originally on Posted May 19, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |

What they are building in Britain is not healthcare reform. It is the construction of a surveillance state disguised as efficiency. Once governments centralize data, they never stop at the original promise. Every government throughout history has always claimed that surrendering liberty was necessary for security, stability, or public benefit. Rome kept census records to control taxation and military conscription. East Germany built the Stasi into one of the most invasive intelligence systems in modern history by weaponizing personal files, informants, and centralized records. The Soviet Union tracked citizens through internal passports and labor databases. Every empire eventually discovers that information is power, and once that temptation exists, governments never voluntarily relinquish it.
Now Britain’s NHS is reportedly granting Palantir contractors “unlimited access” to identifiable patient records. Internal NHS documents describe a new “admin” role that would permit outside contractors broad access to highly sensitive information through the Federated Data Platform. This is not anonymous statistical data. This is identifiable human data tied directly to individual citizens.
People are being sold the fantasy that this is only about improving efficiency, reducing waiting times, or streamlining care. That is always how these systems begin. Governments never announce outright that they are constructing mechanisms of control. They always wrap it in the language of modernization. The same promises were made after 9/11 with mass surveillance legislation. Citizens were told only terrorists would be monitored. Two decades later, governments monitor financial transactions, social media activity, geolocation data, communications metadata, and banking patterns of ordinary citizens who committed no crime whatsoever.
Palantir is not some harmless software vendor. This company was built alongside the intelligence apparatus of the United States, and Peter Thiel is a whole other topic to discuss but know he installed the current VP of the USA. Palantir’s roots are directly tied to surveillance, military targeting systems, predictive policing, and intelligence gathering. Critics inside Britain have already warned that placing Palantir at the center of NHS data infrastructure opens the door to “government abuse of power.”
The public is also being deliberately misled by the phrase “data processor.” NHS officials insist Palantir merely processes information under NHS instructions with safeguards and audits in place. Governments always claim safeguards exist right up until the moment those safeguards are quietly bypassed in the name of some emergency. The Patriot Act in the United States was sold as temporary. Emergency banking controls during financial crises are always presented as short-term. Income taxes themselves were once marketed as temporary wartime measures.
What makes this particularly dangerous is the scale of the data itself. Britain’s NHS system contains one of the most comprehensive centralized health databases in the world. That means psychological history, prescriptions, surgeries, reproductive records, genetic conditions, family history, addiction treatment, vaccination status, and behavioral health information can all potentially exist inside interconnected systems. Once centralized, this information becomes irresistible not only to governments, but also to intelligence agencies, insurers, corporations, and eventually political actors.
The real issue here is not whether Palantir itself abuses the data tomorrow morning. The danger is the precedent. Once governments normalize centralized citizen databases tied to AI systems, the architecture of control is complete. Every future administration inherits the machinery. Every future crisis becomes justification for expanding its use.
We already know where this road leads because history has shown us repeatedly. During COVID, governments around the world demonstrated how quickly societies would accept digital monitoring, movement restrictions, vaccine passports, financial surveillance, and censorship once fear entered the equation. People surrendered centuries of civil liberties in a matter of weeks. Now governments understand exactly how compliant populations become during emergencies.
There is another layer here that almost nobody is discussing. Palantir is a US company. Legal experts have repeatedly warned that US-connected cloud providers and software firms may still fall under the reach of the US CLOUD Act regardless of what contracts say publicly. That means foreign governments can potentially face external legal demands regarding data access. Britain is effectively placing national healthcare infrastructure and sensitive citizen information into a system connected to foreign corporate and legal structures.
The pushback inside Britain itself has become intense. MPs, doctors, unions, and privacy groups have openly warned that patient trust is collapsing. Some NHS regions are refusing to participate altogether because concerns surrounding Palantir continue to grow. Even NHS staff reportedly faced pressure for publicly criticizing the system. That alone tells you everything. When criticism must be suppressed, governments already know the public would reject the truth if fully informed.
The frightening part is that Britain is not unique. Europe is moving toward centralized digital identity systems, CBDCs, integrated banking oversight, AI governance frameworks, and cross-border information sharing all at the same time. The combination of health data, financial records, digital ID, and AI analysis creates a system no free society in history has ever possessed. Governments once needed armies of bureaucrats and informants to monitor populations. AI can now do it instantly.
Government still believes privacy means hiding wrongdoing. Privacy is the barrier between citizenship and servitude. Once governments know everything about you, they possess leverage over everything. History has never produced a benevolent empire with unlimited information power. Not one.