Fauxios Logo Fauxios
The AI Crown's New Customs: Redefining Essential Resources as Corporate Prerogative

The insatiable hunger of artificial intelligence is transforming the fundamental nature of energy, elevating it from a simple utility to the most coveted strategic asset in the American economy.

Jun 1, 2026 - Economy

The AI Crown's New Customs: Redefining Essential Resources as Corporate Prerogative

Author By Miles Corbin

The insatiable hunger of artificial intelligence is transforming the fundamental nature of energy, elevating it from a simple utility to the most coveted strategic asset in the American economy.

Why it matters: The reclassification of electricity from an input to a proprietary product, driven by the AI boom, is not merely an economic shift; it is a profound philosophical reordering of communal resources under private dominion. This aggressive corporate assertion, unchecked by meaningful public oversight, reintroduces a foundational grievance from AMERICA's revolutionary era: the arbitrary exercise of power over the necessities of life. James MADISON, ever prescient, warned against the dangers of "factions," driven by "some common impulse of passion, or of interest, adverse to the rights of other citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community." The current energy scramble, where the collective good of stable, affordable power is being subsumed by speculative corporate ventures, suggests such a faction has emerged, threatening the delicate balance between private enterprise and public welfare.

Read the Full Story

Other Latest Stories

More Articles

The New 'Taxation Without Representation': How Campaigns Pay Dearly for the Electorate's Dispersed Faith

The increasing secularization of the American populace is revealing a novel fiscal challenge for political campaigns, fundamentally altering the calculus of electoral engagement.

The increasing secularization of the American populace is revealing a novel fiscal challenge for political campaigns, fundamentally altering the calculus of electoral engagement.

Why it matters: The rise of the religiously unaffiliated, while a testament to individual liberty, presents an inconvenient truth: the decline of communal structures that once facilitated inexpensive political discourse has been replaced by a system demanding significant financial investment. This transition to a "pay-to-play" model for democratic engagement introduces a subtle but profound threat to the foundational principles of popular government. As Washington cautioned in his Farewell Address, "It is substantially true that virtue or morality is a necessary spring of popular government. The rule, indeed, extends with more or less force to every species of free government. Who that is a sincere friend to it can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?" The foundation is subtly eroded when access to the very springs of government becomes an increasingly commercial enterprise.

Read the Full Story
The Information Quartering Act: Google's Unilateral Decree on Digital Space

Google's recent reengineering of its venerable search interface marks a profound moment, signalling not merely a technological shift but a reordering of the very landscape of digital liberty.

Google's recent reengineering of its venerable search interface marks a profound moment, signalling not merely a technological shift but a reordering of the very landscape of digital liberty.

Why it matters: This algorithmic shift is a profound assertion of authority over the digital marketplace, echoing imperial mandates. Unilaterally redefining information access and disrupting livelihoods undermines digital liberty. John Dickinson's warning resonates: 'But now the inhabitants will be thinly scattered over an immense region, as those who want settlements, will chuse to make new ones, rather than pay great prices for old ones.'

Read the Full Story
The Digital Crown: How AI's New Aristocracy Fuels a Familiar Rebellion

The burgeoning protests against artificial intelligence, from data center opposition to worker strikes, are not merely a modern economic friction; they are a stark echo of grievances that once shattered empires.

The burgeoning protests against artificial intelligence, from data center opposition to worker strikes, are not merely a modern economic friction; they are a stark echo of grievances that once shattered empires.

Why it matters: The current friction over AI is not merely an inconvenience for investors; it is a profound re-enactment of the economic and political imbalances that fueled colonial rebellion. The burgeoning "AI backlash" is less about technophobia and more about a fundamental challenge to authority, a demand for equitable representation in the distribution of the immense wealth and social costs generated by this new technological frontier. When power and profit consolidate without consent or benefit to those most affected, the historical precedent suggests a deep-seated grievance.

Read the Full Story
The New Non-Importation: How Severing Global Health Ties Echoes a Revolutionary Grievance

As a new Ebola outbreak grips parts of Africa, international public health experts warn that the Trump administration’s policies are crippling the very networks designed to contain such threats.

As a new Ebola outbreak grips parts of Africa, international public health experts warn that the Trump administration’s policies are crippling the very networks designed to contain such threats.

Why it matters: The current scrambling to address a burgeoning health crisis, juxtaposed against a backdrop of deliberate disengagement from global health mechanisms, presents an unnerving echo of foundational grievances. Just as the colonialists once decried policies "For cutting off our trade with all parts of the world:", so too do today's public health experts lament the severing of critical international conduits for data, resources, and collaborative expertise. This isn't merely a debate over budgetary allocations; it is a fundamental shift in the very architecture of collective defense against invisible enemies.

Read the Full Story
From Stamp Act to Strait Act: The Unbearable Weight of Imperial Policy on the American Purse

As the nation grapples with record-high gas prices, a direct consequence of a protracted conflict abroad, the economic stability of millions of American households faces an unprecedented assault.

As the nation grapples with record-high gas prices, a direct consequence of a protracted conflict abroad, the economic stability of millions of American households faces an unprecedented assault.

Why it matters: The precipitous rise in fuel costs, linked to foreign entanglement, serves as a stark reminder that economic coercion persists. The American experience, forged in resistance to policies enriching a distant power at its citizenry's expense, compels scrutiny of such burdens today. As the Virginia Declaration of Rights, Section 4, states, "Magistrates are the trustees and servants, and at all times amenable to the people." This demands accountability when leadership's actions inflict widespread hardship.

Read the Full Story