Motion of the day
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
This House would ban facial recognition in public spaces.
tech
San Francisco, Portland, and Boston have banned police use. China and the UK have expanded use. The technology improves faster than the policy debate around it.
Background
NIST's 2024 vendor test showed the top facial-recognition systems crossing 99% accuracy across demographics; up from a 10-100x error rate on darker-skinned faces in the 2018 benchmarks. The accuracy gap that fueled the original ban movement has narrowed. London's Metropolitan Police live-deployment, expanded in 2023, has produced 540 arrests against 3.4 million scans. The civil-liberties critique no longer rests on accuracy; it rests on what continuous identification of citizens in public means for what privacy is.
Government opens with
Continuous identification in public is a categorical change in what privacy means.
Opposition responds with
Bans push the practice to private actors with worse accountability than police.
Take it. Against the AI.
Pick a side. Three minutes per speech. The AI takes the other side in your chosen format. Judge ballot at the end.
Open on this motion →
This week's motions
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
This House would treat addiction as a medical condition, not a moral failing.
Monday, April 20, 2026
This House would require ranked-choice voting in all U.S. federal elections.
Sunday, April 19, 2026
This House would require children to obtain parental consent to use social media until age 16.
Thursday, April 23, 2026
This House would ban political advertising in the 60 days before an election.
Friday, April 24, 2026
This House would require every social media platform to provide an algorithmic-feed off switch.
Saturday, April 25, 2026
This House would ban gain-of-function research on potential pandemic pathogens.