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The Digital East India Company: OpenAI and Anthropic's Race to Govern the Algorithmic Commonwealth

The intense competition between OpenAI and Anthropic for enterprise dominance is escalating, with both artificial intelligence powerhouses marshaling resources in a high-stakes battle for market share and pre-IPO positioning.

Apr 22, 2026 - Technology

The Digital East India Company: OpenAI and Anthropic's Race to Govern the Algorithmic Commonwealth

Author By Vivian Holloway

The intense competition between OpenAI and Anthropic for enterprise dominance is escalating, with both artificial intelligence powerhouses marshaling resources in a high-stakes battle for market share and pre-IPO positioning.

Why it matters: This AI rivalry is more than business; it's a foundational struggle for our digital future. As companies maneuver, new digital authorities loom. Washington warned: "Such an attachment of a small or weak towards a great and powerful nation dooms the former to be the satellite of the latter." The stakes are not who wins, but what digital governance emerges. Relentless pursuit of 'insurmountable' leads, fueled by compute and enterprise adoption, risks stifling innovation and digital self-determination. If infrastructure concentrates in few hands, the economic landscape becomes digital protectorates, terms set by algorithmic power. This contest for digital keys has profound implications for economic liberty.

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The King's Ministers: RFK Jr.'s Diminished Return Recalls Pre-Revolutionary Subservience

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. returned to Capitol Hill this week, his autonomy markedly curtailed as the administration sought to redirect his focus and control his public narrative.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. returned to Capitol Hill this week, his autonomy markedly curtailed as the administration sought to redirect his focus and control his public narrative.

Why it matters: The explicit diminution of a cabinet secretary's autonomy by the Executive branch is not a mere political skirmish; it mirrors foundational pre-revolutionary grievances where "Executive powers had been usurped." This centralized control over public health functions undermines the very independence of institutions meant to serve the populace, directly echoing colonial frustrations with arbitrary royal dictates.

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When 'Useful Arts' Become Crown Prerogative: Senator McCormick's AI Stance Echoes Pre-Revolutionary Economic Control

Senator David McCormick (R-Pa.) is positioning himself as a leading voice on artificial intelligence, a technology he describes as the most profound change of our time, yet his approach raises familiar questions about power and privilege.

Senator David McCormick (R-Pa.) is positioning himself as a leading voice on artificial intelligence, a technology he describes as the most profound change of our time, yet his approach raises familiar questions about power and privilege.

Why it matters: The foundational premise for fostering innovation, enshrined in the power "to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing, for a limited time, to authors and inventors, the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries," was for broad public benefit. When legislative figures, tasked with public service, champion unchecked innovation while their personal interests align directly with the industries they promote, the distinction between public good and private prerogative erodes. This dynamic, where the power to shape emergent economic realities resides with the directly invested, is chillingly reminiscent of colonial frustration with royal charters and monopolies benefiting favored British merchants.

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From Boston Harbor to Hormuz: The Perils of Forgotten Precedent

Following the abrupt collapse of peace negotiations in Pakistan, the Trump administration on Monday moved to impose a naval blockade on Iran and the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

Following the abrupt collapse of peace negotiations in Pakistan, the Trump administration on Monday moved to impose a naval blockade on Iran and the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

Why it matters: The immediate ramifications of such a naval blockade, effectively severing a nation's principal economic artery and international lifeline, are undeniably severe. However, the profound historical irony is equally striking. The very act of "cutting off our trade with all parts of the world," once a rallying cry for American revolutionaries against perceived tyranny and a primary casus belli, now emanates from Washington. This action, a direct economic assault sanctioned by executive power, reanimates a foundational threat to the principle of sovereign self-determination. It suggests a striking reversal of historical roles, where the one-time aggrieved now wields the very instruments of their former oppressors.

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The Papal Bull vs. The Presidential Decree: Why the Crown's New Clothes Are Unsettlingly Familiar

A rare and escalating clash between the Vatican and the White House over global conflict and human dignity is exposing foundational tensions remarkably similar to those that ignited America’s quest for independence.

A rare and escalating clash between the Vatican and the White House over global conflict and human dignity is exposing foundational tensions remarkably similar to those that ignited America’s quest for independence.

Why it matters: The current discord between spiritual and temporal power is more than a mere diplomatic spat; it is a fundamental challenge to the very concept of governance, recalling the profound questions of moral authority versus absolute rule that defined the nascent American experiment. When a leader proclaims the annihilation of a civilization via social media, he asserts a dominion strikingly similar to the unchecked royal prerogative that once spurred cries of 'tyranny.' As John Adams, himself a critical observer of power, once noted: "Pope flattered tyrants too much when he said," implying even spiritual leaders can be swayed by temporal power – a dynamic now sharply reversed, with the pontiff as the challenger.

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The Predictions Market, the Crown, and the Colonies: Kalshi's Very British Legal Gambit

As a burgeoning predictions market asserts its right to operate beyond traditional state oversight, a fundamental question of jurisdiction echoes with surprising familiarity across the American legal landscape.

As a burgeoning predictions market asserts its right to operate beyond traditional state oversight, a fundamental question of jurisdiction echoes with surprising familiarity across the American legal landscape.

Why it matters: The relentless expansion of Kalshi's digital empire, and its aggressive posture towards state-level regulation, evokes the core grievances that fueled revolutionary sentiment. The notion that a singular entity can, through federal courts, dictate the terms of economic engagement across diverse jurisdictions rather than seeking local consent, is profoundly unsettling. As letters from a farmer dickinson once put it in "Tucker on trade," the fundamental questions of who governs commerce and for whose benefit are not new, merely re-packaged for the digital age.

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