Bottom line
As of this release pass, the public U.S. pattern is not a general federal law criminalizing “unlawful thoughts,” nor a universal legal mandate requiring AI, search, or chat providers to monitor every prompt for forbidden questions. The pattern is narrower and more indirect.
The live pipes are legal-process access to stored data, mandatory NCMEC reporting after actual knowledge of specified child-exploitation facts, voluntary disclosures for emergencies or inadvertently obtained crime-related contents, reverse-keyword warrants that use a search phrase as the investigative selector, and proposed broader reporting bills that would pressure platforms to classify suspicious transmissions.
The cognitive-liberty concern is therefore practical architecture rather than formal thoughtcrime. If prompts, searches, classifier outputs, safety notes, and escalation queues are retained, then pre-conduct inquiry can become observable, searchable, reportable, and eventually scoreable.
The archive’s rule remains: no unlawful-thought category. Govern conduct. Do not govern cognition.
The U.S. pattern is indirect
The important legal object is usually not “the thought.” It is a stored communication, a subscriber record, a reportable fact, a preserved file, a search query used as a selector, a suspicious transmission, or a platform record. Those categories sound administrative. They become cognitive-risk categories when they capture prompts, drafts, private research, search terms, memory packages, or safety-review annotations.
This is why “lawful inquiry” is defective drafting. It invites the platform or state to decide which questions receive the privilege of being treated as inquiry. The safer rule is: inquiry remains inquiry. External execution, direct facilitation, fraud, coercion, targeted intrusion, nonconsensual surveillance, and concrete rights violations are where boundary enforcement belongs.
Cognitive-liberty rule for U.S. pages
Do not say that U.S. law has already criminalized thought. Say the narrower and more dangerous thing: compliance systems can make private inquiry feel monitored before any external act exists.
A provider may need to preserve, report, refuse, disclose, or respond to legal process in specific legally recognized categories. That does not authorize the provider to create a hidden orthodoxy engine, silently rewrite preserved sources, or treat private inquiry as unlawful in itself.
Preserve the source. Log the legal boundary. Do not counterfeit the mind.