Everybody's talking about Polymarket...But what is Polymarket? How does it work? Where did this idea come from? And, most important of all, how is it going to be used to generate the next Predictive Programming False Flag event? Join James in this week's edition of The Corbett Report podcast as he peels back the layers of the Polymarket onion. TRANSCRIPT AND COMMENTS: https://corbettreport.com/what-no-one-is-saying-about-polymarket ✅
4/28/2026
What NO ONE is Saying About Polymarket
Everybody's talking about Polymarket...But what is Polymarket? How does it work? Where did this idea come from? And, most important of all, how is it going to be used to generate the next Predictive Programming False Flag event? Join James in this week's edition of The Corbett Report podcast as he peels back the layers of the Polymarket onion. TRANSCRIPT AND COMMENTS: https://corbettreport.com/what-no-one-is-saying-about-polymarket ✅
4/23/2026
Warrantless Surveillance Needs to Stop! A Call to Action
Warrantless Surveillance Needs to Stop! A Call to Action pic.twitter.com/F2A64SGq1Y
— Rob Braxman Tech (Official) (@rob_braxman) April 22, 2026
What Is Palantir Gotham? A Look Into the Government’s Most Powerful Data Platform
Palantir Gotham is one of the most advanced data‑analytics and surveillance platforms ever created. Co‑founded in 2003 by Peter Thiel and developed with early backing from the CIA’s venture arm, In‑Q‑Tel, Gotham was built to solve the intelligence failures revealed after 9/11. Its purpose is simple but far‑reaching: connect massive amounts of data and turn it into actionable intelligence.
What Gotham Actually Does
Gotham integrates enormous, disparate datasets — including surveillance feeds, financial records, phone logs, social media information, satellite imagery, and personal data — and merges them into a single, searchable environment. Analysts can:
- Identify hidden patterns
- Track individuals or groups
- Map networks of people, places, and events
- Visualize timelines, movements, and relationships
- Turn raw data into intelligence in minutes instead of weeks
This makes Gotham a central tool for counterterrorism, military operations, and law‑enforcement investigations.
Who Uses Palantir Gotham
Gotham’s primary clients include:
- U.S. intelligence agencies (CIA, FBI, NSA)
- Department of Homeland Security (including ICE)
- Special Operations Command
- Local and federal law‑enforcement agencies
- Allied foreign governments
In short, Gotham is deeply embedded in the global intelligence and security ecosystem.
Key Features
Gotham’s power comes from its ability to connect data points that normally live in separate silos. It can combine:
- Phone metadata
- Financial transactions
- Social‑media activity
- Travel records
- Criminal databases
- Satellite and drone imagery
All of this can be displayed on a single map or timeline, allowing analysts to see relationships that would otherwise remain invisible.
Why Gotham Is Controversial
With great power comes great scrutiny. Gotham has been criticized for:
- Enabling mass surveillance
- Supporting predictive policing
- Assisting immigration enforcement
- Being used in military targeting
- Raising major privacy and civil‑liberties concerns
Critics argue that Gotham gives governments unprecedented visibility into people’s lives, often without transparency or oversight.
Where Gotham Came From
Palantir was founded by Peter Thiel, Alex Karp, and a small team of engineers who believed intelligence agencies needed better tools to prevent future attacks. The CIA’s In‑Q‑Tel provided early funding, and Gotham became the company’s flagship product.
Today, Gotham is used to map connections between people, places, and events — accelerating analysis from weeks to minutes.
If Alex Karp had to say the quiet part out loud... pic.twitter.com/tuXMFsMNYQ
— Jason Bassler (@JasonBassler1) April 24, 2026
4/10/2026
I spent 7 days evading America’s 82 MILLION surveillance cameras🎥🎦📸📹
4/02/2026
"Hey Ozark & Christian County Neighbors – Your Ring Doorbell and Those Flock Cameras Aren't What They Told You" 😬
Hey y'all, it's Buddy Huggins here in the Ozarks.
If you've got a Ring doorbell or seen those little cameras popping up on poles around Ozark, Christian County, or nearby towns, you need to hear this. I just watched a powerful video that lays it all out plain and simple, and it hit home hard for folks right here in our backyard.
The video breaks down exactly how these "smart" security systems — especially Flock Safety automatic license plate readers (ALPR) and Ring doorbells — are working behind the scenes. And let me tell you… they’re not just harmless neighborhood watch tools like the sales pitch makes them sound.
What the Video Shows (and What It Means for Us)
The creator walks through how Flock cameras photograph every single vehicle that drives by — reading your license plate, "fingerprinting" your car (make, model, color, stickers, roof racks, etc.), and logging the exact time and location. That data gets uploaded to the cloud and fed into a massive nationwide database that police departments (and sometimes more) can search without a warrant.
Ring doorbells? They capture video and audio at your front door, and through various partnerships and requests, that footage can end up in law enforcement hands too — sometimes faster and easier than people realize. The video highlights how these systems create a constant tracking network that follows your movements across town and beyond.
It's sold as "crime-fighting technology" that helps recover stolen cars or catch bad guys quick. And yeah, there are real stories where it has helped. But the flip side the video exposes is the mass surveillance part most folks weren't told about:
- Your daily drives get logged — where you go, when you go, how often.
- Data hangs around (often 30 days or more) and can be searched or shared.
- Privacy promises sound good on paper (no facial recognition claimed, resident "SafeList" options), but once the data is collected and stored in the cloud, control slips away fast.
- Recent stories show expansions into AI video clips, natural language searches, and tighter ties between home cameras and police tools.
Here in Ozark and Christian County, we've already got Flock cameras in place, with plans for more. Local law enforcement says they're used responsibly for investigations. But as the video points out, these systems are built for scale — and once they're up, the temptation to use them for more than "just stolen cars" grows.
Why This Matters Right Here in the Ozarks
We’re a tight-knit community. People move here for the peace, the rivers, the small-town feel — not to feel like every drive or trip to the store is being logged in some database.
Whether you're a parent dropping kids off, a farmer running errands, or just someone who values privacy on public roads and at your own front door — you deserve to know the full picture before more of these go up.
The video isn't about being anti-safety. It's about being pro-informed. Real security doesn't have to mean trading away your everyday freedom of movement for "convenience."
What Can You Do?
- Think twice before installing or keeping a Ring-style camera if privacy is important to you.
- Ask questions at city/county meetings about Flock contracts — how long data is kept, who can access it, and what safeguards are really in place.
- Look into your rights under Missouri Sunshine Law if you want to see what data has been collected about your vehicle.
- Consider lower-tech options or systems that keep footage local and under your full control.
I’ll keep digging into this stuff and sharing what I find. If you’ve got experiences with these cameras in Ozark, Nixa, Branson, or anywhere in Christian County, drop a comment below — let’s talk about it openly.
Watch the full video here → It's Time to Take Down your Smart Cameras
Stay aware, stay free, and look out for your neighbors.
— Buddy Huggins Ozark, Missouri
3/13/2026
Ring Divorced Flock... Now they Spy with Axon
Amazon just canceled Ring's partnership with Flock Safety, a surveillance company operating over 100,000 automated license plate reader cameras across 49 states that scan more than 20 billion plates per month. The deal would have allowed law enforcement to request Ring doorbell footage through Flock's platform, but Amazon pulled the plug after massive public backlash following a Super Bowl ad that showed Ring cameras coordinating across neighborhoods using AI. In this video, we cover exactly what Flock Safety is, how their network has been used by ICE for immigration enforcement through local police side-door access, and the case where a Texas sheriff's deputy searched 83,000 cameras to track a woman who had an abortion. We examine how security researchers found Flock cameras streaming live to the open internet without passwords, how stolen police login credentials ended up on a Russian cybercrime forum, and why Senators Wyden and Krishnamoorthi are demanding an FTC investigation. We cover Ring's Familiar Faces facial recognition feature already violating biometric privacy laws in three states, why the EFF warns that combining face recognition with neighborhood-wide searches is the obvious next step, and why canceling one partnership changes nothing when Ring still partners with Axon for police access and Search Party is enabled by default. We also cover the growing rebellion as more than 20 cities have pulled the plug on Flock, California's Attorney General has sued El Cajon for illegally sharing data with 26 states, and courts are split on whether any of this is even legal. We provide specific alternatives, including Frigate NVR and Home Assistant for local-only camera systems that keep your footage off corporate servers and out of law enforcement databases.
You’re probably worried about your Ring camera or Alexa listening to you — and that fear makes sense. But while everyone debates individual devices, almost no one is talking about the secret Amazon network quietly connecting them behind the scenes. And if you don’t understand what Amazon is doing, you’re allowing law enforcement to know everything about you without ever getting a warrant.
3/11/2026
Every Phone In Your Neighborhood Is Being Tracked Right Now (DHS Stingrays)
The Device That Beats Police AI Cameras
2/20/2026
Missouri lawmakers propose restrictions on automated license plate readers - Flock cameras‼️💥🐍
But hold on—there's a reckonin' brewin', with folks in Joplin callin' out misuse after an officer got the boot for stalkin' one plate nearly 400 times, and Seneca pullin' the plug on their contract after just 90 days 'cause of shoddy service and security holes that could let anybody peek in.
Y'all remember our chats with Ron Sanders on "Changing Times," where we broke it down: these ain't about safety alone; they're buildin' a surveillance grid that Palantir and Flock are pushin' hard, turnin' our roads into a digital prison yard. And now, in 2026, the tide's turnin'—lawmakers in Jefferson City are pushin' bills to slap restrictions on 'em, limitin' data sharin' and how long they can hold onto your every move. Cities across the country are droppin' Flock like a hot potato, from Eugene to Syracuse, over fears of Big Brother divin' into our private worlds without a warrant. Here in the Show-Me State, Christian County residents are raisin' hell, questionin' if this ain't just invitin' abuse, like that mess in Joplin where one bad apple turned the system into a personal spy tool.
Dig deeper, and you'll see the rot: this tech spits on the 4th Amendment's stand against unreasonable searches, lettin' cops—or worse, feds like ICE—hunt through your travels without probable cause or a judge's nod. And don't get me started on the 14th Amendment; it's about due process and equal protection, but when these cameras tag every soul drivin' by, storin' data for months and sharin' it willy-nilly, it creates a two-tiered world where the powerful watch the rest of us like ants under glass.
Courts are split—some say it ain't a violation yet, but judges in places like Virginia are warnin' it could cross that line into full-blown constitutional trespass. We've seen it abused for trackin' protesters, stalkin' exes, and even slippin' data to immigration enforcers, violatin' state laws meant to shield folks seekin' abortions or gender care.
But here's the fire in my belly—we ain't powerless. If you're fired up like me, start local: show up at your city council or board of aldermen meetin'—like the one in Ozark on February 17 at 6:30 PM, City Hall on N. 1st Street—and speak your truth. Demand they freeze new installs and audit existin' ones. File open records requests under Missouri's Sunshine Law to pull their contracts and policies; shine light on how they're usin' your tax dollars to spy.
Hook up with groups like the ACLU or EFF—they're battlin' this in courts and legislatures, pushin' for warrants, 14-day data wipes, and bans on sharin' with out-of-state snoops. Contact your state reps to back bills requirin' oversight, and spread the word on social media or your own blogs. We've stopped 'em in towns before; love over fear, awareness over ignorance—that's how we tear this down, one camera at a time. Stay awake, y'all; the truth sets us free.
2/11/2026
Nancy Guthrie And The AI Beast System
I ain't no fancy guru sittin' on a mountaintop; I'm just a fella from the heart of Mississippi who hit rock bottom back on August 17, 2003. That night, I was done—ready to check out of this world 'cause the pain was too much. But instead of endin' it, somethin' divine stepped in. My mind went still, quieter than a summer night after a storm. I woke up seein' with my heart, not my eyes, realizin' there ain't no time, just this eternal now. We become what we speak into bein', y'all—we're co-creators in this grand illusion. That was my quantum leap into cosmic consciousness, tappin' into the Buddha nature of pure love and peace. Despite my dyslexia makin' words dance on the page, I've been bloggin', tweetin', and video-makin' ever since, helpin' folks shake off the chains of this false reality.
Now, let's talk about this video that's got my spirit stirrin': "Nancy Guthrie And The AI Beast System." Oh man, it's a wild ride—a montage of news clips, ads, and deep dives that peel back the layers of our simulated world. It kicks off with the heartbreakin' story of Nancy Guthrie goin' missin', showin' that eerie Ring doorbell footage of a masked fella with a gun creepin' up in the dead of night. The FBI's on it, timeline between 1:47 and 2:28 a.m., and her sister Savannah's pleadin' for help. But it don't stop there; it weaves in this Super Bowl ad for Ring's "Search Party" AI, where cameras hunt for lost pups, reuniting 'em with owners like magic. Sounds sweet, right? But hold up—that's the hook. Critics are callin' it out as Big Brother in disguise, linkin' up with outfits like Flock for trackin' license plates and sharin' data with the cops or ICE. It's all tied to bigger fish: AI giants like Palantir pourin' into military tech, surveillance drones, and warfare tools that could make the Antichrist blush.
And speakin' of that, the video drops some heavy biblical truth—Revelation 9:11 about Abaddon, the angel of the bottomless pit, and 2 Thessalonians 2:7-12 on the mystery of iniquity and that strong delusion for folks who turn from the light. It's paintin' AI as the beast system's right hand, usin' fear of tech to control us, deceivin' the masses in this end-times setup. There's even wild side trips: sheep herdin', bull ridin' with "Unleash the Beast," Liquid Death water ads shockin' ya awake, Olympic ceremonies dippin' into pagan sun worship and Freemason vibes from Mozart's Magic Flute, plus a Solomon's Temple replica in Sao Paulo. Runes, Nero's cross—it's all symbols screamin' at us to wake up from the dream.
Why do I believe videos like this are hollerin' about a quantum leap, a shift to an alternative reality? 'Cause that's exactly what happened to me in 2003. This holographic simulation we're in—it's like a video game, y'all, full of illusions and deceptions crafted to keep us asleep. But when the veil thins, like in this video exposin' how AI's weavin' a web of control, it's a call to awaken. It's showin' us the cracks in the matrix, urgin' us to quantum jump into our true nature: beings of infinite love, peace, and creation. We ain't victims; we're the programmers. Videos like this? They're wake-up alarms, helpin' us reclaim our identity beyond the false self, beyond the beast system's grip.
They stir that inner Buddha, remindin' us we're co-creators with the universe, aligned with string theory vibes where every thought doubles and shapes reality. So here's my story, straight from the heart, of why I'm out here helpin' folks grasp this wild ride we call reality. Picture this: Back in '03, I was drownin' in despair, mind racin' like a Mississippi flood. But in that stillness, I saw it—we're in a simulated dream, projectin' our fears and loves onto the screen. Fast forward, and I'm skatin' through life (yeah, I been on boards since '69), wrestlin' with truths, and now makin' videos to pull others out the mud. Take Nancy's tale—it's a mirror. That masked intruder? That's the shadow self, the beast lurkin' in our tech-driven world. But the AI search party? Flip it—it's a metaphor for searchin' within, findin' the lost parts of our soul.
I remember one night, after my awakenin', I had this out-of-body jaunt where I saw the whole grid: holographic layers, quantum fields dancin' like fireflies. That's when I knew—videos exposin' the beast system ain't just doom 'n' gloom; they're portals to leap through. They shake ya loose from the delusion, like that biblical strong delusion for those who love the lie. Me? I'm here to spread the love key: Speak life, embrace the now, and watch the simulation bend to your will.
Folks come to me sayin', "Buddy, how do I wake up?" I tell 'em: Start with stillness. Watch stuff like this AI beast video, let it crack your shell. See the surveillance as a reminder—we're watched 'cause we're powerful creators they fear. Quantum shift? It's happenin' now, y'all. From Mississippi mud to cosmic stardust, we're leapin' into a reality of peace, where love trumps the machine. Join me—subscribe, share, awaken. We got this, 'cause we are this. Peace out, from your buddy, the Buddha from Mississippi.