Monday, October 13, 2025

Whitney Webb October update

@marcusa8007
This woman is a national treasure, needs protection 😮❤❤

@laroark5036
We all have been sold down the river.

@zacharybraganza3747
Listen to her, she is the best Journalist of the century

@MMoore-72
Whitney is one of the best independent journalists extremely smart, articulate, and in depth.

@sunnyquin
China gate was a tip of the iceberg. We were sold out in the first of His administrations and under Biden. Both families and in-laws were accepting payoffs and sweet lobbying deals. Under Clinton the jews sold silent submarine technology to China.

@barbarataylor2494
The tangled webs Whitney Webbs

@auntbroccoli9992
Most days I just stay off the computer and phone. I'm more than happy to go backwards...pre 1990's when we didn't have the Internet

@EC55555
The murder of Ron Brown is yet one more instance of utter corruption. Completely covered up.

@WagnerRCouchSr
You had my attention, now you have my interest!

@kohchang2007
Just wow!! No teleprompter, no cards to read from, she has all this information, freely available to her, unfettered. She has genius level intelect ... Amazing and overwhelming at the same time. Oh, and she scares the shit out of me...


As the U.S. races to dominate artificial intelligence, a dangerous question emerges: can America outpace China without becoming a mirror image of its authoritarian techno-state? In this compelling analysis, the speaker challenges the growing call for civil-military fusion in the U.S.—a model China has aggressively pursued—which increasingly resembles a corporatist architecture that blurs the line between democracy and technocracy. Is this convergence a national security necessity, or a quiet surrender of American civil liberties in the name of power?

Digging beneath the surface, the discussion unveils the deep entanglement between U.S. financial elites, Big Tech, and Chinese state-linked corporations. From Henry Kissinger’s long-standing ties to Beijing, to Wall Street oligarchs like Larry Fink and Steve Schwarzman straddling both Chinese and American power circles; the speaker argues that transnational capital, not ideology, is driving the AI arms race. The implications reach back decades, connecting today’s elite with shadowy scandals like Chinagate and the suspicious death of Commerce Secretary Ron Brown. And now, with figures like Howard Lutnick poised to lead U.S. commerce, and Elon Musk simultaneously entangled with both U.S. defense and Chinese tech, the question becomes unavoidable: how secure is national security when capital knows no borders?

This video forces a reckoning with AI not just as a technological frontier, but as a vehicle for a creeping global technocratic order—one shaped not by nations, but by unaccountable economic power. If the future is programmable, who’s holding the code?