The question isn’t whether artificial intelligence will transform our economy, but rather who will control that transformation: Americans or a handful of tech titans entangled with Beijing and other adversarial nations? But the stakes aren’t just economic. They’re about protecting American families’ livelihoods, privacy, and children’s futures.

That’s why OpenAI’s latest appeal to the Trump administration matters. In a letter to White House science chief Michael Kratsios, the company urged Washington to expand Chips Act incentives to cover AI data centers, hardware producers, and grid materials, arguing that large-scale AI infrastructure is essential to the U.S. national interest. The plea underscores that the future of AI will be determined by the policies that govern it.

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