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United States AI Businesses The Military

Executives from Meta, OpenAI, and Palantir Commissioned Into the US Army Reserve (theregister.com) 126

Meta's CTO, Palantir's CTO, and OpenAI's chief product officer are being appointed as lieutenant colonels in America's Army Reserve, reports The Register. (Along with OpenAI's former chief revenue officer).

They've all signed up for Detachment 201: Executive Innovation Corps, "an effort to recruit senior tech executives to serve part-time in the Army Reserve as senior advisors," according to the official statement. "In this role they will work on targeted projects to help guide rapid and scalable tech solutions to complex problems..." "Our primary role will be to serve as technical experts advising the Army's modernization efforts," [Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth] said on X...

As for Open AI's involvement, the company has been building its ties with the military-technology complex for some years now. Like Meta, OpenAI is working with Anduril on military ideas and last year scandalized some by watering down its past commitment to developing non-military products only. The Army wasn't answering questions on Friday but an article referenced by [OpenAI Chief Product Officer Kevin] Weil indicated that the four will have to serve a minimum of 120 hours a year, can work remotely, and won't have to pass basic training...

"America wins when we unite the dynamism of American innovation with the military's vital missions," [Palantir CTO Shyam] Sankar said on X. "This was the key to our triumphs in the 20th century. It can help us win again. I'm humbled by this new opportunity to serve my country, my home, America."

Executives from Meta, OpenAI, and Palantir Commissioned Into the US Army Reserve

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  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:09AM (#65450197) Homepage
    ...may I say: this is offensive. They can be overpaid consultants, but gifting them unearned rank...stinks.
    • by taustin ( 171655 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:21AM (#65450211) Homepage Journal

      Particularly when all they really have to offer is snake oil.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Oh for the love of points. Totally agree.
    • by locater16 ( 2326718 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:32AM (#65450225)
      Freedom, Brought to you by: Coca Cola
      • Freedom, Brought to you by: Coca Cola

        At least we can swipe/tap cards at the vending machines, we no longer need to carry loose change in the field. :-)

      • by mspohr ( 589790 )

        Trump's military parade in DC had multiple sponsors who received public credit during the show.
        Oracle, Lockheed Martin, Palantir, Coinbase and Amazon have recently donated to America250, the nonprofit raising funds for the nation’s semiquincentennial anniversary, the organization said. (Also some energy drink)
        We have the finest government (and military) that the oligarchs can buy.

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      And lieutant colonel is somewhat high isn't it? That higher than captain and major, isn't it?

      • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:44AM (#65450247) Homepage
        Lt. Col is the typical end rank of a 20 year career.
        • Lt. Col is the typical end rank of a 20 year career.

          You should meet some military physicians.

          They are made officers (we used to call them "direct input officers", dunno if they still do) and given inflated ranks for two reasons: to pay them sufficiently, but also to get them within the military accountability structure.

      • by Sique ( 173459 )
        The deciphering of military ranks is easy. A lieutenant is the deputy of the rank named directly behind. The word comes from French lieu = place and tenant = taker. A lieutenant colonel is the deputy of the colonel, a lieutenant general the deputy of a general, and a lieutenant without any specification is the deputy of a captain.

        The major is the highest (Latin: maior) of captains - he is the connection between the captains, the heads (Latin: capus) of the companies, with the Staff, the colonel and his de

    • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @01:01AM (#65450259)

      ...may I say: this is offensive. They can be overpaid consultants, but gifting them unearned rank...stinks.

      I totally understand and agree with that sentiment. However we did similar things during WW2 to help manage war production. It was believed that certain experience and skill sets were needed inside the military and also to help facilitate working with industry. I believe the CEO of General Motors was made a Lt Gen. I am somewhat confused and concerned that they think such extreme action is necessary today. That there is a need for these people to be in some chain of command. And absent conditions that warrant such actions, I agree it is insulting. But if such conditions exist, WTF are they?

      • by LazLong ( 757 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @03:03AM (#65450345)

        As a vet, I too find this offensive.

        Yes, during a major worldwide war we did this extraordinarily unusual thing. There is no such exigent emergency. If these guys want to help, either be paid consultants, or start off as 2nd lieutenants like the rest of the officer corp.

        • Could there be some reason they would need a military staff, and they themselves be in the chain of command? Lt Col would suggest a staff of hundreds? It would have to be some huge sort of infrastructure update? I sure as hell hope an O-5 is not some sort of honorary Kentucky Colonel now.
        • The Warrant Officer or LDO is specifically for technical specialists. They should have used that.

          Has the brass decided we have an emergency because we have no defense at all against drone swarms?

          Even Hollywood figured out what was coming. Angel has Fallen.

      • by alanw ( 1822 )

        I believe the CEO of General Motors was made a Lt Gen.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
        Knudsen was president of the Chevrolet Division of General Motors from 1924 to 1937 and was president of General Motors from 1937 to 1940.
        His experience and success as a key senior manager in the operations sides of Ford Motor Company and then General Motors led the Franklin Roosevelt administration to commission him directly as a lieutenant general in the United States Army to help lead the United States' war materiel production efforts for World War II.

      • But if such conditions exist, WTF are they?

        They're just getting ready for the war between the USA'n'SRs vs Europe.

    • Again, working from the WW2 precedent ... Could they possibly need some sort of military staff for their advisory role? A need to be in the chain of command for that staff?
    • How does this affect average enlisted men? As reserve LTCs, can they still order regular soldiers around? What about other officers?
      • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @03:46AM (#65450369)

        How does this affect average enlisted men? As reserve LTCs, can they still order regular soldiers around? What about other officers?

        They get saluted by all lower ranks when in uniform.

        However if someone is not in your chain of command, ordering them around can be a tricky thing. A quick way to get yelled at by a full Colonel. Of course, having not earned the rank of Lt Col, would they care?

    • by martin-boundary ( 547041 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @02:08AM (#65450291)
      Historically, in monarchies, it's not been that offensive to appoint deserving individuals to a high command role in the military. Especially if they pay their way in.
      • by rossdee ( 243626 )

        Typically that would be if they bought their own Regiment or Battalion in along with them. Of course back then (250 years ago) those would be the men (labourers and peasants) from their estates.

        • Typically that would be if they bought their own Regiment or Battalion in along with them. Of course back then (250 years ago) those would be the men (labourers and peasants) from their estates.

          We did this 164'ish years ago during the Civil War, although I think the units were normally raised by States and officers appointed by Governors. A few raised privately. Also 127'ish years ago during the Spanish American war. I think the State raised units were typically considered US Army, and the private US Volunteers. Teddy Roosevelt's unit was USV.

          And of course we did this 250'ish years ago during the American Revolution. States recruited regiments and Governors appointed officers and these became t

      • "No reason to use AI if you already know what you're doing. Just how complicated do you think plumbing is?"

        Plumbing is simple, building code is not and frequently updated.

      • We're not a monarchy. That's the *point.*

        https://www.nokings.org/ [nokings.org]

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          That's what the Romans were saying a couple of thousand years back. Instead they had Emperors and today it is Presidents for life with an inheritable Presidency at times, see N. Korea.
          Funny enough, I do have a King, keep him thousands of miles away and he does what the government, elected by the people, tells him to do. He is above the law and his mother flaunted it by not licensing her dogs or cars. In practice, His powers are to advice, counsel, and warn.

      • it's not been that offensive

        It was never not offensive, it was just done anyway. Eventually there was enough incompetence and fatal accidents to end that policy, but we seem to be rolling back a lot of blood-earned regulations.

    • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @08:22AM (#65450567) Journal

      ...may I say: this is offensive. They can be overpaid consultants, but gifting them unearned rank...stinks.

      Yawn. Direct input officers have been a thing forever. Heck, I had to salute my physics instructor at nuclear power school, who was just some young teacher chick who would never deploy anywhere.

      And yes, it's to pay them. And get them within the military accountability structure (the more important reason).

      • What rank was your instructor?

      • Direct input officers have been a thing forever.

        How many of them were granted this specific rank? The OP isn't complaining about a rank, he's complaining about an "unearned" rank. I guarantee your physics instructor would be forced to salute these guys.

  • He'd make a great artillery target.

  • by DNS-and-BIND ( 461968 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:40AM (#65450237) Homepage
    Can anyone help jog my memory? When government and corporate interests merge, and you can't tell where corporations stop and government begins...what's that called? I'm sure I had a class on that once. Some kind of political movement. I can't remember what it's called but it was started by the editor of Italy's largest socialist newspaper [avantionline.it]back in the 1920s. Anyone know?
    • Can anyone help jog my memory? When government and corporate interests merge, and you can't tell where corporations stop and government begins...what's that called? I'm sure I had a class on that once. Some kind of political movement. I can't remember what it's called but it was started by the editor of Italy's largest socialist newspaper [avantionline.it]back in the 1920s. Anyone know?

      Actually, you do not know this one. I realize you were thinking fascism but fascism is not a merging of government and corporations. Under fascism, both labor and industry are subordinate to the Party, the government. The Party does not share. The Party allows labor unions for the workers, but the unions must be under Party authority. The Party allows industrialists to have syndicates but they also must be under Party authority. Every organization, every individual, is subordinate to the Party. The Party ma

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        "Under fascism, both labor and industry are subordinate to the Party, the government. The Party does not share. "
        That's just defining totalitarianism, it's not defining what the government is. Fascism is a form of totalitarianism, but not just totalitarianism.

        "The Party allows industrialists to have syndicates but they also must be under Party authority."
        Sure, but that doesn't mean that the "Party" is not dominated by corporate interests. Again, you ignore what the Party is. That term does not mean anyth

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          "Under fascism, both labor and industry are subordinate to the Party, the government. The Party does not share. "
          That's just defining totalitarianism, it's not defining what the government is. Fascism is a form of totalitarianism, but not just totalitarianism.

          True. But the fact remains that fascism is not a merging of gov't and corporate interests. Only gov't interest, ie Party interests, matter under fascism.

          "The Party allows industrialists to have syndicates but they also must be under Party authority."
          Sure, but that doesn't mean that the "Party" is not dominated by corporate interests.

          Actually it means precisely that. Industrialists and corporations are not free to pursue goals that interfere with or are contrary to the Party's industrial goals. A company may benefit from implementing a Party goal, but it is still subordinate.

          Again, you ignore what the Party is. That term does not mean anything other than where the power is, not what it is. Corporations can be, and often are, totalitarian.

          The Party is largely the political body effecting the will of the dictator. Corporations, like workers, are just

    • Can anyone help jog my memory? When government and corporate interests merge, and you can't tell where corporations stop and government begins...what's that called? I'm sure I had a class on that once. Some kind of political movement. I can't remember what it's called but it was started by the editor of Italy's largest socialist newspaper [avantionline.it]back in the 1920s. Anyone know?

      So my chemistry and physics instructors at Naval Nuclear Power School decades ago (who were also direct input officers) were fascists? Who knew!

  • by divide overflow ( 599608 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:41AM (#65450239)
    A cautionary statement from President Eisenhower back in 1961, noting that intelligence gathering and manipulation has always been a primary function of our military, as important as any physical munition. Information is power:

    A vital element in keeping the peace is our military establishment. Our arms must be mighty, ready for instant action, so that no potential aggressor may be tempted to risk his own destruction.

    Our military organization today bears little relation to that known by any of my predecessors in peace time, or indeed by the fighting men of World War II or Korea.

    Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But now we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense; we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security more than the net income of all United State corporations.

    This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence-economic, political, even spiritual-is felt in every city, every state house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are all involved; so is the very structure of our society.

    In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

    We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.

    President Dwight D. Eisenhower's Farewell Address [archives.gov]

    • by evanh ( 627108 )

      In other words, education and enlightenment is the check against abuse of military strength. With FUD being the opposite.

    • According to this book that I read about 20 years ago so may have LLM'd in some hallucinations over time:

      The_Iron_Triangle, Dan Briody, https://www.goodreads.com/book... [goodreads.com]

      Ike may have meant to refer to the Military-Industrial-Congressional (funding) Complex, but somehow left out Congressional. Hence, Iron Triangle.

      I think the book was largely about the Carlyle Group but also the general revolving door and other systemic corruption points in the US government, for example lobbying. Things have only g
  • by maladroit ( 71511 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:42AM (#65450241) Homepage

    The parade today was literally showing ads for the corporate sponsors:

    https://www.mediaite.com/media... [mediaite.com]

    It looks like commissions are for sale as well.

  • DISGUSTING (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:42AM (#65450243)

    They wouldn't pass an aptitude test, do 5 pushups, or contribute anything other than MORE GREED for their personal ego and "shareholder value."

    That is not what the military is above.

    This is yet more grift, tit for tat, and selling access to government and the military industrial complex.

    Fuck Trump.

  • How old are these dudes? Isn't there an age limit to joining?

    • Depending on the program, you can get an age waiver. Typically doctors and nurses have no age limit for waiver. Other programs have definite age caps even with waiver.

      My understanding is part of doing the waiver is to make it clear that depending on how old you are when you commission, you may be unlikely to make the 20 years to qualify for pension.

      What is interesting is that by commissioning these executives, they will now be subject to the UCMJ...

      • What is interesting is that by commissioning these executives, they will now be subject to the UCMJ...

        As if that means anything. Krasnov will just pardon them like he did for all those terrorists.

      • they will now be subject to the UCMJ...

        Rewarding influential people with high positions has been seen in other countries as a way to ensure their loyalty through honours, salary, or implied threats of court-martial.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      Joining? LOL

  • by denny_deluxe ( 1693548 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @02:31AM (#65450315)
    How utterly sickening.
  • Category: Political Ideologies

    Clue: This authoritarian system, marked by the union of corporate and state power, nationalism, and suppression of dissent.

    Answer: What is Fascism?
    • Category: Political Ideologies
      Clue: This authoritarian system, marked by the union of corporate and state power, nationalism, and suppression of dissent.
      Answer: What is Fascism?

      Bzzzz -- Wrong.

      Fascism is not a union of government and corporations. Under fascism, both labor and industry are subordinate to the Party, the government. The Party does not share. The Party allows labor unions for the workers, but the unions must be under Party authority. The Party allows industrialists to have syndicates but they also must be under Party authority. Every organization, every individual, is subordinate to the Party. The Party may play unions and syndicates off each other as convenient.

      • It is still very worrying when the line of defense is that it does not match one particular criterion, how important it be.

        As I read in Wikipedia, Salazarism has "different phiosophical grounds" than fascism and Salazar opposed fascism; Franquism has "resemblances" to fascism, and others are dubious as well (Carol II of Romania opposed fascists, Pétain in France was kind of salazarist). While fascism is strictly speaking the regime of Mussolini and nothign else, this did not prevent history to remember

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          It is still very worrying when the line of defense is that it does not match one particular criterion, how important it be.

          It's not a line of defense, it's a debunking of a false accusation. You can call Trump many thing, you can find a long list of actual real failings. But the fascism accusation is simply false, a political fabrication of his opposition. Counting on ignorance of what fascism is, a word which is often misused to refer to an administration they don't like. It's childish name calling. Which works with the ill informed, as Trump himself has also shown.

          While fascism is strictly speaking the regime of Mussolini and nothign else ....

          Nope. For the pre-WW2 era, we have Italian, Spanish, and Germa

          • Fascism is very flexible [amazon.com] hence it's easy adoption.

            • by drnb ( 2434720 )

              Fascism is very flexible [amazon.com] hence it's easy adoption.

              Yes, fascism is very opportunistic. Borrowing many ideas from the left or right, anything that will help the Party attain or retain power. But the Party sharing power with some other group is not part of that flexibility. All individual, all organization, are subordinate to the Party. Corporation do the will of the Party just as workers do the will of the Party.

          • Nope. For the pre-WW2 era, we have Italian, Spanish, and German version. All with a different spin.

            I don't agree. There are numerous known definitions of fascims. If you go with the strictest ones, Fascism is the regime of Mussolini, and that's it. This is the point of view of many historians (though not all). If you go with the broader definitions, you can make Trump nearly fit inside. You certainly can choose a definition or propose one that will make Salazar fit inside and Trump is more clearly out.

            As I read, Franquist Spain is described as para-fascist, semi-fascist, quasi-fascist. Which is the point

            • by drnb ( 2434720 )

              If you go with the broader definitions, you can make Trump nearly fit inside.

              Nope. No dictatorship. No empire. No ethnic nationalism. No gov't controlled economy. No rationalization of violence. Etc.

              Just exaggerated use of such epithets during political name calling. Its works to a degree with the ill-informed, as Trump himself has shown.

              • "No dictatorship". I don't know what you include in that. All of Hitler, Mussolini, Pétain and Salazar were elected/nominated according to the procedures of the time. Trump has shown his tendency to go around the existing counter-powers, concentrating the power into a single hand.

                "No ethnic nationalism" I don't think the previous European fascists, except for Nazism, were ethnicists. Only Hitler had an Aryan obsession. Persecutions against Jews in France were held, at least officially, on the pretence

          • by dfghjk ( 711126 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @09:03AM (#65450647)

            "It's not a line of defense, it's a debunking of a false accusation. You can call Trump many thing, you can find a long list of actual real failings. But the fascism accusation is simply false, a political fabrication of his opposition. Counting on ignorance of what fascism is, a word which is often misused to refer to an administration they don't like. It's childish name calling. Which works with the ill informed, as Trump himself has also shown."

            And now the truth comes out. Your objection is that you're a Trump supporter. Just who is "counting on ignorance of what fascism is" here?

            "...a word which is often misused to refer to an administration they don't like..."
            Misused BY TRUMP supporters, sure.

            "It's childish name calling."
            Yes, the primary tool of Donald Trump.

            "Nope. For the pre-WW2 era, we have Italian, Spanish, and German version. All with a different spin."
            No, that's wrong. It's also academic, "fascism" has a broader meaning today, but originally it was unique to Italy.

            "But they don't match up with fascists."
            They don't match up with your intentional redefinition of fascism. But then, your redefinition is entirely performative for this purpose.

        • In the world of Isms, there's no need to split hairs. Each Grand Ego to get his hands on power eventually ends up with his own brand... as I believe you point out.

          If he retains a grip on power Trumpism will surely be defined in greater detail.
        • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

          "Salazarism" is distinguished over fascism in that it lacks nationalistic and religious elements. Trumpism contains those elements.

          "It remains to be seen if history will remember them as later fascists..."

          It doesn't remain to be seen. Trumpism is fascism, there's enough history past already to determine that.

          "...or as starting a new cluster of ideologies..."

          A new fascism, if you will. So it remains to be seen what the name will be?

          • Salazarism" is distinguished over fascism in that it lacks nationalistic and religious elements. Trumpism contains those elements.

            One of the least creative slogans of the "Estado Novo" regime of Salazar was "Deus, PÃtria e FamÃlia".
            Salazar was devout and so was everyone in Portugal - or else.

            Another slogan they used would translate to "Proudly alone", in the sense that the Portuguese Empire was self-sufficient, international trade and travel severely limited. Look up the image/map showing that Portugal is not a small country.
            Those were dark times.

      • You made this exact same post earlier. Everyone go ahead and foe this guy and you'll know to skip over his posts in the future.

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          You made this exact same post earlier.

          Yeah, to two individuals making the same false claim.

          Everyone go ahead and foe this guy and you'll know to skip over his posts in the future.

          LOL. Yes, avoid those inconvenient truths. Don't let propaganda be challenged. We must have only a single voice .... Ironically wouldn't that be a fascist like thing to do? Silence the opposition and all that. :-)

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        This is false, and refuted above.

        "BTW. You missed a major part of fascist ideology, a quite defining one. The rationalization of political violence - the "cause" or "goal" being so virtuous."

        That's not an ideology, it's a consequence. What is virtuous IS the ideology. Frankly, the "Clue" you object to is a far better definition of fascism than anything you provide.

    • Cor-rect. Next answer.
  • Oh my... MilSpeak meets TechBroSpeak. A whole new lexicon of meaninglessness...
    I doubt they'll need encryption at their meetings; no one will understand a word anyone says in plain.

  • ... the militarization of the us is accompanied by names that come from a book that is inspired by the war against suppression and fascism.

  • It's funny, regular people can't even work from home but these people can somehow have two full jobs.
    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      True, although interestingly, the end game is that regular people do work at home, only that their home is a private prison owned by these people.

  • Have these executives sworn an oath to protect the USA or to maximize their company profits?

    If they had some executives or higher level management with previous military experience, maybe not such a big deal.

    Bestowing high level ranks simply sounds more like another grift.
  • this is so dumb and i'm not even american so i couldn't care less, but it's SO DUMB...
  • "Several of Silicon Valley's top techies are joining the Army Reserve as part of a newly created unit that will be trying to accelerate the use of AI in military planning and operations."

    So, an AI snip hunt.

  • How will these newly minted LTCs learn about the Army? Who will teach them to wear the uniform and salute properly? (credit to Trump, this is something he actually knows how to do, unlike a lot of actors I've seen portraying officers.) Will they need to do the annual PT test? How about weapons qualification? (Although that's probably not needed if they have no assigned weapon, and a keyboard doesn't count.) Will they learn to march? (If not, how will they participate in next year's Trump Birthday Para

  • by dskoll ( 99328 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @09:34AM (#65450693) Homepage

    ... or are there enough military oppressing Los Angeles already?

  • The Bigger Picture (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 0xG ( 712423 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @11:38AM (#65450857)

    The USA is prohibiting Chinese companies that have ties to the Chinese military from doing business in the US, or accessing US technology.

    Yet now the US is *overtly* linking US companies to the US military.
    'But it's OK when *we* do it?'

  • The US executive branch and now the military is rapidly approaching the contours of Idiocracy meets Sea Org (Scientology's "Navy" [catholic.org])
  • by RossCWilliams ( 5513152 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @12:52PM (#65450971)

    Fascist is just a label. You can put it on anything, it doesn't change the nature of the nature of the thing you label. Whether you label Trump a fascist or a monarchist is a mindless argument.

    What is important is the character of what the government is doing. Picking someone up off the streets and sending them to a prison in El Salvador without any legal process is not something that we should allow. Taking national lands and selling them off to reduce taxes is not something that we should allow. Its selling off the inheritance of future generations to pay for this generation's profligate spending. Government shouldn't be allowed to force women to carry a pregnancy to term and punish them if they don't. But talking about what we don't want is only a small part of the equation.

    People need to stop getting caught in the abstract debates favored by the folks at Harvard and Yale that distract us from our real needs. We need a retirement system that provides a secure retirement. We need a health care industry that delivers high quality health care at a reasonable price rather than crappy care at a high price. We need a tax system that doesn't allow the wealthy to decide how our tax dollars are spent. We need a higher education system that leaves students with marketable skills to build a life for themselves instead of a crushing debt. We need a housing industry that builds homes 90% of us can afford instead of McMansions for the wealthy 10%. We need more jobs that pay a living wage, rather than more jobs that don't. In short we need to start addressing the things that really matter.

    I don't claim to know how we get those things. But we don't get there by arguing over whether Trump is a fascist or just a misguided fool. Trump mania is a distraction. The solution is to focus our eyes on the prize instead of bickering about what toilet people will be allowed to use. And whining to no effect.

  • by linuxguy ( 98493 ) on Sunday June 15, 2025 @04:34PM (#65451313) Homepage

    Of course Palantir exec is not going to recommend that the military buy Palantir products to solve many of its problems. That would be preposterous. /s

    Side note. Most crimes are legal now. Some may require a political donation. Inquire with your state's federal representatives for more details.

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