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The potential blowback from foreign military actions, like domestic terror threats, is not just a risk but also an opportunity for the state. It provides a powerful justification for creating a broader surveillance apparatus, using national security to legitimize increased monitoring of citizens.
The most pressing danger from AI isn't a hypothetical superintelligence but its use as a tool for societal control. The immediate risk is an Orwellian future where AI censors information, rewrites history for political agendas, and enables mass surveillance—a threat far more tangible than science fiction scenarios.
The most immediate danger of AI is its potential for governmental abuse. Concerns focus on embedding political ideology into models and porting social media's censorship apparatus to AI, enabling unprecedented surveillance and social control.
Public fear of AI often focuses on dystopian, "Terminator"-like scenarios. The more immediate and realistic threat is Orwellian: governments leveraging AI to surveil, censor, and embed subtle political biases into models to control public discourse and undermine freedom.
The AI systems used for mass censorship were not created for social media. They began as military and intelligence projects (DARPA, CIA, NSA) to track terrorists and foreign threats, then were pivoted to target domestic political narratives after the 2016 election.
The creation of potentially harmful technology, like AI-powered bot farms, is framed as a necessary evil. The argument is for the US to govern and control such tech, it must lead its development, preventing foreign adversaries from dominating a technology that has already 'wreaked havoc.'
Emergency measures, like the Patriot Act after 9/11, rarely expire. Instead, they create a permanent bureaucratic and technological infrastructure for surveillance and control. This 'emergency-to-infrastructure' pipeline normalizes expanded government power, which is then increasingly aimed at ordinary citizens long after the initial crisis has passed.
The Trump administration uses ICE not just for immigration enforcement, but to create a de facto national police force. By framing immigration as a ubiquitous issue, they justify a federal presence anywhere, effectively turning the entire country into a "border zone" where exceptional laws can apply.
To circumvent First Amendment protections, the national security state framed unwanted domestic political speech as a "foreign influence operation." This national security justification was the legal hammer used to involve agencies like the CIA in moderating content on domestic social media platforms.
As powerful AI capabilities become widely available, they pose significant risks. This creates a difficult choice: risk societal instability or implement a degree of surveillance to monitor for misuse. The challenge is to build these systems with embedded civil liberties protections, avoiding a purely authoritarian model.
China's national AI strategy is explicit. Stage one is using AI for Orwellian surveillance and population control within its borders. Stage two is to export this model of technological authoritarianism to other countries through initiatives like the "Digital Silk Road," posing a major geopolitical threat.