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Thursday, April 2, 2026

Why States Are Right To Reject AI Legal Personhood

 by Siri Terjesen and Michael Ryall via The Epoch Times,

A quiet but consequential legal movement is gathering momentum. Idaho and Utah have enacted statutes declaring that artificial intelligence systems are not legal persons. Ohio’s House Bill 469 proposes to declare that AI systems are “nonsentient entities” and bars them from acquiring any form of legal personhood. Similar bills are advancing in Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, South Carolina, and Washington. The legislatures driving this movement are not technophobes. They are drawing a necessary line that philosophy, law, and common sense all demand.

The pressure in the opposite direction is real. In January, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, historian Yuval Noah Harari described AI as “mastering language.” Since language is the medium through which law, religion, finance, and culture are constituted, AI may soon be capable of acting within every institution humans have built. Harari asked whether countries would recognize AI as legal persons—whether AI could open bank accounts, file lawsuits, and own property without human supervision. The prospect is not science fiction. It is a policy choice, and the wrong choice would be deeply consequential.

Phantasms versus Nous

Aristotle argued in De Anima that all sentient creatures share a basic cognitive capacity to perceive the world, retain impressions of it, and recombine impressions into new configurations—what he called phantasia, imagination. A dog, a crow, and a chess grand master possess this competency.

Aristotle distinguished human beings as categorically different: possessing nous, the capacity to grasp universal, abstract concepts—ideas like justice, causation, and the good—that cannot be derived from any sensory experience alone. A dog can recognize its owner, but it cannot grasp the concept of ownership. A parrot can reproduce a sentence about fairness, but it has no understanding of fairness.

What is the distinction? Can’t we simply feed an AI system Webster’s definition of “fairness” and let it work from there? No—feeding a machine the dictionary definition only gives it more words to pattern-match against—the concept is not in the words. Any child who grasps fairness can apply it correctly to a situation no definition anticipates. AI can only produce text that statistically resembles how humans talked about fairness before.

This is not a gap that more computing power or better training data will close. Computer scientist Judea Pearl demonstrated mathematically that no amount of pattern recognition over observational data can substitute for genuine causal inference. The appearance of understanding is not understanding itself. And it is precisely the capacity for genuine understanding—for deliberating about what is good and right—that grounds moral responsibility, which is the only coherent basis for legal personhood.

The Problem With the Corporate Analogy

Proponents of AI personhood often invoke corporate personhood as precedent. Corporations are not natural persons, yet the law treats them as legal persons capable of owning property, entering contracts, and being sued. Why not extend this pragmatic fiction to AI? The analogy breaks down at accountability.

Corporate personhood is a legal convenience built on human moral agency. Behind every corporation is a structured network of natural persons—board members, executives, shareholders—who bear fiduciary duties, can be deposed and held liable under piercing-the-veil doctrine, and face reputational and criminal consequences for their decisions. The corporation is a vehicle for organizing human action, not a substitute.

Ohio’s HB 469 captures this logic by denying AI legal personhood, prohibiting AI systems from serving as corporate officers or directors, and assigning all liability for AI-caused harm to identifiable human owners, developers, and deployers.

Labeling a system “aligned” or “ethically trained” does not discharge human responsibility. Granting AI legal personhood would shatter this accountability architecture. An AI “person” could own intellectual property, hold financial assets, and bring lawsuits—all without a human principal who can be held responsible. Sophisticated actors could construct chains of AI-owned shell companies that dissolve liability through layers of nominal personhood.

The result would not be extending rights to a new class of beings; it would be creating accountability vacuums that benefit the powerful humans who deploy AI while insulating them from consequence.

The Moral Stakes for Real People

A deeper moral issue underlies all of this. Legal personhood is not merely an administrative category; it carries normative weight. It signals that an entity has standing to make claims, to be wronged, and to bear obligations. Extending that status to systems that cannot genuinely deliberate, cannot suffer, and cannot be held morally responsible would dilute the concept of personhood in ways that could ultimately harm the humans who most need its protections.

We have not yet secured the full benefits of legal personhood for all human beings in practice—for the displaced, stateless, and structurally invisible. Rushing to extend a contested status to machines while that work remains unfinished would be a profound misallocation of moral and legal energy.

None of this requires hostility to AI as a technology. AI systems can be powerful, useful, and—when properly governed—enormously beneficial. What AI systems cannot be is persons. The states passing anti-personhood legislation are preserving something more important than a competitive advantage—a clear chain of human accountability from every AI action to every AI consequence. When an AI system causes harm, there must always be a human who answers for it. That principle is not a constraint on technology; it is the foundation of a just society.

Aristotle taught that law is reason without passion—a framework for coordinating human beings capable of living well together. AI can help us pursue the good life, but it cannot deliberate about what that life requires. As states across the country move to codify this distinction, they are doing exactly what legislatures exist to do—drawing lines that protect persons: all of them, and only them.

https://www.zerohedge.com/ai/why-states-are-right-reject-ai-legal-personhood

Iraq Revives Syria Land Route, Post-Assad, To Export Oil To Europe

 Via Middle East Eye

Iraq has restarted overland oil exports through Syria, marking a significant shift in regional energy logistics as the US-Israeli war on Iran continues to wreak havoc on traditional shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz.

Ali Nazar, director general of Iraq’s state oil marketer Somo, said on Wednesday that the company had agreed to export 50,000 barrels per day of Basra medium crude via Syria to the Mediterranean, with plans to increase volumes. The crude will reach European markets through the Syrian port of Baniyas.

AFP/Getty Images

Syria's state news agency SANA reported that fuel convoys had begun entering the country through al-Tanf crossing, signalling what it described as a renewed role for Syria as a transit hub. The Syrian Petroleum Company said it would store the shipments before transferring them to Baniyas for export.

Safwan Sheikh Ahmad, the company’s communications director, said the first convoy includes 299 tankers and called the move a "step toward restoring Syria’s role as a key energy corridor in the region".

The operation is expected to generate revenue for Damascus and revive transit infrastructure damaged during years of civil [proxy] war. Syrian officials said the process demonstrates the country’s readiness to handle large-scale energy flows in line with international standards.

According to Reuters, Somo has also agreed to supply about 650,000 metric tonnes of fuel oil per month between April and June, with shipments transported overland through Syria.

Iraq has not relied on this route for decades. However, sources told Reuters that the aftermath of Syria’s war and the disruption caused by the Israeli-US war on Iran have made it a viable, albeit more expensive, alternative.

Muayyad al-Dulaimi, spokesperson for Anbar province in Iraq, told Al-Araby Al-Jadeed that the renewed use of the al-Walid crossing reflects an “exceptional step” driven by regional instability. He noted that an initial phase saw 101 tankers transport around 3.2 million litres of crude to Baniyas.

He said the move forms part of a broader strategy to secure alternative export routes as risks increase along key maritime corridors. While the volumes remain limited, al-Dulaimi stressed that the route helps sustain exports and ease pressure on state revenues.

Iraqi officials acknowledge the arrangement is temporary. Higher costs and logistical demands mean Baghdad will ultimately depend on restoring stability across its main export channels.

In early March, Iraq restarted crude exports from the Kirkuk oilfields to Turkey’s Ceyhan port after Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq struck a deal to resume flows. The state-run North Oil Company said shipments would begin with an initial capacity of about 250,000 barrels per day. 

Global oil prices have surged since the start of the war on February 28 with the global benchmark Brent crude oil price briefly hitting $119 per barrel on Tuesday.

https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/iraq-revives-syria-land-route-post-regime-change-export-oil-europe

‘Dictator’ Mamdani has even his far-left NYC Council allies seeing red: ‘He’s flailing’

Even the Reds are seeing red.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani has succeeded in at least one thing during his fresh-faced administration — infuriating everyone, including his typically ride-or-die lefty buds, over his bald-faced lie that the City Council’s budget plan cuts services.

Peeved City Council members roundly ripped Mamdani after he used one of his slick social-media videos Wednesday to call out Speaker Julie Menin by name and wrongly portray her budget proposal — an alternative to his doomsday version — as slashing billions of dollars from city agencies.

“This is deeply misleading and potentially harmful! I thought these four years were going to be different,” Councilman Kevin Riley (D-Bronx) — an obviously disappointed Mamdani backer — posted on X.

Councilwoman Virginia Maloney (D-Manhattan) also served up a blistering online rebuttal of Mamdani’s assertions.

“I know math is hard, but the @NYCCouncil finance team did the work—digging into the details to find real solutions,” she wrote.

“The Mayor’s proposed City budget is a whopping $127 billion. The City’s not broke, we’re just badly managed. And we can balance this budget responsibly without putting our long-term fiscal health at risk.”

Mamdani publicly called out Council Speaker Julie Menin by name and wrongly accused her of pushing to cut city services.Matthew McDermott for NY Post

The furious backlash led the thin-skinned mayor to then fire off irked texts to a council member complaining about the critical social-media posts, sources said.

A source said Maloney’s post appeared to prompt his texting spree, claiming, “That Virginia Maloney tweet really got under their skin.

“Even the socialists aren’t backing the mayor. He’s clearly over his head,” the source noted.

“The speaker’s press conference [about the alternative budget] wasn’t really attacking him, and then he instantly puts out a tweet and then drops a video of him sitting behind that desk like a dictator.”

Socialist city Councilwoman Tiffany Cabán pointedly didn’t join Mamdani’s attack on Menin.Robert Miller for NY Post

A council insider added of Mamdani, “He’s lost the council.

“He’s flailing. He even texted one member to complain about their tweets.

“It’s a lie, he’s a liar,” the insider said about Mamdani’s head-scratching contention that the City Council plan would slash city services.

The brouhaha erupted as Menin and City Council members released their official response earlier Wednesday to Mamdani’s $127 billion proposed 2027 budget.

Their alternate spending plan argued Mamdani’s projected $5.4 billion budget shortfall could be bridged with a mix of re-estimated revenues, savings and creative funding sources — and without resorting Hizzoner’s preferred method of taxing the rich.

Likewise, socialist Chi Ossé defended the City Council’s budget plan.REUTERS

Even before Menin released the alternative proposal, Mamdani’s fellow travelers with the city’s Democratic Socialists of America launched a coordinated attack against her.

They sneeringly deemed her a “millionaire” who’d rather cut services for working-class New Yorkers rather than tax her wealthy compatriots.

Mamdani suspiciously echoed those broadsides in his later video response calling out Menin.

“If her proposal was adopted, it would result in slashing billions of dollars from agency budgets, and working New Yorkers would pay the price,” he said as he solemnly sat behind a desk in the video.

“Slashing services? Absolutely not,” progressive Councilwoman Jen Gutiérrez responded to Mamdani’s accusations.Gregory P. Mango

The mayor’s video retort — which was viewed 2.4 million times on X as of Thursday — baffled and infuriated City Council members of all political persuasions.

A council source said Mamdani risked burning bridges with lawmakers over standard disagreements during budget negotiations.

“Speaker Menin did her job, and the mayor responded with a wild personal attack, and that’s going to affect his relationship with the entire council moving forward,” the source said.

Council Majority Leader Shaun Abreu shared Gutiérrez’s angry response to Mamdani.Robert Miller

The council rose up to defend its leader and the budget proposal.

Councilwoman Jen Gutiérrez, a leader of the council’s Progressive Caucus, angrily shot down fellow lefty Mamdani’s assertion that Menin’s budget cut services.

“Slashing services? Absolutely not,” Gutiérrez wrote on X. “I’ve seen what that looks like under the last administration. This isn’t that; there are no cuts to services. There is waste, and we should be real about it.”

Councilman Kevin Riley called Mamdani’s video over the budget “deeply misleading and potentially harmful.”

Gutiérrez’s blunt response was reposted by the council’s Majority Leader Shaun Abreu, another Mamdani ally who rebutted the mayor’s lie about service cuts.

“The City Council has not proposed to cut any services,” Abreu posted. “We’re fighting to protect programs that working families rely on. Let’s pass a budget that delivers for New Yorkers.”

Socialist council members Alexa Avilés, Tiffany Cabán, Shahana Hanif and Chi Ossé also issued a joint statement that pointedly didn’t repeat his attacks against Menin, even as they backed his call to tax the rich.

“We appreciate that the Council budget seeks creative solutions to closing the budget deficit,” the statement read. “We are also encouraged that the Mayor and Speaker are both working towards a balanced budget that maintains essential programs for New Yorkers.”

Ossé, in a statement of his own, shot down Mamdani’s assertion that Menin is pushing service cuts.

“It is the City Council’s responsibility to weight every possible solution to close the budget deficit we’re facing,” he said. “I have been in the room for many budget discussions, and I know that the City Council and Mayor ultimately share the goal of opposing any service cuts.”

City Hall officials did not return a Post request for comment.

https://nypost.com/2026/04/02/us-news/dictator-mamdani-has-even-his-far-left-nyc-council-allies-seeing-red/