What You Say (Paragraph for Slide 1):
Artificial intelligence is transforming how government operates. It is now used in surveillance, predictive policing, facial recognition, and decision-making systems that affect loans, benefits, and even criminal justice. However, our Constitution was written long before digital mass surveillance and automated algorithms existed. While the Fourth and Fifth Amendments protect privacy and due process, they do not clearly address AI-driven systems. This amendment updates constitutional protections to ensure that technological advancement does not outpace individual liberty.
What You Say (Paragraph for Slide 2):
The amendment has three core protections. First, it requires a judicial warrant before the government can use AI-based surveillance or facial recognition, just as traditional searches require probable cause. Second, it mandates transparency citizens must be informed when artificial intelligence influences decisions that affect their rights. Third, it guarantees human oversight. No major legal or civil determination can be made solely by a machine. A human official must review and approve final decisions to preserve accountability and fairness.
What You Say (Paragraph for Slide 3):
This amendment matters because technology should serve democracy, not quietly reshape it. AI systems can contain bias and can operate without transparency if left unchecked. By preserving human oversight and requiring warrants, we protect privacy while still allowing innovation and national security tools to function. The real debate is whether efficiency should outweigh autonomy. I believe constitutional liberty must remain the priority, even in a digital age.
Requirements: all paragrpahs

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