Questo è Leonardo Aseni, italiano che milita dal 2013 in IDF, tiratore scelto della Brigata Golani, colpevole di genocidio e del massacro del 23 marzo descritto sotto: l’esecuzione di 15 paramedici palestinesi poi sepolti in una fossa comune insieme alle ambulanze,per occultarli.
Le scene della sinistra in festa, come dopo un gol, sono imbarazzanti. Pietose. Un po’ come il fatto che la peggior classe politica della storia non sia riuscita a fare una legge elettorale decente in quarant’anni.
Quando la Gran Bretagna invase la Russia:
una missione nata per contrastare il nemico tedesco diventa, durante la Guerra Civile Russa, una crociata antibolscevica propugnata da un ambizioso politico britannico, Winston Churchill.
(link nel prox tweet)
Your reasoning begins from a mistaken starting point.
The harm to Society has been to commodify employment to a transaction between a worker and a company, often with the worker being in a weakened position compared to the company.
People hates to go to work, not to work.
Si Rai3 ora, chiedono le scuse di Report e della Rai Capezzone (vi rendete conto?) e Torchiarolo (ah Lombroso), mattatori della trasmissione di quello che non può vedere i Palestinesi lavarsi in mare durante un genocidio, su Rai 3 ora.
Nel 1971 tre accademici studiarono e analizzarono il ruolo delle “istituzioni caritatevoli” nelle baraccopoli (formatesi a seguito delle occupazioni abusive) di Lima, pubblicando un’opera profonda e rigorosa
Da invasori a invasi https://t.co/pNusOgtQ5h
@nicola_humar Perché a noi italiani di caricare in macchina lettino ombrellone frigo bar ecc ecc ma perché, pago e non mi rompete le scatole anzi voglio pure quello che mi sventola
No Chinese baby was ever born speaking Chinese. No German baby was ever born speaking German. No English baby was ever born speaking English. They had to listen to their parents to learn the language. No one is born racist, they're taught racism, stop teaching it. WE ARE ALL ONE.
@Orangeman1992 According to Americans, a 14-month-old kid is considered a legitimate military target
But it doesn't count as terrorism as long as America does it
There are more than 3,000,000 files on powerful men who raped, cannibalized, trafficked, filmed, terrorized, tortured, murdered, 13, 14, 15 year children, that the US, UK, and EU will never arrest any of them.
There are more than 10,000 files on John F. Kennedy assassination that the US will never release, alongside thousands of classified files concerning 9/11.
There are more than 10,000 files concerning Israeli war crimes and acts of genocide—which the United States has consistently exercised its veto power in the UN Security Council and regarding which it has refused to support arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court.
Israel has broken all United Nations Resolutions with absolutely no consequences. Iraq broke two and the US and UK obtained UN legitimacy to invade and destroy the country over the course of eight years.
The bottom line here is the world system has become so corrupt that the time has come I think to clean the crap out of the stables and start over.
If people can't unite over children being killed, raped, and abused there's no hope for humanity.
After reflection, this new narrative by Palantir is probably much more consequential than people may assume.
Palantir is basically being the canary in the coal mine announcing the death of two major assumptions propping up the US economy right now:
1) that AI labs will be able to extract significant economic rent - as opposed to AI models being mere commodities
2) that other countries can accept structural dependency on US technology and services without pushing back on sovereignty concerns
Why are Palantir specifically starting to be vocal about this?
First off, major middle-powers, even US “allies”, are one by one showing them the door. In June, France announced that the DGSI - its domestic intelligence agency, which had relied on Palantir since the 2015 Paris attacks - would replace it with French firm ChapsVision, with Prime Minister Lecornu explaining (https://t.co/SLhEGprBZC) that France “cannot accept new strategic dependencies in the digital sphere” and shouldn't depend on the goodwill of companies “capable of turning off the tap.”
Germany moved even earlier: its domestic intelligence service, the BfV, also selected ChapsVision over Palantir (https://t.co/pDZVj4SYUY), and the German military has said it will no longer use Palantir at all. Then, just this week, Spain instructed state-controlled companies - including strategic firms like Telefónica, Indra and Navantia - to avoid signing any new contracts with Palantir (https://t.co/0ik4UAFrT7).
Even in the UK, Washington's most loyal vassal, the NHS's £330 million data contract with Palantir is under review following parliamentary pressure (https://t.co/uJl6g4BMsW), and London Mayor Sadiq Khan blocked a proposed £50 million Palantir contract with the Metropolitan Police.
Palantir making a lot of noise around them caring about sovereignty makes a lot of sense: it's damage control since they keep being told they're a sovereignty risk.
I doubt it will work - because it's true: they are a sovereignty risk - but the fact that they feel the need to be vocal around this tells you where the wind is blowing: they're not shaping the narrative, they're reacting to one they're losing.
What they're saying against closed-source AI (basically a broadside attack on OpenAI and Anthropic), is again highly self-serving. Palantir's sudden love of open-weight AI models conveniently coincides with them launching 2 days before a partnership with Nvidia to sell exactly that: open models models (NVIDIA's Nemotron) in sovereign environments.
So it's essentially a product launch.
It doesn't make what they're saying wrong: it is factual that the value proposition of closed-source AI labs looks increasingly unsustainable. I mean: you're paying 10X the price of Chinese open-source AI models for something that's not really better (or just marginally) and on top of that you have zero control over your data, or the models themselves.
When Palantir says that "the architecture that maximally preserves sovereignty is one that enables institutions to own their tribal knowledge, and to compound it as alpha," they're right. I'd add that this also means you shouldn't trust Palantir either with that "tribal knowledge"... they obviously left this part out 😉
When you take a step back, these two things have major implications on many other US companies.
SpaceX - which just went public at the largest IPO valuation in history - is one clear example as I describe in my latest article on the new space race with China (https://t.co/JK3ELAyEVO).
If countries like France concluded with Palantir that they couldn't depend on a company “capable of turning off the tap” when it’s merely analyzing their data, what should they conclude about a company that aims to literally control their entire connectivity - at one man's whim, from space?
What percentage of SpaceX's crazy market cap is based on the assumption that foreign governments will not do to Starlink what they're currently doing to Palantir?
And SpaceX - or Palantir - aren't alone: a significant proportion of the top US tech giants, who rose in a world where no one questioned American technological hegemony, now face an environment that's much less conducive to the kind of lock-in their business models - and valuations - depend on.
When you pair this with the fact that it increasingly looks like the US made a wrong bet with closed-source AI - an extremely expensive wrong bet - the picture that emerges is of a country that bet its economic future on two things - proprietary AI and captive allies - and is losing both at the same time.
And to compound the problem, it doesn't help that the official narrative of the US government - via the voice of Jacob Helberg, the Under-Secretary of State (https://t.co/Z1rotPl9Ee) - is to be vocally opposed to "AI Sovereignty": essentially telling everyone "you know what, your worst fears are real, our tech companies are really out to undermine your sovereignty."
Read Helberg's post (the one I linked) and put yourself in the shoes of - say - a European or Asian leader and ask yourself how you'd react to being told that building your own AI capabilities is "marching in perfect formation into the past," that your pursuit of sovereignty is really just "synchronized mediocrity," and that your only path to the future runs through American technology.
If it was me in a position of power, I'd read this as a massive wakeup call: when another country's official position is that your sovereignty is a problem, history says you're about to need it.
So yes, it looks like - unexpectedly - Palantir, of all companies, is being quite the canary in the big tech mine. Yes they obviously do this for self-serving and cynical purpose, and yes they're of course also very much part of the problem and not the solution. But it doesn't make them wrong: sometimes it takes a vulture to tell you something is dying.
The US has seized $5.49 billion of Venezuela’s oil revenue in 2026, then offers just $150 million in earthquake aid while the UN estimates $6.7 billion in losses. It’s not relief, it’s extortion. At the same time, US has $30 billion of frozen assets while people are under rubble.
La mobilitazione europea contro la Russia e i fantasmi del passato
Il mio nuovo articolo su #IntelligenceForThePeople
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(Link all’articolo in fondo al thread)