In a recent interview, Breitbart's Wynton Hall — author of Code Red: The Left, the Right, China, and the Race to Control AI — issued a stark warning about the coming "singularity." He described a future in which parents may face an agonising moral choice: whether to "fuse" their children with robots and AI through brain-computer interfaces so they can compete in a post-human world.
When push comes to shove, Christian conservatives are almost certain to say a firm "no" to fusing with machines. Their reasons are both deeply theological and brutally practical.
At the heart of the Christian faith is the belief that human beings are created in the image of God (imago Dei). That image is not abstract intelligence or code — it is tied to our embodied, male-and-female physical design, our moral conscience, our capacity for real relationship with God and others, and the eternal soul. The body is not disposable hardware. Jesus took on real human flesh, died in the body, and rose bodily. Scripture presents humans as unified soul-body creatures, not minds that can simply be uploaded or upgraded.
Transhumanism treats the body as obsolete meat to be transcended. Many Christians see this as a modern Tower of Babel — an arrogant attempt to seize god-like power and remake humanity in Silicon Valley's image. It echoes the serpent's oldest lie: "You will be like God."
But even setting theology aside, there is a very practical reason millions of ordinary people — especially those already frustrated with technology — will reject fusion: computers crash.
Anyone who has ever dealt with a frozen MacBook, a crashed browser, lost Wi-Fi, forced software updates that break things, or a phone that suddenly slows to a crawl, knows how unreliable digital systems are. Now imagine that same fragility inside your brain.
A fused "new you" would be vulnerable to system crashes that could cause sudden blackouts, memory wipes, or total cognitive shutdowns. Malware or hacking could literally rewrite your thoughts, emotions, or beliefs. Governments or corporations could push mandatory "updates" that alter your personality without consent. Hardware failure — a dead battery, degrading implant, or compatibility issue — could leave you half-human and permanently impaired. One bad update or power surge and it's game over: the end of the person you used to be.
Christian conservatives already distrust the elites pushing this vision — the same people behind "you will eat the bugs," radical gender ideology, and endless surveillance. Handing over the seat of your consciousness to that same fragile, hackable, centrally-controlled technology feels like the ultimate act of folly.
When the pressure comes — when schools, jobs, or society demand neural implants to "keep up" — many will choose to remain fully human, even if it means being slower or less competitive in the eyes of the world. Their hope lies not in silicon salvation but in the bodily resurrection promised by Jesus Christ.
Wynton Hall is right to sound the alarm. The moral choice he describes is real and approaching faster than most realise. For Christian conservatives — and for anyone who has ever shouted at a crashing computer — the answer will be clear: we were fearfully and wonderfully made as we are. We will not fuse with robots.
https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2026/03/22/the-singularity-code-red-author-wynton-hall-warns-humans-will-have-to-make-moral-choice-whether-to-fuse-with-robots/