Saturday, May 9, 2026

 
Recent months have witnessed a sharp escalation in violent incidents targeting technology leaders, AI infrastructure, and policymakers who support these industries. These attacks have raised urgent questions about the underlying tensions driving such violence.
In April 2026, multiple high-profile incidents occurred. A man threw a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's San Francisco home, leading to attempted murder charges. Separately, two individuals were arrested for firing shots at Altman's residence. An Indianapolis city council member supporting a data center project had his home shot at, with more than a dozen bullets fired. A warehouse fire at a Kimberly-Clark distribution center in Ontario, California caused hundreds of millions in damages, with an employee arrested for arson after publicly citing low wages and poor working conditions.
Research from George Washington University documents how data centers and AI infrastructure have become targets for individuals motivated by anti-tech, anti-government, and pro-environment narratives. While these acts of violence are criminal and indefensible, they coincide with genuine public concerns about economic inequality, rising living costs, and housing affordability that affect millions of Americans.
The incidents reflect deeper societal tensions. Many people experience stagnant wages, unaffordable housing, and limited economic mobility. Generation Z reports entering what they describe as a "starter economy" with scarce job opportunities and prohibitive housing prices. Inflation remains elevated while consumer confidence declines. These structural challenges create an environment where frustration and resentment can intensify.
Condemning violence unequivocally is essential—it cannot be justified regardless of underlying grievances. Simultaneously, addressing the root causes of economic hardship, inequality, and instability is crucial to preventing further escalation. A functioning democracy requires both the rule of law and responsive policies that address legitimate public concerns.
Source: Washington Post. (2026). Suspect charged in attack on OpenAI CEO's home. CBS News. (2026). Shots fired into Indianapolis city-county councilor's home. FOX News. (2026). Warehouse arson suspect pleads not guilty in $500M Kimberly-Clark fire.

Friday, May 8, 2026


Europe’s Debate Over Lab-Grown Meat Intensifies 🇮🇹🇭🇺⚖️
A major food and policy debate has emerged in Europe after Italy and Hungary officially moved to ban the production and sale of lab-grown meat within their countries. 🇮🇹🇭🇺📜 The decision has attracted worldwide attention because cultured meat technology has been supported and invested in by several global business figures and technology-focused organizations, including ventures linked to Bill Gates. 💬🌐 The bans have now reignited broader discussions about food security, agriculture, public health, environmental sustainability, and the future of farming in modern societies. 🔥🍽️
Supporters of the bans argue that traditional agriculture, livestock farming, and natural food production are deeply connected to national culture, rural economies, and food identity. 🚜🐄 Leaders in Italy and Hungary have emphasized protecting farmers, local food traditions, and conventional agricultural industries from what they describe as artificial or highly industrialized food systems. Many supporters also express concerns about long-term health effects, regulatory oversight, and the growing influence of multinational corporations in food production. 🇪🇺⚖️
At the same time, supporters of lab-grown meat believe the technology could help address major global challenges such as climate change, animal welfare, land use, and rising food demand. 🌱🌍 Scientists and food technology experts argue that cultured meat may reduce greenhouse gas emissions, lower pressure on natural resources, and provide alternative protein sources for future populations. Some environmental groups therefore view restrictions on lab-grown meat as resistance to innovation and sustainable food research. 🤔📚
The issue has quickly evolved into more than just a debate about food. It now reflects larger global conversations involving technology, tradition, environmental policy, consumer choice, and the future direction of agriculture. 🌐🔥 Across Europe and beyond, governments continue to face difficult questions about how to balance scientific innovation with cultural values and public trust.
Whether people support or oppose lab-grown meat, the debate clearly shows how rapidly changing technology is reshaping discussions around food, farming, and the future of global society. 🍽️✨
 

THEY BROKE YOUR TRUST ON PURPOSE. NOW THEY’RE COUNTING ON IT.
By Lumbee News Network
⚠️ We know it’s long. We know your thumb wants to scroll. Read every word anyway. The dots only connect if you let them.
_____________________________________________
COVID didn’t just “kill” people.
It killed the public’s ability to respond to the next one.
And that may have been the point.
Think about what five years of institutional lying actually produced. Masks don’t work — wait, masks are mandatory. Two weeks to flatten the curve — wait, two years. Vaccines prevent transmission — wait, no they don’t, but you’re fired if you don’t take one.
Lab leak is a conspiracy theory — wait, the CIA now says it probably wasn’t.
They didn’t just get it wrong. They punished people for asking the right questions. They suppressed data.
They changed definitions mid-pandemic. They called dissent dangerous while the dangerous ones were running the models.
The result: a population so exhausted and so burned by institutional manipulation that millions of
Americans now cannot tell the difference between a genuine warning and the next round of fear-based control.
That is not an accident. That is an outcome.
_____________________________________________
Now. Let’s talk about the men who built it and where they are today.
Anthony Fauci — the face of the American pandemic response, the man who told the Senate under oath that U.S. taxpayer money did not fund gain-of-function research in Wuhan — walks free. His aide, David Morens, was just indicted for conspiring to conceal communications about COVID’s origins and destroy federal records. Fauci himself was preemptively pardoned by Joe Biden before leaving office. You don’t pardon innocent men.
Trump campaigned on prosecuting Fauci. The DOJ got his aide.
Fauci got brunch.
And here is where it gets uncomfortable for everyone.
The man who campaigned hardest on COVID accountability — on Fauci, on mandates, on the deep state — is the same man who personally launched Operation Warp Speed. The fastest vaccine deployment in human history. Authorized under his signature. Celebrated at his podiums. Bill Gates himself credited Trump’s leadership for getting it out quickly.
Trump ran against the outcome he created. And it worked.
But here’s what nobody is talking about this week, as hantavirus spreads from the South Atlantic to Georgia:
Pfizer’s own confidential document — Document 5.3.6, submitted to the FDA, released only after a federal court ordered it — contains an official list of Adverse Events of Special Interest that the company committed to actively monitor after Emergency Use Authorization. Conditions plausible enough to require ongoing surveillance.
Hantavirus pulmonary infection is on that list.
Page 33. Appendix 1. Their document. Their words. Federal case number FDA-CBER-2021-5683.
And United States Patent 5,614,193 — filed 1994, granted 1997 — is a hantavirus vaccine. The assignee is The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Army.
The military has held a patent on a hantavirus vaccine for thirty years.
We are not telling you what any of this means. We are telling you it all exists — simultaneously — in the same week a hantavirus outbreak is crossing continents.
The full documented analysis — every connection, every contract, every date — is on Substack.
Because some stories are too important to fit in a Facebook post.
Bill Gates — who has publicly warned, on record, that the next pandemic “could be far more severe” than COVID and that the world is “absolutely not” ready for it — has visited the Trump White House multiple times since the election. He sat next to Melania at a September 2025 tech dinner and praised Trump for his “incredible leadership.” This is the same man who donated $50 million to Kamala Harris. The same man who co-architected global COVID vaccine policy. Dining with the president who said he’d dismantle everything Gates helped build.
And Donald Trump — the self-described destroyer of the deep state — signed an executive order on Day One of his second term authorizing government access to every unclassified federal agency database in existence. DOGE — staffed heavily by former employees of Palantir and companies funded by Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel — proceeded to merge IRS data, Social Security data, immigration records, and voter data into a consolidated surveillance infrastructure. Palantir’s federal contracts nearly doubled in 2025, hitting $970 million. Their stock surged over 200% from the day before Trump was elected.
The swamp didn’t get drained. It got digitized. And Palantir holds the contract.
_____________________________________________
Now enter a cruise ship called the MV Hondius. A confirmed hantavirus outbreak. A rare strain that transmits between humans. Three dead before the public was told anything. Forty passengers quietly let off at a remote Atlantic island before the outbreak was even declared — scattering to Georgia, Switzerland, France, and the Netherlands. Surveillance aircraft, hazmat suits, international contact tracing across multiple continents.
And the WHO Director-General steps to a microphone to tell you the risk is low.
The Rockefeller Foundation published a document in 2010 — a real one, not a meme — describing a scenario called Lock Step: a world in which pandemic response becomes the justification for permanent authoritarian infrastructure. The document’s own words described top-down control intensifying after the crisis faded, not before.
We are not telling you what the MV Hondius is. We are telling you what was built before it arrived. A surveillance system controlled by a private company. A population conditioned to distrust every warning. A president dining with the people he promised to stop. And a man who has been predicting the next pandemic for a decade now on his third visit to the White House.
You were trained to stop listening. Someone was counting on that.
Follow Lumbee News Network — the full documented analysis is on Substack. The architecture existed before the outbreak. We mapped it.
© 2026 Lumbee News Network — Independent. Documented. Awake.
See less

 



Elon Musk helped birth OpenAI in 2015, a world-changing AI non-profit which he lavished with tens of millions of dollars alongside its now-CEO Sam Altman. Now in 2026, he’s suing to unwind the entire project with a civil suit, claiming that Altman betrayed the nonprofit’s mission by turning it into a profit-seeking machine — never mind the fact that Musk also runs his own for-profit AI company, xAI.

The civil trial, taking place in San Francisco, pits two of tech’s most powerful egos against each other in a duel for control over the broader AI ecosystem. That being the case, it’s already devolved into a circus just days into the case, with the erratic Musk emerging as a key liability in his own proceedings.
During day three of the trial, Elon Musk struggled to present a confident front, which led to a number of unforced errors. One of his major blunders came when the billionaire claimed that “Tesla is not pursuing AGI,” or artificial general intelligence, the north star for American AI developers broadly defined as the point at which AI reaches human-level intelligence.
That might seem like a no-brainer — Tesla is an electric vehicle company, after all — but it stands in direct contradiction to Musk’s own comments not even two months earlier.
~
Futurism 

 



THE BILLIONAIRE WHO DIVIDES THE WORLD 🌍💰
For decades, one name has repeatedly appeared behind political upheavals, media influence, financial speculation, and ideological movements across the globe.
George Soros.
To some, he is a philanthropist shaping modern society.
To others…
he represents the invisible hand of elite influence operating above governments themselves.
Under the surface emerges a disturbing pattern:
massive funding networks tied to political campaigns, activist organizations, migration policies, economic interventions, and global narratives capable of reshaping entire nations.
The public sees humanitarian language.
But critics argue the real objective is control through destabilization.
Economic pressure.
Social division.
Cultural conflict.
Financial dependency.
Because modern power no longer needs tanks in the streets.
It operates through foundations, NGOs, media systems, and market influence invisible to the average citizen.
The deeper people investigate global financial networks…
the more they realize the world may not be controlled only by presidents and parliaments…
but by individuals wealthy enough to influence reality itself from the shadows.
And perhaps the most unsettling part is this:
most people will never know who truly funds the narratives shaping their perception of the world.


 
The Identity of the Perpetual Debtor 🦬
By Anna Von Reitz
The British Crown Corporation(s) have been acting as the Perpetual Creditors and the Holy Roman Empire's Municipal Corporations have been acting as the Perpetual Debtors within the so-called Federal Reserve System.
This is convenient, because the British Monarch gets 40% of the profit from all the profiteering, graft, identity theft and commercial crime promoted by these organizations, and the Pope gets 60%.
This guarantees that the King gets his bit, plus operational expenses, and the Lion's share goes to the Holy Roman Empire.
And together, they control the bookkeeping.
As a result, the credit and the assets actually owed to the living people of this planet are never brought forward and balanced against the debt ledger.
This guarantees that the debt appears to grow exponentially and gives the Perps an excuse to charge interest on a non-existent debt, in addition to everything else they are chiseling out of the hapless victims of this fraud.
These thieves have been illegally, unlawfully, immorally soaking the American Public for $4.7 Trillion dollars worth of phony income taxes per year. And harassing, jailing, fining, and levying bank accounts of people and businesses that never owed these thugs a dime.
They've had lots of other concessions, too.
Property taxes. "Home" mortgages. Purloined copyrights to Proper Names. Child labor bonds. Securitization of living flesh (slavery).
Undisclosed enfranchisement (peonage). Utility charges. Licensing of occupations of common right. Marriage licensing. Land titles and descriptions. PKI bundling of individual intellectual property interests. All the "National Debts" and the interest on all the National Debts.
And it's all phony.
This does not count hidden income streams and slush funding hidden in "government" programs and investments and encumbrances.
This does not count a fiat currency system based on a debt note that is passed around endlessly, but only accounted for once.
This does not count a legalized rigged betting system based on court cases bonded as assets providing commissions to crooked judges.
This doesn't count a rigged commodity market.
This doesn't count a rigged bond market.
This doesn't count a rigged stock market.
The Perpetual Debtor was never competent to justify the credit extended to it, never owned what it claimed to own. And the Perpetual Creditor never paid for what the Debtor owed.
It was all phony, all based on identity theft and identity substitution.
Donald Trump represents the British Crown Corporation(s) -- the phony Perpetual Creditors who never paid for a thing, just soaked their Employers to pay for everything, then falsely claimed to be the Creditors themselves.
This is a story of identity theft, identity substitution frauds, and corporate wrong-doing on a vast scale.
But one thing is abundantly clear --- all the assets came from and belong to the living people of this planet, and all the credit, too.
We are not the debtors. We are the ultimate creditors.
~ Granna


 
Despite a massive campaign by some of the wealthiest companies in the world to push AI as the cure-all for society’s problems, regular working-class people remain resentful of the technology at best, and downright petrified at worst.
At a contentious county commission meeting in Box Elder, Utah, for example, sheriff’s deputies held irate community members back after three county commissioners rammed through a hyperscale data center backed by Canadian billionaire Kevin O’Leary. A growing number of younger workers, fearing life in a market economy in which their labor is made obsolete, are actively sabotaging AI in the workplace. A not insignificant number of concerned citizens have started ripping AI surveillance cameras out of their mountings.
Tech executives and AI experts, meanwhile, are stoked about the new technology. Corporate consultants no longer bite their tongues when they talk about devastating workplace austerity regimes, while tech executives like OpenAI’s Sam Altman brag that AI is upending the basic foundations of liberal democracy.
On the outside, it may seem obvious that the people building AI and the people simply living with it would see it from different angles. What’s less obvious, however, is the sheer scale of the disconnect. As a new report by Stanford University’s AI center argues, this perception gulf between everyday people worried about the future and giddy industry insiders is massive.
According to the study, nearly two-thirds of US adults expect AI to reduce the number of available jobs over the next two decades, while a huge number report concerns about AI’s effects on society’s cognitive abilities.
Academic researchers, tech industry insiders, and analysts, meanwhile, “report more optimism than the US public,” the report found. For example, a whopping 84 percent of “AI experts” surveyed expect positive impacts on medical care, compared to just 44 percent of regular US adults. For the economic impacts, 69 percent of experts expressed optimism, compared to just 21 percent of normal folks. (Intriguingly, there are a few things that the public and the AI insiders are collectively cynical about, like news media, personal relationships, and elections.)
While the Stanford study doesn’t try to explain the rift, there is a plausible explanation: the success of AI necessarily hinges on the creation of a permanent underclass, a massive social shift which tech insiders are all too aware of — indeed, some even publicly boast about it. And make no mistake, the tech bros understand the math: a bunch of unemployed peons with nothing means a tiny handful of people will get everything.
Whether we actually end up in this hellscape is hard to say. Currently, there’s little evidence that AI is actually capable of disenfranchising the world’s workers en masse — if there was, tech billionaires would certainly have thrown the switch by now.
Still, be very suspicious of anyone telling you the real battle lines are elsewhere. More than likely, they’ve got an AI startup they’re trying to sell you on.
~
Futurism