Price:

AI & TECH

Pentagon certifies Big Tech for classified AI war systems

Friday, May 8, 2026 · from 4 podcasts
  • The Pentagon certified Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Nvidia to run AI on secret military networks, granting unprecedented corporate access.
  • Palantir, Anduril, and SpaceX are consolidating defense contracts worth tens of billions, bypassing traditional oversight.
  • AI models are now embedded in the military kill chain, raising alarms about autonomous lethality and corporate control.

The Department of Defense has certified eight major tech firms to deploy advanced AI on classified networks. David Bennett reported that Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Nvidia are now cleared for Impact Levels 6 and 7 - handling secret and highly restricted national security data. These systems are already in use, with over 1.3 million military personnel generating tens of millions of AI prompts. The military calls it 'decision superiority.' Critics see a shift toward machine-driven warfare.

The Pentagon is no longer relying on legacy contractors alone. A new tier of defense firms - Palantir, Anduril, and SpaceX - has emerged as dominant players. Henry Trix of The Economist calls them 'neoprimes.' Anduril’s Army contracts alone were recently consolidated into a single deal worth up to $20 billion over ten years. SpaceX acquired Elon Musk’s xAI lab specifically to handle Pentagon work. This isn’t procurement. It’s a transfer of strategic control.

Congressman Tim Burchett revealed that physical UFO evidence - craft, metallurgy samples, biological remains - is being stored in private corporate facilities. These sites are outside Freedom of Information Act jurisdiction. The technology is developed in legal black zones, shielded from public scrutiny. Burchett calls the defense establishment 'war pimps' who profit from secrecy.

"The military and its tech partners are increasingly using the term 'warfighters' - a descriptor that strips away the humanity of soldiers."

- David Bennett, Bitcoin And

Palantir is already using Anthropic’s Claude models for classified military activity, despite Anthropic’s public refusal to support autonomous weapons. When the company stipulated its models not be used for mass surveillance or lethal systems, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth blacklisted it as a supply chain risk. SpaceX now runs xAI models directly for the Pentagon. The goal is clear: integrate AI into every phase of the kill chain.

Matt Hill of Start9 warns that corporate AI access extends beyond defense. Users running 'local' AI agents on devices like Mac Minis often route their entire file systems to cloud models at Anthropic. The agent becomes a surveillance portal. Without private, self-hosted LLMs, individuals surrender control to the same firms now embedded in military systems.

The system protects itself. Burchett described how intelligence agencies use honeypots - sexual entrapment schemes - to compromise lawmakers. A recent Chinese prostitution ring listed US politicians as clients. The story vanished in a week. Financial incentives reinforce the silence. Lawmakers routinely buy stocks in defense firms before major contracts. They profit from the status quo.

"If the government doesn't technically own the asset, they don't have to report it to Congress."

- Tim Burchett, The Joe Rogan Experience

This isn’t just about technology. It’s about who controls it. The fusion of Silicon Valley capital, military procurement, and AI integration has created a new command structure - one where corporate executives and venture capitalists have more influence than elected officials. The future of warfare is being built in private.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

#2495 - Tim BurchettMay 7

  • Tim Burchett says government UFO reports are redacted and delayed intentionally, citing a TMZ interview prediction that proved correct.
  • Burchett alleges pilots who report UFO sightings are pulled from duty and subjected to interrogative debriefings, damaging their careers.
  • Burchett recounts a briefing with Florida pilots who described craft hovering for extended periods and accelerating straight up at impossible speeds.
  • Burchett cites briefings on underwater craft moving at 200 mph and lacking heat signatures, speculating about deep ocean bases.
  • Burchett argues UFO technology is compartmentalized within private contractors, making it inaccessible via FOIA requests.
  • Rogan and Burchett link missing scientists working on alternative energy to a warning system against disclosure.
  • Burchett says members of Congress are compromised via honeypot operations or family jobs to disrupt UFO inquiries.
  • Burchett criticizes congressional insider trading, citing stock purchases in missile defense firms after Ukraine aid.
  • Rogan argues disclosure amnesty in UFO legislation could shield decades of fraud and misappropriated funds.
  • Burchett calls the Trump assassination attempt a security failure, noting the shooter had a clear line of sight from a roof and used a rangefinder.
Also from this episode: (5)

Media (1)

  • Joe Rogan states Bob Lazar's 1989 interview is his most viewed YouTube episode, with over 66 million views.

Society (3)

  • Burchett recounts identical UFO descriptions from two separate witnesses decades apart, a Navy veteran in the 1950s and an Air Force officer in the 1980s.
  • Rogan and Burchett discuss MK Ultra-style programming and CIA influence as explanations for political assassinations and deranged attackers.
  • Burchett condemns the COVID-19 response as a wealth transfer, citing closed small businesses while large chains operated and pre-setup morgues.

History (1)

  • Rogan cites Tom O’Neill's book 'Chaos' on CIA LSD programs and Manson family manipulation as evidence of ongoing psychological operations.

CD201: MATT HILL - START9 - FREEDOM COMPUTINGMay 5

  • Matt Hill argues the current cloud computing paradigm contains irreconcilable problems, making a switch to open-source self-hosted solutions both popular and necessary for the future.
  • Hill contends that most people fail to recognize the privacy dangers of AI agents, believing local tools like OpenClaw are private, when in reality they often send entire file systems to third-party inference engines like Anthropic.
  • StartOS version 0.4.0 is a foundational rewrite designed to encode the full skill set of a Linux systems administrator, enabling long-term maintenance and scaling to future use cases like robotics and AI.
  • Hill asserts that self-hosting open-source software on ClearNet is a 'decapitation move' against the SaaS model, allowing users to replace services like Zoom in minutes with self-hosted alternatives like Jitsi.
  • Start9 provides three remote access methods: Tor for maximum privacy, VPN for private speed, and ClearNet for ultimate ease, each with distinct trade-offs between privacy, security, and convenience.
  • Start Tunnel is a virtual private router that lets users create VLANs in the cloud, connecting devices and home servers for seamless, fast remote access without relying on home router VPNs.
  • Hill warns that recent FCC rules requiring WiFi routers to be 'manufactured in the USA' are vague and may force Start9 to sell wired routers and WiFi cards separately to navigate certification issues.
  • Start9 is prototyping a fully open-source, self-contained home security system using RISC-V cameras, StartWRT routers, and StartOS servers, eliminating cloud dependencies and subscriptions.
Also from this episode: (6)

Protocol (4)

  • Matt Hill sees Bitcoin as a killer app for self-hosting that acts as an 'orange pill,' introducing users to the concept of running their own servers and leading them to broader freedom computing.
  • Odell notes that during an investor retreat in October, Matt Hill was the only founder bearish on Bitcoin, predicting a top at $125k when the price was around $120k.
  • Start9's Server One hardware with a 4TB Samsung EVO Plus SSD and 32GB RAM is priced at $1,299, which Odell considers highly competitive given the SSD alone costs nearly $700.
  • The StartWRT router crowdfund had raised $14,000 from 54 contributors via a Bitcoin-only BTCPay server as of the recording.

Startups (1)

  • Start9's competitive advantage is not its software but traditional business strengths like brand, customer support, hardware quality, and ancillary services, as code itself is trivially replicable.

Open Source (1)

  • Start9's upcoming router, StartWRT, is built on OpenWRT and will be the first RISC-V-based wireless router, representing a bet on fully open-source hardware as a path to trustworthy computing.

Lies And Rumors of Lies | Bitcoin NewsMay 4

  • David Bennett reports an unconfirmed Iranian missile strike on a US ship near the Strait of Hormuz caused Bitcoin to drop sharply from an intraday high of $80,594 to approximately $79,074.
  • Bennett speculates the Bisq exploit may have been discovered using AI to audit open-source code, noting the vulnerable protocol version had been live since October 2019.
  • The SEC delayed the launch of prediction market ETFs from issuers like Roundhill and Bitwise, citing concerns over product structure, event definitions, data sources, and settlement timing.
Also from this episode: (7)

Culture (1)

  • Bennett criticizes modern news agencies, arguing they prioritize clickbait over investigative journalism and rarely provide clarifying follow-up on major stories, creating a 'one and done' news cycle.

Protocol (2)

  • Galoy unveiled an updated Bitcoin-native core banking platform that bundles six use cases into a single sidecar system for US banks, including Bitcoin-backed lending, Lightning payments, and custody options.
  • The decentralized exchange Bisq disclosed a critical vulnerability in its trade protocol exploited over 12 days, resulting in the theft of approximately 3 BTC and 4,000 XMR from seven victims in the XMR/BTC market.

Corruption (1)

  • Law firm Gerstein Harrow LLP filed a restraining notice to block the transfer of $73M in frozen ETH from the Kelp DAO exploit, claiming its clients are owed over $877M from prior judgments against North Korea.

Markets (1)

  • GameStop made an unsolicited $55.5B cash and stock offer to acquire eBay, citing a 46% premium and potential $2B in annual cost savings, and proposed using its 1,600 US stores for eBay logistics.

War (2)

  • The US Department of Defense signed agreements with eight tech firms, including Google and OpenAI, to deploy advanced AI on classified military networks at Impact Level 6 and 7 security standards.
  • Bennett expresses deep concern over the Pentagon's AI integration and its use of the term 'warfighter', interpreting it as linguistic preparation for autonomous, non-human combatants on the battlefield.

Spoils of war: money flows into defence techMay 4

  • Political ties risk bipartisanship, as Donald Trump defended Palantir against short sellers and his son is a venture partner at 1789 Capital, which invests in Anduril.
  • Neoprimes advocate for military AI use, with Palantir using Anthropic models for classified work, Anduril embedding AI in autonomous weapons, and SpaceX acquiring Elon Musk's XAI lab.
  • The Trump administration's Department of War blacklisted Anthropic as a supply chain risk after the AI lab stipulated its models not be used for autonomous weapons or mass surveillance.
  • President Woodrow Wilson's 1917 call to enter WWI, framing it as a defense of democracy, was followed by the 1920 ratification of the 19th Amendment granting women's suffrage after suffragists highlighted the hypocrisy of his ideals.
  • Roosevelt's administration interned roughly 120,000 Japanese Americans during WWII, two-thirds of whom were US citizens, while black soldiers served in segregated units.
  • The atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki killed an estimated 200,000 people by the end of 1945, leading to Japan's surrender on August 15th.
Also from this episode: (5)

Big Tech (3)

  • Henry Trix outlines the rise of the 'neoprimes' - Palantir, SpaceX, and Anduril - as tech-led defense contractors leveraging software, satellites, and drones to win government contracts by offering cheaper, nimbler weapons.
  • Major contracts for neoprimes include Palantir's Project Maven program-of-record status, Anduril's consolidated army contract potentially worth $20 billion over 10 years, and a Pentagon AI strategy launch at SpaceX.
  • Trix notes the F-35 program led by Lockheed Martin is valued at approximately $1.7 trillion, far exceeding neoprime deals, yet venture capital is pouring into defense tech at record levels on expectations of a changing of the guard.

Business (1)

  • The Great Depression began with the 1929 Wall Street crash, leading to 25% unemployment by 1933 before Franklin D. Roosevelt introduced the New Deal with bank deposit insurance, jobless relief, and public works projects.

Culture (1)

  • Andrew Palmer advises on workplace emoji etiquette, noting a stand-alone heart emoji can imply a proposal, a thumbs-up may seem frosty to Gen Z, and the tilted tears of joy emoji signals genuine laughter.