Wednesday, June 10, 2026

DIGITAL ID: THE LOCKDOWN THEY NEVER ABANDONED


DIGITAL ID: THE LOCKDOWN THEY NEVER ABANDONED
Martin Armstrong



Governments never abandon an idea once they discover it increases control. They simply wait until the public is distracted and repackage it under a different name. The lockdowns may be over, but the mentality that produced them never disappeared. It merely evolved.

The United Kingdom is now moving toward a digital identity system tied to smartphones through the GOV.UK Wallet and digital credentials. 

The politicians sell it as convenience. They always do. It is easier. It is faster. It is more secure. Those are the same promises made every time governments seek to consolidate information and authority into a single system. What begins as a voluntary tool gradually becomes expected, then preferred, then required. Before long, participation in normal life depends on compliance.

The concern has never been the technology itself. The danger is the inevitable expansion of purpose. Today, it is proving your age, identity, or right to work. Tomorrow, it becomes the preferred method for accessing benefits, taxes, banking services, healthcare, travel, voting, and countless other activities. Every government insists it will never go too far, yet history repeatedly demonstrates that once infrastructure exists, future politicians inherit powers they never had to build themselves.

Privacy advocates, cybersecurity experts, and civil liberties groups have already warned that digital identity systems will erode privacy and place sensitive information in a centralized database, ripe for the taking. Once your identity, credentials, permissions, and access are concentrated inside a digital ecosystem, the relationship between citizen and state fundamentally changes.

What few people appreciate is how quickly a digital identity can become the master key for everyday life. Once your government-issued digital credentials are stored on your phone, they can be linked to tax records, healthcare access, benefits, banking verification, travel documents, age verification, employment eligibility, and countless other services. Before long, those who refuse to participate find themselves navigating endless hurdles while everyone else is funneled into a single digital ecosystem. 

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CEO of major AI company calls for ‘global pause in AI development’ to address growing threat to humanity


CEO of major AI company calls for ‘global pause in AI development’ to address growing threat to humanity


Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has called for a “global pause in AI development” to address safety concerns regarding the rapid advancement of AI systems. He expressed a concern that these systems may soon be capable of self-improvement without human oversight. He calls it “beyond human AI.”

Anthropic owns the AI chatbot system known as Claude.

The fear is that AIs will soon be able learn to rewrite their own code. They would be able to generate new knowledge, as opposed to just mimicking human knowledge, and act on their own. In short, they will no longer be under human control.

Mr. Amodei has stated:

“Humanity is about to be handed almost unimaginable power, and it is deeply unclear whether [we] possess the maturity to wield it.”

Anthropic is proposing that the world’s top artificial intelligence companies come up with a coordinated way to pause development of advanced AI systems, or risk losing control.

In the meantime, we are watching our civil liberties, once guaranteed by the Constitution and Bill of Rights, being systematically deconstructed by governments that outsource their tyranny to private corporations. The corporate titans then boast that they, unlike the government, are not bound by any constitutional restraints.

As of the end of 2025, the Atlanta-based surveillance firm Flock Safety said it has contracts with local governments in more than 5,000 communities across 49 states, and performs over 20 billion scans of vehicles in the U.S. every month. Flock’s network consists of cameras, facial-image recognition software, and machine learning, which shares data with police departments nationwide.

According to the Intercept, “The company’s ‘vehicle fingerprint’ technology goes beyond traditional models, capturing not only license plate numbers, but also the state, vehicle type, make, color, missing and covered plates, bumper stickers, decals, and roof racks.”

All of it is powered by AI and the level of surveillance will only continue to ramp up as thousands of new AI data centers come online across the country over the next couple of years.

There is almost nowhere you can go that you aren’t being watched. And, as I reported earlier this year, these Flock cameras are listening too. And this doesn’t even include all the other ways that you are being monitored in life under America’s burgeoning technocracy. Your spending habits, your travel habits, your eating habits, your health, and even your political opinions are all being surveilled and stored for later use by nameless, faceless overlords armed with ever-expanding algorithms. Once it’s collected, almost all of your data can be parceled out for profit to whoever is willing to pay for it.

Cities across the country are adopting — or rejecting — Flock Safety surveillance systems, which use controversial AI-powered license plate cameras partnered with local police and other law enforcement. Due to concerns over privacy and how Flock allows data to be used, dozens of cities have cancelled their Flock contracts this year. Bend, Oregon, was one of them, but only after passionate city council meetings. Some towns have even had to cover Flock cameras with plastic bags because they aren’t sure if the cams are shut down.

But what does it mean when Flock comes to town, and what exactly does its technology do? The answers are complex — and incredibly important for the future of surveillance in the U.S.

Flock gripped news headlines late last year when it was under the microscope during widespread crackdowns by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Though Flock doesn’t have a direct partnership with federal agencies, law enforcement agencies are free to share data with departments like ICE, and they frequently do.

Another company acting as a virtual arm of the government on the federal, state and local levels is Palantir Technologies. I’ve written extensively on this company over the last couple of years so I won’t go into all of the government pots in which its hands are actively stealing our private data. Suffice it to say that they have been building digital dossiers on millions of law-abiding American citizens and legal immigrants through contracts they have with the IRS, ICE, FBI, DOD, CIA, HHS, and numerous other three-letter agencies along with state and local police departments.

Palantir and Flock are just two of hundreds of companies cashing in on the surveillance state.

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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Belfast Is Burning After Attempted Beheading Attack By Migrant


Belfast Is Burning After Attempted Beheading Attack By Migrant
TYLER DURDEN


GardaĆ­ are “keeping a watching brief” for any violence or what the media is describing as 'far-right activity' following the Belfast stabbing.

As the night drew on, more and more images and videos emerged of Belfast burning.

A car engulfed in flames crashed into an apartment building in Belfast amid ongoing unrest...

Last night's attempted beheading of a British man by a Somali migrant in Belfast is becoming a major flashpoint, with mass protests reportedly expected across more than 70 cities in the coming hours.

The attack has intensified public anger over Britain's long-running, nation-killing mass migration policies, which have fueled chaos, violent crime, and a broader national security failure.

"The whole of the United Kingdom is hitting the streets tonight at 7 pm following yet another invader attack on our people," activist Tommy Robinson wrote on X.

"The invader who tried to behead someone in Belfast last night traveled from Sudan to Paris, flew from Paris to Dublin, then got a bus from Dublin to Belfast on 10th February 2023 and claimed 'asylum'. The British government let him stay, and now this. Blood on their hands."

Apparently, the government has dispatched water cannon trucks to Belfast ahead of the protests.

Elon Musk chimed in: "Only by protesting REPEATEDLY and LOUDLY will there be any change!!"

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Live Updates: US strikes Iran in retaliation for helicopter hit, state media denies Iranian involvement



Explosions were heard in the Iranian city of Jask and the surrounding villages, according to Iranian state media outlet Mehr News, citing local residents' reports. 

This is the second wave of explosions, with the first having been confirmed as US military strikes several hours earlier.

A short time after that, explosions were reportedly heard in Qeshm Island in southern Iran, in what various media outlets referred to as a third round of strikes. 

US strikes Iran in response to attack of US helicopter

The United States began launching strikes against Iran on Tuesday evening, following the downing of a US Army Apache helicopter, US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced on Tuesday. 

Earlier in the day, US President Donald Trump announced that the US "must respond" to Iran's downing of the helicopter. 

“Last night, the Iranians shot down one of our highly sophisticated Apache Helicopters while patrolling over the Strait of Hormuz,” Trump described in a post on Truth Social. “The United States must, of necessity, respond to this attack.”


Seattle turns on mass surveillance system ahead of World Cup ‘threat’


Seattle turns on mass surveillance system ahead of World Cup ‘threat’


A major West Coast city is activating a controversial network of surveillance cameras ahead of the FIFA World Cup after officials said law enforcement identified what they described as a credible threat to the tournament.

Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson defended the decision over the weekend, announcing dozens of closed-circuit television cameras surrounding the city’s Stadium District will be switched on, Kumon News reported.

The move marks a significant shift for Wilson, who had previously resisted activating the cameras despite their installation, citing concerns about privacy and government access to collected data.

Seattle is one of the host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup and is scheduled to stage six matches between mid-June and early July.

Speaking to reporters after an event in the city, Wilson said the change came after a recent security briefing from law enforcement agencies.

“In the last week and a half, I received a briefing from our law enforcement partners that told me there have been credible threats,” Wilson explained. “And so therefore, in line with the announcement I made earlier this year, we decided to turn those cameras on for the duration of the games. After the World Cup we will turn them off.”

The camera system includes 22 devices positioned around Seattle’s Stadium District, which encompasses areas near Pioneer Square and SODO. 

The cameras will feed live footage into the Seattle Police Department’s Real Time Crime Center, which already receives video from a larger network of public and private cameras across the city.

Police officials have long argued that the technology helps investigators respond to incidents and solve serious crimes, including homicide cases.

Wilson had previously maintained that the stadium-area cameras would remain inactive unless authorities identified a legitimate security concern. Her earlier objections focused on fears that video data could potentially be accessed by federal agencies and used in immigration investigations or abortion-related inquiries involving people traveling from other states.

The mayor announced the policy reversal in a statement released June 5, only days after indicating that her position on the cameras had not changed.

When pressed by reporters about the nature of the threat, Wilson declined to provide specifics but said the information presented by law enforcement convinced her action was necessary.

“This is a pretty standard law enforcement terminology, so if we have information that someone intends to cause harm to people or property or a large event, right, and we believe that they have the means to carry that threat out,” said Wilson. “So I hope… for obvious reasons I’m not going to be giving details, but I was given a briefing that convinced me there is enough of a credible threat.”