SPILLING THE TEA ON TECH MONOPOLIES: A REVOLUTIONARY'S GUIDE TO DIGITAL COLONIALISM
How the Founding Fathers Would Have Absolutely Lost Their Minds at a School Board Meeting
The Original Tea Spill
Here's the dirty little secret hiding in every American History textbook: the Boston Tea Party wasn't really about tea. It wasn't even mostly about taxes. It was about a monopoly — and the terrifying precedent that one company, with the blessing of a distant, unaccountable government, could corner an entire market and squeeze out everyone else.
Let that sink in for a moment.
In 1773, the British Parliament passed the Tea Act, which actually lowered the price of tea. Sounds generous, right? Except it handed the struggling East India Company exclusive rights to sell directly to the colonies — bypassing local merchants, crushing competition, and embedding a tax that colonists had never consented to. The colonists weren't fooled by the discount. They recognized the Trojan Horse for what it was: if Parliament can monopolize tea today, they can monopolize everything tomorrow.
So Samuel Adams and the Sons of Liberty dressed up as Mohawks and threw 342 chests of tea into Boston Harbor.
The message was unambiguous: We will not buy your cheaper product if it costs us our freedom.
Fast Forward 253 Years: Meet the New East India Company
The irony would be delicious if it weren't so infuriating.
The Founding Fathers — those powdered-wig revolutionaries who literally started a war over a corporate monopoly backed by a government that wouldn't listen to the people — have been replaced by a Congress that doesn't just tolerate monopolies. It cultivates them, protects them, and apparently fundraises with them over very expensive dinners.
The East India Company had ships and spices. Today's monopolies have something far more powerful: your child's data, their attention, their intellectual labor, and their digital identity — and they're harvesting it all for free, at scale, inside the very institutions your tax dollars built.
Meet the new colonial powers:
| Then (1773) | Now (2026) | The Parallel |
|---|---|---|
| East India Company | Google / Meta / Apple / Amazon / Microsoft | One entity, government-backed, cornering the market |
| Tea monopoly | EdTech ecosystem lock-in | "Free" product that costs you everything |
| Taxation without representation | Data extraction without consent | You pay, but have no say |
| Parliament ignoring colonists | Congress courting Tech Bro billionaires | Power serves power |
| Coercive Acts | Opaque Terms of Service | Compliance enforced through dependency |
The Classroom Heist: Your Kid Is Working for Free
Let's talk about something that should make every parent in America set down their coffee and stare at the wall for a full minute.
Trainers are a paid position. In virtually every industry on the planet, if you train a product, test a system, or generate data that improves a commercial tool, you get compensated. That's called labor. That's called economics.
But somewhere between Silicon Valley's kombucha bar and Capitol Hill's campaign finance reports, the Tech Bros figured out something spectacular: what if we could get millions of children to train our AI products — for free — inside public schools — using taxpayer-funded infrastructure — without telling anyone?
Here's how the heist works:
The Mechanism
- A student writes an essay on a school-issued Chromebook using Google Docs.
- They search for help using Google Search, integrated into their school account.
- They interact with an AI writing assistant embedded in their "free" educational platform.
- Every keystroke, every revision, every search query, every moment of productive struggle — fed directly into the machine.
- The machine learns. The student gets a grade. Google gets richer.
This isn't a conspiracy theory. It's a business model. And it's hiding in plain sight behind End User License Agreements written in the font size of a legal disclaimer on a used car contract.
The Invisible Fingerprint: Tracking Pixels
Then there are the tracking pixels — those tiny, invisible 1x1 snippets of code embedded in school websites, parent portals, and educational apps. They are, in the most accurate possible terms, digital surveillance devices planted inside public institutions.
When your child loads a school page that has a Meta pixel embedded in it:
- Their IP address is transmitted — pinpointing home location
- Their device fingerprint is captured — linking school device to personal devices
- Their behavioral data is logged — what they clicked, how long they lingered, what they struggled with
- If they're logged into Instagram on the same device? Their school activity is now linked to their social media profile — permanently.
In April 2026, Meta quietly launched an AI-powered pixel that automatically reads and categorizes website content without requiring any additional code from developers. It is, functionally, a self-installing surveillance system that school IT departments may not even know is there.
The Founding Fathers threw tea into a harbor over a price fix. What would they do about this?
The Monopoly Lineup: Know Your Colonizers
Under U.S. antitrust law, monopoly power is defined as the ability to control prices or exclude competition in a specific market. By that definition, here's who's currently running the table:
| Company | Market Grip | Education Impact | 2026 Legal Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Google (Alphabet) | ~90% search market share | Chromebooks in 40M+ classrooms; ecosystem lock-in | Confirmed monopoly in search (2025 ruling); FTC scrutiny ongoing |
| Meta | Duopoly in digital advertising; 3B+ users | Shadow profiles on students via pixels on school sites | Bottom-ranked in 2026 AI Privacy Rankings |
| Microsoft | ~75% desktop OS share | Office 365 in most districts; Copilot AI rollout | Strong enterprise security, but buried AI opt-outs |
| Apple | Walled garden hardware/software | iPads in schools; on-device processing | Best privacy practices, but high cost creates equity gap |
| Amazon | Marketplace + competitor on same platform | AWS powers most EdTech backends | DOJ scrutiny over seller data exploitation |
And for the specialized markets that don't make the headlines but absolutely should:
- ASML holds 100% of the market for EUV lithography — the machines that make the chips that power everything above.
- Visa/Mastercard operate as a payment processing duopoly — a toll booth on every digital transaction your school district makes.
- PowerSchool and Naviance — the student information systems used by thousands of districts — settled for $17.25 million in 2026 after student data (names, IDs, photos) was found leaking via ad-trackers to Google and Microsoft.
The Laws Are Already on the Books. So Why Isn't Anyone Using Them?
This is the part that should make you genuinely, historically furious.
The Sherman Antitrust Act has been on the books since 1890. The FTC Act since 1914. COPPA — the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act — since 1998. FERPA since 1974. These are not obscure statutes. They are the legal equivalent of "don't steal children's data and sell it to advertisers."
And yet:
- Google settled a COPPA violation involving YouTube for $10 million — approximately 0.003% of their 2025 revenue. That's not a penalty. That's a rounding error. That's the couch cushion money.
- Meta's "shadow profile" practices — building data dossiers on people who have never created a Facebook account, including minors — have been documented, litigated, and... continued.
- Illuminate Education exposed data on 10 million students and faced an FTC action. The company rebranded. The data is still out there.
Being a monopoly in 2026 means never having to say you're sorry — because your legal budget is larger than most states' education budgets, your lobbyists outnumber the regulators, and your campaign contributions have a way of making Congressional oversight committees suddenly very interested in other things.
The colonists called this taxation without representation. We might call it theft with a Terms of Service.
The People Are Not Amused — #MayDayStrong
Here is the thing about a forty-year oligarchic plan: it forgot to account for the oldest force in democratic history. Organized people.
Parents are showing up at school board meetings with printouts of privacy audits. Teachers are documenting AI rollouts nobody voted for. Communities are connecting the dots between Citizens United, dark money, and the charter school that just opened in their neighborhood with a suspiciously well-funded marketing campaign.
And on May 1st, 2026, a coalition of over 200 organizations is staging a national day of action under a banner that is almost offensively clear in its simplicity:
The call is three words: No Work. No School. No Shopping.
The demands are not radical. They are, in fact, the bare minimum of a functioning democracy:
- ✅ Tax the wealthy to fund public services — schools, healthcare, Social Security
- ✅ Reclaim labor rights from billionaire-funded attacks on unions
- ✅ End ICE raids that terrorize immigrant communities
- ✅ Invest in domestic needs rather than endless military escalation
- ✅ Restore democratic accountability to public education
Planned actions span all 50 states — marches, rallies, school walk-ins, sick-outs, art builds. The weapons they're bringing are signs, solidarity, and the stubborn insistence that democracy is not a subscription service.
Your Action Toolkit — Because Outrage Without Action Is Just a Hobby
A politician is, in the most functional sense, a public employee. You are their employer. Elections are the hiring process.
But right now, the hiring process has been captured. Before you walk into the voting booth, billions of anonymous dollars have already shaped which candidates are viable, which issues get discussed, and which policies are "realistic." By the time you cast your ballot, the most important decisions have already been made — by people whose names you will never know.
Here's what you can do about it — today, tomorrow, and on May 1st:
| 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 — Capitol switchboard: (202) 224-3121 |
| Support democracy locally | Your city/state legislature |
| Track your rep's stock trades | efts.sec.gov & quiverquant.com |
| Demand co-sponsorship of H.J. Res. 122 | house.gov — Capitol switchboard: (202) 224-3121 |
| Scan your school's website for trackers | Blacklight by The Markup — themarkup.org/blacklight |
| Vote in every local election | Your polling place — these are the cheapest races to buy, which means your vote carries the most relative weight |
| Talk about dark money | Everywhere. The donor class's most powerful tool is your silence. |
The Bottom Line
In 1773, the colonists understood something that we seem to 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 that "public servant" means "servant to the public that can afford a fundraiser."
The DISCLOSE Act is a flashlight. The Democracy Voucher is a crowbar. The Constitutional Amendment is a wrecking ball. And May Day Strong is the reminder that organized people — not organized money — are ultimately the only force that has ever changed anything in this country.
Samuel Adams didn't ask the East India Company nicely to please consider being less of a monopoly. He organized, he agitated, and he made the cost of compliance higher than the cost of resistance.
It's time to spill the tea.
Whether the boot on your neck is labeled "The Crown" or "The Board of Directors," the result for the average citizen is the same: a loss of agency and the erosion of the public square. The only difference between 1773 and 2026 is that today's colonizers don't need ships. They just need your child's school-issued Chromebook and a Terms of Service nobody reads.
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.

