Episode Transcript
Music.
Welcome back to New World Next Week.
I'm James Corbett of CorbettReport.com.
And I'm James Evan Palato of MediaMonarchy.com.
I'm sure you'll not be surprised at the significant volume of anti-immigrant content.
We've got that story.
Plus, carbon dioxide isn't a danger anymore.
But first, on episode 600 of New World Next Week, $10 billion 10-year U.S.
Army contract elevates Palantir to defense contracting royalty.
Grabbing this from the register, but I don't think they use the word boffins at all.
There are no official criteria for what constitutes membership in the upper echelon of the U.S.
Military-industrial complex, but a $10 billion deal that consolidates dozens of contracts under a single blanket purchase agreement sure makes it seem like Palantir has earned entry.
The U.S.
Army announced that rather than continue to buy Palantir products on one of 75 different contracts the branch has with the data analytics software company.
It's awarding a 10-year enterprise agreement, EA, with the aforementioned Capitan Billy.
Like a standard blanket purchase agreement, the deal allows the army to buy what it needs from Palantir over the course of a decade.
It doesn't appear that the army is awarding Palantir any new contracts based on the press release or a procurement notice published about the contract back in May.
According to that document, the army had figured out that it's doing so much business with Palantir over so many separate procurement actions that it's wasting a lot of time and money.
That's doge in action.
With 75 active contracts between the army and Palantir, it's nearly impossible to track down exactly what the army is using from Palantir, though the Register does have some ideas.
Palantir won its first major defense contract from the army way back in 2019 when it scored $800 million to work on new battlefield intelligence software for the branch beyond the army and the DoD.
Palantir has also worked with.
The beloved folks at U.S.
immigration officials to develop deportation software, and at the IRS to help track with new software initiatives, and even at U.S.
Mortgage-backed broker Fannie TooBigToFailMay, where the company's code had been put to use detecting fraud from you poors trying to get ahead.
This latest contract will likely do little to assuage conspiracy-minded fears that Palantir is gobbling up and monetizing government data for the benefit of Trump and a coterie of right-wing billionaires.
Remember, when one team comes into power, the opposition wakes up after their sleepy slumber of four to eight years, and those people on that team then go nighty-night.
In related geopolitical warmongering weapon sales news bombshell, India officially rejects crash-prone made-in-America F-35 for the much better made-in-Russia SU-57 Delhi Defense Procurements from U.S.
at a standstill.
And in related news, James, I had to throw this one in.
Discussed it very briefly on my morning monarchy because I had never heard of them, and we obviously need to put their name on the list.
It's not Blackwater.
It's not Wagner.
Americans in Gaza are 100% mercenaries, and they're working for a place called UG Solutions.
Now, that's a great generic name that doesn't bring up any misgivings in my mind.
Right, James?
Yeah, what could it be?
UG?
I don't know.
It sounds like UMG or something.
Who knows?
But yeah, you're right.
That's a new one.
Right.
It's a new one to me.
I had never heard of them before, so it's good to put them on the list because, yes, these mercenaries have the habit of changing names every few years.
But it's the same idea.
It's the same concept.
And let's never forget where the mercenarization of the U.S.
military stemmed from.
It was Dick Cheney as defense secretary under Bush 1, started a study group in the Pentagon.
Should we use more mercenaries and contractors?
The answer came in, yes, yes, we should.
Then he went to become president of or vice president of Halliburton, CEO of Halliburton, whatever he was, for several years in the Clinton years.
And then he came back as vice president under Bush, too, and reaped all the rewards of the wars that he was creating through the company that he was heading.
It's that that is the revolving door.
That's how it works.
That's where all of that came from.
I think that it really is a geopolitical bombshell story, that India story.
It says a lot about the state of the world, including the F-35 jalopy, which is accident prone.
More accidents happening recently, as documented in that article.
And also Russia's interesting offer to not just offer the Su-57, but the source code of the systems on the Su-57 to India as a way to Sweden the pot on that deal, which that's pretty unprecedented.
I don't think any other country sells not only their weapon systems or their fighter jets, but the source code.
because you got to think the U.S.
Is going to get that one way or another.
Maybe they already have it.
So maybe Russia isn't particularly concerned about that.
But at any rate, that's a that's a pretty important deal and says something about how, I mean, U.S.
Has completely pivoted towards India as the bulwark against China in their growing Cold War 2.0 boogeyman Asia Pacific.
No, it's Indo-Pacific because they really want India to be their proxy in the region.
Well, maybe that's not going so well.
So that is a pretty big story.
But as for the Palantir story, you are right to point out, yeah, this is the register, as in that UK outfit that talks about...
Science and technology and stuff?
Why are they talking about this defense contractor?
Well, it's because this is the new face of the military-industrial complex.
It's something that I've had cause to note a couple of times already.
Not only does this vindicate those of us who have been talking about Peter Thiel and his control over this Trump 2.0 administration since before Trump got selected into office.
As reference, I'll put in my strange story of Peter Thiel, specifically part two that I wrote last year on buying politicians is easy.
But also, this speaks to something that I have had cause to note several times over the past several months, which is the military-industrial complex is changing.
Boeing, Lockheed, Northrop Grumman, those are the old fuddy-duddy military-industrial complex.
Now it's Palantir and Andurl and companies like that.
And in fact, I've just noted a couple of days ago, I saw of the top 20 companies in the world by valuation.
I think Andrew is on that top 20 list now, speaking about coming out of nowhere.
And it's not because they're selling products to, you know, mom and pop down on Main Street.
It's because they are selling AI automated weaponry of the future to the Pentagon.
That's where the big bucks are to be made right now.
And you better believe Palantir is part of that new defense contracting royalty.
So I think this speaks to the way things are going.
And it doesn't speak well, but at any rate, it's good to put it on the record and note where the fact that the military-industrial complex is changing.
It's not going away.
It's just changing faces.
Elon got some of our astro-persons to the International Space Station lickety-split last week.
We will try to add more supplemental links.
Maybe if you guys know anything extra about UG Solutions, of course, you can always post those in the comments.
And yeah, it's a great way to avoid pesky war crimes tribunals.
That wasn't us.
That was DynCorp stacking naked prisoners and pointing at them.
And the source code thing.
I mean, John Deere tractors won't even give you the source code.
That's going to let you, like, repair it yourself or something.
Or possibly install backdoors and maybe sell it to your political allies.
That's the first story on this New World Next Week episode 600.
And skeptics for the win again.
The U.S.
EPA, the Environmental Protection Agency, decides CO2 isn't in danger anymore so they can reverse carbon emission standards.
This from azpha.org, A-Z-P-H-A, everything we say and play always included in the show notes.
This week, EPA administrator said he will rescind the 2009 endangerment finding that has underpinned the EPA's regulation of carbon dioxide, the hated CO2, and other greenhouse gases.
If upheld by the courts, and that's going to be the biggie, if the decision will eliminate the EPA's regulation on greenhouse gases with implications for global climate change.
The foundations for regulating carbon dioxide traces back to the 1970 Clean Air Act, which authorized the EPA to regulate air pollutants that may endanger public health, and maybe we'll spray a bunch of stuff too.
Initially, CO2 and other greenhouse gases weren't considered pollutants under the law.
That changed with the 2007 Supreme Court case, Massachusetts v.
EPA, in which the unelected Black Robe 9 ruled that greenhouse gases are air pollutants under the Clean Air Act and must be regulated if the EPA determines they pose a risk.
So then in 2009, the Obama-era EPA issued the endangerment finding concluding that CO2 and other greenhouse gases do endanger public health and welfare due to their role in climate change.
That triggered regulatory requirements, starting with fuel economy and emission standards for motor vehicles, regulations on large industrial sources like power plants, cement manufacturers, and oil refineries.
Not the, you know, weaponized plutonium military factories, though.
Or clean up the ones that have been leaking for decades.
Over the next several years, the EPA launched a suite of regulatory actions like vehicle emission standards, permitting of major industrial sources, and the 2015 Clean Power Plan, which focused on making electricity plants slowly shift to lower emission sources.
Enforcement came through a mix of carrots and sticks, permit requirements, monitoring and reporting standards, and potential penalties for non-compliance.
They might enforce all this stuff.
selectively.
The new EPA now argues that the scientific and legal basis for the endangerment finding is flawed and that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, methane, don't meet that standard anymore, which if upheld by the courts would eliminate all the reduction measures developed and implemented since 2009.
Given that 2009's endangerment finding has survived multiple legal challenges, EPA's reversal, this is, yeah, almost certain to be challenged in court.
Expect lawsuits from states, environmental groups, and possibly industry players who have already invested in the stupid thing you told us to do 15 years ago.
Legal challenges will likely stretch on for years, and so will the uncertainty-facing regulators, industry, and communities dealing with the accelerating impacts of climate change.
In the short run, much will depend on what federal district and appellate courts decide and whether they issue a stay on the EPA decision.
In the longer term, much will depend on the results of America's next top Zionist 2028 season.
And I forgot to include, no, I do have it, I believe, in some of my related notes here, James, from What's Up With That.
Skeptics win.
Endangerment finding axed.
Truth finally prevails in the climate wars.
And we do have the full press conference linked up for you.
EPA announces major environmental policy change.
And yes, top UN court says countries can sue each other over climate change.
So if this first part goes through, you can bet your booty the second part is going to go through.
Each of them, of course, have very shaky legal standings.
But in actual environmental catastrophe news, Israeli forces demolish seed unit of Hebron.
James?
Interesting story here.
And I, you know, James, I guess I could search for the gray lining of this silver cloud and point out, well, why are they leasing up on these regulations?
Maybe it's to provide more of that dirty, dirty, wonderful coal energy to help supplement the energy grid as the AI overlords start snarfing up more and more of the electricity.
But I won't do that.
Whatever the reason or the bigger strategy behind this, at the very least, it is good to get rid of this stupid regulation, because at the very, very least...
I'm just going off the top of my head here.
I didn't look it up, but I think a couple of decades ago, wasn't it John McCain and Nancy Pelosi or something were running ads together side by side talking about the threat of climate change?
Look, it's a bipartisan issue.
Everyone knows that the world is going to hell in a handbasket because you're breathing out, you horrible humans, you, to the extent that we can problematize that simplistic equation and realize that, no, CO2 is not the scourge of the world.
In fact, it is a life-giving, incredibly important part of the photosynthesis that is part of the greening of the earth, the incredible greening of the earth that we've seen over the past few decades in the exact time of the rising CO2 levels.
So this is actually a good thing.
So I think that's good.
However, maybe we are burying the lead with that story that we're sourcing from the BBC there about the ICJ ruling that countries can now sue each other over climate change and, oh, you guys weren't doing enough.
And as they were at pains to point out in that ruling, you know, it's not just, yeah, of course, you have legal obligations under the Paris Agreement, but it's not just the people under the Paris Agreement.
It's every country has an obligation.
Now, there's no actual legally binding thing here.
The ICJ doesn't have that kind of jurisdiction, but it is an important ruling that sets precedent and will allow courts, countries to start trying to sue each other, etc.
So, yay!
hey, maybe that is the new stick that they're going to try to wield in this fight.
But all of this puts me in mind of an interesting conversation that I'm sure everyone in my audience has forgotten about.
But I had a conversation in 2012 with a philosopher of science called Jerome Rivetz, and we talked about the concept of philosophy of science, but specifically science in times of crisis and emergency and times when the stakes are high and the uncertainty is high of necessity.
Science becomes a political act.
It becomes a political thing, a football that is played.
It is not about pure scientists floating around on clouds, you know, just observing reality.
No, it becomes a political act to engage in science.
And for people who need to wrap their heads around that, I will throw that link flashback into the show notes.
I hope people check out that conversation.
You know the first lawsuits are going to be from the art-hating Greta kids that glue themselves to paintings, because I hear that stops global warming or something.
James, I always play an hour of old-time radio every day on my Monarchy radio stream at MediaMonarchy.com slash listen, and play it on Wednesdays.
We're shooting this.
It's a Wednesday to me right now.
That's Food World Order, so it's Food Health Environment News, and I play lots of country music, so I play cowboy radio episodes.
I started playing episodes of Have Gun, Will Travel, and it's from 1958, and one of the episodes I played today was called No Visitors, aka Typhoid Fever.
The whole town is flipping out.
Those two people have typhoid.
Get out of here.
We'll let you die in the streets.
We don't care.
Oh, wait, it was the measles.
So even put in today's light of, oh my god, no, it was the measles.
That's even worse.
James, maybe, you know, I do.
I do.
I can't help myself sometimes, but give the powers that shouldn't be.
Great ideas.
Yeah, I get tired of waiting around for them being so slow sometimes.
Maybe they should make AI videos of all those dead Greta kids that are all dead from climate change, and they could interview them about how they died.
Or somebody should make a meme of West Virginia coal miners working their asses off to power our memes that show coal miners working to power our memes of.
You see the repeats there.
Our third and final story, James.
We'll see if the sigh comes or not.
Labors plot to silence migrant hotel critics.
Emails reveal Whitehall spy unit complaining to tech firms about content mentioning asylum seekers.
Please keep in your mind, Brandon working with the tech companies here during COOF.
And we wonder, wait, does political asylum or climate asylum, which kind?
A secretive Whitehall spy unit, they put quotes in spy every time, has been used by the UK government to target social media posts criticizing migrant hotels and two-tier policing.
The Telegraph, I believe, exclusively revealed that officials working for Peter, Kyle, the technology secretary, have flagged videos with concerning narratives to social media giants, including TikTok, warning that they were exacerbating tensions on the streets.
Emails recovered by a U.S.
congressional committee show that civil servants have complained to tech firms about content mentioning asylum seekers, immigration, and two-tier policing.
There's a lot of euphemisms there, two-tier policing.
The dossier has emerged as ministers battle claims that the U.K.
Is censoring social media with the Online Safety Act, including allies of U.S.
President Trump.
The disclosure reveals that members of the government's National Security and Online Information Team, NSOIT, I'm not sure if there's a pronunciation way to that word, complained about a series of posts that were critical of mass migration and asylum hotels that don't exist, you crazy conspiracy theorists.
They don't have prepaid debit cards either.
You're all liars, except we're freaking out about you finding out.
Critical of mass migration and asylum hotels in August last year during the Southport Riots.
The team based in the Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology, previously known as the Counter Disinformation Unit, but we changed its name to some happy, clappy, Democrat-sounding bull crap.
And was used during the COVID pandemic to monitor anti-lockdown campaigners.
Again, isn't that the Department of Science?
Counter disinfo.
It's still, yeah, it's still the same pig boot on your throat.
Calm down.
The row over the hotels exploded again earlier this month when demonstrations broke out at a hotel in Epping after a migrant tried to kiss a little kid.
Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, has told the cabinet the government must take concerns about migration seriously and do more to alleviate them.
However, one post flagged by the government unit with urgency included a photograph of a rejected freedom of information request about the location of asylum hotels and a reference to asylum seekers as undocumented fighting age males.
The emails were sent on August 3rd and 4th last year.
So I guess, James, it's they let these out for their one-year birthday.
Last year was also the worst weekend of the riots when protesters attacked asylum hotels across the UK.
The government's private exchange with TikTok came days before Elon Musk, the tech billionaire owner of Exxon, former ally of Trump, criticized two-tier cure.
The phrase immediately echoed by Nigel Farage, warning that police had created the sense of injustice.
In another email the same weekend, officials warned TikTok that users were posting about two-tier policing at Southport rallies amid accusations that lowercase white protesters had been treated more harshly by the police than ethnic minorities.
Because that then makes it okay.
It said, I'm sure you will not be surprised at the significant volumes of anti-immigrant content directed at Muslim and Jewish communities, as well as concerning narratives about the police in a two-tier system we're seeing across the online environment.
Officials requested that TikTok explain, quote, any measures you've taken in response as soon as you are able to.
You tell us what you're doing the second you do it.
Mr.
Jordan, not previously mentioned in this article, I maybe edited that part out, said labor ministers had censored posts that were critical of the government's policy on asylum, warning critics of Sir Keir to watch out.
He said, in recent years, UK citizens have become increasingly fed up with the double standard in the UK.
mean tweets get you a longer prison sentence than many violent offenses.
The Americans are calling this out for them.
We really owe them a lot.
Protests target Canary Wharf as police enforce public order act at asylum hotels.
This is all still going on right now.
And essentially boiled down as my West Virginia coal miners work hard to give us more memes for the memes war.
Boiled down.
Police help.
We've got a very violent burglar.
Oh, you're too busy.
Don't worry, love.
I'm just complaining about all migrants online.
The police will be here any second now.
James, we laugh to not cry.
I always appreciate the British accent as well.
But yeah, yeah, laugh to not cry.
There's so many things to be concerned about with a story like this, isn't there?
Including, of course, how the never-ending illegal wars of aggression in the Middle East create the crises that then create the flood of migration that then is used and weaponized against various European and other countries.
And then, of course, the population is gaslit by their own government.
It's not happening.
It doesn't matter.
Who cares?
You're all crazy.
And so one can understand how that eventuates into some significant protests.
And how do they deal with this?
To me, the real bright, bold headline from this is the National Security and Online Information Team.
National Security, Online Information.
information those are of course wedded because we are living in the era in which everything of significance is online and they want your data they want to control your digital life they want to talk to control who you talk to and when and in what context and what you are and aren't allowed to say because that is the game for all the marbles total societal control and i think that speaks to a number of things but perhaps the most important and i will underline this again not for the first time, not for the last time.
I will continue to underline this.
Things like this and the fact that a national security and online information team exists and that they are actively monitoring and trying to control social media conversations, once again, means that it does matter what you say.
It does matter what you think.
They are actually scared of you actually going out there and informing and organizing with others.
They are actively spending their time and resources to combat that threat because it makes a difference.
So do not listen to the Black Pill Doomsayers who say, nothing matters.
It's all a New World Order script.
They control everything.
No, they do not.
When you believe that and you just give in, oh, nothing I do matters, then they win.
So no, do not believe that enemy propaganda.
Do not internalize it.
What you say and what you think does make a difference.
They show that with their actions.
So continue speaking and thinking freely, and unless and until they stop you from doing that, we are winning.
Imagine if 9-11 truth had been able to stop the seven wars Bush and Obama started 20 years ago now.
Might have a lot less asylum seekers seeking to be used as a cudgel to divide and conquer.
And really, again, to quote, I always got to quote war games, the smartest move is to not play.
And when I say that, I mean playing it in their way, using their platforms, standing in their free speech ones, all those other old ways.
Just as you were saying, the military industrial complex has changed.
So has your ways to fight the new world order.
Screaming and yelling and bullhorning ain't going to do it anymore.
I heard discussions last night in my chat, James, you know, Mark Passio over in Pennsylvania.
We've got monarchy friends who work with him pretty much every week.
He's not really making work to wake up the normie.
He's working with people who are already awake and activated and are ready to actually make what I would say be more substantive changes than griping with your sister-in-law on Facebook.
I don't need the New World Next Week sigh.
I don't feel completely depressed about all of that.
There's positivity, James.
And that is New World Next Week, episode 600.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have been doing New World Next Week for 15 years.
Our separate work combined creates to over 30 years of fear-free, ad-free work.
You've never seen any advertisements on our work that we placed there.
It's all been given away for free.
Every single bit of it to you over our last, again, combined 30-some years.
And now while you can't get classic Korba Report logo shirts at newworldnextweek.com anymore unless we might actually we might have a damaged one by one of the cats here James when it was being modeled on the mannequin we do talk about sometimes having a little uh you know.
Busted toys sale for the new world next week store there were some USB drives a couple years back that weren't up to our standards that it still have all the data upon them we might do a little crazy blowout sale one of these days and maybe move a bit of that product that is at newworldnextweek.com corporate report dvds usbs monarchy music mixes and radio plays and james it just was hitting me the other day oh it's time to play the annual media monarchy production of the octopus so i'll probably have to do that later this weekend the casillaro death-aversary of course coming up this weekend.
James, did you see, not to keep going and going, Les Wexner's going to buy Obama's awesome Martha's Vineyard pad?
You know, where his chef died in like an inch of water.
Weird yeah so les wexner who i thought didn't have any money you know since the whole victoria secret thing fell apart it really really made me want to reach out to whitney webb and see what on earth is going on if you want to know what's going on i play the exclusive audio of these new world next week episodes before they are published only me brock and corbett have heard them i play them after my morning monarchy thursday mornings that is around 10 a.m mountain time at MediaMonarchy.com slash listen.
And James, as my 20th anniversary of Media Monarchy approaches, like I said, been online since September 11th, 2005, if I could put it out to people in some ways that, and you know this, you could agree.
Media Monarchy can kind of be your one-stop shop.
If you feel like you're schlepping around doing a bunch of time waster crap on the internet, arguing with your sister-in-law, as mentioned earlier, Media Monarchy has your news, has your music, has your friends, has your DIY, has some TV at night.
It pretty much has all the things you run around into other places, all essentially in a fear-free, ad-free, hopefully usually bully-free membership community, James.
And that is all at MediaMonarchy.com slash join.
Again, I kind of think that work is the thing that's worth the membership payment.
So you get to get in and you get to hang out with other people and again there are people james you know they're in there 24 7 and you can pop in there and go oh my god i need to work on this thing in my garden or my kid or a fix in my home or have you seen that new movie it's a bit like a like a friendship james and the stranger the world gets i find places like the media monarchy community to be that much more important that is my hard sell at the end of new world next week episode 600, buddy.
Awesome.
And just on a Corbett Report deprogramming note, I thank you to the people who have in the past couple of episodes wondered, is James okay?
He looks so terrible.
He looks exhausted.
Is he all right?
I am fine.
I am amazingly fine.
I'm awesome.
I am fired up.
I'm passionate.
I'm 100% firing on all cylinders.
But I'm dripping with sweat because it is incredibly hot in the Japanese summer and I don't have air conditioning.
So thank you to the people who are concerned about my well-being.
I am totally fine.
I'm just a bit hot.
On that note, though, I am going to do what I do, I think, every August at this point, which is take a couple of weeks off of the public production of the regular series and stuff.
Don't worry, I'm not actually going any on vacation.
I'm just going to continue working behind the scenes, but I will probably be not posting as much during the rest of August.
I think we're still on for New World next week, at least most weeks here.
But I will not be posting all the Solutions Watch and podcasts and stuff as usual or the subscriber newsletter as usual.
So anyway, August will be quieter at CorbettReport.com.
Thank you for, again, for all the people emailing in their concern.
But I am totally fine.
But you may notice the sweat literally dripping off of me as I record this.
I think we'll leave this there.
Though, James, thank you again for the stories.
Looking forward to doing it again.
Thanks so much, buddy.
Take care, man.