Why This Blog Exists
The United States signed the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) in 1977. Nearly fifty years later, the Senate has never voted on ratification. During those decades, 173 nations moved forward. The U.S. did not.
Now artificial intelligence stands to reshape the economy more rapidly than any technology since electrification. No person should lose access to work, healthcare, education, or an adequate standard of living because they happen to live in the one major democracy that lacks a binding framework for economic rights.
That urgency drives everything on this blog.
What We Cover
The main site lays out the full analysis — the differential diagnosis of AI’s economic impact, four orders of knock-on effects, and an advocacy toolkit for taking action. This blog tracks what changes next:
- Legislative and economic developments — Tariff shifts, AI adoption data, and policy actions move fast. Posts here connect those developments to the ICESCR framework as they unfold.
- Methodology and accountability — The discriminator methodology and fair witness reporting standards that produced the site’s analysis deserve scrutiny. Posts here open that process to examination.
- Advocacy strategy — What works, what doesn’t, and what remains untried in the campaign for ratification.
Join the Effort
This project advances through collective action, not passive reading. Ways to participate:
- Contribute analysis — Open a pull request with a
.mdfile in the repository following the blog specification - Report corrections — GitHub Issues for factual errors or gaps in the analysis
- Discuss strategy — GitHub Discussions for deeper conversation about advocacy approaches
- Subscribe — RSS Feed to stay current
- Reach out directly — Contact the maintainer
No person should face AI-driven economic disruption without legal protection. The treaty already exists. The signature already happened. What remains: ratification.
Human Rights; Nothing More, Nothing Less.