Una investigación da cuenta de la existencia de unos audios que comprometerían a EE. UU. y a aliados con un golpe contra México y Colombia. 🔗👇 https://t.co/DWBdqxOtN5
HSBC was accused of laundering money for El Chapo’s Sinaloa Cartel, failed to properly monitor $670 billion in wire transfers, paid a $1.9 billion fine, and no one went to jail.
> you open a website
> it says: "click all the traffic lights"
> it takes you 10 seconds
> 200 million people do this every day
> you weren't passing a security check
> you were labeling training data for a self-driving car
> google acquires recaptcha in 2009
> deploys it on every bank, store, and government site on earth
> turns the entire internet into an unpaid AI annotation factory
> waymo is now worth $45 billion
> you didn't pass the test. you built it.
> walk around your city catching pokémon
> game asks you to scan a fountain. sure why not
> 30 billion scans later
> niantic owns a more detailed map than any government
> sells game for $3.5B
> spins off a spatial AI company
> your pokéwalk is now classified infrastructure
> delivery robots now navigate using your walks
> you were never the player. you were the product.
Some of the stories they aren't telling you:
• Chevrolet's chatbot sold a car for $1
• Air Canada had to honor a refund policy that its chatbot made up
• A pipeline ran 20x over cost for 6 days without anyone noticing
People didn't realize because nothing broke. There were no crashes and no alerts.
That's the issue with agentic applications.
They always generate something that looks coherent and don't raise any suspicion unless it's too late.
There's an amazing free YouTube lecture and blog post from @arshdilbagi that will help you fix this with a practical framework.
Here is what you'll learn:
• How to set up end-to-end trace instrumentation
• How to build alerts around a silent failure taxonomy
• An eval system built from production data
• Complete and concrete implementation steps
Every section of the blog ends with exactly what to do next.
You don't need permission to build a communication network.
No FCC license (ISM band). No permits. No contracts. No monthly fees.
Just open-source software on commodity hardware.
This is what freedom of speech infrastructure looks like.
Oswaldo Zavala’s thesis right here: That the “cartels” are a way for the US to depopulate the Mexican areas with the most minerals for foreign investment, and the Mexican government has been pocketing tons of the drug money
"The goal here is not rational persuasion but influence. The underlying message is simple: All the cool kids love nuclear power; if you don’t, you you’re a loser." https://t.co/fG0VQASVq7
An April 20, 2009 State Dept cable identified Masih Alinejad as a US intel asset
Since leaving Iran, she has been campaigning for a US-Israeli war on her former country on the US taxpayer dime
"Cognitive Electromagnetic Warfare" is in the 2026 U.S. military budget.
Definition: Using technology and signals to influence how people think, feel, and make decisions.
I've been saying for YEARS that all of the torture citizens experience is military/intelligence. All of it.
We want to share something we think every serious person should look at with their own eyes.
There’s an active U.S. patent (US11354666B1) assigned to Wells Fargo that describes “smart dust”, microelectromechanical sensors (MEMS) that can be released, suspended in air, and used to collect data for identity authentication during payments.
Check it out here on the documents section of our website, https://t.co/2PoblWiGwz
According to the patent description, these sensors can collect and transmit things like...
Biometric indicators (heart rate/pulse, blood pressure, body temperature, height/weight).
Audio data.
Optical data (including capturing images for facial recognition).
Motion, pressure, temperature, and even electromagnetic field data.
And it explicitly discusses the sensors being activated when a payment is attempted, then used to authenticate the person based on a “user profile.”
So here are the questions we think everyone should be willing to ask, without hysteria, without speculation, and without denial...
If systems like this are being patented for commerce, what else is being developed under similar frameworks?
What does “consent” look like when sensors can be “suspended in air” and collect biometric and optical data?
How do you verify what data is being collected, where it’s stored, and who has access to it?
What happens when the public is told something is “impossible” or “not real,” while the patents clearly describe the capability?
This is exactly why we built Mind Nexus.
We’re not here to “sell a narrative.”
We’re here to document.
To ask hard questions.
To push for accountability.
To protect people from being dismissed when what they’re experiencing deserves real investigation.
If you believe non-consensual human testing and covert experimentation must be confronted with evidence and action, sign the petition here: https://t.co/B81inZCA0t
MasterPeace detox support (free account + $5 off with code MNX): https://t.co/Kxbzc5rDpf
Get scanned: https://t.co/F4TWHbZkqr
Scanning is NOT a medical diagnosis. Our scans detect anomalous frequencies around a person, not inside the body. Findings are for informational purposes only and can support personal investigations.
Ukrainian attack drones continue to receive upgraded AI-assisted targeting systems.
Seen here, the onboard software detects and classifies various Russian targets, with the drone operator only clicking to initiate an automated strike.
The Real Game Behind the Juan Hernández Pardon: Power, Pressure, and the New Monroe Doctrine
Juan Orlando Hernández wasn’t pardoned for some technicality or grey zone offense. He was convicted in the U.S. for moving enormous volumes of cocaine toward the United States, taking cartel money, and using the Honduran police and military to protect those routes. Over 400 tons of U.S. bound cocaine moved under his watch. He took millions in bribes from groups like the Sinaloa cartel and Honduran gangs. And he weaponized state institutions to keep that machine running. That’s why he got 45 years. So a pardon like this isn’t small or symbolic, it’s a geopolitical decision.
Why This Could Be Part of a Bigger Strategy
Right now, Honduras is led by Xiomara Castro, who’s aligned herself more closely with Maduro, Cuba, Nicaragua, and has opened doors to China. At the same time, the U.S. is dramatically expanding its military footprint around Venezuela: carriers in the Caribbean, reopened bases in Puerto Rico, and deeper intelligence operations across the region. That’s not random, it’s part of a broader push to reassert influence in a part of the world where China, Russia, and left wing governments are tightening their ties.
In that context, freeing Hernández gives the U.S. a useful piece to move around the board. He still has relationships inside Honduras…political, business, security even if he no longer holds formal power. His presence alone reminds the current Honduran government that Washington still has ways to influence the country’s internal dynamics if it needs to. It doesn’t require overt threats. Just putting him back into play shifts the balance.
What This Pardon Enables Behind the Scenes
Hernández knows the networks…the routes, the brokers, the officials, the financial channels because he built them. In a region where cartels, politics, and foreign influence all blur together, a guy like that is valuable to intelligence agencies. He can help map who’s who, where the vulnerabilities are, and how different factions in Honduras and neighboring countries actually operate beneath the surface.
It also gives the U.S. quiet leverage in negotiations. If Washington wants Honduras to distance itself from Beijing, cooperate more on counter narcotics, or soften its ties with Maduro, the ability to empower or sideline people connected to Hernández’s old political network becomes another tool. Not overt coercion, just a reminder that the U.S. still has reach.
The Larger Picture
If you zoom out, the pardon looks less like an act of forgiveness and more like a move in a regional realignment. The United States is positioning itself for a more aggressive posture in Latin America, and it wants influence inside countries that are drifting away. Hernández, flawed as he is, gives them another pressure point.
So the real story isn’t the pardon itself. It’s what the pardon allows…a channel, a signal, and a piece of leverage at a moment when geopolitical fault lines in the Americas are shifting.