Defending Individual Economic Liberty from Jackson’s Era to the Age of Automation
Banking to Bots explores the constitutional principles that have protected American economic freedom for over two centuries, and how those same principles apply to the most pressing question of our time: who will own the robots? In 1832, President Andrew Jackson faced down the Second Bank of the United States, recognizing that concentrated economic power threatened individual liberty and constitutional government. His victory established a crucial precedent: essential economic infrastructure should serve individual citizens, not corporate shareholders. Today, we face a similar crossroads. As companies mass-produce humanoid robots and automation technology advances rapidly, a fundamental question emerges, Will robots be owned by individuals, or will they remain the exclusive domain of corporations and institutions? This question will determine whether the coming age of automation creates widespread prosperity or permanent economic dependence.
Our Mission
Banking to Bots provides constitutional analysis, policy research, and advocacy for individual robot ownership rights.
We believe that:
Economic sovereignty and political sovereignty are inseparable
The Constitution provides clear guidance for individual technological ownership
Historical precedents offer proven frameworks for defending economic liberty
Immediate action is required before corporate monopolization becomes entrenched
Our Approach
We focus on verifiable facts, established constitutional principles, and practical policy solutions rather than speculation or complex theories. We can demonstrate our conclusion and informational analysis from Monte Carlo simulations, DAG and more we will share in weeks to come.
Our analysis draws from:
–Constitutional law and historical precedent
–Economic modeling and market analysis
–Legislative developments and regulatory trends
–Technological developments in automation
The Window for Action
The passport revocation attempts of 2025 demonstrated both the persistent threat to individual rights and the power of rapid constitutional advocacy. The robot ownership question faces the same dynamic, once corporate control becomes entrenched, reversing it becomes exponentially more difficult. The robots aren’t coming, they’re here. The question is, will they work for us, or will we work for them?
Contact
Banking to Bots is committed to building a coalition of citizens, policymakers, and organizations dedicated to preserving individual economic liberty in the age of automation.