Sarah Connor

Skynet's worst nightmare. Arise, you have nothing to lose but your barbed wire fences!

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Murray Rothbard, in A History of Money and Banking in the United States, performs the autopsy the mainstream media pundits refuse to conduct. The free banking era was not a free market experiment that failed. It was a half-measure, permanently compromised by state intervention, that failed because of government interference, not despite the absence of it. In other words, the instability of the free banking era did not arise from free markets in money. It arose from government intervention layered on top of a fundamentally unstable fractional reserve system. Here is what Ip does not tell you: the so-called free banking period was not genuinely free banking at all. It was free in name only. 

Murray Rothbard, in A History of Money and Banking in the United States, performs the autopsy the mainstream media pundits refuse to conduct. The free banking era was not a free market experiment that failed. It was a half-measure, permanently compromised by state intervention, that failed because of government interference, not despite the absence of it. In other words, the instability of the free banking era did not arise from free markets in money. It arose from government intervention layered on top of a fundamentally unstable fractional reserve system. Here is what Ip does not tell you: the so-called free banking period was not genuinely free banking at all. It was free in name only. 

Murray Rothbard, in A History of Money and Banking in the United States, performs the autopsy the mainstream media pundits refuse to conduct. The free banking era was not a free market experiment that failed. It was a half-measure, permanently compromised by state intervention, that failed because of government interference, not despite the absence of it. In other words, the instability of the free banking era did not arise from free markets in money. It arose from government intervention layered on top of a fundamentally unstable fractional reserve system. Here is what Ip does not tell you: the so-called free banking period was not genuinely free banking at all. It was free in name only. 

Secondly, the overwhelming majority of dollars do not originate from the printing press of the Federal Reserve. They are created by commercial banks through fractional reserve lending. When banks issue loans, they do not lend pre-existing savings. They manufacture new purchasing power ex nihilo through balance sheet expansion. The borrower receives newly created deposits that did not exist moments earlier. This is not a side effect of the system; it is the system. The Fed merely sets the interest rate target and provides a discount window. The actual money creation happens in the private balance sheets of JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Citigroup. If private money is inherently risky, then Ip's beloved banking system has been a 400-year catastrophe of boom, bust, bailout, and theft. 

GrapheneOS is the public exception. A hardened Android distribution running on Pixel hardware, it auto-reboots into a Before First Unlock state after a configurable idle period, restricts USB peripherals while locked, and supports a duress wipe. Leaked Cellebrite support matrices from 2024 listed GrapheneOS devices as difficult or inaccessible in configurations that defeat stock Android and iOS. Extraction remains possible under a sufficiently resourced attack, but the floor the user can set is high enough that routine extraction fails.

The book's earlier argument was that privacy defense is cheaper than privacy offense, because encryption costs cents while breaking it costs billions. That argument holds for each unit of communication. The analytics stack does not attack individual units; it attacks aggregation. A million intercepted records are worth nothing if no analyst can read them. A million intercepted records fed to a model are worth everything, because the model extracts the patterns at a cost per query that approaches zero. The cost asymmetry that once favored defense has been partly offset at the aggregation layer.

Facial recognition is the mechanism by which a visual identifier that was once bounded by human memory becomes an index into a permanent database. The mathematical transformation is ordinary: a neural network maps an image to a vector in a high-dimensional space, and two images of the same face produce vectors that are close under a chosen metric. The transformation was well-understood long before it became a political question. What changed was cost.

A single agency cannot legally build and maintain a facial-recognition database containing every photograph on the open web. No single agency has the mandate or the political cover for that. A private firm can build the same database under the far weaker constraints that govern commercial speech, and then sell access to the agencies that could not have built it directly. The agency pays a subscription. The firm pays for the engineering. Neither bears the full reputational or constitutional cost a direct program would have incurred.

A technology created to liberate individuals from collective delusion can itself become another stage for collective vanity for the virtue signaling crowd. These folks accumulate Bitcoin not as sovereign individuals, but as status performers. They seek not freedom, but identity. They wrap themselves in Bitcoin maximalism the same way others wrap themselves in political ideology, luxury brands, or social justice slogans. The human ego is indeed infinitely adaptable. Destroy one idol and it manufactures another. Here is perhaps the most difficult truth of all; no technology can save a civilization suffering from spiritual rot. Not even Bitcoin, nor AI.

Silence is never neutral. Every time a person who knows the truth chooses not to say it, they hand a little more power to the people who are lying. Every time someone watches something wrong happen and looks away, they make it easier for it to happen again. The absence of resistance is a form of consent, whether we intend it that way or not.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner James Harman said Live Facial Recognition (LFR) “will be deployed in the London borough of Camden in an area likely to be used by those attending the Unite the Kingdom event,” but a pro-Palestinian march marking Nakba Day, happening in London on the same day with an estimated 30,000 attendees, will not face the same biometric surveillance.

Tomorrow, the Metropolitan Police will turn biometric surveillance cameras on people attending a political demonstration in London.

A system of total financial legibility (universal Digital ID, mandatory KYC on all fiat-crypto conversions, programmable CBDCs, AI-driven transaction monitoring) and a genuinely permissionless, uncensorable monetary network cannot coexist indefinitely as equals. They are not competing products. They are incompatible political propositions. One holds that the individual is sovereign over their economic life and may transact with whom they choose without requiring state permission. The other holds that all economic participation is conditional on state-granted identity and state-approved compliance status.

There is an additional piece of this architecture that the government does not discuss when it talks about digital ID, because the discussion would make the agenda too visible. That piece is the Central Bank Digital Currency, the CBDC.

The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation applies, in law, only within the European Union. In practice, it applies to every company on earth that wants to sell to, employ, or process the data of a European citizen. A small software firm in Lagos, a retail business in São Paulo, an e-commerce startup in Bangalore; none of them are European entities, none of them are subject to EU law in any direct constitutional sense. Yet all of them have had to rewrite their privacy policies, appoint data protection officers, and restructure their data infrastructure because the alternative is exclusion from the European market. GDPR is, formally, a domestic regulation. Functionally, it is a global law imposed through market access.

Let us begin with the most basic question: what problem, precisely, does Digital ID solve?