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Derek Leaberry's avatar

Our host announces that Trump's second term "is not going well." Since January 2025, there are at least twenty items on the Trump agenda that I disagree with like his intervention into Canadian politics to his fascination with Greenland and the unwise war in Iran. Yet the border is closed, 400,000 federal bureaucrats have been axed, fraud cases like the Somalis pulled off in Minnesota are being exposed, illegal aliens are being rounded up, graft in the federal government have been dealt with and the 2017 Trump tax cuts have been retained. Trump has some accomplishments and even the situation in Iran has stabilized and the 50,000 point Dow is in reach.

I was in my early twenties in the early stages of the Reagan Administration. A lot of Republicans and Democrats often said that the Reagan presidency "wasn't going well." But that's normal in politics. Reagan's presidency ended up being pretty successful.

Frank Bruno's avatar

You’re getting at something more unsettling than “Hitler 2.0.”

Hitler had to win crowds. Stalin had to crush them. Both depended on human limits—time, fear, imperfect control. AI doesn’t.

When Bill Maher is raising red flags, and builders like Dario Amodei admit they don’t fully understand what they’ve made, that’s not normal progress. That’s a warning from inside the machine room.

And look at where we already are. Palantir sits quietly inside defense, intelligence, and government systems—no drama, just dependency.

As Paul Kingsnorth keeps warning, the real danger isn’t conquest. It’s consent.

Because the system won’t need to seize power. We’ll hand it over—piece by piece—because it works: faster courts, smarter war planning, frictionless lives

Relief first. Then dependence, then no alternative.

That’s not tyranny as we’ve known it. It’s something colder: a world where control is invisible, and opting out feels irrational.

Weimar turned to a man who spoke to fear. We may turn to a system that removes the need to feel anything at all.

And listen to how some in Silicon Valley talk. The ambition isn’t modest. It’s to build something like a mind above all minds—something that knows, predicts, and directs.

They joke about “creating God.” Then add, almost under their breath: “not yet.”That’s not reassurance,That’s a timeline.

No beast rising in a moment—just a system no one can live outside of.

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