Monday, May 11, 2026

China is Infiltrating the Anti-AI Movement: A Capitol Hill Event Promotes Chinese AI Governance

China is Infiltrating the Anti-AI Movement:
A Capitol Hill event promotes Chinese AI governance.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, an 84-year-old socialist politician whose previous position on technology was that he had no apps on his phone, didn’t seem to recognize the names of major platforms, and had a woman named ‘Melissa’ to tell him what he was doing, is suddenly interested in AI.

Anyone who thought that Bernie’s sudden hostility to AI was organic was disabused of the notion when the politician announced an event at the U.S. Capitol to discuss the “need for international cooperation” on AI featuring two Chinese scientists along with two members of the Future of Life Institute which has developed a growing interest in China’s role in AI.

While there are legitimate concerns about the impact of AI, the Sanders event is raising concerns that China is infiltrating the anti-AI movement, coordinating with AI critics and pushing for an ‘international governance’ model that would allow the regime to limit AI development by American companies while providing advantages to China’s domestic AI industry.

Of the Chinese half of the Sanders session, Zeng Yi is the dean of the Beijing Institute of AI Safety and Governance, and promoted China’s “Global Artificial Intelligence Governance Initiative”, and Xue Lan, who chairs China’s national expert committee for AI governance, has been advocating for China’s access to the International Network of AI Safety Institutes of free nations which had included America, as well as European and Asian nations, including Japan and South Korea, but not China due to concerns about its systemic theft and manipulation.

The Sanders session promotes a Chinese role in AI governance even as a new administration memo accuses Chinese companies of “deliberate, industrial-scale campaigns” to steal AI models.

But it’s the other half of the AI session that raises even more questions about China’s ability to co-opt western critics of AI. Although the Sanders RSVP does not mention it, Max Tegmark, a physicist, is the president and a board member of the Future of Life Institute along with his wife Meia Chita-Tegmark, who has degrees in education and psychology, who is listed as the co-founder of the ‘institute’, while David Krueger, the second attendee, is also linked to it.

While the Future of Life Institute was backed in the past by prominent figures including Elon Musk, it has more recently served into problematic territory. In 2025, it issued a PhD fellowship proposal for US-China AI governance urging “global governance” to reduce “the risks associated with a US-China AI competition” and the deployment of advanced AI systems.

This closely mirrors Chinese rhetoric warning against an AI ‘arms race’ and urging a partnership to control AI. Like past arms agreements, this will be yet another one way partnership that risks allowing China access to American AI developments and the ability to control the rate of development even while China misstates, conceals and deceives about its AI progress.

It would also allow China to restrict AI weapons development by the United States while freeing China to conduct whatever secret weapons development it pleases until it has its ‘Manhattan Project’ moment and achieves military superiority over the United States of America.

In 2024, Tegmark predicted that the American and Chinese governments would create a joint set of AI standards and enforce them on the world.

What’s China’s position on the Future of Life Institute? CGTN, China’s state media under the control of the Central Propaganda Department of the Chinese Communist Party promoted a Future of Life Institute claim that AI companies were failing to maintain safety standards.

The Chinese government has been using similar alarmism to advance its program of global governance. “If we allow this reckless competition among countries to continue,” Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang warned last year at the World Economic Forum, disaster would follow. “We stand ready, under the framework of the United Nations and its core, to actively participate in including all the relevant international organizations and all countries to discuss the formulation of robust rules.”

Is China about to stop competing? Unlikely. The calls for a ‘multipolar world’ lately being broadcast by social media influencers and politicians at all points of the political spectrum, from Tucker Carlson to Bernie Sanders, serve its interests by weakening the United States, and creating opportunities for a pathway to unfettered dominance by Chinese companies.

China has never abided by the rules of the international community and it won’t start now. --->READ MORE HERE

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