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Chris Pratt Calls Out AI’s Limits, Champions Faith Over Technology

Chris Pratt stood up to the modern worship of technology in plain language at the premiere of Mercy, telling reporters that artificial intelligence “will not replace God.” That simple, biblical truth cut through the Silicon Valley hype machine and reminded everyday Americans that machines built by fallible humans can never replace the Creator. Pratt’s warning deserves applause from anyone who still believes faith and family matter more than the next shiny gadget.

The movie itself is a stark, dystopian fable about an AI judge deciding human guilt and meting out final punishments, and Mercy hits theaters at a time when these questions are no longer hypothetical. The film’s premise — an AI court that pulls data from every camera and device to render judgment — is a gut punch to liberty-minded citizens who fear surveillance and bureaucratic overreach. The timing of the release makes Pratt’s comments more than celebrity soundbites; they are a cultural beacon in a moment of technological overreach.

Pratt is not just mouthing lines for PR; he has been open about giving his platform to God and living his faith out loud, even when Hollywood often punishes such candor. That courage to stand unapologetically for Christ is exactly what brave conservatives should celebrate and defend, because too many in entertainment have sold out their principles for careerism. Real men and women in the public square who refuse to hide their convictions inspire a nation tired of moral cowardice.

He also made a sober point about protecting children from the corrosive influence of screens and algorithms, saying he limits his kids’ access to cell phones while he learns how to use AI responsibly. That parental common sense is precisely the kind of leadership we need in American homes instead of the nanny-state or Big Tech deciding what kids are taught and fed. Conservatives should take note: families, not algorithms, must shape the next generation.

Pratt’s balanced stance — skeptical of AI’s moral authority while cautiously open to using it as a tool — is the mature approach our policymakers should adopt. We must demand safeguards, transparency, and laws that protect privacy, free speech, and parental rights before a handful of engineers and corporate boards build a digital priesthood. If Americans want to preserve religious liberty and human dignity, now is the time to push back, legislate, and elect leaders who will put people above profit and principles above programming.

Hollywood elites who mock faith and cheerlead for unchecked technology should be reminded that patriotism and piety still run deep in this country. Chris Pratt’s plainspoken reminder that AI is man-made and not God should be a rallying cry for conservatives to defend our families, our freedoms, and our faith against the techno-utopian fantasies of the radical left. The choice is simple: stand with God and country, or bow to an algorithm that answers to no conscience.

Written by Keith Jacobs

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