TruthArchive.ai - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Israel uses a system called Lavender to decide who to kill, assigning scores to Palestinians and drone striking those above a certain threshold. Palantir creates these "murder lists" by scraping data from Facebook, satellite imagery, and other surveillance sources, compiling personal information to assign weighted scores and identify targets. Palantir, founded by individuals with ties to the Israeli government and the CIA, built this surveillance platform in Israel to target Palestinians. Palantir also maintains an "enemies list" of 1 to 2 million US citizens for the CIA and federal law enforcement, classifying them as potential political dissidents. This database uses surveillance and AI to identify Americans deemed threats to the government, including those with anti-government views or potential involvement in domestic extremism.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
If you care about not being surveilled illegally, about the treatment of people who come into the country illegally but deserve adequate treatment, and about lives in Gaza, Ukraine, and worldwide where Palantir is used, you're gonna want the best software in the world because it's the only way you can reduce and more precisely target the people and justify it; and actually the only way where you can say this person did this and they deserve to go.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Israel uses a system like Lavender to decide who to kill, assigning scores to Palestinians and drone striking those above a certain threshold. Palantir creates these "murder lists" by scraping data from Facebook, satellite imagery, and other sources to build databases with personal information, geolocation, bank information, healthcare information, and relationships. The company assigns weighted scores using algorithms and AI to advise the military on drone strikes. Palantir, founded by individuals with ties to the Israeli government and the CIA, allegedly built this platform in Israel to target Palestinians. Palantir also maintains an "enemies list" of one to two million US citizens for the CIA and federal law enforcement, classifying them as potential political dissidents. This database uses surveillance, AI, and weighted scores to identify Americans deemed a threat to the government, including those with anti-government views or those who might be a concern in a martial law or civil war scenario.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 discusses Palantir and expanded government use. Key points: - Palantir is openly building databases on people, used with ICE and announced for broader government use; Palantir also manages all health data due to extensive contracts with HHS. - Trump’s first term included a push to have social media companies flag statements to prevent shootings, using analytics to determine intervention before a crime—concept described as “minority report.” - William Barr, during the first Trump administration, created DEEP, a program that legalized precrime in the United States; there were a few arrests under DEEP for Facebook posts, but not many, with the legal framework in place since Trump’s first term. - The pitch for a precrime system included HARPA, a health-focused version of DARPA, and a program called Safe Homes intended to analyze American social media posts for early warning signs of neuropsychiatric violence. Based on that analysis, individuals could be sent to a court-ordered psychologist or physician or placed under house arrest without having committed any crime. - With Palantir’s increased government integration, especially through the Doge agency led by Elon Musk, Palantir has embedded itself further in government, including the IRS and mortgage-related entities like Fannie Mae; this involves access to data from the Department of Treasury and the IRS, forming a master database aimed at stopping crime before it happens. - Palantir’s precrime activities included piloting predictive policing programs in police departments, initially in New Orleans, targeting primarily low-income minority neighborhoods. - Other companies besides Palantir, such as Predpol in Los Angeles, claim to provide predictive policing with an accuracy of 0.5%; contracts with Predpol have not been terminated. - The overarching concept traces to the Panopticon idea: constant surveillance leads people to police themselves and censor themselves, implying control through perpetual observation, rather than purely improved efficiency in policing. The speaker characterizes this as the foundational form of control.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The discussion centers on the kill chain concept and Palantir’s role within it. One speaker explains that the system you call the kill chain was created privately, while publicly lawyers frame it as something like “tech for the amelioration of unwanted blah blah blah.” The term kill chain sounds good to him, though not originally Palantir’s; it’s a general military sequence from identifying a target to taking a life. Palantir’s contract added their software and artificial intelligence to the kill chain, making it quicker, and, in his view, “better and more violent.” He notes that stepping back to examine the actual application of these technologies can be destabilizing. Another speaker discusses a personal trajectory: Juan didn’t leave Palantir entirely for ethical reasons, only taking another job, but his motivation to speak out against Palantir grew after observing the Israeli invasion of Gaza following the October 7 attacks. Palantir has contracts with the Israeli Defense Forces, with the exact nature intentionally opaque, yet evidence suggests Palantir’s AI tech was used for target selection in Gaza. The speaker Carp embraces controversy as part of marketing, stating Palantir is comfortable being unpopular. He adds that Palantir works with health insurance companies to build AI for denials management to protect revenue, raising the question of whether Palantir’s AI should decide what care is covered for individuals. A third speaker explains the technical approach: they use what legal scholars call predicate-based search to identify indicators of potential bad behavior in a person’s life. In essence, Palantir makes software that helps customers collect and analyze data and then act on the analysis. By 2013, a decade after founding, Palantir’s client list included the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, the Marines, the Air Force, Special Operations Command, and more. Palantir already had contracts with the IRS to analyze taxpayer data to guide auditors to easier audits, handling financial information for many. They also had multiple contracts with the Department of Health and Human Services, whose core responsibility is Medicare and Medicaid, controlling millions of Americans’ health records and access to health care. A final speaker warns that as we increasingly live in a simulated world, we move toward governance by algorithm, governed by those influencing these AI systems to advance profit- or control-seeking objectives.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0: Palantir is described through the Lord of the Rings metaphor, with a logo of a black orb balanced on two leaf-like supports, invoking the mythical Palantirs from Tolkien's work. Palantirs are stones that allowed users to see into the past, future, and other locations, and the logo is used to symbolize Palantir’s mission of using complex data for powerful insights, with a focus on data intelligence and innovation. A Palantir is described as an indestructible crystal ball, and the word is said to come from quinia palan, meaning far or to watch over, which is linked to a surveillance state. The speaker asserts that Palantir has been all over the Trump administration, and claims that Trump has tapped Palantir to compile data on Americans. It is stated that if Palantir teams with Doge, their job becomes easy because Doge has already gained access to the Department of Homeland Security, the Social Security Administration, the IRS, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Personal Management, and the Department of Education. The speaker contends that if they wanted to build a social credit score system, they would have all the information they need. There is a reference to Minority Report, claiming Palantir already has the technology of crime predicting, and that Palantir is now being sold to police departments. The speaker warns that, as in the Minority Report ending, the outcome was not good. The speaker mentions riots in Los Angeles that are planned to spread across the nation, and suggests that an additional biological threat has already been exercised, referencing Event 201. There is a claim that there was a saying about nothing new under the sun, recalling 2020, riots, and stimulus checks. The prediction is that this time there will be universal basic income relief, the rollout of an emergency digital wallet, and soon digital IDs, though they will be labeled differently to sound favorable because of Trump’s tendency to rename things. Palantir is said to take over to ensure universal compliance. The speaker invokes occult language about “order out of chaos,” claiming that people are falling for it. The message asserts that Trump will not save them and reiterates Palantir’s presence since day one. The speaker proclaims that we are living in extraordinary times and asserts that Christians should be excited because of what the Bible says, while those who are scared are described as not in Christ. Finally, there is a call to know Jesus as Lord and Savior, with the Bible verse implication that confessing Jesus as Lord and believing in his death and resurrection will lead to salvation, urging not to wait until it is too late.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Meet shadow president Peter Thiel. Recognized as Republican kingmaker, Thiel has wielded extraordinary influence over Donald Trump's administration. Thiel dominated his original transition team, has won multiple military contracts under Trump for 30 different government agencies, has been the primary force behind JD Vance's political rise to power. Neil is also recognized as the dawn of the PayPal mafia. He sits on the steering committee of the Bilderberg Group and co founded the now infamous big tech company Palantir, which he currently chairs. Named after the all seeing stone in Lord of the Rings, Palantir was seated with CIA money and is used by the FBI, NSA, ICE, local law enforcement, and Israeli and Ukrainian militaries. From AI precrime software in America to generating kill list in Israel, Palantir is one step closer to the dystopian concept of Skynet. It's time to look beyond the political theater. It's time to wake up.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"And Trump has been openly building databases on people with Palantir." "Palantir also manages all of your health data Because they contract extensively with HHS." "It was called DEEP and there's been a few arrests under DEEP for people making Facebook posts and things like that." "But anyway, this pitch to that Trump made about having social media spy on its users and use like analytics to, you know, bring about some sort of pre crime society." "didn't ultimately happen in creating this agency called HARPA, which was supposed to be like the health version of the Pentagon's DARPA." "the goal of Palantir, just like it was with total information awareness, is about stopping crime before it happens. It's pre crime." "There's one in LA called Predpol, and they have an accuracy of half a percent."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The conversation centers on fears of evolving toward a biometric surveillance state driven by predictive algorithms. Speaker 0 argues that the plan resembles a transition to mass surveillance on everybody, drawing on observations from a recent trip to China where some aspects were acceptable but others were not, and contrasts that with potential consequences in the speakers’ own country—specifically, “without the nice trains and without the free healthcare.” The core concern is the creation of a biometric surveillance framework that uses predictive analytics to monitor and control people. A key point raised is a new report that highlights contracts with Palantir, the data analytics company, which would “create data profiles of Americans to surveil and harass them.” This claim emphasizes the potential domestic use of technologies and methodologies that have been associated with counterterrorism efforts abroad. The discussion frames this as evidence that the United States could be adopting similar surveillance capabilities at home. Speaker 1 responds with a blend of agreement and critical tone, underscoring the perceived inevitability of this trajectory and hinting at the burdens of being right about such developments, including the intellectual burden of grappling with the math and ontology behind these systems. The exchange suggests that Palantir’s role is to “disrupt and make our the institutions we partner with the very best in the world” and to be prepared to “scare enemies and on occasion kill them.” This is presented as part of Palantir’s stated mission, with Speaker 1 affirming a sense of inevitability about the path forward. Speaker 0 further reframes the issue by stating that “the enemy is literally the American people,” expressing alarm at the idea that the same company tracking terrorists abroad would “now be tracking us at home.” They note posting on social media that this development should be very alarming, highlighting the notion that the entity responsible for foreign surveillance might be extending its reach domestically. Overall, the dialogue juxtaposes concerns about a domestic biometric surveillance state—enabled by predictive algorithms and proprietary data profiling by Palantir—with ethical and political anxieties about the implications for civil liberties, accountability, and the potential normalization of surveillance within the United States. The conversation dismisses no specific claims but emphasizes the perceived transformation of surveillance capabilities from foreign counterterrorism into internal population monitoring.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0: Welcome back to Jake GTV news. Did you see ICE shooting American citizens? Speaker 1: I thought they were supposed to get rid of the illegals, though. Speaker 0: Me too. Let's go to Ching Chong on the murder scene. Speaker 1: Chloe and Michael, good morning. We're here in Minneapolis where ICE agents trained by Israel are causing chaos. We go to John for more. Speaker 0: Thanks, Ching Chong. Thought it was only Libtards who opposed this, but they are literally murdering Americans. Back to you in the studio. Speaker 2: Stand back. Speaker 1: Please don't hurt me, sir Ed. I'm here to get rid of the illegals, grandma. Speaker 0: Wow. Thanks, John. Check this out here. It's from the protest. Here we see an agent assault a woman for simply being at the protest. Speaker 3: Then Alex steps in to help her Speaker 0: get back on her feet, and Speaker 4: the agents pepper spray him and proceed to assault him. Speaker 0: They then proceed to remove his legally owned firearm and shoot him in the back roughly 10 times, not even kidding. Holy shit. Speaker 1: Please tell me they're gonna jail. Speaker 0: Nope. They're on administrative leave while the FBI pretends to care. Dude, what? Let's see what Trump's team has to say. Speaker 5: Very, very unfortunate incident. I don't like that he had a gun. I don't like the fact that he was carrying a gun. Speaker 6: You know, you can't have guns. You can't walk in with guns. You just can't. And you can't listen. You can't walk in with guns. You can't do that, but it's it's a very unfortunate incident. Speaker 7: Do you Speaker 1: agree with Trump, Steen? Speaker 6: Oh, hell yeah. Guns are bad now. Didn't you get the memo? Speaker 1: What about the second amendment? Speaker 6: It's all four d chess, honey. Trust the plan. Speaker 1: Sup, bro? How do you feel about ICE? Speaker 0: This country needs more Indians than blacks. Check your privilege. Speaker 1: Dude, when did everybody get so retarded? Was it the vaccines or something? We go to the investigation team to learn more. Speaker 8: Thanks, Ching Chung. So basically, we uncovered that not only is ICE Embassy located in Tel Aviv, but they're using the same technology they used to genocide the Palestinians. Speaker 0: It's a freaking Jewish spyware by Paragon Solutions called Graphite, and check this out. Tell me why Alex Pretty was googled a month prior to the shooting and, again, five minutes before his death. Make of that what you will. Back to you guys. Wow. Wasn't the Homeland Security's own Twitter page being run from Israel? Speaker 1: Yeah. Same with ICE's embassy, Tel Aviv to be exact. Speaker 0: Freaking Jews, man. Speaker 9: Shut it down. He was an unhinged lefty who thought our Chobus Goy Trumpstein was a dictator. He kicked the taillight the week prior, so he deserved to be gunned down like a dog. Speaker 1: Air that. Jeez, Producer Berg, chill. Speaker 0: Gosh, he's so Talmudic. Speaker 1: Right. Always victim. Speaker 0: Anyways, here's their emotional justification for cold blooded murder. Speaker 1: That was a pretty good leg kick. Speaker 0: Right? Let's get Shapiro Steen's take on this whole thing. Speaker 10: Just because we didn't arrest anyone for the Epstein files, genocide, or our poisonous mRNA doesn't mean we won't also get away with murdering Boyum. After all, he kicked a taillight. Speaker 0: Yeah. I guess you're right, Shapiro Steen. Israel is our greatest ally. Speaker 1: You're not getting a raise. Speaker 0: Discount on your only freaks? Speaker 1: Not a chance. Ching chong, take it away. Gosh, dude. You're such a weak little simp. She's a literal succubus. Speaker 0: Anyways, let's take a tour with the IDF, I mean ice. Whoops. What was your training like? We were supposed to be trained for this? Speaker 0: Yeah. We've got an antiseptic on the next block. Get ready to murder. Stop resisting. Did you see me shoot that senior citizen? Yeah. Definitely not an immigrant, he sure had it coming. Let's see what Diego's up to. Speaker 2: I will tell you this, brother. What? You know? I will tell you this. You raise your voice? I raise your voice. Speaker 1: Wow. Isn't that like against the law? Speaker 0: You'd think so but they'll end up getting paid administrative leave and mental health support. Speaker 1: Seriously? Speaker 0: Dead ass. If I Speaker 11: raise my voice, you'll erase Speaker 2: my Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Speaker 11: Are you serious? You said, if I raise my voice, you'll erase my voice? Speaker 1: Yes. Mhmm. Mhmm. Ice. You guys are saving this country. Speaker 0: Didn't they kill that American woman last week? Renee Good or something? Speaker 1: That non chosen person? She was lesbian leftist Karen. Who cares? Speaker 0: Whatever you say, Daisy. No. Speaker 7: No. Shit. Shit. Oh my fucking god. What the fuck? What What the the fuck? Fuck? Speaker 0: You might be wondering, why Minneapolis? Tim Waltz ushered in a defund the police initiative, which created a perfect opportunity for Trump's team to bring about the first AI surveillance state. You know what they say, create the problem, usher in the solution. Tom, back to you. Exactly. Speaker 0: So Peter Thiel, a close advisor to J. D. Vance, founded Palantir, the company that built the AI surveillance system used to target sand people. That same technology was sold to ICE and rebranded as Immigration OS, creating a satanic surveillance network to monitor Americans. Speaker 9: Shut it down, Tom. That's not for the normies to understand. Keep it up and I'll turn you into a lampshade like I did with Jackie. Back to the Goyslop or you're canceled. Speaker 12: Goyslop Junior's Goyslop Filet is back, and it's got more seed oils than ever. Speaker 0: I hate myself. Goyslop Junior. Speaker 7: Go on. Speaker 6: Enjoy cancer. Speaker 1: Gosh, that looks good. Speaker 0: Producer Verk said if we stop talking about Palantir, Goyslap Junior will cater to the Super Bowl party. Speaker 1: Alright. Speaker 0: Zipped. Let's just have Eric Warsaw break it down for us. Speaker 12: Palantir. The same company that is run by the hardline Zionist Alex Karp who works closely with Israeli military, will now be in charge of America's civilian data collection. We built Foundry, which was just was used to distribute the COVID vaccine and saved millions of lives globally. Palantir is here to disrupt and make our the institutions we partner with the very best in the world, and when it's necessary to scare enemies and on occasion kill them. Speaker 12: And also, the target selections for the US military, police forces, and even target selections for ICE officers. Speaker 1: That's right, Eric. We're giving our data to the Israeli Jew whose AI targeted over fifty percent of the civilian deaths in Gaza. Here he is. Speaker 7: Your AI and your technology from Palestine to kill Palestinians. Speaker 13: Mostly terrorists. Speaker 1: And by terrorists, he means anyone who opposes their families being genocided, including women and children. This guy. Speaker 9: Shut it the heck down. Say goodbye to your Goyslav junior catering. Remember what happened to Charlie? You're next. Run the freaking commercials. Speaker 0: Want to express yourself? Well, now you can. I always wonder how dumb this going sometimes can be. Speaker 7: TikTok, Speaker 0: Now owned by the Jews at BlackRock. Speaker 7: We're watching that. Speaker 0: Wow. I thought China owning our data was bad. Now you can't even say Zionist without getting flagged. Speaker 1: Straight up. It's like, give it back to China at this point. Speaker 0: Anything's better than Jews at this point. Speaker 1: Right? It's like take a freaking joke, let alone facts. Speaker 0: That's based. We go to John for some breaking news. Thanks, guys. Couldn't have said it better. And this just in, we're taking over Greenland because it was promised to us by Lucifer himself. So take it away, Satan. Speaker 14: By the way, what are we doing with Greenland? We gotta do something with Greenland. Where's my advance team? Go to Greenland. They must have some satellite needs or something that we could do there. But we are coloring the world blue. Speaker 0: So satanic. Speaker 1: Right? Isn't Greenland the central hub for the undersea data cables connecting North America, Europe, and Asia? Speaker 0: Bingo. Speaker 0: Ching Chong joins us live from Greenland. Speaker 1: We're here in Greenland, and not only is it located on a gold mine of rare earth minerals, but its freezing temperatures are the perfect natural coolant for the AI supercomputers needed to power the new world order that will enslave humanity. Eric Morsaw, break it down for us. Speaker 12: If you thought George Orwell's 1984 was a bad surveillance state, wait until you see what Israel's Palantir can do with AI technology or America. It's gonna make the movie The Matrix look mild. Speaker 1: Thanks, Eric. But to truly understand the endgame, you need to understand their ultimate prize, Jerusalem's Golden Dome. The satanic cabal believes controlling this one holy site lets them hijack God's story for billions and install the Antichrist. Let's hear what Trump's theme has to say about it. Speaker 5: We will have all everything we want. We're getting everything we want at no cost. Speaker 10: So the so the Golden Dome will be on Greenland? Speaker 5: A piece of it, yes. And it's a very important part because it's everything comes over Greenland. If the bad guys start shooting, it comes over Greenland. Speaker 1: So what he means by that is the satanic cabal is taking a piece of God's throne and putting it on their AI brain in Greenland to legitimize the antichrist. Speaker 6: Is that some sort of question? Speaker 1: How does that make you feel? Speaker 6: Get the out of our country. Speaker 10: So what are we talking about? An acquisition of Greenland? Are you going to pay for it? Speaker 5: I mean We're talking about it's really being negotiated now, the details of it, but essentially it's total access. It's there's no end. Speaker 0: We're making Iran great again, Venezuela, and now Greenland. How exciting. Speaker 1: Why can't we just fix this country? Speaker 0: Because Israel is our greatest ally. Speaker 1: Right, Shapiro Steen? Speaker 0: Well. I'm so sick of pretending we're Israel first. Speaker 10: I heard that. Just because you stupid goyim think you can expose our satanic agenda doesn't mean you won't fall for our next tie up. Dennis, shut this episode down or you're all fired. Speaker 0: Thanks, Shapiro Steen. Suck on this. Anyways, if you're still not following Jake GTV, you're either brainwashed or legally retarded. Speaker 15: I think I figured out where our data's going. Just let me hack into Homeland Security real quick, and we're in. Speaker 0: And time to get rid of their lice For antiseptic purposes, of course. Did you hear we gave Jake GTV a strike on his YouTube? Speaker 9: Oh, someone's hacked into our system. Another pizza cost. Speaker 1: Look who it is, my base fucking noticer. If you wanna stop wondering what's going on and know, check out my new book on jakegtv.com. Otherwise, just hit the like, comment, and subscribe, and I'll see you on the next one. Speaker 9: Did you hit him with a YouTube strike? Speaker 0: Sir, we did, but he's not stopping. Speaker 9: Shadow ban his accounts. We must shut him down before the red Speaker 7: heifer Speaker 0: is sacrificed.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Palantir is allegedly in partnership with the Netanyahu syndicate and the breakaways. The government pays Palantir massive amounts of money through contracts. A new sole-source ICE contract is on the way to Palantir. Palantir has Treasury, IRS, and Social Security data, and will soon have all ICE data. Trump wants to privatize Freddie and Fannie, but Palantir will underwrite all the packages, giving them all housing data. HHS is organizing all public and private health data, which is assumed to be going to Palantir as well. This data is being managed and privatized into AI. After XAI announced a partnership with Palantir, the government gave Palantir additional contracts. An income verification service suddenly had complete data on 100% of Americans after Doge got Treasury, Social Security, and IRS data. The ICE contract allows tracking immigrants' locations in real-time through Palantir back to ICE. The primary thing going on is building a complete biometric surveillance of the entire population.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
- The speaker references The UK and says they’re flooding borders, and in a senate hearing with Alejandro Mayorkas, Holly asks why the border is open; Mayorkas allegedly replies, “my parents were holocaust survivors.” - The speaker claims that the first moves upon taking office are to protect Israel, pass antisemitism laws, and send $4 billion to Israel, accusing them of genociding Palestine in the West Bank. - The speaker asserts Palantir controlled Warp Speed and was involved with Anderil in UAS drone strikes, effectively indiscriminately killing and genociding anyone “guilty of being brown” in the West Bank and Gaza. - The speaker contends Palantir sat on known information and suppressed effective therapeutics like hydroxychloroquine, and that remdesivir was not only ineffective but toxic, increasing mortality with COVID by 35 to 40 times. - The speaker claims Palantir colluded with Apollo, Cleveland Clinic, HCA Healthcare, New York Presbyterian Hospital, Weill Cornell, Mount Sinai, and most major hospital networks in the country to genocide white Americans in their own country. - The speaker cites Whitney Webb presenting an interview in which Alex Karp says he makes most of his business decisions based on the fear that he’s going to be murdered by Christians in America. - The speaker questions Palantir’s board of directors, stating “Oh, it’s all fucking Jews,” and asks about main investors, listing “eight VC, LightSpeed, and Booz Allen Hamilton,” and accuses them of being connected to people who melted Lahaina.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Trump has been openly building databases on people with Palantir. Palantir also manages all of your health data Because they contract extensively with HHS. Trump called on social media companies to stop shooters before they commit a crime and to basically flag what people were saying on social media and use that to determine if there should be intervention before a crime might be committed, basically. That's minority report. William Barr, when he was in office the first time, created this program that legalized precrime in The United States, and I think I was, like, one of two people maybe that reported on that at the time. It was called DEEP. The legal framework has been there since, you know, Trump round one. This pitch that Trump made about having social media spy on its users and use like analytics to bring about some sort of pre crime society.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Peter Thiel might be the most dangerous man in America today. He's a tech billionaire, and he got his start by raising a cool $1,000,000 from his friends and family getting into venture capital in 1996. His first big break was PayPal. Thiel founded his most infamous company Palantir in 02/2003. Today, Palantir is laying the groundwork for the digital mass surveillance state that's slowly being rolled out across The United States with the ultimate goal of predicting crime before it happens, pre crime. It's been their dream for a long time. Palantir started as a digital mass surveillance platform for the battlefield. Its technology has been tested and honed by the IDF on the Palestinians in the West Bank as well as in American combat theaters across the Middle East.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 discusses The New York Times piece about Trump tapping Palantir to compile data on Americans, noting mixed reactions online and outlining the background. In March, President Trump signed an executive order calling for the federal government to share data across agencies, raising questions about a potential master list of personal information and untold surveillance power. Behind the scenes, officials have quietly placed technological building blocks to enable the plan, with Palantir—the data analysis and technology firm—playing a central role. Palantir is described as more than a data firm. The Trump administration has expanded Palantir’s work across the federal government in recent months. The company has received more than 113,000,000 in federal government spending since Trump took office, including new contracts with the Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon, plus existing contracts. A separate note mentions a $795,000,000 Department of Defense contract awarded last week that has not yet been spent. Representatives of Palantir are said to be in discussions with at least two other agencies—the Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service—about buying its technology, according to six government officials and Palantir employees. A key Palantir product, Foundry, is used in at least four federal agencies, including DHS and the HHS, widely adopted to organize and analyze data and to pave the way for merging information from different agencies. This is linked to the ability to create detailed portraits of Americans based on government data. Government officials say the administration has sought access to hundreds of data points on citizens and others through government databases, including bank account numbers, student debt amounts, medical claims, and disability status. Critics say such data access could be used to advance political agendas, policing immigrants, and punishing critics; privacy advocates, student unions, and labor rights organizations have filed lawsuits to block data access. A notable point in the piece is that Palantir’s selection as a chief vendor was driven by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, with at least three Doge members formerly at Palantir and two others who had worked at Peter Thiel-funded companies. Some current and former Palantir employees have expressed unease, with 13 former employees signing a letter urging Palantir to stop its endeavors with President Trump, including Linda Shah, a Palantir engineer who left last year, who said the concern was not the technology but how the administration planned to use it. The article also notes Palantir’s main products: Foundry and Gotham, the latter described as helping organize and draw conclusions from data and tailored for security and defense purposes. Gotham is interpreted by some as precrime software. Palantir was founded with initial funding from the CIA’s venture capital arm, In-Q-Tel, and Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund, and In-Q-Tel also funded Founders Fund. Speaker 1 interjects with a quote from Palantir’s Alex Karp claiming Palantir built PG to stop the rise of the far right in Europe and to distribute the COVID vaccine with Foundry, and to create a “digital kill chain.” Speaker 0 questions the desirability of a technology that compiles banking data, social security information, online presence, and other personal data for precrime analysis across government, especially under an administration associated with claims of stopping a far-right rise. The discussion continues with concerns about the potential weaponization of data and the implications for speech, political ideology, and dissent.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 Summary: Peter Thiel, a co-founder of PayPal and Palantir, and an early investor in Facebook, is described as now worth about $8,000,000,000. He has focused a large portion of his fortune on building JD Vance. Thiel and Vance met in 2011 at Yale Law School after Thiel gave a talk; Thiel became Vance’s mentor, employer, and financier, funding Vance’s venture firm and writing the blurb on Vance’s book. In 2022, Thiel donated $15,000,000 to Vance’s Senate campaign—the largest individual donation to a single Senate race in American history. He escorted Vance into Mar-a-Lago personally and introduced him to Donald Trump, despite Vance having previously called Trump “Hitler.” The transcript notes Thiel has stated publicly, and it is claimed here as a quote, that “I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.” Epstein files and connections: Thiel’s name allegedly appears over 2,200 times across Epstein’s email schedules and documents. The transcript says Thiel and Epstein lunch together in November 2017, nine years after Epstein’s conviction for soliciting prostitution from a minor. Epstein invested $40,000,000 into funds co-managed by Thiel, and Epstein reportedly brokered introductions between Thiel and Israeli officials, including arranging a 2014 dinner. Thiel denies wrongdoing, though the calendar entries cited do not express opinions. Palantir and government ties: Palantir, Thiel’s company, signed a strategic partnership with Israel’s Ministry of Defense in 2024. Palantir’s CEO publicly stated pride in supporting Israel “in every way we can,” and has acknowledged that their product is used, on occasion, to kill people. The transcript emphasizes Thiel as “the man who built your vice president,” asserting he is “the company in the bloodstream of your government.” It concludes with the line, “You didn’t vote for Peter Thiel, but Peter Thiel is governing you anyway. That’s not democracy. That’s a purchase.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript surveys Palantir’s rise as a powerful data analytics company intertwined with government and military aims, emphasizing how fear, surveillance, and control have shaped its growth and public image. It frames Palantir as aiming to become “the ultimate military contractor and the ultimate arbiter of all of our data,” with its software described as enabling governments and major institutions to collect, analyze, and act on vast datasets, including in war zones. Key points include: - Palantir’s positioning and clients: The company claims it can revolutionize government systems with AI-powered data analysis and has been hired by the Department of Defense, the FBI, local police, the IRS, and other entities, including non-government customers like Wendy’s. Its business model is described as transforming “information those organizations collect, collect even more information, and use that data to draw conclusions.” - The kill chain concept and AI: Palantir’s tech is linked to the “kill chain,” a military term for the series of decisions leading to targeting and potentially taking life. Palantir’s contract adds AI to this chain, making it “quicker and better and safer and more violent.” - Founding story and rhetoric: Palantir traces its origins to a PayPal-connected network (the “PayPal mafia”) and to Alex Karp, who studied neoclassical social theory, with the company named after Tolkien’s Palantir. Middle-earth imagery is used to juxtapose potential good versus dangerous power. - Data, surveillance, and ontology: The software is described as capable of reconfiguring an organization’s ontology—what systems matter, what information matters, how processes are structured, and what biases are introduced. - Inside views and ethics: A former Palantir employee, Juan, explains his departure and later criticisms after observing the Israeli invasion of Gaza; Palantir’s involvement with the Israeli Defense Forces is noted, though contract details are opaque. The claim is that Palantir’s AI may have been used for target selection. - Revenue and focus on government: In 2024 Palantir earned nearly $2.9 billion, with 55% from government sources, most of it American. Palantir’s CTO Sham Sankar is cited with a Defense Reformation rhetoric that aligns with the Defense Innovation Board’s push to fund emerging tech, suggesting a fusion of defense spending and Palantir’s growth. - Domination and market strategy: Palantir is depicted as striving to be the “US government’s central operating system,” with Doge (an internal effort) aimed at unifying data across agencies like the IRS and Health and Human Services, potentially giving one contractor broad access to Americans’ data and health records. - Corporate culture and risk: The company is described as comfortable being unpopular, with leaders like Peter Thiel investing heavily and having a role in politics; Karp emphasizes civil liberties in terms of lawful use of government data and its potential misapplication. - Ethical tension and viewpoint: The piece notes that Palantir’s reach could enable governance by algorithm and automated decision-making, potentially reshaping personal lives, battlefields, and governance. The founders’ ownership structure preserves control through class voting shares. - Final reflections: The speakers argue that criticizing the system is fraught because watching and fear can silence dissent, and warn against replacing a broken system with an even more broken one, urging vigilance over who wields powerful data and AI.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss the ongoing investigations into the Epstein-Israel connection. Speaker 1 explains that Robsat has been examining Epstein’s ties to the Israeli government, Israeli security services, and Israeli private firms connected to the security sector, which are heavily involved in tech surveillance. Epstein is described as a very critical node in this network. The recent email dump is noted as chaotic and not fully accessible, with about 3,000,000 documents released, roughly half of what the DOJ reportedly has. There is mention of another roughly 3,000,000 files that remain unseen, and that lawmakers like Ro Khanna and Thomas Massey have raised this issue. The currently released material may only be the tip of the iceberg, and fuller analysis awaits chronological organization to understand the conversations in context. Speaker 1 notes that prior reporting relied on very limited Epstein files and involuntary releases from hacked material—such as an intrusion into Ehud Barak’s inbox—which revealed Epstein’s extensive, far-reaching involvement with figures and institutions in Israel’s political and security establishment. Epstein’s role is described as a resource and a critical node used for connections, money, political leverage, and global influence, rather than simply being a Mossad agent. The forthcoming documents are expected to enable more stories about Israel’s global influence through Epstein, including in Africa, Central Asia, Europe, North America, and Russia. Speaker 0 asks about the significance of Epstein informing Ehud Barak, especially in light of Palantir’s actions, and why Barak would need this information if Palantir would proceed independently. Speaker 1 responds by noting that Ehud Barak was leaving public service and, like many former politicians, sought to leverage access gained in office to generate private wealth while pursuing ongoing political aims. Epstein was assisting Barak in developing him as a tech security mogul. Barak apparently did not know Palantir well at that time, illustrating Epstein’s role in shaping and linking these tech surveillance interests. Speaker 1 adds that Palantir was reportedly attempting to hire Israel’s UN ambassador, Ron Prosor, indicating a very intimate relationship between the Israeli political/security establishment and Palantir, which also has ties to the American intelligence community. Epstein’s interest in surveillance technology aligned with his broader access to intelligence networks and financial resources to influence the technological landscape. The transcript ends with Speaker 0 interjecting a promotional advertisement for gold and silver (which should be omitted from the summary per instructions).

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Total Information Awareness (TIA) was defunded by Congress not long after it launched because mainstream media and organizations like the ACLU said it would end privacy for Americans and was unconstitutional. It was described as something that would spy on all Americans and decide who would commit a crime before it happened, including terror attacks and bioterror, and even pandemics before they happen. The policies behind TIA resurfaced during the Trump administration during COVID, with Palantir as the contractor for those efforts. TIA originated related to MAINCORE. The claim is that they would use every telephone call, every text, every Google search, and every website visited, collecting all of that data and putting it into a database on an individual. After the invention, organizations pushed back, and the government said they wouldn’t pursue it anymore. Palantir then stepped in, arguing they could do it, even though Palantir did not exist yet at that time. It is claimed that Palantir was created by Peter Thiel as TIA faced public backlash, and that in the setup they used Richard Pearl to connect with Poindexter, who was running TIA, to privatize the program and have Palantir do what TIA had intended to do. TIA, although housed in DARPA, was intimately pushed and developed with CIA involvement, specifically by the CIA’s chief information officer at the time, Alan Wade, who is described as a business partner of Ghislain Maxwell’s sister Christine. A broader scope is highlighted to show the ominousness of these efforts, noting that Poindexter and a DARPA program manager were involved in LifeLog, a project seeking to build a database tracking a person’s entire existence. LifeLog aimed to collect an individual’s relationships and communications (phone calls, mail, email), plus media consumption, purchases, and more to build a digital record of everything a person says, sees, or does. LifeLog would then take unstructured data and organize it into discrete episodes or snapshots while mapping relationships, memories, events, and experiences. This context is tied to Peter Thiel’s current influence, with Thiel described as the person pushing these private-sector efforts and now being responsible for J. D. Vance’s funding and for connecting J. D. Vance with Donald Trump, including funding of Vance’s campaign. The discussion concludes with the claim that Palantir is really a CIA front.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Are we just becoming China? Is that the plan here, just mass surveillance on everybody? Because recently, I was just in China, and some of what I saw was pretty good. We're talking about the creation of a biometric surveillance state with predictive algorithms. A new report shines light on contracts with tech company Palantir which would create data profiles of Americans to surveil and harass them. 'Palantir is here to disrupt and make our the institutions we partner with the very best in the world and when it's necessary to scare enemies and on occasion kill them.' 'Except here, the enemy is literally the American people. I tweeted this out the other day saying that it should be very alarming that the same company that's tracking terrorists abroad is now tracking us at home. Starting to feel like maybe they think we're the enemy. What are your thoughts?'"

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The discussion centers on Palantir Technologies and a proposed March 2025 executive order that would require federal agencies to share and control data, aiming to centralize government data using Palantir’s Foundry platform. It is claimed that Palantir has already deployed Foundry in at least four agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services, and that the company has received over $113 million in federal contracts since Trump took office, with a recent $795 million Department of Defense contract. The speakers allege that the initiative could enable a comprehensive database on all Americans—“light years beyond Real ID, the Patriot Act, and Prism”—and that those who control it seek “complete power over you and everyone else.” They warn of mass surveillance and privacy violations, lack of oversight, and potential political abuse. Key concerns include the breadth of data that Palantir’s system could merge, such as bank accounts, medical records, driving records, student debt, disability status, political affiliation, credit card expenditures, online purchases, tax filings, and travel and phone records, creating “detailed profiles on every single American.” The speakers argue this centralization would enable unchecked monitoring with “zero oversight,” increasing data security risks and the potential for breaches, leaks, or mismanagement. They emphasize a history of opaqueness in Palantir’s operations and tie the company’s AI tools to predictive policing and military applications lacking public accountability. They cite Palantir’s CEO Alex Karp as having controversial views and describe the firm as aligned with a profit-driven push for technomilitarism. The talk links Palantir to broader power dynamics, including ties to Elon Musk’s and Peter Thiel’s spheres, and suggests a technocratic oligarchy could emerge that prioritizes corporate and political agendas over public interest. While acknowledging stated goals like fraud detection and national security, the speakers assert the lack of checks and balances, and fear that the surveillance infrastructure would be embedded to be expanded by future governments. The “kill chain” terminology is discussed both in military and cyber contexts, with Palantir’s Gotham platform described as designed to shorten the kill chain by fusing large datasets into actionable intelligence, enabling faster targeting decisions. They provide examples like the use of Palantir to improve the accuracy and speed of Ukraine’s artillery strikes and, publicly, the Israeli Defense Forces’ use for striking targets in Gaza. The segment also mentions Palantir’s use in predictive policing, including tools used by the Los Angeles Police Department, and argues that Palantir aims to track “everybody, not just immigrants.” The speakers conclude that this centralized system is “light years beyond Real ID, the Patriot Act, or Prism” and advocate resisting it and “thinking of ways we can break the links in the kill chain.”

Philion

The Epstein Files Just Got Exposed..
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Lately I’ve been following Tim Dylan’s obsession with the Epstein Files and his interview with Alex Jones. The host carries a blend of politics, humor, and conspiratorial curiosity, and Jones is framed as a legendary broadcaster discussing a troubling chapter of the past decade. The core claim is that Trump’s campaign to expose a cover‑up has collided with a deeper cover‑up. Axios reported, 15 days ago, that Epstein 'didn’t uh get murdered and he w he there wasn't human trafficking and there wasn't any blackmail and case closed.' I still don't think he was murdered. The conversation pivots on whether political actors and intelligence figures used Epstein for leverage, and whether grand jury transcripts and other files should be released. At one point, Jones erupts, 'How dare you desecrate the great FYON has been compromised.' The discussion then splits into two tracks: incompetence by Bondi and Cash Patel and a broader cover‑up. They argue there was a money‑laundering operation tied to Epstein and the intelligence world, not just a trafficking case. Epstein reportedly moved billions around the globe, with ties to Les Wexner and the Maxwell family; the claim extends to CIAs and MI6 circles. The Jane Does cited in older memos are questioned for authenticity, while the “grand jury transcripts” are treated as leverage. The speakers insist the Epstein file is being handled ambiguously to protect powerful allies, and that two things could be true at once: simple incompetence in holding cells and a larger cover‑up. They pivot to technology and power, focusing on Palanteer as an AI tool pitched to intelligence and defense circles. The guests warn Palanteer could ‘merge databases across agencies’ and become a security layer that tracks citizens, while insisting the ‘grid’ is already in place with Google, Microsoft, and Amazon. They describe Palanteer branding as esoteric and Lord of the Rings–tinged, and say it’s positioned to act as a broker for Trump while the broader reality is that Big Tech already runs the data ecosystem. They invoke Curtis Yarvin and JD Vance, linking their circle to the Palanteer push, and warn of a surveillance state that would erode privacy and empower a 1984‑style governance structure. The conversation culminates in geopolitics—Netanyahu, Gaza, Iran, and the US‑Israel nexus. They argue Netanyahu has been a long‑time power broker, with intelligence ties and a pipeline strategy imagined to route energy to Europe. They connect this to U.S. policy on Ukraine, gas fields off Leviathan, and the Levant basin, presenting a vision where energy and military contracts chase trillions. The talk links these stakes to the broader global order, two‑tier justice, and the fear that disclosure of Epstein’s case could threaten allies and destabilize the power structure. Both hosts press for full disclosure—Maxwell testifying, Aosta testifying, all related files released—seeing that release as essential to counter a creeping erosion of democratic norms and accountability.

Breaking Points

Tim Dillon SHREDS Influencers For Palantir Shilling
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Peter Thiel's company, Palantir, is becoming integral to U.S. politics, particularly with plans to deploy its technology in Los Angeles to address immigration issues. Palantir's contract aims to consolidate data from various agencies, raising concerns about privacy and data collection. Tim Dylan and Theo Vaughn discussed the implications of Palantir's data usage, emphasizing the potential for misuse. J.D. Vance defended the initiative, arguing that the government already possesses this data and aims to identify undocumented individuals filing taxes. Critics highlight the risks of automating government databases, recalling issues from the Patriot Act. The relationship between Thiel and Vance is noted as unique, with Thiel supporting Vance's political ambitions without direct demands.

Breaking Points

Trump Taps Palantir AI To SPY ON ALL AMERICANS
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Ken Clippenstein discusses concerns over Palantir's collaboration with the Trump administration to create a mass database of American citizens. Palantir, an AI-driven tech company, is integral to national security agencies, utilizing AI to analyze vast amounts of data efficiently. The Trump administration's ties to Palantir, including former employees and financial backers, highlight a shift towards AI-focused contracts, raising civil liberties concerns. The national security state, exemplified by ICE's surveillance practices, suggests that data collection will affect not just non-citizens but all Americans, necessitating a reevaluation of civil liberties in the age of AI.

Unlimited Hangout

Stopping the Surveillance State with Derrick Broze
Guests: Derrick Broze
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The discussion links the ongoing COVID-19 crisis to a broader expansion of the US surveillance state, highlighting biometrics, mass digitalization, and AI as accelerants. The guests outline how facial recognition and related technologies are being deployed by both public agencies and private contractors, expanding the reach of surveillance across everyday life. Clearview AI is described as a private company building a large facial‑recognition database shared with law enforcement. Its CEO cites a 26% increase in police use and a growing roster of clients, with about a quarter of US police departments already using the tech. The company faces lawsuits in Illinois under the Biometric Information Privacy Act, and the broader context includes NYT attention and debates about privacy, consent, and public awareness. Broze argues biometrics extend beyond faces to gait and other traits, and he notes real‑world concerns from a store in Mexico employing camera‑based temperature checks that could also store face prints. The conversation then ties this to Peter Thiel’s network, including Palantir, Oculus founder Palmer Luckey, and Moldbug/Curtis Yarvin, suggesting a pervasive influence on surveillance and security programs. Broze connects Palantir’s post‑Trump expansion with broader neocon and technocratic circles, arguing these networks shape defense, intelligence, and domestic security policies. On border security, the speakers describe Trump’s push for a biometric, “smart” wall comprising facial-recognition cameras, license-plate readers, drones, and even DNA collection. They discuss expanded border‑patrol powers to seize devices and inspect them, the concept of a constitution‑free zone extending inland (roughly 100 miles), and the involvement of foreign contractors like Elbit Systems. Biden’s continuity is anticipated, with biometric expansion continuing. The dialogue shifts to social media data, biometric scraping, and predictive analytics, noting MITRE’s capability to extract fingerprints from images and the growth of Clearview‑style databases. They reference social-credit‑style effects already appearing, including a 32% figure from a Kaspersky report about social media affecting loans or jobs. Broze’s book How to Opt Out of the Technocratic State anchors the Solutions segment, drawing on Konkin’s Agorism and counter-economics. He describes “exit and build” and “hold down the fort” as paths to resilience, plus a warning that apathy is death. The Greater Reset and a forthcoming 14‑part documentary, The Pyramid of Power, are cited as efforts to surface practical solutions—growing food, alternative currencies, digital defensibility, and local organizing via freedom cells. The hosts emphasize tangible steps in a world of pervasive surveillance and expanding biotech infrastructure, urging active, solution‑oriented resistance.
View Full Interactive Feed