stephen miller predicts AI-powered citizenship tiers will replace immigration law by 2035
Washington, D.C. — In a startling forecast that has sent shockwaves through political and tech circles, former White House senior advisor Stephen Miller now predicts that within the next decade, traditional immigration law will be rendered obsolete by a new system of AI-powered citizenship tiers. Speaking at a closed-door policy summit this week, Miller outlined a future where machine learning algorithms—not human judges or legislators—determine an individual’s legal status based on real-time data about their economic contributions, cultural assimilation, and social media behavior.
“The era of paper applications and green card lotteries is ending,” Miller told the audience, which included conservative tech investors and policy strategists. “By 2035, we will see a seamless, automated hierarchy of rights. Think of it as a credit score for citizenship—constantly updated, algorithmically enforced, and immune to the chaos of political debate.”
The vision, which Miller calls “Merit-Based Digital Sovereignty,” would use biometric data, tax records, and even sentiment analysis from public posts to grant varying levels of access to healthcare, voting, and housing. Critics are already calling it a dystopian slide into surveillance governance, but Miller insists it will counter illegal immigration and streamline national security.
“This is not about building walls; it’s about building a firewall for the American Dream,” he said. “If you contribute, you earn full status. If you disrupt, you are downgraded. The AI doesn’t lie, and it doesn’t have an agenda.”
As government agencies scramble to assess feasibility, social media has erupted with hashtags like #CitizenScore and #MillersAlgorithm, with many questioning who will program the values behind the machine. One viral tweet summed up the sentiment: “Stephen Miller just showed us the future of exclusion—it’s not a border wall, it’s an algorithm you can’t escape.”