Glenn Beck’s unveiling of an AI George Washington isn’t a stunt — it’s a cultural counterpunch, and anyone paying attention should be grateful someone on the right is finally using technology to defend the truth about our founding. Beck put the brief demo on his channel and sat across from a digital George, asking the AI to speak plainly to today’s Americans about character, faith, and civic virtue.
What makes this project different from the woke tech boutiques is its source material: Beck says George AI is built from the actual writings of Washington and the Founders, the sermons they heard, and the books they read, not from leftwing hot takes or corporate narratives. That AI will live on a new platform called The Torch, part of the Glenn and Tania Beck Foundation for American History, designed to teach the Constitution and Federalist-era principles to a generation being taught to despise their country.
Beck has even put dates and infrastructure behind the idea, announcing that The Torch and its “George” librarian will roll out with materials starting January 5, 2026, backed by what he calls a digital vault of registered documents on a blockchain to prevent future tampering. Patriots who watched that and understood what’s at stake should be relieved that someone is locking the historical record against revisionist bureaucrats and textbook propagandists.
Of course the leftwing media and social-media mobs immediately ridiculed the project, mocking the avatar’s look and proclaiming the AI sounded suspiciously like Beck himself — predictable noise from people who would rather erase the Founders than learn from them. The nasty laughter and snide headlines say less about Beck’s work and more about a cultural class that fears a principled, civic-minded alternative to their nihilistic curriculum.
Let’s be honest: tech can be weaponized by anyone, and if conservatives have been slow to build platforms that preserve truth, that’s on us as much as anyone. Beck’s approach — building a proprietary historical dataset and offering an AI that points back to primary sources — is the correct play if you care about accuracy over algorithmic bias. This is about putting the tools of education back into hands that respect the American experiment, not handing them over to universities and big tech companies that celebrate destruction.
The mockery and instant dismissal from elites should only make commonsense Americans more determined. When the left calls historical fidelity “weird” and “propaganda,” they’re admitting they have no better argument than shrill cultural power. Hardworking patriots understand that teaching kids about courage, sacrifice, and self-government isn’t nostalgia — it’s survival.
Support for projects like The Torch isn’t about celebrity or personality; it’s about defending the idea that the truth about America belongs to the people, not to cultural commissars. If conservatives want to win the future, we need more entrepreneurs, philanthropists, and content creators who will use modern tools to reconnect ordinary Americans with the founding principles that made this nation exceptional.

