ROSEMARY JENKS: Being in Washington, D.C., We Get Our Heads Patted All The Time By Politicians Who Say That Mass Deportations Are Just Not Popular Or Doable. We’re Sick And Tired Of Being Patted On The Head


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: March 12, 2026

MIKE HOWELL: We Understand The Battle Lines Clearly. Mass Deportations Is A Popular Issue! It Is A Mandate! It Is A Promise! Here’s The Fight: It’s Special Interests And The Lobbyists Vs. The Rest Of The American People


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: March 12, 2026

ERIC BOLLING: Tapping Into Our SPR Is Putting A Piece Of Gauze On A Hemorrhage


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: March 12, 2026

Bo French on What He Will Do as Texas Railroad Commissioner


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: March 12, 2026

JAMES RICKARDS: My Question For The President Is, Which Is It? Is It Unconditional Surrender, Or Is It An Excursion?


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: March 12, 2026

BANNON: The Secretary Of Energy Said From The White House This Morning That The Navy Is Not Going To Be Prepared To Even Escort The Ships To The End Of The Month!


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: March 12, 2026

Seth Keshsel: America’s War on Election Corruption


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: March 12, 2026

AI, the Pentagon, and the Surveillance State


Posted originally on Mar 13, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

OpenAIResignation

The resignation of Caitlin Kalinowski from OpenAI has triggered a debate that goes far beyond Silicon Valley. Kalinowski stepped down shortly after the company entered into an agreement with the United States Department of Defense to deploy its artificial intelligence models on government systems. The issue was not simply the partnership itself, but the speed at which the decision was made and the implications for how such powerful technology could be used as a weapon against American citizens.

“I resigned from OpenAI. I care deeply about the Robotics team and the work we built together. This wasn’t an easy call.” She was not rejecting national defense outright. She even acknowledged that “AI has an important role in national security.” Yet she warned that certain lines had been crossed. In her own words, “surveillance of Americans without judicial oversight and lethal autonomy without human authorization are lines that deserved more deliberation than they got.”

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When someone inside the system walks away and raises that type of alarm, you should pay attention. For years, I have warned that governments are steadily constructing the infrastructure necessary to monitor populations in ways previous generations could not even imagine. After the September 11 attacks, intelligence agencies dramatically expanded their surveillance powers under the banner of protecting national security through the Patriot Act. Phone data, internet activity, and financial transactions became data points feeding enormous intelligence databases. The public was told these programs were narrowly targeted at foreign threats. Behind the curtain, the databases were growing larger every year. Governments now have access to EVERYTHING we do.

What most people do not realize is that the financial system was also pulled into this surveillance web. I have written before that governments began monitoring bank accounts and financial transfers on a scale that few citizens fully appreciate. Under the administration of Obama, programs quietly expanded to allow intelligence agencies to track international banking activity, financial flows, and transaction patterns in the name of national security. Those systems became permanent fixtures inside the intelligence community.

The trend accelerated under Joe Biden, when federal agencies aggressively pushed for greater reporting requirements from banks and financial institutions. Governments argued this was necessary to combat tax evasion, money laundering, and illicit activity. The financial behavior of ordinary citizens came under scrutiny, and Biden’s team was caught red-handed spying on anyone who supported his adversary. Donated to Trump? You’re on a list to be monitored. Hold religious beliefs that do not coincide with current political leanings? Anyone who purchased a Bible was placed on a list. Your bank account, your transactions, and even your spending patterns increasingly became part of enormous government databases.

What Kalinowski exposed is that the next phase is already underway. Once AI becomes embedded in national security systems, the surveillance state moves to an entirely new level. Governments will have the ability to monitor populations in real-time. Populations—not merely persons of interest—but the entire population. The people operating these systems are rarely elected officials. They are bureaucrats, intelligence officers, and agencies operating behind the curtain where the public has almost no visibility. Then the power is placed into the hands of a computer system that can instantly flag and target people or groups without moral discernment.

This is why the Kalinowski resignation matters. She warned openly about AI being used for domestic surveillance without oversight. Once these systems are integrated into government networks, the temptation to expand them becomes irresistible. Governments always claim these tools are necessary for security. But history shows that the definition of “security” tends to expand until it includes monitoring the population itself.

What is even more revealing is that officials within the Pentagon have already begun describing certain advanced AI systems as potential national security risks if they cannot be controlled by the government. In other words, artificial intelligence itself is now viewed as a threat unless it is firmly under the state’s control. That should tell you everything you need to know about where this is heading.

Do not assume these systems will remain limited to foreign adversaries. Surveillance infrastructure rarely stays confined to its original mission. Once built, it inevitably expands. The technology now exists to construct the most comprehensive monitoring system ever devised in human history. And if you think governments will not use it, you have not been paying attention.

AI’s Power Hunger


Posted Mar 13, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  
AI.DataCenter

The biggest constraint on artificial intelligence is not chips, software, or capital. It is electricity. Now the tech giants are finally admitting it. Seven major companies, including Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Meta, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI, have signed a pledge committing to supply or finance their own power generation for the massive AI data centers they are building. The agreement essentially states that these firms will build or purchase new electricity sources and pay for the infrastructure needed so that the exploding demand for AI computing does not drive up electricity costs for ordinary consumers.

Data centers were once a background piece of infrastructure. AI has changed that completely. The energy requirements of AI computing are on an entirely different scale. Analysts now say AI data centers consume an order of magnitude more power than traditional server warehouses because of the massive computing loads required to run advanced models.

The numbers are staggering. U.S. data center electricity demand is expected to surge dramatically, reaching roughly 75.8 gigawatts in 2026 and potentially more than 134 gigawatts by 2030. Meanwhile, the Department of Energy estimates data centers could consume between 6.7% and 12% of all U.S. electricity by 2028. Global projections are even more dramatic, with data center electricity consumption potentially reaching hundreds of terawatt-hours annually as AI infrastructure expands worldwide.

Anyone who has followed my work already knows this problem was inevitable. I wrote previously that an electricity crisis was on the horizon precisely because governments were pursuing contradictory policies. They pushed electrification of everything from cars, heating systems, and industry while simultaneously shutting down reliable power generation and blocking new nuclear development. Then, suddenly, the world discovers AI requires an entirely new layer of energy infrastructure.

Even utilities are now warning that electricity demand is entering a new phase of rapid growth. After years of relatively flat consumption, U.S. power usage is expected to hit record levels in both 2026 and 2027, driven largely by AI data centers and the electrification of industry and transportation.

This is why the tech companies are suddenly pledging to build their own power sources. Local communities and utilities have begun pushing back against massive data center projects that could strain power grids and raise electricity costs for consumers. The pledge is essentially an attempt to reassure regulators and voters that the AI boom will not destabilize the energy system.

But this only highlights the deeper structural issue. Electricity infrastructure takes years or decades to build. AI demand is exploding now. The result is a growing gap between technological expansion and energy capacity. The irony is remarkable. Governments around the world spent years lecturing the public about reducing electricity consumption while simultaneously promoting industries that require exponentially more power. Artificial intelligence is not just a technological revolution, it is also an energy revolution.

If electricity supply does not expand dramatically, AI growth itself could hit a hard physical limit. The warning signs are already appearing. Tech companies are reopening nuclear plants, building dedicated power facilities, and now pledging to generate their own electricity simply to keep AI infrastructure running. When private companies begin building power plants to support their software, you know the system has reached a turning point.

When the Government Demands to Inspect Your Home


Posted originally on Mar 13, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

Government Oppression

The push to ban firearms in the United States never really stops. It simply advances in stages. Minnesota has now produced one of the more revealing examples of how far some politicians are willing to go. Democratic lawmakers are proposing legislation that would ban many semiautomatic rifles and magazines while forcing citizens who already own them to register their firearms and submit to government inspections inside their own homes. The proposal effectively says that if you wish to keep a legally purchased firearm, the government must first be allowed to verify how you store it.

According to the legislation, gun owners would need to obtain a certificate to keep firearms that the state plans to prohibit going forward. Even more troubling is the requirement that law enforcement be permitted to inspect the owner’s residence to verify compliance with storage rules. In other words, the state is asserting the authority to enter private homes to ensure obedience to government mandates.

The constitutional problems are obvious. The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution explicitly states that the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. The rifles being targeted are not rare or exotic weapons; they are among the most commonly owned firearms in the country. The courts have repeatedly acknowledged that arms in common use fall within the protection of the Constitution. Attempting to ban them outright invites a direct constitutional conflict.

At the same time, the proposal collides head-on with the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. That amendment was written precisely to prevent the government from entering a citizen’s home without proper cause and a warrant. Yet Minnesota’s proposal essentially conditions the ownership of private property on allowing police access to your residence. If you refuse, you lose the right to keep the firearm. This is a remarkable inversion of the principle that government power must be limited by the Constitution rather than the other way around.

Throughout history, governments have always preferred populations that are dependent and compliant. An armed citizenry is far more difficult to control. That is why the debate is rarely just about crime. Just look at Minnesota, a state riddled with fraud against taxpayers. The attention instead falls on the law-abiding citizens who legally purchased firearms and followed every rule imposed by the government. Politicians refuse to acknowledge the problems plaguing society unless those problems personally affect their campaigns.

Laws that directly challenge the Second and Fourth Amendments will almost certainly end up in the courts. The real question is whether the Constitution still serves as a meaningful restraint on government power or whether legislators now believe they can simply rewrite those limits whenever political convenience demands it.