North American Technate
In recent years, growing interest in the Technocracy movement—an early 20th-century ideology advocating for governance by scientists and engineers—has reignited concerns about national sovereignty in North America. Originally conceptualized by economist Thorstein Veblen in 1919 and later advanced by Howard Scott during the Great Depression, technocracy called for a radical reorganization of society under technical experts, sidelining traditional democratic institutions. One of its most vocal advocates in Canada was Joshua Haldeman, Elon Musk’s grandfather, who was arrested for allegedly attempting to overthrow the Canadian government in support of technocratic ideals. Although Haldeman later renounced the movement, his legacy has raised uncomfortable questions about the influence of technocratic thinking on contemporary elites. Today, the idea of a "North American Technate"—a unified, technocratic superstate—is gaining attention amid provocative political rhetoric. President-elect Donald Trump has openly threatened to annex Canada, Greenland, and the Panama Canal, echoing the territorial ambitions and anti-sovereignty impulses that defined earlier technocratic movements. As such proposals resurface under the guise of economic or strategic necessity, they pose a serious threat to the self-determination and democratic governance of existing nations.

