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John Alcorn's avatar

Re: "By the end of this year, if you do not oppose AI then they will take away your Progressive movement membership card."

Compare Nicholas Bloom & Christos Makridis, "The Politics of AI" (NBER Working Paper 34813, February 2026), at the link below:

https://www.nber.org/papers/w34813

Here is the abstract:

"Using new data from the Gallup Workforce Panel, we document a persistent partisan gap in self-reported AI use at work: Democrats are consistently more likely than Republicans to report frequent use. In 2025:Q4, for example, 27.8% of Democrats report using AI weekly or daily, compared with 22.5% of Republicans. Democrats also report deeper task-level integration, using AI in 16% more work activities than Republicans. Consistent with this, Democrats are employed in occupations with higher predicted AI exposure based on task-content measures and report larger perceived differences in AI-related job displacement risk. However, in regression models the partisan gap in AI use disappears once we control for education, industry, and occupation, indicating that observed differences primarily reflect compositional variation rather than political affiliation per se."

From the text:

"Put differently, partisan differences in exposure primarily reflect sorting into industries with higher predicted LLM exposure rather than within industry exposure differences."

It remains to be seen whether greater exposure of progressives (than of conservatives) to AI on the job will translate into fear or, instead, into opportunity.

However that may be, my intuition is that the poltics and rhetoric of AI will take on a life of their own, rather than simply tracking self-interest at the workplace.

forumposter123@protonmail.com's avatar

In Northern Virgina there was a very large detest for data centers and the new governor seems to share the sentiment. Every campaign add I saw from the democrat side attacked data centers.

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