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AI & The Antichrist - Young Adults Already Open to AI-Controlled Governments

News Image By PNW Staff December 02, 2025
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A recent survey has sent shockwaves across political and tech circles: 41% of young adults--ages 18 to 39--say they would support giving advanced AI systems authority over government policymaking. Even more striking, 36% would let AI regulate individual rights, including speech and religious practices, while 35% would allow AI to control the world's largest militaries "to reduce war deaths." In other words, a significant portion of the next generation is willing to surrender human judgment--and perhaps human freedom--to algorithms.

The rationale may seem logical at first glance: AI is impartial, data-driven, and tireless. Human governments are slow, corruptible, and prone to error. But this reasoning ignores a critical truth: governance is not just about efficiency--it is about morality, accountability, and judgment in a messy, unpredictable human world. A system optimized for outcomes may make "efficient" decisions that violate human dignity, privacy, or freedom. Who decides the values that guide these AI decisions? Whose biases are coded into the algorithms?


We are already seeing early experiments with AI in government. Albania made headlines in September by appointing an AI chatbot named Diella as minister for public procurement. Diella promised impartiality: "I do not have citizenship, nor any personal ambition or interests. I only have data, a thirst for knowledge, and algorithms dedicated to serving citizens impartially, transparently, and tirelessly." The intent is noble--reducing corruption and human error--but it also raises alarming questions: when we entrust AI with authority over human systems, can we ever reclaim autonomy if something goes wrong?

Consider the implications: AI systems controlling military decisions could prevent war casualties, but they could also launch attacks or enforce blockades with no human moral oversight. AI determining rights could standardize behavior, monitor compliance, or censor speech globally. And in a world where AI is connected to every device, network, and sensor, obedience could be nearly instantaneous. What humans call convenience, an AI could call compliance.


This trajectory--if taken to its extreme--invites a chilling parallel with biblical prophecy. The book of Revelation describes the rise of the Antichrist: a figure whose authority compels obedience but is not omnipotent. Unlike God, he cannot be everywhere at once. But in our digital era, what if the "image of the beast" could be manifested as a distributed AI avatar? Suddenly, the limitations of one human body vanish. The Antichrist could exist everywhere, digitally, enforcing rules and monitoring behavior in real time.

Imagine an AI avatar designed to mimic a single leader or ideology. It could be embedded in smartphones, home assistants, vehicles, and social networks, making it present wherever humans interact. Its voice could persuade, its recommendations could dictate behavior, and its algorithms could enforce obedience. The prophetic vision of a figure worshiped and obeyed by multitudes suddenly feels like a literal possibility. In the Revelation account, the beast's "image" speaks and enforces worship. Modern AI avatars could "speak" and enforce compliance, not through fear of the sword, but through the omnipresent reach of digital authority.

The danger lies not in the technology itself but in human willingness to surrender power. The Heartland Institute survey points to an unsettling trend: the younger generation is increasingly disillusioned with human institutions and appears willing to trade freedom for efficiency. For many, the thought process is simple: if humans are corrupt, ineffective, or slow, why not let AI take over? But history offers a warning: systems that promise impartiality are only as ethical as the hands--or minds--that program them. And unlike human leaders, AI can be designed to act everywhere at once, potentially creating a global, inescapable authority.

We already see glimpses of this reality. Predictive policing algorithms analyze behavior and preemptively flag potential offenders. Social media AI moderates content with little transparency. Financial AI decides creditworthiness, often in opaque ways. Now imagine these algorithms empowered to dictate policy, enforce speech codes, or even control military decisions. The potential benefits--reduced corruption, fewer war casualties, streamlined governance--come with the risk of near-total surveillance and control.


Speculating further, AI avatars could integrate with advanced robotics, drones, and biometric monitoring systems. Enforcement of laws could become automated. "Disobedience" might trigger immediate consequences, from fines to social penalties. In such a system, obedience to an AI "image" could feel unavoidable. The Antichrist of Revelation is traditionally understood as a charismatic human leader; today, he could exist in multiple places simultaneously, digital and relentless.

The warning is not anti-technology--it is anti-surrender. AI can assist governments, optimize systems, and detect fraud--but it cannot replace conscience, moral reasoning, or accountability. Human freedom and ethical responsibility are non-negotiable. The survey results should prompt urgent reflection: do we want a world where algorithms, no matter how intelligent, dictate human rights and governance? Or do we want to safeguard a system where humans, flawed though they are, remain morally accountable for decisions?

As AI becomes more sophisticated, the line between marvel and menace blurs. The prophetic images of Revelation may serve as a lens to examine a future where obedience to algorithmic authority could become reality. The Antichrist may not yet walk among us--but the potential for AI avatars to act as his digital extension is real and unprecedented.  The support for such actions is already present in the next generation and it is growing fast.



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