What Would a Declaration of Independence 2.0 Declare?
A Future Worth Moving Toward
In this post: A draft Declaration of Independence 2.0, asking what it would mean to organize our systems around dignity, sovereignty, and the flourishing of life rather than extraction.
Last week, I wrote that we may be entering another revolutionary period, not because we have a king to overthrow, but because we have a future to declare.
I have also been thinking about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s final public witness: speaking from danger, yet still pointing toward a promised land. Not because arrival was guaranteed, but because people sometimes need to see enough of the future to begin moving toward it.
That feels important now. With history alive in us, artificial intelligence before us, and the old extraction pattern becoming harder to ignore, we can begin to glimpse a different possibility: systems organized around human dignity, sovereignty, and the flourishing of life, not fear, scarcity, dependency, and extraction.
A Declaration does not prove the future will arrive. It stakes a claim that the future is worth moving toward. That is the spirit of this draft: not certainty, not command, not the final word, but an attempt to name a future beyond exhaustion, division, fear, and false inevitability.
The original Declaration named a king. This one names a pattern. It names the habit of organizing human life around fear, scarcity, dependency, division, and the extraction of value from people, communities, attention, labor, data, bodies, and the living Earth.
The question is not whether we can abandon the systems that sustain human life. We cannot. We need food, energy, labor, commerce, government, technology, healthcare, infrastructure, communication, the natural world, and one another. The question is whether those systems must remain organized by extraction.
This draft says no.
What follows is a draft, not a decree.
A Declaration of Independence 2.0
For Human Sovereignty in the Presence of Artificial Intelligence
When, in the course of human development, it becomes necessary to name the patterns that no longer serve life, and to reclaim the authority diminished by them, a decent respect for humanity, the Earth, and generations yet to come requires that we declare the causes which compel us to this claim.
We hold these truths to be self-evident: that every human being possesses inherent dignity and sovereignty; that this sovereignty is not granted by governments, markets, corporations, platforms, machines, or powerful individuals; that human systems exist to serve life, liberty, conscience, community, and the flourishing of present and future generations; and that intelligence, whether human or artificial, must remain accountable to wisdom, compassion, and responsibility.
We Name the Pattern of Extraction
We do not declare independence from the systems that sustain human life. We depend on food, energy, labor, technology, healthcare, communication, infrastructure, commerce, government, the natural world, and one another. Total independence is not the aim. It is an illusion.
We declare instead our independence from any pattern that bends human systems away from their rightful purpose and organizes life for extraction.
We Claim Sovereignty Within Interdependence
We seek not isolation, but sovereignty within interdependence; not separation from one another, but freedom from the habits, incentives, and designs that keep people exhausted, divided, fearful, indebted, lonely, and easy to exploit.
Prudence will dictate that systems long established should not be changed for light and transient causes. Human beings do not wisely discard institutions, markets, governments, technologies, or habits merely because they are imperfect. But when a long train of abuses and distortions reveals a design that reduces persons, families, communities, and the living Earth to instruments of extraction, it is the right and responsibility of the people to name that pattern and alter its course.
When any system repeatedly organizes human life in ways that increase fear, sickness, division, exhaustion, dependency, loneliness, ecological harm, and loss of sovereignty, while calling those outcomes progress, efficiency, growth, or innovation, it no longer serves the purpose for which human systems should exist.
Extraction Is Not Inevitable
This has been humanity’s long suffering. And this is now the necessity which requires us to declare independence from extraction as the governing pattern of our age.
It has claimed the language of progress while leaving millions exhausted, indebted, distracted, divided, and afraid.
We Name What Has Been Taken
It has taken time from parents, steadiness from workers, security from elders, and attention from children.
It has turned attention into inventory, sickness into revenue, fear into strategy, loneliness into market opportunity, and human data into property. It has made survival feel so uncertain that people trade conscience for security and call it responsibility. It has made corruption appear practical by tying safety, income, status, and belonging to systems that reward taking more than they return.
It has made people complicit in their own diminishment by requiring their labor, spending, attention, debt, silence, and fear to keep the old pattern running. It has used power not to repair injustice, but to make the many dependent on the few.
It has treated the Earth as inventory, the future as collateral, and the living world as an expendable cost of growth. It has hidden its true costs in bodies, homes, families, communities, waters, soils, debts, and futures.
It has treated the knowledge carried by women, Indigenous peoples, ancestors, the vulnerable, and those closest to the living world as secondary to the ambitions of the already powerful. It has permitted old exclusions to wear new clothing, allowing systems to speak of freedom while ignoring those whose labor, bodies, lands, grief, and silence made that freedom possible.
It has built technologies capable of enlarging human understanding, while too often bending them toward surveillance, manipulation, distraction, dependency, and control. It has begun to build artificial intelligence before asking with sufficient humility whether such intelligence will strengthen human agency or weaken it.
It has called this arrangement inevitable.
It is not inevitable.
We Face a Revolutionary Choice
Artificial intelligence now places before humanity a revolutionary choice. Captured by extraction, it may become the most efficient instrument ever devised for turning human life into inputs, predictions, markets, managed outcomes, and invisible forms of control. Guided instead by dignity, responsibility, and whole-system wisdom, it may help humanity see wider, coordinate better, reveal hidden costs, protect the vulnerable, strengthen communities, and build regenerative systems worthy of future generations.
Intelligence Must Serve Life
We therefore declare that human beings are not inputs to be harvested, users to be manipulated, workers to be discarded without responsibility, consumers to be predicted, patients to be monetized, citizens to be managed, or souls to be reduced to data.
Intelligence, whether human or artificial, must serve life.
We reject the old use of power by which fear, scarcity, dependency, and access are used to command human beings. We claim instead a shared power rooted in conscience, courage, and responsibility: not to humiliate or coerce, but to reveal what has been hidden, repair what has been harmed, protect what has been made vulnerable, and build systems worthy of human life.
We therefore declare that the dignity and sovereignty of people are not subject to the consent of those who profit from their diminishment. No class, corporation, government, market, machine, platform, institution, or powerful individual may rightfully require people to remain bound to patterns that exhaust life while calling such exhaustion necessity.
The future is not the private property of those who control the present.
We Choose to Build What Serves Dignity
We reclaim, as sovereign and interdependent people, the power to imagine, build, choose, refuse, repair, and renew.
We reclaim the power to design systems that serve dignity, strengthen community, protect the living Earth, guide intelligence with wisdom, exchange value without extraction, and secure for present and future generations the conditions of a flourishing life.
We therefore commit to build and support systems that return more life than they extract: systems that deepen dignity, strengthen community, protect the vulnerable, preserve the living Earth, and keep intelligence, institutions, and markets accountable to the humanity they are meant to serve.
We reject any attempt to use the language of dignity, sovereignty, innovation, safety, or progress as a mask for new forms of extraction, domination, or control.
We affirm that humanity is capable of moral courage, repair, invention, restraint, and greatness. We affirm that every advancement in knowledge, science, technology, and intelligence should be turned toward the elevation of human life, the healing of the Earth, the strengthening of community, and the unfolding of capacities not yet known to us.
We Pledge Responsibility to the Living and the Unborn
We make this Declaration not because the future is certain, but because a future not declared is too easily designed by those who profit from the present.
We speak with reverence for the voices history has too often excluded, and with gratitude for those across time who widened the circle of dignity, defended conscience, protected the vulnerable, healed communities, resisted domination, and imagined more humane futures before such futures seemed possible. We include in that reverence the generations yet unborn, whose claim upon us is real.
We do not claim perfection. We do not claim certainty. We do not claim that any one nation, party, market, ideology, technology, or generation can complete this work alone. We claim responsibility. We claim the right to begin.
And for the support of this Declaration, with firm reliance on the wisdom that life is not meant to be organized by fear, scarcity, extraction, and domination, we mutually pledge our conscience, our courage, our labor, and our sacred honor.
An Invitation to Read This as a Mirror
I do not yet know what this becomes. For now, I want to begin with the Declaration itself.
I would invite you to read it less like an argument to agree or disagree with, and more like a mirror. What would you add if the voices of history, the people living inside these systems now, and the generations still to come were all meant to be included?
About David
David Barnes is the co-creator of the Alignment Movie Process with Sue-Anne MacGregor and co-author of Taming Your Dragons: Making Peace With Your Emotions and It’s Just Commerce: Returning Balance to Business. His work explores emotional pattern recognition, human sovereignty, commerce, AI, and how stories can help people move beyond reactivity toward more mature, life-serving systems.
David also works with a framework that helps people and organizations identify the unseen emotional, cultural, and extraction-based patterns that shape what they build, what they optimize for, and what they miss.


