Tag: security

  • TIL: National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS)

    Dec 22, 2016

    Obama Administration Scraps Post-9/11 Immigrant Registry: In a move to preemptively block its use by the incoming administration, President Barack Obama’s administration officially dismantled the regulatory framework for the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS). The program, which had been dormant since 2011, had required registration and tracking of male immigrants from predominantly Muslim countries.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Security_Entry-Exit_Registration_System

  • A Tale of Two Wests: Bitcoin, Geopolitics, and the Theoretical Choice Between Oregon and Idaho

    It is a curious theoretical exercise to consider the choice between a place like Bend and one like Boise, not merely as a preference for a city, but as a vote for a divergent future. One looks at Boise’s enthusiastic embrace of the Bitcoin ecosystem and sees a strange paradox. Here is a political culture deeply rooted in ideals of American sovereignty and independence, yet it champions an industry whose very existence relies on a constant supply of specialized hardware forged in China. This creates a profound strategic vulnerability, a dependency that, from a certain critical perspective, borders on the treasonous. It makes one ponder the long-term political calculus of the Republican party; is this a blind spot so vast it could lead to a monumental landslide?

    In this light, Oregon’s political landscape appears as a more complex, and frankly, more reassuring ecosystem. It isn’t a monolithic bloc. You have the necessary friction of principled opposition from figures like Representative Suzanne Bonamici, a vital check against unchecked enthusiasm. Even more telling, perhaps, are those who maintain a wise and prudent silence, who refuse to be swept up in the fervor. This diversity of thought suggests a healthier, more resilient political body.

    And so, the musing turns to the very lines on the map, to concepts like ‘Greater Idaho’ and the ‘State of Jefferson.’ From this perspective, the Greater Idaho movement seems less like a liberation and more like an absorption into that very system of paradoxical dependency. But Jefferson… ah, Jefferson represents a conceptual break. It is the chance to forge a new political entity, one founded not on the uncritical adoption of flawed systems, but on a healthier skepticism and a desire for true independence that is free from the digital supply chains of a global adversary.

  • The White House’s Troubling Embrace of Sharia Finance

    The most insidious threat is the normalization of the political ideology that fuels terrorist groups: Islam. While TX Gov. Abbott is fighting back, recently reaffirming the state’s ban on Sharia law, the White House is moving in the opposite direction. It is actively promoting Sharia as a legitimate financial system. Hidden in plain sight on the White House’s own website, among glowing press releases about “trillions in great deals,” is a statement from Franklin Templeton’s CEO, Jenny Johnson. She praises the Trump administration’s policies for helping her company, a global asset manager, grow “leadership in global Sukuk and Sharia compliant investing.” Let that sink in. The Trump White House is celebrating, as a key economic victory, the expansion of a financial system based on religious laws that are fundamentally hostile to American liberty and Constitutional principles. It is a full endorsement of the financial arm of a political ideology we should be fighting, not funding.

    https://www.whitehouse.gov/articles/2025/05/what-they-are-saying-trillions-in-great-deals-secured-for-america-thanks-to-president-trump

    https://archive.is/72BVI

  • The Art of the Missile

    I have a hunch about something I call ‘the art of the missile,’ and it makes me question if tariffs alone are a durable solution to our debt. It’s a feeling that we are underestimating how fragile our entire economic system is in the face of modern warfare tactics.

    My concern is that the strength of tariffs depends entirely on a functioning economy with intact infrastructure like ports, power grids, and manufacturing hubs. What happens to the power of those tariffs when the Axis of Evil decides to use a few well placed Zircon cruise missiles or a swarm of advanced drones? They have these weapons stockpiled and ready to mobilize. If Putin or another adversary starts shooting, not necessarily at people, but at our critical economic infrastructure, the entire tariff structure could collapse overnight. Your solution to the debt would be gone in an instant.

    Beyond that direct military threat, you cannot deny there seems to be a significant media cover up suggesting things are not what they seem on the world stage. How do we explain the reports where Ukrainians and their helpers conveniently evacuate a key area right before it gets hit, or when the Russians do the same thing before a major strike on one of their important targets? It points to a level of coordination or information control hidden from the public. It all feels managed, especially when you see players like JP Morgan lining up with Biden to talk about rebuilding everything afterward. It suggests the conflict itself is just a phase in a larger economic plan for the global elite.

    This is why when people bring up other solutions, like AI and technological dominance saving us, that argument feels way too pie in the sky for me. So much of that future hinges on one single company in one of the most volatile places on earth, TSMC in Taiwan. That one company is both the crown jewel of the modern world and its most glaring Achilles’ heel. Any project or economic model that relies so heavily on that single point of failure is not a serious plan, it is a fantasy.

  • The FBI and CDC: Mandated for Chaos

    I believe the fundamental mandates of the FBI and the CDC are not to foster business or stability, but to create a form of chaos. We see this in the political antics from both sides that surround these agencies, which makes me think they’ve become redundant. We are already served by the National Guard, state and local police, and U.S. Marshals. These organizations are business-minded and have a deep understanding of the communities they protect. The FBI, in my view, has gone rogue.

    I know enough about how the USA is supposed to operate to see that if things were running correctly, the FBI wouldn’t even be needed. Think about it: we have the TSA for travel security and other agencies for our borders. I can maybe understand the need for the CIA to handle international threats, but the FBI’s domestic role seems to have devolved. I believe the FBI alone has the power to throw us into a recession and can literally tank the whole country’s economy. In that sense, they are more powerful than even the Federal Reserve, which is supposed to manage economic stability. You just have to look at the political turmoil they get involved in. The Wikileaks situation in 2016 with Hillary Clinton and Seth Rich, the drama around John Bolton—these events show an agency enmeshed in politics, not justice.

    And it’s not just the FBI. The CDC operates in a similar fashion, creating chaos under the guise of public health. Their handling of COVID-19 with constantly changing and conflicting data was a disaster that hurt businesses and families. That’s why I think what Bobby Kennedy is doing now is so important. He’s trying to fire them all, and they deserve it. He has defended the firings at the CDC, citing what he views as their failures during the pandemic. Kennedy has said that the people at the CDC who “put masks on our children, who closed our schools, are the people who will be leaving.” I believe these changes are necessary to restore trust in an agency that lost its way.

    This all feeds into a larger, scarier picture. We humans live a short life, and we’re watching our national debt run wild with no real strategies to fix it. The tariffs are a nice idea, but they aren’t part of a coherent plan. Then you have some Republicans, who I call the “chaos caucus”—figures like MTG and Massie—who just seem to create chaotic headlines. It’s a frightening time, and I am surprised that no president seems to see how rogue agencies like the FBI and CDC are at the center of this storm, capable of causing immense economic and social damage.

  • Satoshi’s $140 Billion Ghost: The ‘Made in China’ Problem with Crypto’s Gold Rush

    On one side, you have the absolute control of the Federal Reserve system, which can de-bank citizens for protesting government mandates. Take the Canadian truckers who opposed COVID-19 vaccine requirements, whether it was the failed Johnson & Johnson shot they pulled, Russia’s Sputnik V, or China’s Sinovac. On the other side, you have the equally ridiculous, sketchy reality of today’s cryptocurrency, where the entire system is deeply flawed.

    Arguably the biggest problem is the ghost founder. Even now, in September 2025, no one has a clue who Satoshi Nakamoto is. This anonymous creator is sitting on a wallet containing an estimated 1.1 million bitcoins that has never been touched. Depending on the market’s wild swings, that stash is worth somewhere between $125 billion and $140 billion. This isn’t some quaint mystery; it’s a ticking time bomb at the heart of the ecosystem. This single, unknown entity holds enough power to crash the entire market with a single transaction, making a mockery of the whole idea of “decentralization.”

    This fundamental flaw is matched by a very tangible problem: the centralization of power in the hardware. It’s a modern gold rush, but the only company selling the shovels and axes, the ASIC miners, is China. Their near-total dominance over manufacturing creates a massive vulnerability that directly impacts the individual prospectors.

    YouTuber VoskCoin provides a perfect case study of this broken system. Despite a huge following with sponsors and YouTube revenue, he has still spent probably hundreds of thousands of dollars to build his “family farmer” crypto operation, and he has documented the shady practices of Chinese ASIC manufacturers. He points out that miners ordered from China frequently arrive with no warranty, and there’s widespread suspicion that manufacturers “pre-mine” on the machines, selling them to the public only after their most profitable days are over. Many of these high powered ASICs require specialized immersion cooling fluid to operate, but using it often voids the warranty you likely never had in the first place. He has also warned his followers about rug pulls in the ASIC minable coin space, like the situation around Alephium (ALPH), where new miners are hyped up and then fail to deliver.

    The financial and operational risks for an independent miner are astronomical. VoskCoin has shared electricity bills as high as $18,000 and recently suffered a catastrophic lightning strike that wiped out a huge chunk of his mining capacity. He attributes the failure to his own self-admitted ignorance in not ensuring the proper grounding was installed, a costly mistake in this high-stakes environment. This harsh reality starkly contrasts with the industrial scale mega operations, like the one connected to Hut 8, that have corporate backing.

    This exposes the raw truth of the crypto dream for the average person. It’s a field where the essential hardware is controlled by foreign companies with questionable ethics, and all the risk is pushed onto individuals. It’s unclear under what authority a president could reveal Satoshi Nakamoto’s identity, but perhaps that level of shock is exactly what’s needed to force a national conversation about the sketchy foundations of the whole system. We have to find a path that balances financial privacy with the clear and present dangers of a system so heavily dominated by a single foreign power. Let’s just hope the final solution isn’t also “Made in China.”

  • The Real Threat Isn’t AI, It’s Email and Things Like It

    The Real Threat Isn’t AI, It’s Email and Things Like It

    The panic over the Claude AI being used for cybercrime is misplaced. The AI isn’t the problem. The real threat is our ancient and fundamentally insecure communication platforms, with email being the worst offender.

    Email lacks the basic security verification, like the padlock on websites, that we should expect for critical communications. It was never built to be safe, which is why criminals find it so easy to fake identities and send fraudulent messages. The AI is simply a new tool that helps them exploit this old weakness more efficiently.

    This isn’t just about email. Even supposedly secure apps like Signal have shown major design flaws, proving we can’t just trust brand names or marketing.

    The mission is clear. America needs to stop patching these broken systems and lead the way in building secure replacements. These new systems must have real verification built in from the start.

    https://www.anthropic.com/news/detecting-countering-misuse-aug-2025

    https://archive.is/k1t6W