Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Palantir’s Technological Republic Is a blueprint for digital tyranny


Palantir’s Technological Republic Is a blueprint for digital tyranny


Walking through the glass-and-steel corridors of the modern tech-security apparatus reveals that the telescreen is a tireless processor of our very souls.

Palantir Technologies’ vision of a “Technological Republic” arrives as a manual for the refinement of the boot, the one destined to remain on the human face, provided the boot remains equipped with the latest predictive sensors. In the spirit of a clear-eyed look at the clock striking thirteen, we must dissect the alliance between corporate algorithmic power and the Zionist state. This is a new Newspeak, where “defense” is a moral debt and “deterrence” is the silent humming of an algorithm deciding who shall disappear.

The foundation of this digital fortress is built upon the claim of a “moral debt” that the engineering elite owes to the State. In George Orwell’s world of 1984, this represents the ultimate synthesis: the Party and the Corporation becoming indistinguishable. This “affirmative obligation” to participate in national defense is literalized in Palantir’s “strategic partnership” with the Israeli Ministry of Defense. Finalized in early 2024 during a high-stakes visit by co-founders Peter Thiel and Alex Karp to Tel Aviv, this pact seeks to harness advanced data mining for “war-related missions.” The software engineers of Palo Alto have been drafted as the new Inner Party: high priests of a digital armory. Their corporate identity is so entwined with the Zionist project that Palantir held its first board meeting of 2024 in Israel, signaling that their “Technological Republic” transcends borders when it comes to the enforcement of state power.

We are told that the age of “soaring rhetoric” and atomic deterrence is fading, replaced by a “hard power” built entirely on software. Here is the transition from the clumsy violence of the truncheon to the invisible violence of the code. 

Reports from Gaza suggest that Palantir provides the underlying scaffolding for a system where human intuition is replaced by mathematical certainty. By synthesizing massive datasets – surveillance footage, intercepted communications, and biometric records – the software assists in the production of targeting databases that function as automated “kill lists.”

This creates a dangerous accountability gap, a form of “algorithmic plausible deniability.” When an AI-informed strike levels an apartment complex, the blame is diffused into a “black box.”The developer claims the software only “suggests,” the data scientist claims the inputs were “objective,” and the military commander claims the machine’s logic was “optimal.” 

Alex Karp recently boasted to shareholders, “We are in the business of building things that scare our enemies and, on occasion, kill them,” a chilling affirmation of the firm’s central role in the escalating hostilities against Iran. This admission exposes a brutal reality where algorithmic precision is celebrated as a technical triumph while it systematically masks the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding under the weight of AI-driven targeting.

Amnesty International has documented how this “made-by-Palantir” technology poses a surveillance threat to protestors. It is the realization that a society is only “free” so long as its actions are “vital” to the State’s interests. The manifesto of the Technological Republic suggests that the “decadence” of the ruling class will be forgiven so long as they deliver security. This is the ancient bargain of the totalitarian: we will feed you and keep you safe from the current “Enemy,” provided you hand over the keys to your private life and the right to remain unobserved.

The architects of this system boast of an “extraordinarily long peace” made possible by American power and its allies. This is the ultimate slogan: War is Peace. To the billions living under the shadow of proxy wars and AI-driven policing, this “peace” looks remarkably like a spreadsheet of managed casualties. It is a peace of the graveyard, maintained by a “deterrence” built on software that purports to know a subject’s intent before they have even conceived a thought.

Palantir’s corporate philosophy, is a mandatory absorption into a singular, totalizing System: a digital panopticon where the Marine’s rifle and the citizen’s intimate data are managed by the same algorithmic entity. This system establishes a stark, neo-feudal class divide; it laments the “ruthless exposure” of the private lives of the elite, seeking to resurrect a protected “priesthood” of public servants who operate within a sanctuary of state-sanctioned forgiveness and anonymity.

Meanwhile, the rest of mankind is subjected to the absolute “ruthless exposure” of their own data, stripped of the right to be unquantifiable. Under this regime, transparency is a weapon used downward to discipline the proles, while opacity is a shield used upward to protect the architects of the machine.

Palantir represents a new era of the military-industrial complex, one where data is the primary ammunition and ideology is the primary marketing tool. It seeks to upgrade the Republic into a fortress where the walls are made of code and the “long peace” is maintained by the stoic demeanor of the machine. 

...the core question of our age remains: Should the power to decide who is a “terrorist,” who is “regressive,” and who is a “target” to be outsourced to a private company with a political agenda? In the “Technological Republic,” the most rebellious act one can commit is to remain unquantifiable, to exist outside the data-mining net, and to insist that a human life is more than a data point in a war-related mission.




Vatican Investigation Underway to Determine Whether or not Benedict XVI Truly Resigned


Vatican Investigation Underway to Determine Whether or not Benedict XVI Truly Resigned


It has surfaced in the news that a Vatican investigation is presently underway to officially determine the validity of Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation in 2013. This has been confirmed by the Vatican’s Office of the Promoter of Justice, which is responsible for conducting criminal investigations for the tribunal of the Vatican City State. 

Professor Allesandro Diddi who heads the office, is spearheading this move in the wake of widespread allegations that Benedict XVI never renounced his papal office or munus. And of course, if he didn’t renounce his office it would mean that Francis was never a pope.


Benedict indeed stepped down from the Chair of Peter but there is no logical reason to think that he was no longer a pope. His stepping down can be compared to one who gives up driving his car while continuing to possess a valid driver license. Benedict gave up the active ministry of driving the Barque of Peter while continuing to retain his papal license (office).

In a 2016 book-length interview with Pope Benedict’s biographer Peter Seewald, Benedict told the journalist: "The situation of Celestine V was extremely peculiar and could in no way be invoked as my precedent."

Pope Celestine V resigned, but in doing so he completely abdicated the Petrine office. That is, he laid off his munus and went back to being the simple monk Pietro da Morrone, and not Pope Emeritus. On the contrary, Benedict said he “in no way” related to what Celestine did, that full abdication from the papacy is what he did not do.

What Benedict did do was to simply step down from the active exercise of the papacy while retaining his office. Consider his own words delivered on the eve of his resignation.

    “Anyone who accepts the Petrine ministry no longer has any privacy. He belongs always and completely to everyone, to the whole Church... The ‘always’ is also a ‘forever’--there can no longer be a return to the private sphere. My decision to resign the active exercise of the ministry does not revoke this.” (Pope Benedict XVI, General Audience, February 27, 2013)

According to the text, Benedict’s office was never revoked. Church law states that a pope must fully give up his office in order for his resignation to be valid. (Canon 332) Benedict makes it clear that he chose to retain his office "forever," which is why he continued to wear the papal garb and to go by the name Benedict XVI.

This matches the explanation offered by Benedict’s private secretary Archbishop Georg Gänswein, who also served as Prefect of the Pontifical Household until February 2023.

    "He left the Papal Throne,” Gänswein said, “and yet, with the step he took on 11 February 2013, he has not abandoned this ministry," adding that the renunciation of his office would have been "quite impossible after his irrevocable acceptance of the office in April 2005."
Gänswein here says that Benedict was still the pope. “This is the reason why the correct appellation for him is ‘Your Holiness,’” he said.

What it boils down to is that the Vatican deep state forced Benedict to step down because they detested his teachings and his strong support of the Traditional Latin Mass. According to Seewald, the pressures they placed on him were so great that it was ruining his health.

We know from the late Cardinal Danneels of Brussels that he was part of a radical "mafia" reformist group opposed to Benedict XVI. Danneels, known for his support of abortion, LGBTQ, and gay-marriage, said in a taped interview in September 2015 that he and several cardinals were part of this "mafia" clique that was calling for drastic changes in the Church, to make it "much more modern," and that the plan was to oust Benedict and have Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio head it.









Palantir manifesto described as ‘ramblings of a supervillain’ amid UK contract fears


Palantir manifesto described as ‘ramblings of a supervillain’ amid UK contract fears


The US spy tech company Palantir published a manifesto extolling the benefits of American power and implying some cultures are inferior to others – in what MPs have called “a parody of a RoboCop film” and “the ramblings of a supervillain”.

“Some cultures have produced vital advances; others remain dysfunctional and regressive,” wrote Palantir in a 22-point post on X over the weekend, which also called for an end to the “postwar neutering” of Germany and Japan.

The post exhorted the US to reinstate a military draft, saying that “free and democratic societies” need “hard power” in order to prevail.

It also predicted a future dominated by autonomous weapons: “The question is not whether A.I. weapons will be built; it is who will build them and for what purpose. Our adversaries will not pause to indulge in theatrical debates about the merits of developing technologies with critical military and national security applications. They will proceed.”

The pronouncement is the most recent of a number of high-profile statements from Palantir and its chief executive, Alex Karp, which appear to indicate that Karp views himself as not simply the head of a software company, but a pundit with important insights into the future of civilisation.

It led to criticism from several MPs, who said that it raised yet more questions about the UK’s portfolio of contracts with the company. Palantir has built up more than £500m in contracts in Britain, including a £330m contract with the NHS, as well as deals with the police and Ministry of Defence. These deals have come in for increasing criticism.

“Palantir’s manifesto, which embraces AI state surveillance of citizens along with national service in the USA, is either a parody of a RoboCop film, or a disturbing narcissistic rant from an arrogant organisation,” said Martin Wrigley, a Liberal Democrat MP who is a member of the commons science and technology select committee.

“Either way it shows that the company’s ethos is entirely unsuited to working on UK government projects involving citizens’ most sensitive private data.”

It is unclear what inspired Palantir to publish the manifesto, which appears to reprise Karp’s book, The Technological Republic, published last yearThat book laments a widespread “complacency” among “engineers and founders” who build photo-sharing apps as opposed to collaborating with governments to secure “the West’s dominant place in the geopolitical order”.

In an interview with CNBC in early March, Karp suggested that AI would “disrupt” the power of “highly educated, often female voters who vote mostly Democrat”,and instead empower “vocationally trained, working-class, often male, working-class voters”.

Rachael Maskell, a Labour MP, former NHS worker and critic of Palantir’s £330m contract to help run NHS England’s federated data platform, told the Guardian: “To post this is quite disturbing and in trying to ascertain Palantir’s commercial pitch from this, they are clearly seeking to place themselves at the heart of the defence revolution in the technological age. They are far more than a tech solutions company if they are trying to direct policy, politics and investment choices.”

“It is time that the government seriously understands the culture and ideology of Palantir, and how it will exit from its contracts at the earliest opportunity.”

Last month, the Guardian reported that Palantir was to be given access to highly sensitive UK financial regulation data, after the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) awarded the company a contract to investigate its internal intelligence data. MPs urged the government to stop this deal.

In a debate last week, MPs also demanded that the government scrap its NHS contract.

“There’s no shortage of bizarre and disturbing quotes from Palantir’s leadership,” said Tim Squirrell, the head of strategy at the campaign group Foxglove.








Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Comfort and Cowardice | Britain’s Middle Classes are Sleepwalking to Ruin


Britain’s middle class is sleepwalking the nation into ruin – because it’s more comfortable to say nothing




There is a particular species of Englishman and Englishwoman, spotted in the market towns of the Home Counties, the stucco-fronted terraces of Notting Hill and the smarter quarters of provincial cities. He drives an Audi estate; she wears yoga leggings and clutches a reusable water bottle emblazoned with self-improvement slogans. Their children attend schools where the greatest concern is why Inigo lost the lead in Oliver! to Bertie. Weekends revolve around sourdough, Pilates, and the odd ski trip to Val d’Isère. They are comfortable. And comfort, the middle classes have discovered, is more potent a narcotic than any opium once imported from the East.

Call me a snob, but I belong to this class – one that has attained just enough comfort to fear losing it and therefore refuses to think beyond the next bonus or Ofsted report. The very rich can afford ideology; their portfolios are diversified; their walls are gated. The aristocracy still plants oaks in their Capability Brown parks that will take centuries to mature. The working class, for whom comfort is a rumour, has nothing to lose and therefore everything to gain from taking the long view. Only the bourgeois mass is trapped in the present tense. They’re not ideological; they’re terrified.

Ten years ago, the Brexit referendum laid it bare for us. The “AB” social grades – professionals, managers and the university-educated – voted Remain by a clear margin. The “C2Des” (skilled and unskilled workers) voted Leave. The upper echelons were more evenly split, many quietly Eurosceptic. It was the middle that clung to the status quo, terrified that upheaval might cause house prices to wobble or spoil the essential supply of Prosecco. Comfort made cowards of them then, and is doing so again now.


A decade on, we see this pattern repeating itself. Polling ahead of the May local elections shows the middle drifting towards the Liberal Democrats and Greens – parties offering the politics of comfortable virtue-signalling: net zero, diversity workshops and wind turbines that will ruin someone else’s view. Restore Britain draws the working class and pockets of the old orders who still remember what a nation state is for. The middle, once again, chooses the safe, the soft and the approved.


They refuse to notice that the country is changing faster than their children’s GCSE syllabus. They hide away from the reality of the grooming-gang [rape gang] scandals in Rotherham, Rochdale and Telford, where authorities, too, averted their eyes for fear of “racism.” They pretend not to see the parallel societies in Birmingham, Bradford and Tower Hamlets, where the call to prayer drowns out the ancient toll of the church bells, and certain streets become no-go zones for women in Western dress. They call mass immigration “enriching” whilst quietly relocating when their local primary school shifts from 80% white British to 20% in a single decade.

This is not ignorance; it is wilful blindness born of fear. To speak plainly about demographic changes – native birth rates below replacement, higher Muslim fertility rates, polls showing significant minorities of British Muslims favouring sharia, apostasy laws and views on homosexuality that would have horrified their grandparents – risks the one thing they dread the most: social disapproval. Better another holiday, another enrichment class and the hope that the problem solves itself. It will not.










Iran’s Revolutionary Guard sidelines president as military grip expands


Iran’s Revolutionary Guard sidelines president as military grip expands


Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the elite branch of the Iranian armed forces, has blocked President Masoud Pezeshkian’s presidential appointments and erected what sources described as a security cordon around Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, a report published Tuesday by Iran International said.

The IRGC effectively has assumed control over key state functions, the report claimed.

"It was always a matter of when, not if, the IRGC was going to step forward even more than it has in the last three decades," Behnam Ben Taleblu, senior director of the Iran program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told Fox News Digital.

Pezeshkian has reached a "complete political deadlock" as tensions between his administration and the military leadership deepen, according to the report.

The reported shift could have major consequences far beyond Iran. 

Analysts say a more powerful IRGC likely would mean a more confrontational Iran, less willing to compromise in talks with Washington and more inclined to continue military escalation across the region. With U.S.-Iran negotiations already faltering and uncertainty growing over whether Tehran will even send negotiators to the next round of talks, the rise of the Revolutionary Guard raises fresh doubts about who actually is making decisions in Iran and whether any civilian official can still speak for the regime.

"But it’s a mistake to assume this is some sort of coup," Ben Taleblu said. "This has been the process in Iran for years now, as the regime has chosen conflict over cooperation and emboldened its security forces at every juncture."

Pezeshkian’s recent effort to appoint a new intelligence minister collapsed after direct pressure from IRGC commander Ahmad Vahidi, sources told Iran International, arguing that all proposed candidates, including former Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan, were rejected.

Vahidi reportedly insisted that under wartime conditions, all critical and sensitive positions must be chosen and managed directly by the Revolutionary Guard until further notice.

"By any standard, Vahidi is considered a radical even within the regime’s hardline elite, and his rise is a warning that Tehran’s war machine now calls the shots," Lisa Daftari, foreign policy analyst and journalist, told Fox News Digital.

Under Iran’s system, the president traditionally nominates an intelligence minister only after securing approval from the supreme leader. But with the condition and whereabouts of Mojtaba Khamenei unclear in recent weeks, the IRGC appears to be increasingly acting without civilian oversight.