
Have you ever started to dig a hole in the yard and hit a rock, then started to dig the rock out, thinking it was just a little thing in the way, only to discover a gigantic boulder? This post is like that, and I’m still digging. But I wanted to share what I have so far. If you want to keep digging, here is a link to help you out.
It started, as is so often the case, with a news article that seemed reasonably straight-forward in the Washington Post titled: “In Trump’s Washington, Palantir is winning big.” I figured it would be just another case of nepotism, or corruption, or influence peddling, or Jewish influence and insider-money grubbing. You know, the usual.
It turns out it is all of that, and much worse.

or (from left): Homosexual, Jew/half Negro, Jew, Jew
Palantir is the poster-child for the new breed of Military Industrial Complex behemoths, the Militarized Information Complex. Founded in 2003 by homosexual Peter Thiel, Jews Stephen Cohen and Joe Lonsdale, and half-Jew half-negro CEO Alex Karp, it’s initial funding came from Thiel- and the CIA. Which makes a sick sort of sense: The CIA charter forbids their spying on Americans on American soil (and we all believe that never happens). So, they funded a private company to do it for them.
Palantir’s mission was data aggregation and analysis, working to coordinate into a coherent whole information for many different or “siloed” sources. In the beginning it utilized early AI in conjunction with human analysts in what is referred to as “intelligence augmentation.” By 2013 Palantir’s clients included at least 12 groups in the U.S. government- you may have heard of some of them: the CIA, the DHS, the NSA, the FBI, the CDC, the Marine Corps, the Air Force, and the Special Operations Command.

Thanks to various government contracts Palantir is now the top stock on the S&P 500.
This is all well-and-good, you might say. Just another company getting rich of the government teat. Nothing to see here, move along. And at first, that’s what I thought too.
But something didn’t smell right. The more I learned, the more trouble I became. It’s a matter of seeing the forest for the trees. Any one individual fact about Palantir is not too disturbing (generally). But when you add them together, a different picture emerges.
Let’s look at some of those facts.

We’ll start where I started: with the tRump administration. In May, the Pentagon allocated $795 million more to the military’s artificial intelligence software program, the Palantir-built Maven Smart System, to expand its deployment to all U.S. Forces around the world. They followed this up last week with another contract, for $10 Billion. At the same time, at the State Department, a Palantir-designed AI system is now helping to write some diplomatic cables in a new pilot program. The DHS has awarded Palantir a $30 million dollar contract to track immigration enforcement, and the IRS has “tapped Palantir to expand an internal project to modernize the agency’s data.”
For its part, Palantir has reciprocated by boosting its connections to the Trump administration: This year it hired Ballard Partners and Miller Strategies to help with lobbying and marketing. In what must surely be a coincidence (hopefully the sarcasm comes through here), Trump’s Chief of Staff, Susie Wiles, ran Ballard Partners for nearly a decade. Likewise, Pam Bondi, our current Attorney General, was a partner at Ballard earning over $1 million a year.

For Jewish flavor, we have the aforementioned Miller Strategies, run by Republican Jeff Miller, who also sits on the boards of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Republican Jewish Coalition. Remember, the CEO of Palantir, and most of their board as well see in a moment, is Jewish too. Gotta keep it in the family.
The take away from this is simple: if you work in the US Government using electronic information, at some point, you will be using Palantir’s software.
Why is that a problem? Simple: no one is allowed to see under the hood. It’s all proprietary and managed by Palantir employees.
It is important to understand what Palantir actually does, and that’s not easy. Bundled in techno-jargon and industry double-speak, descriptions of Palantir products and services are more opaque than a CIA employee roster (and that’s not a coincidence). Their slogan probably is the best description of what they do and where they are headed: “AI-Powered Automation For Every Decision”. Make note of the “Decision” part of that. We’ll be circling back.
Essentially, Palantir has four products, all variations on a theme. The goal is to solve problems by collecting data from all available sources, then using AI to analyze that data and recommend a course of action. What sort of “problems” are we talking about? Little ones like target acquisition in Ukraine, illegal immigrant identification for ICE raids, or threat assessment and target recommendations in Iran.

For example, Since 2015, the IAEA has used Palantir’s Mosaic platform, an AI-based information gathering tool designed to predict intent (one IAEA official joked it was a “Minority Report for uranium”) to monitor Iran’s nuclear program. Information from Mosaic surveillance was passed to Israel, who then bombed Iran.
However, post action assessment has raised concerns that at least some, and perhaps most, of the information and recommendations provided by the program were erroneous, and displayed an example of “data-driven decisioning versus real-world information.” Since June, the IAEA has retracted their earlier statements and now says there was “no proof of a systematic weapons program.” Shocker: AI isn’t always right.
What sort of review or consequences will Palantir face for mistakes made by its program? None at all. Opaque by design, Mosaic’s algorithms are proprietary and non-auditable.
This is why Israel, while using Palantir for much of it’s logistical coordination and troop management, still uses its own proprietary AI-software for targeting. (Which I suppose partly explains why Israel keeps bombing civilians. That is, assuming they are not asking the AI to locate and target civilians).

“[Palantir] is understood to be a partner in aspects of logistics and manpower management in the Israeli military, but it does not work with military intelligence. After examining its system, the IDF’s 8200 signals intelligence unit and the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) decided not to hire its services.
In order to work with Palantir, security organizations have to accept its unusual service model: besides software, Palantir provides analysts, AI experts who assist in deriving insights from the system. The fact that armies cannot work with the system by themselves creates several dilemmas in Israel…the organization becomes dependent on the analysts.” (source)
This dependence on Palantir employees to provide the analysis is problematic for some like Israel, but not our government. We’re perfectly willing to hand the trigger over to nappy-haired Jew Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir. They have become a privatized intelligence arm for the U.S. government, consolidating vast amounts of personal data without oversight. Leaked documents show Palantir’s role in mass surveillance, from tracking migrants for ICE in the US, in real time, to mining health data for the NHS in Britain. Again, with no oversight.
What began as a niche data mining tool for counter-terrorism has since metastasized into a multi-billion-dollar empire, embedded in everything from pandemic tracking to predictive policing. The company’s flagship product, Gotham, was initially marketed as a way to “connect the dots” between terrorists—but internal documents show it’s now used by local police in the United States to catalog everything from mugshots to social connections. Palantir’s AI programs are quickly becoming the single-source of information and recommendations for every U.S. intelligence agency.
But wait, it gets worse.
The real problem, and danger, is Palantir’s focus: they are trying to improve intelligence gathering and distill it into actionable intelligence in a matter of minutes by having AI run the “target coordination cycle”, which consists of four steps: find, track, target, and prosecute. In the past, in a conflict like Ukraine or Afghanistan for example, that process could take six hours. With Palantir running the show, now it takes two or three minutes. For now, it is still necessary for a human to pull the trigger. But how long before some bean-counter makes the case that another whole minute could be shaved from the process if we simply let the AI run the “prosecute” phase of the target coordination cycle as well?
Who are the people leading us down this Skynet primrose path? Zionists, through and through. Anyone who gets in their way is just collateral damage: During a recent call with investors, the Jewish billionaire and Palantir CEO Karp let it slip that he doesn’t mind a little bloodshed, just so long as the money keeps pouring in. “Palantir is here to disrupt and make the institutions we partner with the very best in the world and, when it’s necessary, to scare enemies and on occasion kill them.” This was said with a smile on his face as he danced in his seat. To be fair, some of the other people around the table looked slightly uncomfortable. Don’t you hate it when people say the quiet part out loud?
As of December 2024, the board of directors of Palantir includes:
- (Jew) Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir, ½ African-American, and member of the Bilderberg Group steering committee (source)
- (Jew) Alexandra Schiff, former reporter of The Wall Street Journal
- (Jew) Stephen Cohen, co-founder and president of Palantir
- (Jew) Lauren Friedman Stat, former Chief Administration Officer at Friendly Force, a satellite communications company
- Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, Palantir and Founders Fund

Their chief technology officer is Shyam Sankar, a Hindu who is so pro-Israel that at a recent meeting (in Israel) he proclaimed himself as “the biggest Zionist at Palantir, including [Alex Karp],” he then put on a yarmulke — he calls it his Shyarmulke. Sankar led Palantir’s work in Israel right from the start of its activities in 2013 and has been closely involved ever since. “Some of the work I’m proudest of ever having done is in Israel,” he said. “I kind of joke I’m not a Hindu, I’m a Hinjew.”
Which brings us to the National Socialist take on all of this. One of the core tenets of the American Nazi Party is the declaration: “We must have an America in which our cultural, social, business and political life is free of alien, Jewish influence; an America in which White people are the sole masters of our own destiny.”
With Palantir increasingly embedded in every aspect of the intelligence community and government, we are about as far from “masters of our own destiny” as we can get. What is terrifying to me is that the Zionists have leap-frogged over controlling of our society via their ownership of media companies, their disproportionate presence in the legal and medical professions, and their public dominance of US politics, and have truly found a way to take-over the government. By controlling all aspects of information gathering, analysis, and actionable recommendations— both in the civilian agencies and the military— they stand poised to run the country any way they see fit, with no accountability.
It is that accountability that is the problem, both with Palantir and with the Military Industrial Complex itself. I understand that the modern battlefield has changed. We need to stay innovative and plan for the next war, not the last one. However, there is a difference between the government (ostensibly controlled by the people) managing and overseeing the nation’s defense, and handing that responsibility off to a private company with no obligation to the citizens of the nation it is tasked with defending- particularly a company loyal only to profit and Zionism, and run by a member of the Bilderberg Group.
Palantir is essentially a data mining company, but here’s the catch: you are the data and the mining is being done by a Jewish AI program operated by self-declared Zionists. Our government, and the rest of the western world, is bending over backwards to give Palantir access to all the personal data it can collect. What happens when they shift their focus from Israel and Ukraine, or illegal immigration, and turn inward?

CEO Alex Karp bragged openly at Davos about Palantir’s role in “killing” enemies and suppressing dissent, framing its technology as essential for elite control during the coming “revolutionary” unrest. What happens when he decides the “problem” that Palantir’s AIP needs to solve is identifying and eliminating threats to Zionist interests in America using “predictive policing”? In a matter of minutes, Palantir can distill information from nearly every electronic source of information the government has given them, and maybe some they haven’t: DMV records, Social Security records, tax records, FBI firearm background checks, local police and sheriff records, education records, voter registration, charitable donations, etc, and come up with a profile.
What if they ask their AI to: “Identify individuals who completed high-school, have ordered Nazi memorabilia online, who have searched for George Lincoln Rockwell on the internet archive, who follow “alt-right” threads in discussion platforms, and who have posted antisemitic comments on social media. Then give us the best time and place to intercept these individuals.”
With Zionist controlled Palantir on the job, the longest part of that process will be the amount of time it takes for the SWAT team to knock on your door.
Amerika Erwache!
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