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The US possesses advanced weaponry, potentially including tectonic, earthquake, and volcanic weapons, as suggested by former Secretary of Defense William Cohen. Trump hinted at secret weapons, and the White House Office of Science Technology stated the US can manipulate time and space. The US may have quantum entanglement weaponry, magnetic drones, and direct energy weapons. These technologies cannot be shielded against in the normal manner. There are also claims of advanced radar and satellite receivers and emitters, and the use of carrier waves through the earth for instant communication with submarines. The Ice Cube Neutrino Detector in the South Pole is allegedly a directed energy weapon. Concerns exist regarding cyclotrons, superconducting super colliders, and CERN, with the potential for creating dangerous black holes. The speaker suggests a conscious decision to shut down industrial technological development for the general public, and that these technologies have been hoarded and developed for weapons. Methylene blue is available at alexshowstore.com.

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The US government has advanced technology, like the Garmin 7 x, with various features and sensors. Garmin spends $800 million on research, while the US government spends $140 billion. They developed gen 3 night vision in the 1980s and high-speed cameras in the 1960s. Their research and development efforts continue to push boundaries.

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The US possesses advanced weaponry, possibly including tectonic, earthquake, and volcanic weapons, as suggested by former Secretary of Defense William Cohen. Trump hinted at secret weapons, and the White House Office of Science Technology director stated the US can manipulate time and space. Technological progress has been intentionally suppressed, leading to stagnation and dependence. Technologies have been hoarded and developed primarily for weapons. The US created artificial suns by the 1950s and has gravitic craft and weapons. Russia and China also possess similar advanced systems. Quantum entanglement weaponry allows for carrier wave-free communication and potentially detonating enemy nuclear weapons remotely. Magnetic drones can destroy rockets, and direct energy weapons exist that cannot be shielded against. The Ice Cube Neutrino Detector in the South Pole is allegedly a directed energy weapon capable of causing earthquakes. CERN's experiments pose a risk of planetary destruction. The speaker suggests these technologies are dangerous and that humanity risks repeating the mistakes of Atlantis. The alexshowstore.com now offers high-quality methylene blue.

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We're uncertain about the details, but Boeing, Rolls Royce, and the US government possess significant knowledge about the situation. The most advanced sensors in the US defense department are located in the Middle East.

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In this video, we get an inside look at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which has played a crucial role in technological advancements. They were responsible for launching the first weather satellite in 1958 and have since contributed to inventions like the Internet and Siri. Additionally, they have developed a sensor that can be placed under the skin to monitor chemical reactions in the body. The video also includes some unrelated and nonsensical dialogue.

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Our government funnels tax dollars overseas to countries and weapons manufacturers like Lockheed Martin, who then lobby back with gifts for elected officials. Last year, the US spent $47.7 billion on Lockheed, 93% of their revenue. Nearly 80% of this money was borrowed. In total, $861 billion was spent on defense, with 80% going to other countries, surpassing spending on all other US programs combined. This is all publicly disclosed, showing where our money goes.

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Directed EMP weapons have been developed, and the founder of Palantir, an AI platform used by the military, has played a significant role in revolutionizing warfare. The capability to neutralize drones was available at any moment.

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The CIA developed advanced mask technology over 10 years, impressing even Hollywood. Retired CIA chief of disguise, Jana Mendez, showcased masks undetectable in face-to-face meetings with President Bush in the 90s. The CIA's progress in disguise technology over the past 30 years is remarkable.

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We found an incredible video from Lockheed Martin showing satellites scanning the world in infrared. There are geostationary satellites, relay satellites, and low earth orbit satellites. The furthest satellites are 40,000 kilometers away, while the closest are only 1,000 kilometers. The military likely uses this technology for real-time video playback and recording. Lockheed Martin's quote at the end is ominous.

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Speaker 0: Trump is not building a ballroom. Andrew Kerr, an architect with over twenty years of federal project experience, posted on Facebook and walked through step by step why this ballroom makes no sense. He did the math: $300,000,000 at 90,000 square feet would be about $3,333 per square foot, and he said that even luxury federal construction doesn’t usually approach $1,000 per square foot. The geometry of the renderings is nearly impossible, showing a building with a 380 by 235 foot footprint, but interior views show maybe 200 by 100 feet, which is 20,000 square feet, so that can’t exist in the same building. Construction drawings look like they were thrown together in about a week, and he suggested they were probably thrown together by Grock, or whoever’s still wandering around the White House from Doge. So the million dollar question is what is he building? The answer, he suggests, is an underground data center. Think about where they’re building. It’s not random. It’s the East Wing, where the PEOC bunker is, the tunnel systems that connect the White House to the Treasury to other federal buildings, and where all of the secure communications infrastructure lives. That’s prime underground real estate. It reminds me of Larry Ellison’s Oracle data centers in underground Jerusalem: nine stories deep, 160 feet below ground, 460,000 square feet, costing $319,000,000 per bunker. The White House is already at $300,000,000 for this “ballroom,” and it’s only climbing. Fiscally, it feels like a more apt comparison to those. Outside of architecture anomalies, the fact that this is privately funded should have been the first red flag. This is Donald Trump, the man who has spent taxpayer money on stuff that benefits him. He spent over $3,900,000,000 in taxpayer money just to make over Air Force One. Didn’t he also have Secret Service pay room bills at Mar-a-Lago? This suggests it isn’t serving him; it’s serving someone else specifically. Look at the donor list: defense contractors like Lockheed Martin and Booz Allen Hamilton, tech giants like Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Palantir, crypto companies like Coinbase, Ripple, and Tether, and telecoms like T-Mobile and Comcast. These aren’t people funding a party space; these are companies with interests in government infrastructure, data, and operations. They’re funding infrastructure that directly serves them. Also, about Larry Ellison’s vision to automate the government: many tech pros talk about automating federal operations or creating a single digital platform for the government, which would require a supremely secure physical home for that system. Placing it directly under the White House would eliminate latency problems and ensure the President has direct physical control over the system’s core. Centralizing control and securing the brain of the government. It’s dystopian in many ways, and these are real developments happening worldwide. The companies funding this are buying access to integrate their systems with how the government operates, and that’s what $300,000,000 will get you. I guess.

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Donald Trump suggested Elon Musk audit the federal government. One speaker believes AI can democratize government and increase transparency, or enslave citizens to the government and intelligence agencies, and that Musk understands this best. The Pentagon has failed every audit for the last 20 years and lost $4.3 trillion in the last audit. This money was primarily lost on equipment purchases whose locations are unknown, forcing the Pentagon to repurchase them. These problems are solvable with AI, which could track stockpiles and warehouses to identify the location of equipment.

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At the South Pole Station, there are advanced technologies that most people are unaware of. One such technology is the directed energy weapon system, which is not commonly known. Additionally, the ice cube neutrino detector is not just a listening device, but it is actually the largest directed energy weapon system in the world. These technologies are worth exploring and understanding.

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Speaker 0 describes a sweeping shift in the industrial and military landscape driven by the technological revolution of recent decades. In this new era, research has moved to the center of national advancement, becoming more formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share of research is conducted for, by, or at the direction of the Federal Government. The traditional lone inventor working in a shop has been largely eclipsed by task forces of scientists in laboratories and testing fields. As the free university—a historic fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery—experiences its own revolution in how research is conducted, government funding and contracts increasingly shape inquiry. Partly because of the enormous costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity. Where once old blackboards sufficed for contemplation and experimentation, now hundreds of new electronic computers occupy the space, symbolizing the new scale and tools of research. The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present, and it is gravely to be regarded. Yet, in acknowledging the importance of holding scientific research and discovery in respect, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific technological elite. The central challenge is to prevent policy from being subordinated to narrow technical interests while preserving the integrity and vitality of scientific inquiry. The speech emphasizes that it is the task of statesmanship to mold, balance, and integrate these evolving forces—new and old—within the principles of a democratic system. This balancing act should be oriented toward the supreme goals of a free society, ensuring that technological and scientific advances serve broad public purposes rather than becoming ends in themselves. The overarching message is a call to thoughtfully manage the profound changes in how research is funded, organized, and directed, so that the benefits of the technological revolution support democratic ideals and societal well-being rather than concentrating power or constraining intellectual exploration.

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The 552-page records reveal that the United States government, particularly the Fauci Agency and the National Institutes for Health, funded gain of function research on mutants. This information is significant as it serves as evidence of their knowledge and involvement in such research.

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Cameras are becoming smaller and more affordable. Spy glasses costing around $40 include a 16GB memory card, capable of recording ten hours of video at 1920x1080 resolution.

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The speaker describes U.S. surveillance as more advanced than the White House ballroom “underground surveillance center,” claiming that a large-scale system is already deployed and not widely understood enough to stop it. They say they followed the money behind “Flock” after hearing about it. The speaker identifies Flock Cameras as the company behind surveillance cameras (not bird-monitoring game cameras), formed around 2018 by three Georgia Tech students. They claim Flock is deployed across “5,000 towns” with “over 80,000 cameras” in the United States, originally intended to catch crime using license-plate tracing. The speaker then claims that in the past two years Flock added accessories that they describe as “more electric dog collars,” shifting “innocent” crime-capture capabilities into “nefarious” uses. The speaker outlines three parts of the claimed system: 1) Flock cameras mounted on light poles that trace license plates, with added AI capabilities said to include identifying vehicles from “dents,” “scratches,” and “bumper stickers,” and then tracing the car using these features rather than license plates alone. 2) A drone-related capability, attributed to Flock buying a drone company: it is said to hear someone scream or respond to a camera detecting a crime, then automatically deploy a drone that surveils a chase “2,000 feet up in the air.” 3) “Nova,” described as an accessory added to Flock cameras that tracks people and “turns your license plate into everything about you,” including marital status, kids, address, and phone number, plus “pattern of life.” The speaker claims an investigation found Nova pulls data not only from legal/open sources but also from the dark web, including social security numbers, bank information, leaked email, leaked passwords, and other leaked data. They give an example involving a Texas police officer searching a “Flock database” for an abortion-related case and then seeking expansion into states where abortions were legal, after receiving “1800 results.” The speaker then connects the surveillance technologies to specific investors and related companies. They claim Andreas Horowitz is an investor in Flock. The speaker says they recognized Horowitz from research on Ehud Barak and asserts Barak created related companies including “TOCA,” described as technology that can alter live camera footage in real time, add or remove content, create fake footage, and “leave no forensic evidence.” They also claim Barak is connected to “Carbine,” described as a 911 system capable of accessing microphones, cameras, and location. The speaker further claims Horowitz and additional investors link Flock to these technologies through Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund, which they say also invested in Flock and Carbine. The speaker says all these companies connect through large investors and says it enables additional capabilities such as drone use and footage manipulation. They announce “part two,” claiming the next topic is a competitor that previously worked with Flock, branched off, and can track Bluetooth devices, described as linked to an Italian military defense company.

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This is the next generation of surveillance: the Argus sensor, designed by engineer Ioannis Antoniades, is the world's highest resolution camera. It can capture images of a medium-sized city from 17,500 feet above, covering 15 square miles. With the ability to generate moving images and automatically track moving objects, it provides detailed information about people's activities, such as their clothes and gestures. Argus can open up to 65 windows at once and see objects as small as 6 inches on the ground. It streams live footage and stores an enormous amount of video data. The technology behind Argus is based on imaging chips found in cell phones, and it can be mounted on various unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for continuous surveillance. The US Air Force has the capability to archive all UAV videos, raising concerns about privacy in our increasingly electronic society.

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China has been developing laser weapons for over 60 years, with a focus on anti-satellite capabilities. They have ground-based laser systems that can target objects in space and have been caught using laser weapons to probe foreign satellites. China has also developed a directed energy weapon called the relativistic klystron amplifier (RKA), which can be mounted on satellites to destroy their electronics. The US is aware of the threat and has responded by prioritizing laser weapons in its defense budget. The Army has the IFPC HEL and the DEM SHORAD, the Air Force has the SHIELD program, and the Navy has the Helios laser weapon. The battle between the US and China extends across all domains and services.

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The Department of Defense spends $1 billion annually on developing directed energy weapons like lasers and microwaves. These weapons can quickly disrupt or destroy targets and are cheaper than traditional weapons. However, the DOD faces challenges in transitioning these technologies from the lab to actual use. The army has a transition plan in place and it is recommended that the Navy and Air Force develop similar plans.

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The US government has been releasing patents and documents that reveal certain truths. They have patents on controlling the weather and NASA documents admitting the earth is flat and non-rotating. The documents also mention a barrier called the firmament, which is different from the Van Allen belts. The government hopes people won't read these documents, but they are available for anyone to search.

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In 1951, the US enacted the Invention Secrecy Act, allowing the government to keep inventions secret if they pose a threat to national security or economy. Violating this act can lead to imprisonment. Currently, over 6,000 patents are kept secret by the US government, preventing inventors from discussing, exporting, or selling them outside military channels. Many are curious about these patents and their potential impact on industries like oil.

The Why Files

The Dark Side of DARPA | The Human Cost of Technological Supremacy
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In the early Space Race, the Soviet Union achieved significant milestones, including launching Sputnik and sending the first humans into space, while the U.S. struggled to keep pace. In response to fears of Soviet advancements, the U.S. established the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA), later known as DARPA, to develop advanced military technologies. DARPA's innovations include the internet, GPS, and AI, with many technologies initially designed for military purposes later benefiting civilian life. However, DARPA's history also includes controversial projects like Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, which caused extensive harm to civilians and veterans. The agency operates with little transparency, often funding projects through private channels, leading to concerns about the military-industrial complex's influence. Despite its advancements in technology, DARPA's legacy is mixed, balancing significant contributions to society with morally questionable actions. The discussion raises questions about the ethical implications of DARPA's work and the necessity of its existence in modern warfare.

Armchair Expert

Raj M. Shah & Christopher Kirchhoff (on the military-industrial complex) | Armchair Expert with...
Guests: Raj M. Shah, Christopher Kirchhoff
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Dax Shepard hosts Raj M. Shah and Christopher Kirchhoff, discussing their book "Unit X: The Pentagon and Silicon Valley Are Transforming the Future of War." They highlight how outdated military technology is, exemplified by the F-35 fighter jet, which has an operating system significantly slower than modern consumer devices. Raj shares his background as an F-16 pilot and his journey from military service to entrepreneurship, while Christopher discusses his academic path and experiences in technology policy. The conversation explores the historical context of the military-industrial complex, noting how government-funded research has led to significant technological advancements, such as GPS and the internet. However, they emphasize that the private sector has outpaced government innovation since the mid-1980s, leading to a disconnect between military needs and technological capabilities. Raj recounts a personal experience flying an F-16 in Iraq, where he lacked modern navigation tools compared to consumer technology, illustrating the military's lag in adopting new tech. They discuss the shift in warfare dynamics, particularly with the rise of drones and the challenges posed by adversaries like China, which is rapidly advancing its military capabilities. The duo reflects on the Defense Innovation Unit's efforts to bridge the gap between Silicon Valley and the Pentagon, emphasizing the need for faster contracting processes to integrate commercial technology into military applications. They recount the challenges they faced, including budget cuts and bureaucratic hurdles, while striving to modernize military capabilities. Raj and Christopher also touch on the implications of recent conflicts, such as the war in Ukraine, where drones have proven effective against traditional military assets. They express concern about the future of warfare and the necessity for the U.S. to adapt to new technologies and strategies to maintain its military edge. The discussion concludes with a call for greater public understanding of military innovation and the importance of collaboration between the private sector and defense agencies to ensure national security. They stress that the evolving nature of warfare requires a reevaluation of military investments and strategies to address emerging threats effectively.

a16z Podcast

a16z Podcast | Government, Startups, & Innovation -- with U.S. Secretary of Defense Ash Carter
Guests: Ash Carter
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Ash Carter discussed the vulnerabilities of GPS technology, emphasizing the need for a "GPS of things" using MEMS technology to enhance accuracy and reduce reliance on satellites. He highlighted the evolving role of the Department of Defense (DoD) in a global tech ecosystem, where it acts as a major IT buyer while also fostering innovation. Carter noted the importance of connecting innovators with users to overcome silos in research and development. He expressed concerns about inadequate cybersecurity investments in the industry and outlined the DoD's dual role in innovating defense techniques and potentially intervening against cyber threats. He advocated for improved threat-sharing and proactive defense strategies in cybersecurity.

a16z Podcast

a16z Podcast | Eyes in the Sky
Guests: Jonathan Downey, Grant Jordan, Kyle Russell
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In this a16z podcast episode, Jonathan Downey from Airware and Grant Jordan from SkySafe discuss the evolving drone market with Kyle Russell. They highlight the FAA's summer regulation, Part 107, which allows commercial drone operations up to 500 feet, provided operators maintain visual contact. The conversation shifts to how businesses are adapting to drones, with a focus on security concerns and potential applications in various sectors, such as prisons and stadiums. Downey notes the shift from military to commercial use, emphasizing the need for user-friendly software and regulatory frameworks. Jordan points out the challenges posed by consumer drones and the importance of balancing regulation with innovation. They discuss the future of drone autonomy, the potential for drones to automate tasks like insurance inspections, and the need for scalable operations. The discussion concludes with reflections on how military advancements in drone technology have influenced consumer and commercial markets, underscoring the importance of ease of use and accessibility in driving adoption.
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