From Dana Criswell <[email protected]>
Subject AI Is a Tool. Mississippi Should Pick It Up.
Date June 11, 2026 1:11 PM
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On May 9, Senator Rand Paul told the graduating class of Grove City College that the case for the future is a case for optimism, and a good part of that case was about artificial intelligence. He urged a hall full of new graduates not to be afraid of it. I think he was right, and I want to make that same case to my fellow Mississippians.
Two hundred years ago, English textile workers we now call the Luddites began smashing the new power looms, certain the machines would destroy them. They were skilled craftsmen, not fools, and they were still wrong. The looms won. The descendants of the Luddites did not end up poorer than their ancestors. They ended up with shorter workdays, longer lives, and work the loom-smashers could never have pictured. Every wave of technology since has run the same course. The fear is always sincere. The fear is almost always wrong.
Artificial intelligence is going to be part of life in Mississippi whether any one of us votes for it or not. The only question still in our hands is a personal one. Will you treat this thing as a threat to hide from, or as a tool to pick up? The people who get left behind by a new technology are rarely the ones who used it. They are the ones who refused to.
And this is a tool everyday Mississippians can use today. A row-crop farmer in the Delta can use AI to read soil and satellite data, time his planting and harvest, and flag a piece of equipment that is about to fail before it quits in the middle of a field. The owner of a two-person business in Tupelo or Meridian can use it to draft her marketing, answer routine customer emails, and get a plain-English read on a contract before she signs it. A schoolteacher can build lesson plans and write three versions of one assignment for students reading at three different levels. A nurse in a rural clinic can speed up the charting that consumes her shift, so more of her day is spent facing a patient instead of a keyboard. These are not science-fiction examples. People in those jobs are doing this right now.
I want to be honest about the real worry, because Senator Paul was. A world with no meaningful work at all would be its own kind of dystopia. Work is part of how human beings find purpose. But embracing AI does not mean a future with no work. It means less drudgery and more of the work that actually mattered in the first place.
Here is why this matters for Mississippi. Our state has spent most of my lifetime being last. Last to get the factory, last to get the investment, last to catch the wave of prosperity that lifted other states first. This time we do not have to be last. These tools are not locked behind a Silicon Valley zip code. A teacher in Senatobia and a teacher in San Francisco can open the very same AI tool tonight. For once in our history, the playing field is close to level.
The technology is not waiting for our permission. So the question for every Mississippian is the one Senator Paul put to those graduates. Will you meet the future with fear, or with curiosity and a plan? Here is a plan small enough to start this week. Find one task in your work or your home where AI could save you an hour. Just one. Use it. Then do it again next week. That is how you make sure you are not the one left behind. Not by fighting the future, but by deciding to be one of the people who picked up the tool.

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