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Greg Twemlow argues for the urgent need for a constitutional framework to govern the rise of autonomous AI agents, termed "Agentic AI." It posits that this new form of power, unlike atomic or digital power, rewrites reality by delegating decision-making to synthetic entities, which can recursively improve and operate faster than human governance. The author proposes MAARR (Memorandum of Agentic AI Rights and Responsibilities) as a constitution for the age of agentic intelligence, outlining principles like agent auditability, rights allocation, and sovereignty safeguards. Enforcement mechanisms are discussed, including an Agentic Firewall that validates compliance at the execution layer and the importance of GPU vendors integrating MAARR compliance. The article concludes by highlighting the potential for a future conflict between MAARR-enabled democracies and "Shadow MAARR" architectures, underscoring that MAARR is not optional and must be embedded into the core of synthetic cognition. Read the article.

About the Author - Greg Twemlow writes and teaches at the intersection of technology, education, and human judgment. He works with educators and businesses to make AI explainable and assessable in classrooms and boardrooms — to ensure AI users show their process and own their decisions. His cognition protocol, the Context & Critique Rule™, is built on a three-step process: Evidence → Cognition → Discernment — a bridge from what’s scattered to what’s chosen. Context & Critique → Accountable AI™. © 2025 Greg Twemlow. “Context & Critique → Accountable AI” and “Context & Critique Rule” are unregistered trademarks (™).