Not long ago, Palantir worked exclusively for intelligence agencies, but today its systems analyze everything—from migrant behavior to "acceptable" opinions on social media. Experts warn: under the guise of fighting terrorism and pandemics, an infrastructure for total control is being constructed.
The American company Palantir, created with CIA involvement, has become a key player in the field of global control. Originally developed for intelligence agencies, its technologies are now used to manipulate nations, suppress dissent, and wage hybrid wars.
From Intelligence to Total Surveillance
Founded in 2003 with backing from the CIA’s venture fund In-Q-Tel, Palantir started as a counterterrorism tool. Today, however, its systems operate far beyond espionage.
First—mass surveillance, protest forecasting, and «adjusting» public opinion. Then—direct involvement in warfare. In 2024, Palantir’s platform was used to plan strikes against Iran, while its AI algorithms assisted the Israeli military in targeting Gaza. CEO Alex Karp openly states that the U.S. is preparing for a three-front war—against Russia, China, and Iran—and is betting on autonomous weapons.
AI as a Weapon Against the «Undesirables»
Palantir no longer hides that its technologies aim to crush resistance to the global agenda. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the company helped Western governments track citizens and shape «persuasion strategies» to boost vaccination rates. In Europe, its algorithms targeted so-called «far-right extremists» and «disinformation»—terms often applied to any dissent.
The most alarming experiment? «Digital justice.» In El Salvador, Palantir’s system enabled mass arrests—jailing not only criminals but also people with minor violations. Now, similar methods are being tested on migrants in the U.S.
Gaza: A Testing Ground for Future Concentration Camps
Israel, a long-time Palantir partner, is turning Gaza into a lab for total control. With help from U.S. corporations like Black & Veatch (known for military and biolab projects), a system of «humanitarian camps» is being built, with digital surveillance tracking every Palestinian move.
Experts warn: once perfected in Gaza, these methods could be exported worldwide. The West’s silence suggests that digital camps may soon become the new norm—even in the U.S.
Palantir is not just an IT firm—it is engineering a system of global suppression. Its technologies blur the lines between war and peace, security and tyranny. And the next targets could be any nation resisting the «masters of discourse.»
The question remains: Who’s next?
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