DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Bernie Sanders’s worst idea yet

February 12, 2026
in News
Bernie Sanders’s worst idea yet

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) has made a career of mainstreaming terrible ideas, but his proposed moratorium on data center construction might be his worst yet.

“We have not a clue. We are totally unprepared for what is coming,” Sanders said Tuesday night on MS NOW. The 84-year-old socialist knows progress on artificial intelligence depends on the computational advances generated by data centers, which is why he’s determined to stop them from being built: “We’ve got to slow this thing down.”

Some oppose data centers for environmental or aesthetic reasons, but Sanders bypasses those arguments and goes straight for the old-school Marxist thesis that they’re bad because they alienate workers from their labor. He also says computers might take over the world and blames AI on “a cognitive decline among young people.”

But his real issue is that American businesses might benefit. Indeed, firms like Meta, Google and Amazon, which was founded by Post owner Jeff Bezos, are investing billions in data centers that can process mind-blowing amounts of information. Stopping that can harm big business, which is always the villain in the socialist imagination.

Investments in physical and productive capital are what corporate critics have long said they wanted. Few people have been more critical of stock buybacks than Sanders, but investment in AI is leading to a reduction in buybacks.

Sanders should also be ecstatic about how much AI can help workers. He has introduced legislation to mandate a 32-hour work week. Annual working hours have gradually declined for decades as technology improves productivity. AI’s efficiency boost someday could get workers there without the job-killing risks of a government diktat.

But Sanders doesn’t believe in letting the economy develop organically. He wants the government to manage it. Unfortunately, he’s not alone.

AI doomerism has become a bipartisan affliction. Six states, red and blue, are considering bans on new data centers. Environmental concerns have spurred fearmongering about water shortages, and straightforward NIMBYism also stands in the way of development.

So far, congressional Democrats have largely rejected Sanders’s call for a moratorium. Even if he was right that the technology is moving too fast, it’s too late to stop. If the U.S. slowed down, other countries would not. Sanders mused on MS NOW that the U.S. should negotiate an AI treaty with China. Maybe he can start with a more realistic request, like asking Xi Jinping to hold a free and fair election when his term is up.

While politicians grandstand, AI advances continue every day. It can translate phone calls in real time. AI-assisted mammography is improving breast cancer patients’ outcomes. The technology is helping facial-reconstruction surgeons 3D-print more accurate jawbones for people healing from gruesome injuries.

The ceiling for progress is not human imagination. It’s intervention from economically illiterate politicians.

The post Bernie Sanders’s worst idea yet appeared first on Washington Post.

Trump Foe Slams President’s ‘Fragile Masculinity’
News

Trump Foe Slams President’s ‘Fragile Masculinity’

by The Daily Beast
February 12, 2026

One of President Donald Trump’s top Democratic foes found a fresh opportunity to mock him—this time, over his masculinity. Illinois ...

Read more
News

Bowser prepares D.C. Council for fiscal pain, tough policy trade-offs

February 12, 2026
News

Los Angeles man dies on advanced ski trail near Lake Tahoe

February 12, 2026
News

Home renovation reveals surprising photo under the floor: ‘Hey, that’s my mom’

February 12, 2026
News

Trump, 79, Smears Makeup on Decaying Hand

February 12, 2026
I Know the Secret of How to Cripple Trump

I Know the Secret of How to Cripple Trump

February 12, 2026
Breakdown between Pentagon, FAA led to flight stoppage, officials say

Breakdown between Pentagon, FAA led to flight stoppage, officials say

February 12, 2026
James Van Der Beek’s final days captured in intimate photos shared by friends after his death

James Van Der Beek’s final days captured in intimate photos shared by friends after his death

February 12, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026