The Moral Algorithm: One Message United
Moral Algorithm Analysis – a custom AI tool that anyone can use to evaluate laws, speeches, and government actions through timeless ethical frameworks.

🧭 Announcing: The Moral Algorithm GPT
A Shared Moral Compass for an Age of Division
In a time when every political debate feels like a shouting match—and every issue gets buried in spin—it’s easy to feel powerless.
But what if we had one shared foundation to return to?
A way to say: “Does this serve the people—or just the powerful?”
Today, we’re launching something new:
Moral Algorithm Analysis – a custom AI tool that anyone can use to evaluate laws, speeches, and government actions through timeless ethical frameworks.
This tool isn't neutral—and that’s the point.
It’s principled.
🤖 But Isn’t AI Biased?
Absolutely.
Every system has a perspective—whether it admits it or not.
That’s why this tool doesn’t pretend to be “objective” or “unbiased.”
Instead, it declares its lens up front:
- John Adams’ Moral Algorithm — Government must serve the common good, not private interests.
- John Rawls’ Veil of Ignorance — Justice must be fair, even if you didn’t know your place in society.
- Aristotle’s Virtue Ethics — Laws should cultivate good character, not just enforce rules.
This isn’t “trust the AI.”
It’s trust the framework.
The Moral Algorithm GPT gives you shared, inspectable values to start better conversations—not end them.
Bias isn’t hidden here.
It’s invited to the table and challenged openly.
🛠 How It Works
Using the tool is simple:
- Paste any article, law, policy, or speech.
- The GPT analyzes it through the three ethical lenses.
- It returns a structured critique:
- Who benefits?
- Who’s harmed?
- Does it align with virtue, fairness, and the common good?
You don’t need to be a lawyer or philosopher.
If you can copy-paste, you can now ethically analyze power.
⚔️ A New Weapon for Political Clarity
This tool doesn’t end political arguments.
It upgrades them.
Imagine if debates weren’t about who shouts louder—but who upholds shared values better.
Imagine citizens across ideologies debating not just with passion, but with a common framework.
When both sides agree on the Moral Algorithm, the fight becomes clearer:
- Does this policy really serve the people?
- Would it be just if you didn’t know your identity?
- Does it build a better society—or just win short-term points?
That’s how we stop spinning in partisan circles—and start rebuilding something better.
📣 Why This Matters Now
We’re standing at a crossroads.
More tech. More power. More confusion.
But with the right tools, we can level the playing field.
The Moral Algorithm GPT helps every citizen—no matter their education, background, or politics—analyze power using known variables.
No more guessing. No more “he said, she said.”
Just one moral code, applied equally to everyone.
🌍 Let’s Get on the Same Page
We don't have to agree on everything.
But if we can agree on how to evaluate things, we can move forward.
The Moral Algorithm isn’t a replacement for your voice.
It’s a lens to sharpen it.
So we can stop fighting over feelings—and start fighting for the future.
99% of U.S. social and economic issues can be understood through two key concepts:
The Moral Algorithm — Government exists for the common good, not private profit.
As John Adams put it:
"Government is instituted for the protection, safety, prosperity, and happiness of the people—not for the profit or private interests of any one man, family, or class."
When this principle is followed, the nation prospers. When ignored, collapse, inequality, and unrest follow.
Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) — Money is not scarce; real resources are.
A government that issues its own currency can’t "run out" of money. Its limit is inflation, not revenue.
- Taxes regulate demand, not fund spending.
- Deficits fuel growth, not debt burdens.
- The real constraint is productive capacity—labor, resources, and infrastructure—not the budget.
Think of Monopoly: when the bank runs out of money, you print more. The game only breaks when there aren’t enough houses, properties, or players—not because the paper is gone.
U.S. History Through This Lens:
- 1773: Boston Tea Party — Protest against government favoritism toward the East India Company. Early rejection of private interests controlling public policy.
- 1776: Declaration of Independence — The Moral Algorithm written into national identity.
- 1861–65: Civil War — The promise of equal rights denied to millions. Moral Algorithm not applied universally.
- 1929: Great Depression — Economic collapse due to elite wealth hoarding and deregulation.
- 1933–45: FDR & Truman — Moral Algorithm and public investment restored. MMT principles applied in practice: deficits fueled recovery, war spending, and the post-war boom.
- 1950s–60s: Civil Rights Movement — Moral Algorithm again demanded for all citizens.
- 1971: Powell Memo — Corporate interests organize to reassert control, launching Neoliberalism.
- 1980s–2000s: Reagan, Thatcher, Clinton — Neoliberal policies privatize gains and socialize losses. Clinton deregulates and dismantles key FDR-era safeguards.
- 2008–Present: Crisis and stagnation — Both parties support Neoliberalism, with Democrats offering only symbolic alignment to the Moral Algorithm.
- Today: Peak Neoliberalism — Trump’s Project 2025 aims to dismantle public governance. Fringe ideologies like the “Dark Enlightenment” push for techno-feudalism: city-states ruled by CEOs, not citizens.