Cary Harrison Files

How The "Terminator" Is Coming for You


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Disclaimer: Side effects may include laughter, anger, historical recognition, and sudden distrust of people who say “this is for your own good.” Not approved by wellness gurus, congressional committees, or anyone who believes discomfort equals virtue. Read or watch at your own risk.

Let’s get something straight before the civics textbooks start hyperventilating.

This isn’t a conspiracy.It’s a supply chain.

It’s not a shadowy cabal.It’s a frequent-flyer program.

And it doesn’t start with a jackboot.It starts with a training seminar, a PowerPoint deck, and a complimentary bottled water.

For years—years—thousands of American law-enforcement officers, including the kind with medals, pensions, and a deep emotional attachment to authority, have been quietly hopping on planes to Israel. Since the early 2000s. Not for hummus. Not for archaeology. For training. Policing. Military-style. Crowd control. Surveillance. Population management. How to pacify people without calling it pacification.

Think of it as a professional exchange program:You bring your badge; we’ll show you how to run a neighborhood like a spreadsheet.

This wasn’t advertised as repression. It was sold as best practices. Because nothing travels faster across borders than a technique for controlling human beings while still calling yourself a democracy.

(Small Money, Big Damage - Early drafts, cartoons, heresies included)

And once those techniques land back home, they don’t stay in the locker room. They metastasize. They spread through departments, task forces, fusion centers—like an invasive species with a grant budget.

Now here’s where the story gets truly American.

Because while the cops were getting trained, Silicon Valley was packing its lunch.

The hoodie class—those soft-spoken monks of “disruption”—weren’t asking whether this apparatus should exist. They were asking how fast they could scale it.

They didn’t bring ideology. They brought infrastructure.

And infrastructure is ideology that doesn’t have to argue.

Sophia Goodfriend nailed it: U.S. companies sharpened their surveillance tech in Israel and brought it home like a souvenir—except instead of a snow globe, it’s your metadata, your movement history, your social graph, your insomnia, your browsing habits, and that weird text you sent at 2:17 a.m. that you forgot about but the database didn’t.

By 2015, firms like Babel and Palantir were already feeding ICE the raw material of modern power: data. Not just data—relational data. Who you know. Who you talk to. Who you stand near. Who shares your last name. Who liked whose post. Who went to the same mosque, protest, clinic, or birthday party.

They turned human life into a logic puzzle.

Then the real heavy equipment rolled in.

Amazon.Microsoft.Google.

The holy trinity of cheerful monopolies.

They didn’t bring whips or chains. They brought cloud services—which is just a cute way of saying: We’ll store the nation’s private life on servers you’ll never see, governed by contracts you’ll never read.

And here’s the joke the future will laugh at us for:Where AI fails technically, it succeeds ideologically.

It doesn’t have to be right.It just has to feel inevitable.

It just has to make the bureaucracy feel powerful.Like a toddler gripping a steering wheel while the bus careens downhill.

Now we’re told “the parts are all in place.”

That’s the phrase they use right before something irreversible happens.

Palantir—named after Tolkien’s all-seeing stones, because nothing screams humility like borrowing props from fantasy literature—has reportedly been building ICE an “immigrationOS.”

An operating system.For people.

Reports that can generate what immigrants look like, where they live, where they travel, who they associate with—and monitor their location in real time. Add social-media surveillance. Add AI pattern recognition. Add predictive tools that decide who looks suspicious enough today.

And to justify it, they dust off the ugliest nouns in the language—“terrorist,” “antisemite”—because power always launders itself through moral panic. It doesn’t matter who fits the label. What matters is that the label exists.

Then comes the quote that should be tattooed on the forehead of the century:

“We need to treat this like a business.Like Amazon Prime—but with human beings.”

There it is.

Two hundred and fifty years of Enlightenment thought, reduced to free shipping and live tracking.

Now, let’s talk about Palantir itself—because this isn’t just software. It’s a worldview wearing code.

Their original flagship platform—Gotham—connects everything in a battlefield. Soldier sensors. Drones. Satellites. Cameras. All fused into a single interface. The general’s wet dream: total visibility, zero uncertainty, no fog of war—just a clean dashboard with color-coded deaths.

Every general in history would’ve sold their mother for this.

And then Palantir did what all powerful technologies do: it leaked.

They rolled out AIP—Artificial Intelligence Platform—a system that lets users tailor large language models to private and public data. Translation: bring us your secrets; we’ll make them actionable.

Suddenly the customer base explodes.

Not just the military.Banks. Oil companies. Insurance firms. Rental cars.

Citi. BP. AIG. Hertz.

The same tools that map insurgent networks now map customers, employees, citizens.

The wall between battlefield and boardroom doesn’t crack—it dissolves.

War comes home, takes off its helmet, and starts doing performance reviews.

And presiding over this is Alex Karp—the philosopher-warrior CEO, the Patagonia-wearing prophet of “system transformation.” He talks like he’s rewriting scripture. Talks about rebuilding institutions. About destiny. About “noble warriors of the West.”

Strip away the rhetoric and what he’s selling is algorithmic supremacy.

Not justice.Not democracy.Efficiency.

Effectiveness.

Speed.

He treats democratic hesitation—the arguing, the protesting, the moral caution—as a bug in the system. And the fix is automation.

Why debate when you can deploy?Why deliberate when you can optimize?

Karp doesn’t hide his contempt for restraint. He doesn’t flirt with ethics panels or open letters. He says the quiet part loud: Palantir is here to wage war—on inefficiency, on bureaucracy, on enemies foreign and domestic.

This isn’t about tools.It’s about inevitability.

He’s not saying, “Here’s an option.”He’s saying, “This is the future. Get out of the way.”

And Wall Street loves him for it.

(Small Money, Big Damage - Early drafts, cartoons, heresies included)

Coming up…. we’re opening the phones.

If you’ve ever wondered when “security” quietly turned into surveillance, when convenience turned into control, and when nobody bothered to ask your permission—this is your segment.

Where do you see it showing up?At work? At the border? In policing? In tech? In your daily life?

If any of this feels familiar—if any of it makes your stomach tighten just a notch—then this part is for you.

Because what we’re talking about isn’t abstract. It’s not theory. It’s not sci-fi. It’s not “someday.”It’s already installed.

This is about a country quietly trading judgment for dashboards, democracy for deployment, and human beings for data points—then acting shocked when the system starts treating everyone like a potential problem to be managed.

You don’t need to be a tech expert.You don’t need to be a lawyer.You don’t need a PhD in geopolitics or a subscription to five think tanks.

You just need eyes. And a pulse.

Have you noticed how everything now comes with tracking?How every institution suddenly wants your data “for safety”?How the language is always clean, clinical, professional—while the consequences are anything but?

At what point does “efficiency” become control?At what point does “security” become surveillance?At what point does the system stop working for people and start working on them?

That’s not a rhetorical question. That’s a live one.

This is The Cary Harrison Files.And right now, the floor is yours.

(Small Money, Big Damage - Early drafts, cartoons, heresies included)

Palantir is now one of the most highly valued defense contractors in American history—trading at obscene multiples because nothing excites investors like permanent conflict and recurring surveillance revenue.

They’re delivering AI-powered targeting systems. Logistics platforms. Vehicles like TITAN. Programs like Maven that turn satellite imagery into instant kill decisions.

That’s not support.That’s imperial plumbing.

Here’s the truly chilling part—and lean in, because this matters:

This system doesn’t need public support.

It doesn’t need elections.It doesn’t need persuasion.It doesn’t need belief.

It just needs backend access.

Wars without consent.Policing without accountability.Governance without visibility.

Morality outsourced to code.Human judgment replaced by scoring systems.Life reduced to probabilities.

If Orwell warned us about Big Brother, this is worse—because nobody’s screaming.

There are no banners.No parades.No goose-stepping theatrics.

Just procurement contracts.Quarterly earnings calls.And a calm voice telling you this is all for your safety.

The most dangerous thing about Alex Karp isn’t that he looks like a villain.

It’s that he looks reasonable.

He quotes scripture.He wears fleece.He sounds like your smartest professor after office hours.

But behind the affectation is a man laying track for a future where dissent is a glitch, ambiguity is a flaw, and the human being is just another inefficiency to be engineered out.

So while the media fixates on loud demagogues throwing tantrums on camera, keep your eyes on the quiet architecture being poured beneath your feet.

Because the future isn’t being shouted at you.

It’s being installed.

And Big Brother doesn’t shout.Big Brother doesn’t threaten.Big Brother codes.

Coming up….: we’re opening the phones.

If you’ve ever wondered when “security” quietly turned into surveillance, when convenience turned into control, and when nobody bothered to ask your permission—this is your segment.

Where do you see it showing up?At work? At the border? In policing? In tech? In your daily life?

Call in. Push back. Push harder.

818-985-KPFK—that’s 818-985-5735.

Don’t go anywhere.You’re listening to The Cary Harrison Files—and this is where you enter the story.

If any of this feels familiar—if any of it makes your stomach tighten just a notch—then this part is for you.

Because what we’re talking about isn’t abstract. It’s not theory. It’s not sci-fi. It’s not “someday.”It’s already installed.

This is about a country quietly trading judgment for dashboards, democracy for deployment, and human beings for data points—then acting shocked when the system starts treating everyone like a potential problem to be managed.

You don’t need to be a tech expert.You don’t need to be a lawyer.You don’t need a PhD in geopolitics or a subscription to five think tanks.

You just need eyes. And a pulse.

Have you noticed how everything now comes with tracking?How every institution suddenly wants your data “for safety”?How the language is always clean, clinical, professional—while the consequences are anything but?

At what point does “efficiency” become control?At what point does “security” become surveillance?At what point does the system stop working for people and start working on them?

That’s not a rhetorical question. That’s a live one.

And this show isn’t a TED Talk. It’s not a sermon. It’s a conversation—and it only works if you’re part of it.

So if you’re angry, confused, uneasy, skeptical, or just trying to put words to that low-grade hum of dread you’ve been carrying around—this is your moment.

Tell me where you see this creeping into your life.Tell me what you’re noticing at work, at school, at the border, online, in your city, in your kid’s classroom, in your local police department, in your bank, in your inbox.

Or tell me I’m wrong.Tell me I’m overstating it.Tell me where you think the line still is—and why you think it’ll hold.

But don’t sit there silent while the future gets rolled out like a software update you never agreed to.

You can leave a text or voice-message at 310-737-TALK (8255)

This is The Cary Harrison Files.And right now, the floor is yours.

Call in.

(Small Money, Big Damage - Early drafts, cartoons, heresies included)

The Cary Harrison Files is a listener-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Look for my complete book “A MAGA history of the United States” (MAGA: Making Academia Great Again) coming out in the next months. I perform chapters often on my LA public radio show, the Cary Harrison Files”, Fridays at 10 AM Pacific, KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles.

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Cary Harrison FilesBy CARY HARRISON