Sentinel's live RPC list is available at: https://t.co/cHl9sZ770m
dVPN node discovery, authentication and connection is all on-chain.
Sentinel does not have centralized servers like other P2P networks and VPN applications.
Checkout https://t.co/LI1IgZ3gtO to learn more!
The roots of a polynomial aren't just numbers, but a moving geometric field that reacts like a resonant surface in the complex plane.
See the description for the animation below
Drug cartels, wildlife traffickers, and fentanyl networks have nothing in common. Except they all use the exact same 1,400-year-old Chinese financial system to make their money disappear. And it runs straight through the global supply chains your business depends on.
It is called fei qian. Flying money. It was invented in China's Tang Dynasty around 618 AD, when silk road merchants needed to move value across thousands of miles without physically transporting heavy copper coins through bandit territory. They used paper credit notes redeemable through trusted partners in distant cities. No cash moved. Value moved. The debt settled quietly between trusted parties later.
Thirteen centuries later, the mechanics are almost identical. The scale is not.
Here is how it works today. A drug cartel in Mexico has $500,000 in cash it cannot bank, wire, or cross borders with. It hands that cash to a broker in the US. That broker contacts a partner network in China. The Chinese partner pays the equivalent in RMB to whoever the cartel designates inside China, settling the debt not through any financial transfer but through manipulated invoices inside a legitimate manufacturing deal. An appliance shipment gets invoiced at $600,000 instead of $500,000. The difference evaporates into the supply chain. No wire transfer. No suspicious activity report. No border crossing. The money flew.
The system thrives specifically because of China's strict capital controls, which limit how much RMB citizens can convert to foreign currency. That creates enormous demand inside China for underground brokers who can deliver foreign currency without going through official channels. Criminals with dirty dollars abroad and Chinese nationals trying to move money out of China find each other through diaspora trust networks that have operated this way for generations.
The numbers that have been verified are staggering. The UNODC estimates between $800 billion and $2 trillion is laundered globally every year, representing 2 to 5% of world GDP. A 2025 Napier AI analysis puts broader illicit flows at $5.5 trillion annually. The US State Department estimates $154 billion is laundered through China specifically each year. Chinese criminal networks alone processed $16.1 billion through crypto channels in 2025 alone according to FATF records. And only 1% of all illicit financial flows are ever detected and seized by authorities worldwide.
This is not a fringe theory. It is covered in Congressional hearings, UK National Crime Agency reports, US Treasury investigations, and detailed academic research. A retired US Treasury special agent named John Cassara spent his career tracking exactly this system and wrote the definitive book on it.
Johnny Harris's documentary on fei qian, released April 16, 2026, has been watched nearly 3 million times in two weeks. It traces how drug cartels, illegal shark fin traders, African wildlife traffickers, illegal Congo miners, and fentanyl precursor networks all settle debts through the same invisible infrastructure embedded inside legitimate global trade.
There are ghost transactions running through your supply chain right now. You cannot see them. That is the entire point.
#China #CCP #MoneyLaundering #FeiQian #FlyingMoney #Fentanyl #TradeBasedLaundering #Cartels #NationalSecurity #Geopolitics
This guy pulled a big chute at the annual "Big Iron Chute-Out" in Revelstoke this weekend.
What he did was impressive. You have to see one of these chutes in person to appreciate how tall, steep and narrow they are. The horsepower necessary to do this requires a turbo, and a lot of track speed.
Unfortunately, when he got to the top, he was probably exhausted (you can usually taste the adrenaline in your mouth) and gravity took him the wrong way.
He fell over a 700' cliff. Everyone thought he was dead, but miracles happen.