The People’s Liberation Army of China is integrating frontier artificial intelligence into military targeting and logistics to prepare for a potential invasion of Taiwan by 2027. This rapid mobilization, driven by Beijing's military-civil fusion doctrine, threatens to compromise United States infrastructure through advanced cyberespionage campaigns like Volt Typhoon.
To counter this existential threat, American policymakers must foster a highly competitive, lightly regulated domestic technology sector capable of securing global semiconductor supply chains. However, the domestic race carries significant risks of ideological capture, as secular, progressive developers encode partisan assumptions into foundational models under the guise of safety alignment. If left unchecked, this subtle systemic bias threatens to quietly rewrite traditional American values and civil liberties from within. Ultimately, preserving national identity requires treating these cognitive tools as stewards of cultural inheritance rather than mere instruments of state surveillance or corporate optimization, ensuring the technological surplus benefits domestic citizens first.
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