Tag: national security
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Rent to Own: The Direction of Defense Intelligence Systems
As governments move from renting AI to owning it, the real risk is not the technology itself, but what happens when powerful systems operate with fewer constraints and weakened oversight.
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The War They Wanted: How the Collapse of the JCPOA Led the U.S. and Israel Into a Conflict the Public Never Asked For
The strike on Iran wasn’t a sudden detour in U.S. or Israeli policy. It was the predictable outcome of dismantled diplomacy, energy-market incentives, and political momentum that never aligned with what the American public actually wanted. When the JCPOA collapsed, the guardrails came off — and what followed was less a reaction than an opportunity.…
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The Virtue of a Proportional Response
In The American President, a quiet line about “proportional response” exposes the moral arithmetic beneath national security decisions. In the age of artificial intelligence, that pause — that recognition of human cost — must never be automated away.
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When Ethics Competes with National Security: Who Blinks First in the AI Arms Race?
Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming dual-use infrastructure for both civilian systems and national defense. When national security imperatives collide with ethical guardrails, who sets the boundary — the state, the firm, or the market? This piece argues for a “Defense-First AI” doctrine: prioritizing infrastructure resilience, cybersecurity, and biosecurity over autonomous lethal systems. Drawing on recent…
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The Execution of Alex Pretti and the Crumbling Architecture of Federal Restraint
When federal officers killed Alex Pretti on a Minneapolis street, the nation witnessed something far more serious than an isolated tragedy. Pretti was an ICU nurse, a government employee, and a Minnesota resident with no history of violence. He was shot multiple times at close range after falling to the ground, with early reports suggesting…
