions: Building Alternative Systems
AI's trajectory isn't inevitable—its governance is still being shaped. Here's how we push back:
For Individuals:
Support open-source AI platforms like Hugging Face that prioritize transparent development
Join digital rights organizations fighting for data ownership (Electronic Frontier Foundation, Data Rights Protocol)
Use browser extensions that block data harvesting (Privacy Badger, uBlock Origin)
For Workers:
Form industry-specific AI impact coalitions to advocate for fair implementation
Push for contract clauses requiring human review of algorithmic decisions
Support the "Right to Disconnect" legislation movement
For Communities:
Advocate for municipal AI accountability ordinances that require impact assessments
Create community-owned data trusts that allow collective bargaining with AI companies
Support local libraries and schools implementing ethical AI literacy programs
These aren't just abstract ideas—they're already working in places like Barcelona, Amsterdam, and San Francisco.
🚀 PLAINTXT//DECODED: What We Do
📌 We decode complexity to expose power.
📌 We reclaim language to break their narrative.
📌 We fight for Automated Intelligence to empower, not extract.
📣 Your Role in This Battle:
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🚨 Jon asks, 'Is this what’s next?' The answer depends on what we do now.
Technology isn’t the enemy. Concentrated control is.
Shape the future—or be erased by it.
Exposing power. Reclaiming language.
Is it possible to help others understand how we're all being controlled and manipulated by AI? Videos like Social Dilemma and Writing Doom are helpful but it seems so many people shut down when hearing about AI. It's all just too sci-fi futuristic for them to wrap their heads around.
I am interested in seeing an article addressing the possibility of the US government controlling content and access to the internet like is done in China Russia and North Korea. If it can be done there certainly it can be done in the US. Is that what is next?