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China is on the far side of the moon, potentially mining helium-3, and the U.S. doesn't know the extent of their activities due to a lack of monitoring infrastructure. Helium-3 could power the globe for thousands of years and is crucial for cooling quantum computers. If China masters quantum computing first, they could break all encryption and dominate the information market. The speaker believes a superior strategy trumps better technology and that China is building a space strategy focused on logistics and infrastructure, while the U.S. is focused on building better satellites. Understanding China's cultural mindset is crucial to avoid being victimized. The speaker asserts that truth and free will are essential, but truth is being manipulated in the information domain. The speaker believes President Trump understood the importance of space and created the Space Force. If China can cool their quantum computers with helium three before the U.S. can, "the jig is up."

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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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- The discussion frames Iranian capabilities as the current biggest threat to the US Navy, noting that Iran’s position is now stronger, with significant new efforts in the last six months supported by China and Russia. The guest emphasizes that Iranian capabilities today are far more lethal than in 2020 and that Iran has benefited from Chinese and Russian involvement, including help with integrated air defenses. - On the protests in Iran, the guest contends that Mossad, with CIA and MI6, joined the efforts to provoke the regime into a brutal crackdown, aiming to trigger a stronger US response. He argues the protests were legitimate at their core (economic grievances and reformist aims) and that the attempt to exploit them for regime change failed. He explains that, after discovering 40,000 starlight terminals used to orchestrate regime-change efforts, the intelligence community judged the operation a failure, and President Trump was advised that a broader, more forceful campaign would be required, potentially including more firepower and assets. - Regarding Russia and China’s responses to potential regime collapse in Iran, the guest asserts that Russia would intervene only if the regime seemed in danger of collapsing, and China would respond similarly, considering strategic and financial consequences. - In the Maduro Venezuela operation, the guest recounts paying off many actors to enable the abduction of Maduro and his wife, noting air defenses largely stood down due to bribes, with one battery reportedly firing and damaging a helicopter. He suggests the operation accomplished regime alteration but not a change in leadership style, since the new president reportedly will not take instructions from Washington. He speculates that continued oil income from the captured Venezuelan oil could influence outcomes, and he notes skepticism about the profitability of Venezuelan drilling for major oil corporations, who may turn to private or mercenary groups. - The “secret weapon” comment (the discombobulator) is described as an exaggeration; the guest hints at undisclosed capabilities but declines further public discussion, citing high clearance and Pentagon confidentiality. - On Iran’s protests and possible US strikes, the guest reiterates that the initial protests were economically driven and that the Mossad-CIA-MI6 effort to provoke a harsher regime response stalled, leading to the decision for a larger potential strike. He outlines a plan for a prolonged air campaign with multiple carriers and a heavy emphasis on air power over naval action, suggesting a Kosovo-like approach with extensive air sorties to degrade Iran’s air and missile defenses, using surface ships as needed but relying on air power for sustained damage. He notes that the air campaign would require time and additional assets, possibly two to three more carrier groups, and would hinge on the ability to degrade defenses to enable broader bombing operations. - When discussing Iranian capabilities against the US Navy, the guest says Iran’s current capabilities are more dangerous, with Iran receiving about 500 missiles from China and improved Russian integrated air defenses. He notes concern about long-range missiles capable of reaching US bases and questions whether Iran’s Orion missiles could reach Diego Garcia. He asserts that Russian help could be more for deterrence or limited military support rather than supplying exotic missiles like Reshnik, and that the Chinese missiles could threaten ships at sea. - On the US mobilization (Lincoln, submarines, aircraft, drones, HIMARS, Patriot/THAAD), the guest says the response is a time-buying effort to pressure negotiations, with more assets likely and ongoing dialogue with Iran. He suggests the US may pursue enriched uranium settlements, acknowledging Netanyahu’s and Trump’s positions, while noting Iran’s insistence that missile development is not negotiable and that JCPOA prospects are unlikely. - About Iran’s possible escalation strategies, the guest analyzes several options: drone swarms could threaten bases; sea mines in the Strait of Hormuz would be a last resort but remain a hazard; a swarm of boats and diesel submarines pose challenges but are not existential threats to carriers; and long-range missiles (including those supplied by China) could target US bases or ships. He emphasizes that the navy can defend against many of these threats but highlights the difficulty of countering missiles and the threat submarines pose in shallow gulf waters. - On Russia and China’s potential responses if the regime falls: Russia would likely intervene militarily or economically to prevent regime disintegration, while China could leverage financial power (including debt leverage) and maintain strategic flexibility. The Turkish role is described as a wild card; Turkey could be motivated to counter Israeli hegemony in the region, potentially drawing NATO into conflict, despite NATO’s current limited capacity. - Finally, the guest touches on broader geopolitical implications: he suggests Europe is drifting towards greater autonomy from the US, NATO’s effectiveness is questionable, and the regime’s fall could trigger wider regional instability. He argues Taiwan is a separate, less feasible target for conflict, given distance and economic stakes, and calls for more cautious rhetoric regarding Taiwan. He closes by noting that Ukraine’s fate and Europe’s stance will influence how the US and its allies manage any Iran escalation.

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The transcript outlines major concerns about neuroscience and neuroweaponry, highlighting both technical advances and the risks they pose to privacy, security, and human autonomy. It begins with the potential to use nanoparticulate and aerosolizable nanomaterials as weapons that disrupt blood flow and neurological networks, and to deploy nanomaterials for implantable sensor arrays and real-time brain reading/writing without invasive surgery, as in DARPA’s N3D program (Next Generation Non-Invasive Neuromodulation). Advances in artificial intelligence are driving breakthroughs such as devices that can read minds and alter brain function to treat conditions like anxiety or Alzheimer's. This progress raises privacy concerns, leading to Colorado enacting a pioneering law that protects brain data as part of the state privacy act, analogous to fingerprints when used to identify people. The discussion notes that at-home devices, such as EarPods, can decode brainwave activity to determine whether someone is paying attention or their mind is wandering, and progress suggests it can already discriminate the types of attention (central tasks like programming vs. peripheral tasks like writing or online browsing). The narrative emphasizes that “the biggest question” is who has access to these technologies. It asserts that devices connected to AI can change, enhance, and even control thoughts, emotions, and memories. Brainwave patterns can be decrypted to convert thoughts to text, and patterns can reveal a person’s internal states. Lab-grade capabilities include reading brain activity from multiple regions and writing into the brain remotely, enabling high-resolution monitoring and intervention. The conversation underscores the sensitivity of brain data, with potential misuse by data insurers, law enforcement, and advertisers, and notes that private companies collecting brain data often do not disclose storage locations, retention periods, access controls, or security breach responses. A first-in-the-nation Privacy Act in Colorado is described as a foundational step, but more work remains. The discussion also covers the broader ecosystem: consumer devices, corporate investments by major tech companies (e.g., those that acquired brain-computer interface firms like Control Labs), and the emergence of ubiquitous monitoring through wearables and bossware in workplaces. There is concern about the ability to identify not just attention but specific tasks or intents, which raises questions about surveillance and control. Security and misuse are central themes. There are accounts of attempts to prime recognition signals (P300, N400) to reveal private data such as PINs without conscious processing. The possibility of hacking brain interfaces over Bluetooth is raised, along with debates about technologies that aim to write signals to the brain, potentially enabling manipulation or coercion. The potential for “Manchurian candidates” and covert manipulation is discussed, including examples of individuals who perceived voices or were influenced by harmful ideation. Finally, the transcript touches on geopolitical and ethical implications: rapid progress and heavy investment (notably by China) in neurotechnology, the risk that AI could be used to read thoughts and target individuals, and concerns about the broader aim of controlling narratives and people. There is acknowledgment of the difficulty in proving tampering with the brain and a warning about the dangerous, uncharted territory at the intersection of AI, neuroscience, and weaponization.

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Speaker 0: The discussion reports that Russia has covertly tested three new weapon systems over the past twenty-eight days, with two of them described as complete game changers. These tests are said to be causing nerves inside NATO, and none of these three have been made public by President Putin, who typically announces such developments. One system, however, is not being kept secret. Speaker 0: According to the report, Russian President Putin just rolled out their most advanced hypersonic missiles to date. These missiles are described as "no one can shoot down"—at least in the view of the speaker—unless future assessments prove otherwise. The specific system named is the Orenshik Oreshnik hypersonic missiles. They are set for combat duty by the end of the year, and they are characterized as capable of extremely high speeds and long-range strikes. The deployment of these missiles is framed as something NATO will be watching very closely. The report suggests that European leaders are exhibiting a willingness to engage in war-related actions, with two particularly troubling points highlighted: the idea that they want to be part of the conflict and the accompanying casualties. It is claimed that they want to participate in the death and destruction in the European Union and in The UK. Speaker 0: The report specifically notes German Chancellor Mertz saying that they are ready to draft young men to war if they cannot reach their volunteer numbers, effectively suggesting compulsory service to fight Russia. Speaker 0: It is also stated that the UK is telling its populace to prepare to sacrifice their sons and daughters, and the speaker emphasizes that "Sons and daughters, colleagues, veterans will all have a part to play, to build, to serve, and if necessary, to fight." The speaker adds that more families will know what sacrifice for our nation means. Speaker 1: The accompanying commentary underscores the need to explain the changing threat and the necessity of staying ahead of it, reinforcing the idea that sacrifice and readiness are central to national defense in the current context.

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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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Speaker 0: Decision on whether to supply Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine or sell them to NATO and let them sell them to Ukraine. Speaker 1: Yeah. I've sort of made a decision pretty much if if if you consider. Yeah. I I think I wanna find out what they're doing with them. Yes. Speaker 0: Yes. Speaker 2: Donald Trump's recent statement to the press about mulling over sending Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine has elicited a response from the Kremlin today. Putin announced that the peace process with the Trump administration to end the Ukraine war is officially, quote, unquote, exhausted. Trump and Putin have had a very, you know, strange relationship, a little touch and go since Trump returned to the presidency. At first, to end the Ukraine war on his very first day in office, Trump has meandered a bit on the issue and is now apparently settling on the Biden administration's policy of arming Ukraine and NATO to the hilt. But can Tomahawk cruise missiles even make much of a difference given that the Russian military has achieved supremacy on the battlefield and maintained that dominance for at least the last year and a half, maybe even longer, if you will. We're now joined by, and we're so pleased he's with us, retired US Army colonel Douglas MacGregor. He's the author of I'm sorry. We also have Brandon Weichert with us, the author of Ukraine. Go cross wires there, a disaster of their own making, how the West lost to Ukraine. Thank you both for being with us. Speaker 3: Sure. Speaker 4: Thank you for having me. Speaker 2: Colonel McGregor, welcome to the show. We're so glad to especially have your perspective on this. And what we're gonna kinda do is a tour, if you will, around the globe because there's several, ongoing and pending conflicts. Right? So let's start with this breaking news out of Russia where Putin says that these talks, these negotiations are exhausted. Are they, as a matter of fact, exhausted, colonel? Speaker 3: Well, I think he was referring specifically to what happened in Alaska. And I think president Trump showed up, you know, in grandiose fashion with the goal of overwhelming, president Putin and his team with his charm and grace and power, and it all failed miserably. President Trump never really listened carefully to anything the Russians said to him. He didn't read any of the material that was pertinent to the discussion. He came completely unprepared, and that was the the message that came out after the meeting. So the Russians were very disappointed. If you don't read their proposals, you don't read what they're doing and what they're trying to accomplish, then you're not gonna get very far. So now, president Trump has completed his transformation into Joe Biden. He's become another version of Joe Biden. Speaker 2: What it is so unexpected. And, you know, it's hard for a lot of a lot of Trump voters to hear because specifically part of voting for him and the mandate that he had going into this term was in these conflicts. Right? Specifically, the one in Ukraine. He didn't start any new conflicts while in office in the first term. Why this version of Trump this term? I know you, like I, look into the hiring, the administration, the pressures from the outside on the president. What is influencing where he is now on Ukraine, colonel MacGregor? Speaker 3: Well, that's a that's a difficult question. I mean, first of all, he grossly underestimated the complexity of the of the war. If you don't understand the foundations for the conflict, how this conflict came about, I mean, I I was standing around listening to someone like Brzezinski in the nineteen nineties trying to tell president Clinton that it was critical to address Ukraine's borders because Eastern Ukraine was, quote, unquote, Russified and effectively not Ukrainian. Nobody would listen to Brzezinski, and so we walked away from that very problem. And in the run up to this thing back in 2014, I was on several different programs, and I pointed to the electoral map, And it showed you who voted for what where. It was very obvious that the East and the Northeast voted to stay with the Russian pro Russian candidate, and everybody else voted against the pro Russian candidate. So none of this should come as a surprise, but I don't think president Trump is aware of any of that. I don't think he studied any of that. And so he's got a lot of people around him pushing him in the direction of the status quo. He went through this during his first term, disappointed all of us because he could never quite escape from the Washington status quo. So he simply returned to it, and I don't see anything positive occurring in the near future. Speaker 2: That's sort of the same as well, with other agencies like the the DOJ, which I wanna get into a little bit later. Brandon, you've been writing about this as a national interest. So what what do you make of it? Speaker 4: Well, I think that right now, this is a lot of vamping from Trump. I think the colonel is a 100% correct when he says Trump really didn't come prepared to the Alaska meeting. I think ultimately Trump's default is to still try to get a deal with Putin on things like rare earth mineral development and trade. I think it's very important to note, I believe it was Friday or Thursday of last week, Putin was on a stage at an event and he reiterated his desire to reopen trade relations with The United States and he wants to do a deal with Trump on multiple other fronts. So that's a positive thing. But ultimately, I think that people need to realize that Trump says a lot of stuff in the moment. The follow through is the question. I am very skeptical that he's actually going to follow through on the Tomahawk transfer if only because logistically, it's not practical. Ukraine lacks the launchers. They lack the training. The the targeting data has to come exclusively and be approved exclusively by the Pentagon, which means that Trump will be on the hook even more for Joe Biden's war, which runs against what he says he wants to get done, which is peace. Regardless of whether it's been exhausted or not that process, Trump I think default wants peace. So I think this is a lot of bluster and I think ultimately it will not lead to the Tomahawk transfer. Last of all because we don't have enough of these Tomahawks. Right? I mean, that that is a a finite amount. I think we have about 3,500 left in our arsenal. We have 400 we're sending to the Japanese Navy, and we're gonna need these systems for any other potential contingency in South America or God forbid another Middle East contingency or certainly in the Indo Pacific. So I think that at some point, the reality will hit, you know, hit the cameras and Trump will not actually follow through on this. Speaker 2: So speaking of South America, let's head that way. Colonel McGregor, I I don't know if you know. I've been covering this pretty extensively what's been going on with the Trump administration's actions on Venezuela. So a bit of breaking news. Today, the US State Department claims that Venezuela is planning to attack their embassy, which has a small maintenance and security board other than, you know, diplomatic staff. Meanwhile, Maduro's regime argues they're just foiled a right wing terrorist plot that's that was planning to stage a false flag against the US embassy to give the US Navy fleet. There's a lot off in Venezuela's coast the impetus to attack Maduro. I've been getting some pushback, you know, on this reporting related to Venezuela, because, you know, Trump's base largely doesn't want any new conflicts. They're afraid this is sort of foreign influence wanting wanting him to go there. Are we justified in what Trump is doing as far as the buildup and what we are hearing is an impending invasion? Is it is the Trump administration justified in this action, colonel MacGregor, in Venezuela? Speaker 3: No. I I don't think there's any, pressing pressing need for us to invade or attack Venezuela at all. But we have to go back and look at his actions to this point. He's just suspended diplomatic relations with Venezuela, which is usually a signal of some sort of impending military action. I don't know what he's being told. I don't know what sort of briefing he's received, what sort of planning has been discussed, but we need to keep a few things in mind. First of all, the Venezuelan people, whether they love or do not love Maduro, are very proud of their country, and they have a long history of rebelling against foreign influence, particularly against Spain. And they're not likely to take, an invasion or an intervention of any kind from The United States lately. Secondly, they've got about 400,000 people in the militias, but they can expect, at least a 100,000 or more paramilitaries to come in from Brazil and Colombia and other Latin American states. It's why the whole thing could result in a Latin American crusade against The United States. And finally, we ought to keep in mind that the coastline is 1,700 miles long. That's almost as long as the border between The United States and Mexico. The border with Brazil and with Colombia is each of them are about 1,380 kilometers long. You start running the math and you're dealing with an area the size of Germany and and France combined. This is not something that one should sink one's teeth in without carefully considering the consequences. So I don't know what the underlying assumptions are, but my own experience is that they're usually a series of what we call rosy scenarios and assume things that just aren't true. So I I'm very concerned we'll get into it. We'll waste a lot of time and money. We'll poison the well down there. If we really want access to the oil and and gas, I think we can get it without invading the place. And they also have emerald mines and gold mines. So I think they'd be happy to do business with us. But this obsession with regime change is very dangerous, and I think it's unnecessary. Speaker 2: That is definitely what it seems they're going for. When I talk to my sources, ChromaGregor, and then I'll get your take on it, Brandon, they say it's a four pronged issue. Right? That it's the drug that, of course, the drugs that come through Venezuela into The United States, Trend Aragua, which we know the ODNI and Tulsi Gabbard, DNI, Tulsi Gabbard was briefed on specifically, that the right of trend in Aragua and how they were flooded into the country, counterintelligence issues, a Venezuelan influence in, you know, in some of our intelligence operations, and, just the narco terrorist state that it is. But you feel that given even if all of that is true and the Venezuela oh, excuse me, in the election fraud. Right? The election interference via the Smartmatic software. Given all that, you still feel it's not best to invade, colonel. You how do we handle it? How do we counter these threats coming from Venezuela? Speaker 3: Well, first of all, you secure your borders. You secure your coastal waters. You get control of the people who are inside The United States. We have an estimated 50,000,000 illegals. Somewhere between twenty five and thirty million of them poured into the country, thanks to president Biden's betrayal of the American people and his decision to open the borders with the help of mister Mayorkas that facilitated this massive invasion. I would start at home. The drug problem is not down in Venezuela. The drug problem is here in The United States. If you're serious, anybody who deals in drugs or is involved in human trafficking, particularly child trafficking, should face, the death penalty. Unless you do those kinds of things, you're not gonna fundamentally change the problem here. Now as the narco state title, I think, is a lot of nonsense. The drugs overwhelmingly come out of Colombia. They don't come out of Venezuela. A very small amount goes through Venezuela. I'm sure there are generals in the Venezuelan army that are skimming off the top and putting extra cash in their banks, but it's not a big it's not a big source from our standpoint. We have a much more serious problem in Mexico right now. Mexico is effectively an organized crime state, and I don't think, what Maduro is doing is is really, in that same category. On the other hand, I think Maduro is courting the Chinese and the Russians. And I think he's doing that because he feels threatened by us, and he's looking for whatever assistance or support he can get. And right now, given our behavior towards the Russians in Ukraine, it makes infinite sense for the Russians to cultivate a proxy against us in Central And South America. This is the way things are done, unfortunately. We there are consequences for our actions. I don't think we've thought any of them through. Speaker 2: Well, in in in talking about turning this into a broader conflict or a bigger problem, I I I I know, Brandon, you had heard that that Russia basically told Maduro, don't look to us. Don't come to us. But now this was a couple weeks ago. Yep. Yep. Like you just said, colonel MacGregor, things have changed a little bit. Right? Especially looking at what Putin said today. So will Russia now come to Venezuela's aid, to Maduro's aid? Speaker 3: I think it's distinctly possible, but it's not going to be overt. It'll be clandestine. It'll be behind the scenes. The Chinese are also gonna do business with Maduro. They have an interest in the largest known vindicated oil reserves in the world. The bottom line is and this you go back to this tomahawk thing, which I think Brandon talked about. It's very, very important. The tomahawk is a devastating weapon. Can they be shot down? Absolutely. The Serbs shot them down back in 1999 during this Kosovo air campaign. However, it carries a pretty substantial warhead, roughly a thousand pounds. It has a range of roughly a thousand miles. And I think president Trump has finally been briefed on that, and he has said, yeah. I I wanna know where they're going to fire them, whom they're going to target. Well, the Ukrainians have targeted almost exclusively whatever they could in terms of Russian civilian infrastructure and Russian civilians. They've killed them as often and as much as they could. So the notion if you're gonna give these things to these people or you're gonna shoot for them, you can expect the worst, and that would precipitate a terrible response from the Russians. I don't think we understand how seriously attacks on Russian cities is gonna be taken by the Russians. So I would say, they will provide the Venezuelans with enough to do damage to us if if it's required, but I don't think they expect the Venezuelans to overwhelm us or march into America. That's Mexico's job right now with organized crime. That's where I think we have a much more serious problem. Speaker 4: I I agree with the colonel on that. I think also there's an issue. Now I happen to think we we because of the election fraud that you talk a lot about, Emerald, I think there is a threat in Maduro, and I I do think that that there is a more serious threat than we realize coming out of that sort of left wing miasma in Latin America. And I I think the colonel's correct though in saying that we're we're making it worse with some of our actions. I will point out on the technical side. I broke this story last week. The Venezuelan government, the military Padrino, the the defense minister there, claimed that his radar systems actually detected a tranche of US Marine Corps f 35 b's using these Russian made radars that they have. This is not the first time, by the way, a Russian made radar system using these really and I'm not going get into the technical details here, but using really innovative ways of detecting American stealth planes. It's not the first time a Russian system has been able to do this. And so we are now deploying large relatively large number of f 35 b's into the region. Obviously, it's a build up for some kind of strike package. And there are other countermeasures that the f 35 b has in the event it's detected. But I will point out that this plane is supposed to be basically invisible, and we think the Venezuelans are so technologically inferior, we do need to be preparing our forces for the fact that the Venezuelans will be using innovative tactics, in order to stymie our advances over their territory. It's not to say we can't defeat them, but we are not prepared, I don't think, for for having these systems, seen on radar by the Venezuelans, and that is something the Russians have helped the Venezuelans do. Speaker 2: Very complex. Before we run out of time, do wanna get your thoughts, colonel MacGregor, on, the expectation that Israel will strike Iran again. Will we again come to their aid? And do you think we should? Speaker 3: Well, first of all, stealth can delay detection but cannot resist it. Yeah. I think the stealth is grossly exaggerated in terms of its value. It causes an enormous price tag Yeah. When you buy the damn plane. And the f 35, from a readiness standpoint, is a disaster anyway. So, you know, I I think we have to understand that, yes, mister Netanyahu has to fight Iran. Iran has to be balkanized and reduced to rubble the way the Israelis with help from us and the British have reduced Syria to chaos, broken up into different parts. This is an Israeli strategy for the region. It's always been there. If you can balkanize your neighbors, your neighbors don't threaten you. Now I don't subscribe to the Israeli view that Iran is this permanent existential threat that has to be destroyed, but it doesn't matter what I think. What matters is what they think. They think Iran is a permanent existential threat and therefore must be destroyed. Your question is, will they find a way to attack Iran? The answer is yes. Sooner rather than later. The longer they wait, the more robust and capable Iran becomes. And, I think that's in the near term that we'll see we'll see some trigger. Somehow, there'll be a trigger and Iran will strike. And will we support them? Absolutely. We're already moving assets into the region along with large quantities of missiles and ammunition, but our inventories, as I'm sure you're aware, are limited. We fired a lot of missiles. We don't have a surge capacity in the industrial base. We need one. Our factories are not operating twenty four hours a day, seven days a week. The Russian factories are. Their manufacturing base can keep up. And by the way, the Chinese are right there with them. They have the largest manufacturing base in the world. So if it comes down to who could produce and fire the most missiles, well, we're gonna lose that game, and Israel is gonna lose with us. But right now, I don't see any evidence that anyone's worried about that. Speaker 4: Yeah. Speaker 2: You know what? Colonel McGregor, I I I don't know if I feel any safer after you joined us today. It is very concerning. It's it's a concerning situation we find ourselves in, and I feel like so many people because they feel the election turned out the way they wanted to wanted it to, are not concerned anymore. Right? But we are in Speaker 1: a finite amount of time and there's still great pressures upon the president. There are many voices whispering in his ear. And so we constantly have to be calling out what we Speaker 2: see and explaining to people why it matters. Speaker 3: Remember, this president has said this. Everybody dealing with the administration has said this. It's a very transactional administration. Yep. Follow the money. Who has poured billions into his campaign and bought the White House and Congress for him? When you understand those facts in, you can explain the policy positions. Speaker 1: And I think that's also why we're, the leading conversation we're seeing on acts and social media. Right now, Colonel McGregor, thank you so much for joining us today. We hope you'll come back soon. Speaker 3: Sure. Thank you. Speaker 2: And, Brandon, as always, good to see you, my friend. Thank you. Speaker 4: See you again. Nice to meet you, colonel. Speaker 3: Very nice to see you. Bye bye.

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Dan Farrah, director and producer of The Age of Disclosure, discusses his new documentary, which he says reveals an eighty-year cover-up of nonhuman intelligent life and a secret race among major nations to reverse engineer advanced technology of nonhuman origin. The film opens in select theaters in New York, Washington, and Los Angeles on November 21 and is available worldwide to purchase or rent on Prime Video. Farrah notes that he interviewed 34 extremely high-level military, government, and intelligence officials who have direct knowledge of the issue. Much of what they know is classified, but in the film they break their silence on what they can lawfully disclose. He states that every interviewee makes it clear that it is no longer a question of whether this is real; it is a very real situation and humanity is not the only intelligence in the universe. Nonhuman intelligence exists, UAPs are real, and they are not human. The film explores questions about who is controlling these UAPs, where they come from, and what their intention might be. Farrah explains that a long time ago the topic was moved away from congressional oversight and even away from presidential oversight, with certain elements within the government and defense contractors gatekeeping knowledge about the topic. Some officials in the film claim to have seen craft and recovered nonhuman bodies, and there are claims of crashed craft and nonhuman bodies within them. He emphasizes that having 34 credible people willing to put their name and reputation on the line constitutes strong evidence in a time when videos and photos can be created or manipulated. A major reveal in the film is that elements of the US government are in a high-stakes secret cold war with adversarial nations like China and Russia to reverse engineer technology of nonhuman origin. The discussion highlights that the first country to crack this technology could lead for years to come. China is said to have established its own UAV task force, signaling a strategic race akin to the Manhattan Project, but on “the atomic weapon on steroids.” The fear is that if another nation wins this race, it could significantly alter global power dynamics. Regarding public reception, Farrah acknowledges skepticism and stigma around the topic. For a long period, the public, Congress, and even the president were kept out of the loop, but in recent years senior Congress members and administration officials, aided by whistleblowers, have begun pursuing the truth for the American people. He suggests that it is only a matter of time before a sitting president steps forward to tell humanity that we are not alone and that the United States intends to lead the way.

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This is an attempt to provide Chinese options in crisis or conflict. We need to remove them from critical infrastructures and remain vigilant. This is a persistent threat that requires daily operation, offensive and defensive capabilities.

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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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Directed EMP weapons were discussed, highlighting their potential to disable drones at any moment. The conversation also touched on the founder of Palantir, a significant AI platform utilized by the military, which has transformed modern warfare.

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China is set to showcase a range of advanced weapons at a large-scale parade, with the full list kept under wrap. The event, in front of Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin, and other leaders, has drawn international attention. Analysts using social media photos and rehearsal footage identify key systems: new anti ship missiles from the YJ series, including YJ-15: "new ramjet powered supersonic anti ship cruise missile"; YJ-17: "wave rider with hypersonic glide vehicle, also known as HGV"; YJ-19: "an HCV missile, perhaps driven by an air breathing scramjet"; YJ-21: "Chinese Navy's new possible hypersonic anti ship missile"; and YG twenty's "Biconic aerodynamic configuration points to it being a maneuverable reentry vehicle." Also two new extra large torpedo shaped unmanned underwater vehicles: "The first labeled AJX zero zero two, which has a length of around 18 to 20 meters and, one or 1.5 meter in a diameter" and "second was hidden under a tampoline." The world's largest program of extra large uncrewed underwater vehicles, XLUUVS, with at least five types already in the water. A huge rectangular vehicle in camouflage colors covered with a tarpaulin is claimed to be the most powerful laser air defense system in the world, if confirmed, with capabilities to shoot down missiles and drones using a powerful laser (South China Morning Post daily that is). Other items: "h q nine" still shrouded in mystery; "h q 29" described as a satellite hunter capable of intercepting missiles at altitude 500 kilometers; mobility on a wheeled vehicle, with containers two each approximately 1.5 meters in diameter and satellites in low orbit.

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The transcript centers on claims that the United States used directed energy weapons during the kidnapping raid in Caracas to capture Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, with Redacted independently confirming the news from multiple sources. The host asserts that this technology is not new and that the U.S. has used it on previous, unreported occasions. The operation, termed “Absolute Resolve” and part of a broader Caribbean campaign, allegedly involved roughly 150 aircraft conducting strikes around Caracas before Delta Force and CIA operatives seized Maduro and Celia Flores and flew them out. Reuters is cited as framing the raid as a strategic message to China and Russia, noting that air defenses supplied by those countries were reportedly disabled in the opening moments. A circulating Venezuelan security guard’s transcript, which is also retweeted by White House press spokesperson Carolyn Leavitt, is highlighted as aligning with what modern electronic warfare and directed energy weapons can do. The guard describes a scenario where all radar systems shut down without explanation, followed by a large drone presence over positions. He recounts a moment when something was launched that produced “a very intense sound wave,” after which his unit experienced severe physiological effects: people bleeding from the nose, vomiting blood, and an inability to move or stand. He describes eyes going blind first and bodies collapsing, with the head feeling like it would explode. The host clarifies what is meant by directed energy, distinguishing electronic warfare (attacking the spectrum, jamming, spoofing, overload, or cutting networks) from kinetic actions. The Economic Times is cited as describing something called the “Wraith” as an electronic warfare umbrella used in the Maduro capture to create a digital blackout that paralyzed security infrastructure. There is some confusion around the name because CX2 markets a product called Wraith as an autonomous airborne EW platform that locates high-value emitters such as jammers and radars, with a promotional video illustrating its jamming capabilities. A third component discussed is sonic or acoustic weapons. The listener is shown a concept of active denial technology described by the Pentagon as a focused beam of radio frequency millimeter waves that penetrate only about one sixty-fourth of an inch into the skin, causing an intolerable heating sensation that compels movement; stepping out of the beam ends the sensation. The host references a Fox News segment in which Peter Ducey tested the system, illustrating crowd-control and perimetry uses. The conversation then elaborates that directed energy weapons are a real arms category used by major powers for years, with China and Russia possessing their own systems. The host mentions that initial testing of these weapons reportedly occurred in Afghanistan, with subsequent use in Syria during the Obama era, and asserts that the U.S. has employed such weapons for years, including during the Maduro operation. The discussion includes warnings against overestimating unilateral U.S. dominance in this arena, noting that both China and Russia have developed and deployed directed energy capabilities and that the technologies are broader and older than some public narratives suggest. The segment also touches on ongoing geopolitical dynamics involving Iran and global security concerns related to these weapons.

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Military intelligence literature since 2000 shows a push towards connecting human bodies to an external control grid using bionanotechnology. The purpose of 5G/6G and Starlink projects is questioned, suggesting they could be used for remote targeting and control. This could lead to asymmetrical warfare with no chance of fighting back. The goal seems to be linking humans to a technocratic network.

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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 Chinese army displayed the capabilities of its FPV drones and the massive swarms they create that can work in unison.

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Speaker 0 reports that while attention was on US aircraft carriers, China quietly broke the air blockade in Asia over the past forty-eight hours. The claim is that 16 Chinese Y-20 military cargo planes took off, then vanished from radar, turning their transponders off and flying completely dark. Their destination is stated as Iran. According to multiple intel sources cited in the transcript, what these planes carried was not food or humanitarian aid but advanced electronic warfare systems. The systems are described as the kind built to blind US carrier-based F-35 jets. The assertion is that China may have provided Iran with technology to jam American aircraft right in the middle of the Persian Gulf standoff. The sequence is summarized as: 16 aircraft, zero radio signals, and a full airborne supply chain delivered under America’s nose. The transcript emphasizes the supposed significance of this development, suggesting that if true, the balance of power over the Middle East could have shifted without widespread notice. The final framing centers on the potential implications: the real question posed is what action the United States will take next, given the alleged delivery of electronic warfare capability to Iran and the covert nature of the operation. The account stresses that this development allegedly occurred while global attention was focused on US aircraft carriers, implying it represents a strategic surprise with potentially far-reaching consequences for regional and global security dynamics.

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The Chinese j 35 a has many physical similarities to the American f 35 stealth fighter. The United States has at multiple times claimed that Beijing has obtained classified and sensitive data from the f 35 program. However, China says it has not copied the jet and that the j 35 a is entirely an original concept. China has become only second nation in the world to have two different types of stealth fighter jets, which are also made indigenously. The first is the J-twenty Mighty Dragon and now there's the J-35A. China says it is confident that the aircraft will be a successful air dominance fighter, and the j 35 a has already raised eyebrows. China's all weather friend, Pakistan, says it will buy the Chinese stealth fighter jet. Pakistani media has reported that pilots from the Pakistan Air Force are already training in China on the j 35.

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Directed energy weapons, such as lasers and microwaves, are being developed and deployed by various countries. China and Russia have weaponized satellites with these technologies. Laser weapons destroy targets with heat, while microwaves penetrate and destroy electronics. The use of these weapons may explain unusual destruction patterns seen in homes and cars. The deployment of these weapons raises questions about potential attacks and the intentions of various nations.

Weaponized

Russia vs. USA - The Race to Crack UFO Technology
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This episode traces a high-stakes collaboration across the Cold War and post‑Soviet era to understand UFO phenomena and the race to reverse‑engineer its technology. The hosts recount years of reporting on Russian UFO programs, describing how Glasnost and Perestroika opened doors to Soviet scientists and military officers who spoke frankly about what Russia believed and what it knew about aerial phenomena. The conversation emphasizes the symbolically charged idea that the information gathered in Russia could illuminate what the United States government may or may not admit about its own reverse‑engineering efforts, and it frames UFOs as a catalyst for strategic technology development. The guests discuss specific Russian programs and key figures, including interviews that revealed space‑based weapon concepts and detailed accounts of incidents at missile bases, landings, and sensor observations that suggested rapid, nonconventional flight capabilities. Thread 3, described as the culmination of decades of gathering data, is presented as a strategic synthesis of Russian and American information with the goal of building their own capabilities. The dialogue explains why some materials have remained classified and what it would mean for national security if adversaries truly understood the underlying physics and engineering. Throughout, the speakers acknowledge the tension between openness and secrecy, noting moments when openness in Russia contrasted with the later tightening of information under Putin. They explain how, after congressional testimony and later public releases of documents, the material is being presented in structured, digestible formats designed to help the public and analysts assess what is known about non‑human technology and its implications for defense, policy, and science. The discussion also covers media strategy and narrative, including the role of documentaries and episodic releases in translating complex, highly technical material for a broader audience, while underscoring that the core revelation—advanced non‑human technology interacting with human systems—demands careful, evidence‑based examination rather than sensationalism.

Relentless

#45 - What Happens If A Million Drones Attack Tomorrow | Michael LaFramboise, CEO Aurelius
Guests: Michael LaFramboise
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In this episode of Relentless, Michael LaFramboise, cofounder of Aurelius, discusses a future dominated by mass drone warfare and why traditional missile defenses are unsustainable as drone swarms grow. He explains their pivot to laser-based directed energy weapons that can destroy drones at a tiny marginal cost, arguing that electricity to power the laser is far cheaper than expensive missiles. The conversation covers why counter-UAS is lagging behind drone proliferation and how Aurelius is building a scalable defense network capable of autonomously detecting and neutralizing drones with a “silent” hard kill that minimizes collateral damage and avoids public alarm. LaFramboise delves into the evolution of drone warfare, citing Ukraine, Red Sea incidents, and the sheer dominance of Chinese drone production. He emphasizes the need to shift defense industrial strategy from a missile-centric model to a distributed, cost-effective laser network, capable of defending critical infrastructure and forward bases. The discussion broadens to the defense ecosystem, the role of government partners, and the ongoing shift toward autonomy across land, sea, and air. They detail Aurelius’s roadmap from small, mobile counter-UAS turrets to larger, higher-power systems that could eventually address strategic threats in space, while stressing the importance of domestic laser manufacturing in the United States. The interview also chronicles the founder’s personal journey from a challenging upbringing in Detroit and Alaska to a career in engineering, sales, and startups. He candidly reflects on his early struggles, pivotal moments that pushed him to drop out and pursue a laser startup, and the brutal realities of fundraising in defense tech. The conversation reveals a pragmatic founder who prioritizes execution, partnerships, talent selection, and a relentless work ethic. It closes with a look at production plans in Detroit, the procurement landscape, and how Aurelius plans to deploy and scale quickly in a market that’s increasingly receptive to defense innovation.

Shawn Ryan Show

Brandon Tseng – Shield AI’s X-BAT: The First AI Fighter Jet to Outsmart Top Gun | SRS #247
Guests: Brandon Tseng
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Brandon Tseng, co-founder and president of Shield AI, a defense technology company, discussed his journey from a Navy SEAL to a leader in AI and autonomous systems for national security. A graduate of the Naval Academy and Harvard Business School, Tseng's military experience, including deployments to Afghanistan and the Pacific Theater, profoundly shaped his vision for Shield AI. He emphasized the importance of protecting warfighters and civilians, driven by a desire to solve critical problems in warfare and global stability. His early military career, including augmenting a SEAL Team 6 troop, provided a masterclass in ISR and targeting operations, which later informed his approach to building AI systems. Shield AI, founded in 2015, has raised over $1 billion and grown to over a thousand employees, focusing on building AI pilots for military assets. Their core innovation is the "Hivemind" AI pilot, a self-driving technology for unmanned systems that enables operation without GPS or communications, and facilitates swarming capabilities. The company's first product was an AI-piloted quadcopter for clearing buildings, successfully deployed in various conflict zones like Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, and Ukraine, proving its ability to enhance safety for special operations forces. This initial success, though in a niche market, laid the groundwork for more ambitious projects. The company expanded its hardware capabilities by acquiring companies that developed the VBAT, a 180lb vertical takeoff and landing aircraft, and Heron Systems, which specialized in AI for fighter jets. The VBAT, akin to a miniature Predator drone, has been operationally deployed with the US Coast Guard for counter-drug operations in the Caribbean, interdicting over half a billion dollars worth of cocaine in just two weeks. It has also seen significant success in Ukraine, performing over 130 sorties and enabling numerous strikes against Russian equipment in GPS and communications-jammed environments, demonstrating its strategic value in contested battlefields. Shield AI's most ambitious project is the XBAT, a first-of-its-kind, AI-piloted, vertical takeoff and landing multi-role combat strike jet platform. This aircraft, which does not require runways and is designed for mass production, aims to fundamentally transform air warfare by enabling geographically distributed, long-range fires from virtually any location. The XBAT, targeting a cost significantly lower than current fighter jets, boasts a 2100 nautical mile range and fifth/sixth-generation capabilities. Tseng believes AI and autonomy will be the most strategic capability for the next 50 years, leading to human-machine teaming in the near term and eventually robot-on-robot deterrence, emphasizing the need for the US to lead in this technology to maintain global stability against adversaries like China.

All In Podcast

E174: Inflation stays hot, AI disclosure bill, Drone warfare, defense startups & more
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In episode 174 of the All-In Pod, the hosts discuss various topics, including the upcoming All-In Summit 2024 in Los Angeles, scheduled for September 8-10. They highlight improvements from last year, such as upgraded experiences and a single ticket type for all attendees. Chamath shares insights from an AI conference in Paris, emphasizing Nvidia's strengths in learning and inference, and the challenges it faces due to its architectural decisions. He notes the importance of understanding Nvidia's market position for investors and startups. The conversation shifts to urban issues in Western cities, with Chamath expressing concerns about crime and urban decay, particularly in San Francisco. The hosts discuss the political implications of inflation, with recent CPI data showing higher-than-expected inflation rates, which could impact Biden's reelection prospects. They analyze how persistent inflation affects consumer behavior and government borrowing costs, leading to potential economic stress. The discussion also touches on the implications of AI legislation, particularly Adam Schiff's proposed Generative AI Copyright Disclosure Act, which aims to regulate AI training data. The hosts debate the balance between protecting intellectual property and fostering innovation in AI. Finally, they explore the evolving landscape of warfare technology, particularly the role of drones and autonomous systems. The hosts emphasize the need for the U.S. to adapt its defense strategies and invest in new technologies to remain competitive, while also addressing the moral implications of such investments. They conclude that the future of warfare will increasingly rely on autonomous systems and the importance of Silicon Valley's involvement in defense innovation.

All In Podcast

Inside the Iran War and the Pentagon's Feud with Anthropic with Under Secretary of War Emil Michael
Guests: Emil Michael
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The episode centers on Emil Michael, the Under Secretary of War for Research and Engineering, who discusses the Pentagon’s approach to modern warfare, autonomous weapons, and the evolving role of AI in national security. The conversation covers recent U.S. and allied actions in the Middle East, including the Iran operation, and explains the administration’s emphasis on avoiding boots-on-the-ground deployments while pursuing strategic achievements such as disabling the regime’s capacity to fund and supply militant groups. Emil emphasizes that the mission is framed as weeks, not months, with a target to reduce capability gaps and dissuade adversaries by demonstrating precision, speed, and overwhelming force when necessary. The dialogue then shifts to how technology shapes future combat—particularly drones, AI-enabled targeting, and autonomous systems. Emil outlines a multi-layer approach to defense, combining space, air, land, sea, and cyber assets, and describes a “drone dominance” program to field low-cost, capable unmanned systems. He explains that AI will play a growing role in edge-level operations, from automatic target recognition to coordinating drone swarms, while stressing the need for robust human oversight and clearly defined rules of engagement to minimize civilian risk. The panel probes how policy, ethics, and national security intersect in the private AI sector, with Emil recounting tense negotiations with Anthropic about lawful use, model governance, and the risk of supply-chain dependence. He argues for diversified, multi-model redundancy to guard against unilateral changes by a single provider, and he highlights the critical importance of a reliable partner capable of operating under classified constraints. Throughout, the hosts explore broader questions about China’s strategic posture, energy markets, and the global implications of technologically enhanced warfare, including how breakthroughs in defense tech could reshape geopolitics, industry funding, and domestic manufacturing. The discussion also briefly touches on the potential for space-based sensors, hypersonics, and the evolving defense industrial base, while acknowledging the role of allies such as Israel and the importance of a capable, ethical, and predictable national security framework.

TED

The AI Arsenal That Could Stop World War III | Palmer Luckey | TED
Guests: Palmer Luckey, Bilawal Sidhu
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In a potential invasion of Taiwan, China could swiftly neutralize defenses with missiles and cyber attacks, leading to a rapid U.S. defeat due to insufficient military resources. Taiwan's fall would disrupt global semiconductor supply, causing economic chaos and ideological shifts towards authoritarianism. Palmer Luckey, founder of Anduril, highlights the stagnation in U.S. defense innovation, urging a shift to autonomous systems and AI to counter China's military advancements. He emphasizes the need for mass production of smarter weapons to deter conflict and protect freedoms, advocating for collaboration with allies and the ethical use of technology in warfare.
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