FROM CITIZENS UNITED TO NEO-FEUDALISM: WHY MAY DAY 2026 IS THE MOST IMPORTANT DAY YOU'RE NOT TALKING ABOUT
A slightly furious, entirely necessary dispatch from the edge of the republic
There's a particular kind of genius in convincing people that the cage they're in is actually a free market. For fifteen years, since the Supreme Court handed corporations a First Amendment megaphone in Citizens United v. FEC, we've been debating what it did to our elections. That's the wrong argument. The more profound question — the one that keeps economists up at night and should keep the rest of us up too — is what it did to capitalism itself. Because what we're watching in 2026 isn't just political corruption. It's the systematic conversion of a democracy into a corporate oligarchy, with Artificial Intelligence serving as the final, gleaming lock on the door.
And on May 1st, the people holding the key are you.
The Citizens United Capitalism Heist
Here's the part the civics textbooks skip: Citizens United wasn't just a campaign finance ruling. It was a corporate merger — the merger of economic power and political power into one seamless, self-reinforcing machine.
Before 2010, the wealthy could influence democracy. After 2010, they could purchase it wholesale, anonymously, at scale, with a receipt that says "free speech" on it.
The result? A mixed economy — that beautifully imperfect compromise between raw capitalism and democratic governance — began quietly tipping off its axis. The "referee" (government) started taking checks from the players. The rulebook got rewritten in boardrooms. And the scoreboard? It only shows one metric now: shareholder value.
Consider what this looks like in practice:
- Regulatory Capture became the norm, not the exception. The agencies meant to police industries are now staffed by the industries themselves.
- "Killer Acquisitions" replaced competition. Why out-innovate a startup when you can just buy it and bury it?
- Dark money flows like a river through a system designed for transparent streams, funding everything from school board candidates to Supreme Court justices.
- Public services — schools, infrastructure, healthcare — were systematically starved of funding while private alternatives were lavishly subsidized.
This isn't a bug in the system. It is the system, now running exactly as its architects intended.
Enter AI: The Feudalism Accelerant
Just when you thought the oligarchy had enough tools, Silicon Valley handed it the most powerful concentration device in human history: Artificial Intelligence.
Here's the brutal economic logic. AI is trained on public knowledge — the collective intellectual output of centuries of human civilization, scraped from the open web. That data was yours. The resulting intelligence, however? Locked behind a paywall. Owned by a handful of firms. Optimized not for your flourishing, but for their quarterly earnings.
This is what economists call "Data Enclosure" — and it's the digital equivalent of the 18th-century land enclosures that turned English peasants into serfs. The commons were taken. A subscription was offered in their place.
The trajectory, if left unchecked, looks something like this:
| Stage | What It Looks Like | Who Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Now (2026) | AI tools in schools, hospitals, courts — all privately owned | Tech shareholders |
| Near Future | AI agents managing your finances, healthcare, legal options | Platform owners |
| End State | Algorithmic feudalism — you rent access to the infrastructure of daily life | A permanent tech aristocracy |
That last row isn't science fiction. It's the logical conclusion of allowing the infrastructure of civilization to be privately owned without democratic accountability. The East India Company ran a trading empire. Today's monopolies run the cognitive empire. Same boot, different logo.
Guardrails vs. Redesign: The Central Fight of Our Time
The good news is that this isn't inevitable. The question is whether we need better guardrails on the current system, or a fundamental redesign of the engine itself.
The Guardrails argument says the machine is fixable — we just need better steering:
- Anti-Monopoly 2.0: Break up tech giants. Stop killer acquisitions. Measure market power, not just consumer prices.
- Campaign Finance Reform: Pass the DISCLOSE Act. Decouple economic power from political power. Make the referee stop taking bribes.
- Modernized Labor Law: Extend protections to gig workers. Make flexibility a feature, not an excuse to strip benefits.
- Carbon Pricing: Make pollution expensive. Use market logic to solve market failures.
The Redesign argument says the machine's goal is wrong — and you can't fix a car that's been programmed to drive into a wall:
- Stakeholder Capitalism: Legally require corporations to serve employees, communities, and the planet — not just shareholders.
- Universal Basic Services: A floor, not a net. Internet access, transit, nutrition — not commodities, but rights.
- Public Option for AI: Data Trusts. Public AI utilities. The benefits of automation distributed across society, not concentrated in five zip codes in California.
- Democratic Workplaces: Workers on corporate boards. Cooperatives. The radical notion that people who do the work should have a vote in how it's done.
The honest answer? We need both — and we need them now. Guardrails are what you implement this legislative session. Redesign is what you build over the next generation. But here's the catch: you can't have effective guardrails if the referees are on the payroll of the players. The guardrails have to come first, or the redesign never gets built.
The Classroom as Ground Zero
Nowhere is this more visible — or more consequential — than in public education.
The pattern is depressingly familiar to anyone who lived through Common Core: frame a crisis, provide a pre-packaged solution, buy the consensus, leverage federal funding, weather the backlash, repeat. Today, the "solution" being sold is AI in the classroom — adaptive learning platforms, automated grading, AI tutors — all of it privately owned, data-hungry, and optimized for engagement metrics, not student growth.
The result is a two-tiered education system taking shape before our eyes:
- Public schools: AI-delivered instruction, thin on human connection, rich in data harvesting.
- Private schools: Human teachers, smaller classes, and the quiet confidence that their students' essays aren't being used to train the next product release.
This is not a technology problem. It is a power problem. And the solution isn't to ban AI from schools — it's to build a Public Option for AI: a government-funded, independently governed, transparent AI infrastructure, modeled on the public library, that serves students rather than shareholders.
The public library didn't ask you to subscribe. It didn't harvest your reading data. It didn't nudge you toward the books its investors published. That's the model. And it's achievable — if we fight for it.
May Day 2026: The Bill Comes Due
Here's the thing about a forty-year oligarchic plan: it forgot to account for the oldest force in democratic history. Organized people.
On May 1st, 2026, a coalition of over 200 organizations is staging a national day of action under a banner of almost offensive clarity:
Three words. Three actions: No Work. No School. No Shopping.
The demands aren't radical. They're the bare minimum of a functioning democracy:
✅ Tax the wealthy to fund public schools, healthcare, and Social Security ✅ Restore labor rights gutted by billionaire-funded union attacks ✅ End ICE raids terrorizing immigrant communities ✅ Invest in domestic needs over endless military escalation ✅ Restore democratic accountability to public education
Planned actions span all 50 states. The weapons being brought are signs, solidarity, and the stubborn insistence that democracy is not a subscription service.
Your Action Toolkit
A politician is, in the most functional sense, a public employee. You are their employer. But right now, the hiring process has been captured — billions in anonymous dollars have already decided which candidates are viable before you ever enter the booth.
Here's what you do about it:
| Action | Where |
|---|---|
| Sign the May Day Pledge | maydaystrong.org |
| Get the educator organizing toolkit | nea.org/mayday-toolkit |
| Demand your Senator vote on the DISCLOSE Act | senate.gov — Switchboard: (202) 224-3121 |
| Demand co-sponsorship of H.J. Res. 122 | house.gov — Switchboard: (202) 224-3121 |
| Track your rep's stock trades | efts.sec.gov & quiverquant.com |
| Scan your school's website for trackers | themarkup.org/blacklight |
| Vote in every local election | Your polling place — cheapest races to buy, highest relative weight for your vote |
| Talk about dark money | Everywhere. Silence is the donor class's most powerful tool. |
The Bottom Line
In 1773, the colonists understood something we keep forgetting: a monopoly is not just an economic problem. It is a political one. When one entity controls the infrastructure of daily life — whether it's tea, search engines, or the software grading your child's essays — it controls the terms of participation in society itself.
The East India Company had the British Parliament. Today's monopolies have Citizens United, dark money PACs, and a Congress that has apparently decided "public servant" means "servant to the public that can afford a fundraiser."
Samuel Adams didn't ask the East India Company nicely to please consider being less of a monopoly. He organized. He agitated. He made the cost of compliance higher than the cost of resistance.
The question isn't whether you can afford to get involved.
The question is whether you can afford not to.
#MayDayStrong | #WorkersOverBillionaires | #ProtectStudentData | #BreakUpBigTech | #NoKings
The People Are Watching. The People Are Organized. The People Remember Boston.
And this time, the tea is data — and there's a whole lot of it to spill.
Sources & Further Reading
🏛️ Citizens United & Campaign Finance
Brennan Center for Justice — Citizens United, Explained A clear breakdown of the 2010 ruling and its ongoing damage to democratic accountability. 🔗 https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/citizens-united-explained
Roosevelt Institute — Citizens United and the Decline of US Democracy (15 Years Later) A sharp analysis of how the ruling accelerated the merger of corporate and political power. 🔗 https://rooseveltinstitute.org/publications/citizens-united-15-years-later/
American Progress — The Corporate Power Reset That Makes Citizens United Irrelevant Examines how corporate power has evolved well beyond what even Citizens United anticipated. 🔗 https://www.americanprogress.org/article/the-corporate-power-reset-that-makes-citizens-united-irrelevant/
FEC (Federal Election Commission) — Official Case Record: Citizens United v. FEC The primary legal source for the ruling itself. 🔗 https://www.fec.gov/legal-resources/court-cases/citizens-united-v-fec/
Oyez — Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (Case Summary) Accessible legal summary of the Supreme Court decision. 🔗 https://www.oyez.org/cases/2008/08-205
🤖 AI, Neo-Feudalism & Corporate Ownership
LinkedIn / John Dey — AI and the Rise of Digital Lords: How Big Tech Is Building a New Feudalism Examines infrastructure capture, knowledge ownership, and the parallels to historical feudalism. 🔗 https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-rise-digital-lords-how-big-tech-building-new-john-dey-lfrve
Preprints.org — Geopolitical Fragmentation, AI, and the Coming Neo-Feudalism An academic paper drawing historical parallels between today's AI concentration and authoritarian-era power structures. 🔗 https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202604.0074/v1
OneTrust — Where AI Regulation Is Heading in 2026: A Global Outlook Covers the emerging global regulatory landscape for AI, including transparency requirements and prohibited practices. 🔗 https://www.onetrust.com/blog/where-ai-regulation-is-heading-in-2026-a-global-outlook/
JD Supra — The AI Regulation Landscape for 2026: What Legal and Compliance Teams Need to Know A practical legal overview of the fragmented, fast-moving AI regulatory environment. 🔗 https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/the-ai-regulation-landscape-for-2026-7255123/
🏫 Public Education, AI & the Public Option
Big Education Ape — Pissing Into the Digital Wind: Why Public Education Needs a Public Option for AI The foundational piece that inspired this article — a sharp critique of AI privatization in schools. 🔗 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/04/pissing-into-digital-wind-why-public.html
The Markup — Blacklight A real-time website privacy inspector. Use it to scan your school's website for hidden trackers and data harvesting tools. 🔗 https://themarkup.org/blacklight
Curmudgucation — Indianapolis Schools Have Been Privatized: What Cities Are Next A ground-level look at how the privatization playbook is being executed city by city. 🔗 https://curmudgucation.substack.com/p/indianapolis-schools-have-been-privatized
✊ May Day 2026 & Organizing
May Day Strong — Official Pledge & Action Hub Sign the pledge, find local events, and access organizing resources for May 1st, 2026. 🔗 https://maydaystrong.org
NEA — May Day Educator Organizing Toolkit Resources specifically designed for teachers, school staff, and education advocates. 🔗 https://www.nea.org
U.S. Senate Switchboard — Demand a Vote on the DISCLOSE Act 📞 (202) 224-3121 — Call your Senator directly. 🔗 https://www.senate.gov
U.S. House Switchboard — Demand Co-Sponsorship of H.J. Res. 122 📞 (202) 224-3121 — Call your Representative directly. 🔗 https://www.house.gov
📊 Tracking Money & Power
SEC EDGAR Full-Text Search — Track Congressional Stock Trades Search financial disclosures filed by public officials and corporations. 🔗 https://efts.sec.gov
Quiver Quantitative — Congressional Trading Tracker A user-friendly dashboard for tracking stock trades made by members of Congress. 🔗 https://www.quiverquant.com
OpenSecrets — Dark Money & Campaign Finance Database The gold standard for tracking where political money comes from and where it goes. 🔗 https://www.opensecrets.org
📖 Deeper Reading on Capitalism, Redesign & Guardrails
Wikipedia — Citizens United v. FEC (Full Case Overview) Comprehensive background on the legal, political, and economic implications of the ruling. 🔗 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC
Diane Ravitch's Blog — Senator Kelly Introduces Bill to Roll Back Federal Vouchers Tracks the legislative fight to protect public education funding in real time. 🔗 https://dianeravitch.net
NEPC (National Education Policy Center) Independent research on education policy, privatization, and equity. 🔗 https://nepc.colorado.edu
All links verified as of April 22, 2026. For the most current legislative status of the DISCLOSE Act and H.J. Res. 122, check congress.gov directly at 🔗 https://www.congress.gov
#MayDayStrong | #WorkersOverBillionaires | #ProtectStudentData | #BreakUpBigTech | #NoKings
