Why do we govern? Not as a philosophical abstraction, but as a practical human act. This paper argues that governance is not bureaucratic imposition. It is the organized expression of care when observed dysfunction threatens something we value. A parent who structures a child’s education after observing neglected potential is not controlling the child. They are responding with structured care to a gap between what is and what should be. Governance in every domain—markets, roads, pharmaceuticals, financial systems—follows the same logic: it appears when the cost of non-governance falls on people who had no say in the decisions that created it. This paper examines the resistance to AI governance from this foundation. It argues that commercial opposition to AI accountability is neither mysterious nor principled—it follows predictable patterns rooted in the psychology of self-interest, the rule-maker problem, and the revenue imperative. The paper subjects fourteen industry counter-arguments to rigorous scrutiny and finds that each reveals a governance gap that must be closed rather than a reason to abandon governance. Industry opposition, properly engaged, is the most valuable stress test governance has ever received: every loophole identified publicly is a loophole that can be closed before less visible actors exploit it silently. The paper proposes three original governance mechanisms: a pre-deployment fund requiring companies to define anticipated harms before deployment and establish financial accountability proportionate to those harms; a deployment-based jurisdiction requirement establishing that companies serving citizens of a nation must be legally accountable in that nation regardless of where they are incorporated; and a two-tier EU transition framework distinguishing between companies willing to stand behind their systems and those who are not. The paper concludes that governance is not the adversary of innovation. It is the infrastructure of trust on which innovation at scale depends—and that opposition to governance, properly understood, is the curriculum through which governance becomes strong enough to deserve that trust.
Sashikanta Barik (Sat,) studied this question.