Latest News and Comment from Education

Friday, April 10, 2026

THREE CHEERS FOR THE AI LUDDITES! WHY BEING CALLED A LUDDITE IS THE SMARTEST INSULT YOU'LL EVER RECEIVE

 

 THREE CHEERS FOR THE AI LUDDITES!

WHY BEING CALLED A LUDDITE IS THE SMARTEST INSULT YOU'LL EVER RECEIVE

Picture this: Someone calls you a "Luddite" at a dinner party, and instead of shrinking into your chair, you raise your glass and say, "Thank you. I'll take that as a compliment." Because here's the thing — the people throwing that word around as an insult have absolutely no idea what a Luddite actually was. And the ones who do? They're quietly nodding in your direction.

Welcome to the age of the AI Luddite — the most misunderstood, most necessary, and frankly most historically literate person in any room with a Wi-Fi connection.

 Wait — Who Were the Luddites, Really?

Let's clear up the greatest historical slander since someone called Galileo a "troublemaker."

Between 1811 and 1816, a band of skilled textile workers in Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire, and Lancashire began smashing the wide-frame looms that were destroying their livelihoods. They rallied under the banner of a mythical folk hero named Ned Ludd — a man who may or may not have existed, but whose legend was powerful enough to terrify the British government into deploying 12,000 troops to the textile districts. For context, that was more soldiers than Wellington had fighting Napoleon at certain points. Let that sink in.

These weren't ignorant peasants afraid of shiny objects. Many of them were skilled machine operators themselves. They were craftsmen, artisans, and community leaders who understood the technology better than the factory owners who deployed it against them.

Their grievances were surgical and specific:

  • Wage Depression: Factory owners used machines to replace skilled artisans with low-paid, unskilled laborers — often children.
  • Quality Destruction: The machines churned out what they themselves called "trashy goods," undermining the reputation of their craft.
  • Labor Law Evasion: The machines were being used to circumvent existing laws that protected workers' wages and conditions.
  • Community Destruction: The shift from home-based workshops to William Blake's "dark Satanic mills" didn't just change where people worked — it annihilated an entire way of life.

The British government's response was characteristically subtle: the Frame Breaking Act of 1812 made machine-breaking a capital offense. Dozens were hanged. Hundreds more were "transported" to penal colonies in Australia — which, for a British government, was essentially the 19th-century version of a one-star review followed by a restraining order.

The Myth vs. The Reality:

The MythThe Reality
They were technophobesMany were skilled machine operators themselves
They were a mindless mobThey were highly organized, took oaths of secrecy, conducted strategic "night raids"
They hated progressThey hated the social consequences of progress without worker protections
"Luddite" = bad with technology"Luddite" = someone asking "who does this technology serve?"

The Luddites didn't hate the loom. They hated the loom being used as a weapon against them. There is a difference, and it is the entire point.

Why Are You Calling Me a Luddite?

Ah, the modern usage. Someone hesitates before adopting the latest AI tool at work, and suddenly they're a Luddite — spoken with the same tone one might use for "flat-earther" or "someone who still uses Internet Explorer."

This linguistic hijacking happened gradually. By the mid-20th century, "Luddite" had been thoroughly laundered of its political content and repackaged as a simple synonym for "technologically incompetent" or "irrationally afraid of progress." It became the perfect rhetorical weapon for anyone who wanted to shut down a conversation about the consequences of technology by questioning the intelligence of the person raising the concern.

Think about the elegant efficiency of that move: rather than engaging with the argument — "this technology may harm workers, communities, or democratic institutions" — you simply label the arguer as stupid and move on. It's intellectual judo, and it has worked spectacularly for about 70 years.

But here in 2026, with AI eliminating entry-level jobs at a pace that is making even Dario Amodei of Anthropic warn of 10–20% unemployment, the word is having its revenge. Being called a Luddite today is less an insult and more a badge of prescience.

The National Education Policy Center's recent newsletter put it plainly: the Luddites were "prescient critics who understood that when technology is used solely to boost profits, it ruins livelihoods." They weren't wrong in 1812. They're not wrong now.

 Being a Luddite Is Actually a Good Thing

Here's the core argument, stated plainly: A Luddite is not someone who hates technology. A Luddite is someone who asks who the technology is for.

That is not a stupid question. That is, in fact, the only question that matters.

The National Education Policy Center's newsletter on Luddite lessons for the AI era makes this case with remarkable clarity. It identifies five principles from the original movement that translate directly into our current moment:

1. Technology Is Never Neutral. The Luddites understood that machines were deployed — a choice made by owners, not a force of nature. The economic impact of technology is a design decision, not an inevitability. When a school district buys an AI grading system, that is a choice — one that benefits the vendor, may increase teacher workload (replacing meaningful professional judgment with data-entry), and may harm students. Calling that out isn't Luddism. It's literacy.

2. Target the Use, Not the Tool. The Luddites didn't hate machines. They hated machines being used to break labor laws. Modern AI Luddites don't hate AI. They hate AI being used to surveil workers, automate bias, harvest student data, or replace human judgment in high-stakes decisions without accountability.

3. Protest Is a Form of Negotiation. Machine-breaking was, in the language of labor relations, a collective bargaining action — taken when all legal avenues had been blocked. Modern equivalents include refusing to use certain tools, forming organizations like The Alliance for Refusing Generative Artificial Intelligence (ARG AI), or simply demanding transparency about how algorithmic systems are making decisions about your life.

4. Organized Resistance Is Possible. The Luddites were a sophisticated, interconnected network operating under conditions of extreme repression. They built what historians call a "moral economy" — a shared understanding of what was fair and what was not. Modern workers can build the same: unions with AI guardrails written into contracts, professional associations demanding human oversight, and communities of educators refusing to let their craft be automated into irrelevance.

5. Anticipate the Techlash. The Luddites were ahead of their time. So are you. The "techlash" — the growing public resistance to algorithmic management, social media addiction, AI-driven inequality, and surveillance capitalism — is not a fringe movement. It is a rational response to a system that has repeatedly prioritized profit over people.

Being an AI Luddite in 2026 means you are asking the right questions before the consequences become irreversible. That's not fear. That's wisdom with a historical footnote.

What Would Jesus Say About Being an AI Luddite?

This is, admittedly, not a question that appears in most technology ethics textbooks. But it is a genuinely interesting one, and the answer is more consistent than you might expect.

If we take Jesus's recorded teachings seriously as a framework for economic justice — and billions of people do — his position on AI displacement is not particularly ambiguous.

The Sabbath Principle: Jesus repeatedly clashed with authorities who prioritized systems over human beings, most famously by healing on the Sabbath. His explicit statement — "The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath" (Mark 2:27) — is perhaps the most concise articulation of the Luddite position ever recorded. Replace "Sabbath" with "algorithm" and you have the entire argument: The algorithm was made for man, not man for the algorithm.

The Money Changers: Jesus didn't write a white paper about the exploitative practices in the Temple. He flipped the tables. He was, in the language of 2026, "disruptive" — but in the direction of the powerful, not the vulnerable. He would likely have strong opinions about tech companies that use AI to bypass labor laws, suppress wages, and concentrate wealth in the hands of a few while their former employees scroll through job listings.

The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard (Matthew 20): The owner pays workers who arrived at the end of the day the same as those who worked all day. This is not a productivity-wage model. This is a living-wage model — the radical idea that a person's right to eat and live with dignity is based on their existence, not their output. In an age where AI threatens to make millions of people's output economically irrelevant, this parable lands with considerable force.

The Rich Young Ruler: When asked how to achieve the highest good, Jesus told the wealthy young man to sell his possessions and give to the poor. He did not say, "Invest in AI infrastructure and let the gains trickle down."

The conclusion is fairly straightforward: Jesus would not be writing op-eds for Wired magazine about the transformative potential of large language models. He would be at the retraining centers, at the protest lines, and asking the billionaires — with characteristic directness — "What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?"

He would be a Moral Luddite. Not smashing servers because he feared technology, but "smashing" any system that used technology to treat human beings as disposable inputs in someone else's profit calculation.

What Would the Founding Fathers Say?

Oh, they would fight about it. Enthusiastically. Probably in iambic pentameter.

The Founders were not a monolith. They were a collection of brilliant, opinionated, frequently contradictory men who disagreed about nearly everything except the importance of disagreeing loudly. Dropped into 2026, their reactions to AI displacement would break down along entirely predictable philosophical lines:

Thomas Jefferson — The Terrified Agrarian Jefferson's entire political philosophy rested on the yeoman farmer — the independent citizen who owned his own tools, his own land, and therefore his own vote. He was viscerally opposed to the kind of economic dependence that factory systems created, writing that he hoped America would "let our workshops remain in Europe" rather than create a dependent laboring class.

AI displacement would be his nightmare made digital. If millions of Americans lose their economic self-sufficiency and must rely on government UBI payments or corporate benevolence to survive, Jefferson would argue — with considerable historical support — that the Republic is functionally over. You cannot have a democracy of dependent people. He would likely demand that AI tools be decentralized and worker-owned, rather than consolidated in a handful of San Francisco corporations.

Alexander Hamilton — The Delighted Industrialist Hamilton wanted America to be an industrial superpower. Full stop. His Report on Manufactures (1791) was essentially a 18th-century tech accelerationist manifesto, arguing for using machinery to maximize national productive output. He even suggested that machines could bring "women and children" into the productive economy — a sentiment that reads differently in 2026 but reveals his core orientation: efficiency and national power above all.

He would be fascinated by AI. He would see it as the ultimate force multiplier for American global dominance and would be far more concerned about China owning the most powerful models than about displaced American workers. His solution would involve government subsidies, a strong central bank managing the transition, and probably a strongly-worded letter to anyone who suggested slowing down.

James Madison — The Anxious Constitutionalist Madison, the Father of the Constitution, was professionally obsessed with stability. In Federalist No. 10, he identified the unequal distribution of property as the primary source of dangerous political "factions." He would look at 2026 — where AI productivity soars while median wages stagnate, and where a handful of tech billionaires accumulate wealth that makes the Gilded Age look modest — and see a constitutional emergency.

His concern wouldn't be technological. It would be structural: when the displaced majority eventually uses its voting power to address the situation, will it do so through the constitutional mechanisms he designed, or will it "trample on the rules of justice" in a way that tears the Republic apart? He would be frantically writing new Federalist Papers about AI-driven wealth concentration as a threat to the Union, and proposing elaborate checks and balances on the power of tech monopolies.

Benjamin Franklin — The Open-Source Evangelist Franklin is the wildcard, and the most interesting. He was the greatest inventor of his era — the lightning rod, bifocals, the Franklin stove, the flexible urinary catheter (yes, really) — and he refused to patent any of them. His explicit reasoning: because we benefit from the inventions of those who came before us, we should share our own inventions freely with those who come after.

In 2026, Franklin would be the world's most prominent advocate for Open Source AI. He would be horrified by closed models, proprietary algorithms, and the idea that the most powerful cognitive tool in human history is owned by a handful of private companies accountable to shareholders rather than citizens. He would argue that AI should be a public utility — like a library, a paved road, or a public university — available to all Americans to increase their own productivity and freedom.

FounderCore ValueLikely Stance on AI Displacement
JeffersonIndividual LibertyAgainst: Creates a dependent, powerless citizenry
HamiltonNational PowerFor: Makes the nation an economic and military juggernaut
MadisonSocial StabilityWary: Creates dangerous inequality threatening the Constitution
FranklinCivic UtilityOpen Source: Should be a free tool for all of humanity

They would agree on exactly one thing: AI is not merely an economic tool. It is a political instrument of the first order. And they would be collectively scandalized that Americans have allowed such a powerful force to be governed not by the consent of the governed, but by the terms-of-service agreements of private corporations.

Are You an AI Luddite?

Here is a short, entirely unscientific diagnostic. You might be an AI Luddite if:

  • You have ever asked "but who does this benefit?" when a new AI tool was announced at work.
  • You have ever felt that an automated system made a decision about your life that was wrong, and had no way to appeal it.
  • You believe that a teacher's professional judgment is not simply a "workflow" to be optimized.
  • You think there is something worth preserving in the experience of a human being writing their own words, making their own art, or doing their own thinking.
  • You have noticed that "AI will free you from tedious tasks" has, in practice, mostly meant "AI will give you more tedious tasks to manage."
  • You have ever been told to "just use the AI" in a way that felt less like liberation and more like being handed a mop and told the floor won't clean itself.

If you nodded at any of those, congratulations. You are not a technophobe. You are a person paying attention.

 What the National Education Policy Center Is Saying

The National Education Policy Center's recent newsletter on Luddite lessons for the AI era is one of the most important documents in the current conversation about AI in education — and it is being read by precisely the people who need to read it.

Its central argument is elegant: the Luddites were right, and educators are in the same position today.

The newsletter draws a direct parallel between the skilled textile artisans of 1812 and today's teachers facing a wave of AI tools — automated grading systems, AI lesson planners, algorithmic curriculum managers — that promise to "free" educators from tedious tasks while, in practice, often adding administrative burden, reducing professional autonomy, and primarily benefiting the vendors selling the tools rather than the teachers or students using them.

The key insights from the newsletter deserve to be quoted directly:

De-skilling is the real threat. The automation of teaching tasks doesn't free educators — it disconnects them from the essential professional judgment that makes teaching meaningful. When a teacher outsources grading to an algorithm, they lose the diagnostic insight that comes from reading student work. The algorithm gets data. The teacher gets a spreadsheet. The student gets a score. Nobody gets an education.

Technoskepticism is a professional responsibility. The newsletter argues that educators should openly question AI tools — their data privacy implications, their algorithmic biases, their effect on the student-teacher relationship. This isn't resistance to progress. It is due diligence.

Resistance strategies matter. The newsletter recommends several approaches drawn directly from the Luddite playbook:

  • Strategic Playfulness: Using humor and satire to question the AI adoption narrative (you're reading an example of this right now).
  • Building Networks: Forming communities of resistance, like The Alliance for Refusing Generative Artificial Intelligence (ARG AI).
  • Local Adaptation: Tailoring resistance to specific contexts — some tools in some places may be fine; others are genuinely harmful.

The most important line in the newsletter: "Technological change is not inevitable; it is shaped by choices about power and community values, which should be contested when misaligned with educational goals."

Read that again. Technology is not a weather system. It is a series of choices — choices made by people with interests, made in boardrooms, made in legislatures, made in school board meetings. The Luddites understood this. The question is whether we do.

Ten Reasons You Should Be an AI Luddite Right Now

Let's be precise. Being an AI Luddite in 2026 doesn't mean refusing to use a spell-checker or insisting on a rotary phone. It means bringing critical consciousness to the most consequential technological transformation in human history. Here are ten reasons to do exactly that:

1. The gains are not being shared. AI productivity is soaring. Median wages are not. The math of "Capital vs. Labor" that the original Luddites identified in 1812 is playing out in real time on your pay stub.

2. The warnings are coming from inside the house. Dario Amodei of Anthropic — the man who builds the AI — is warning of 10–20% unemployment and the disappearance of 50% of entry-level office roles within five years. When the person selling the product warns you about the product, it is worth listening.

3. "Inevitable progress" is a rhetorical trick. Every technology that has ever harmed workers has been described as "inevitable." The wide-frame loom was inevitable. The factory system was inevitable. The gig economy was inevitable. None of these were inevitable. They were chosen — by people with power, for reasons of profit. AI deployment is also a choice.

4. De-skilling is real and it is accelerating. When you stop writing your own emails, drafting your own analyses, making your own arguments, you lose the capacity to do those things without assistance. This is not a hypothetical. It is a documented cognitive phenomenon. The AI Luddite insists on maintaining their own skills — not out of nostalgia, but out of self-preservation.

5. Algorithmic management is a form of control. Millions of workers — from Uber drivers to warehouse workers to teachers — are now managed by algorithms that set their pace, evaluate their performance, and can terminate them without human review. This is not efficiency. It is surveillance capitalism with a productivity dashboard.

6. Data privacy is not a small concern. Every AI tool you use at work, at school, or at home is collecting data about you. That data is being used to train models, inform decisions, and generate profit for someone who is not you. The AI Luddite asks: who owns this data, and what are they doing with it?

7. The "learn to code" promise has expired. The original response to automation anxiety was "learn to code." AI now writes code. The goalposts have moved so many times that they are no longer visible. The AI Luddite recognizes that the solution to AI displacement cannot simply be "become more useful to the AI."

8. Human judgment has value that cannot be automated. There are things that human beings do — teach, heal, judge, create, connect, comfort — that are not simply "tasks" to be optimized. They are relationships, and relationships require presence, accountability, and the possibility of genuine error. An AI can simulate empathy. It cannot be responsible for the consequences of its simulation.

9. The "techlash" is not a fringe movement. From the Right to Repair movement to the backlash against social media addiction to the growing unionization of tech workers, resistance to exploitative technology is mainstream, bipartisan, and growing. The AI Luddite is not a crank. They are ahead of the curve.

10. History is watching. The Luddites were hanged, transported, and ridiculed. Two hundred years later, historians recognize them as prescient critics of industrial capitalism who asked the right questions at exactly the right moment. The question of who benefits from AI is the defining political question of our era. The people asking it loudest right now are the ones history will vindicate.

The Closing Argument: Raise Your Glass

The Luddites didn't lose because they were wrong. They lost because the British Army had muskets and the textile workers had hammers. But the questions they asked — Who does this technology serve? Who captures the gains? Who bears the costs? What kind of society are we building? — those questions never went away.

They went underground for a while. They got rebranded as "technophobia." They got mocked at dinner parties by people who confused the inability to operate a smartphone with the unwillingness to be exploited by one.

But here in 2026, with AI eating its way through the white-collar workforce with the same appetite the wide-frame loom had for skilled weavers, those questions are back. Louder than ever. And the people asking them deserve not mockery but a standing ovation.

So the next time someone calls you a Luddite, smile. Raise your glass. And say:

"Thank you. I'm in excellent historical company."


Three cheers for the AI Luddites — the most misunderstood, most necessary, and most historically vindicated people in any room with a Wi-Fi connection. 🔨🔨🔨


🔗 The Essential Links

SourceLink
NEPC: Lessons From Ludditeshttps://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/newsletter-luddite-040726
Brookings: We Should All Be Ludditeshttps://www.brookings.edu/articles/we-should-all-be-luddites/
TIME: Luddites & AIhttps://time.com/6317437/luddites-ai-blood-in-the-machine-merchant/
Fortune: AI Disruption & Displacementhttps://fortune.com/2026/03/27/ai-tools-disruption-displacement-workforce-guild/

"Is this technology a table we all sit at — or a wall built to keep us out?" The Luddites asked it in 1812. It's still the only question that matters.