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Briefing #225


this update does not exist and I was never here


Greetings!

This morning I received, in confidence, a private communication containing very positive news of progress by dynastic Elder principals.

While we were given additional details, WHA was instructed to not reveal them. As WHA always keeps confidences as a condition for further support, we will respect this wish.

I was going to simply post this as a comment, but on further reflection, I thought it best to publish it to our readership.

It’s hoped that positive updates will continue!

Earlier we predicted that 2026 was going to be a pivotal year; that forward progress would have to take place along a wide front of a very diverse set of transformational projects within the human experience – technological, political, financial, social. The information we received today would seem to validate that a particular ram has touched the wall, and this time it’s going to continue forward.

We hope so!


There are no significant crypto updates at this time, but all prior recent suggestions and observations are still valid at this time. There will be no going back. Adoption, regulatory clarity, crypto-based products and stablecoin payment rails are no longer theories. They are movements.

Thank you, again, for your continuing contributions to the discussion section.

More when possible!

WHA
S*P*Q*R*
SI VIS PACEM PARA BELLVM


“The more a man knows, the less he talks.”

Voltaire

311 responses to “Briefing #225”

  1. Interesting take on Sigma stack today. With thanks to Vox Day.

    ***

    An aerial view shows the aftermath of the fire at the Kimberly-Clark paper products facility in Ontario.

    While we talk a lot more often about Gamma rage-spirals, which makes sense because they are fairly common and we’ve all seen them, the wrath of the Omega is actually much more dangerous and more apocalyptic.

    Milton burning down the building after being humiliated one too many times isn’t just a Hollywood invention, as evidenced by the complete destruction of a factory in California by an Omega this week.

    The suspect in a massive blaze at an Ontario warehouse posted videos that appeared to show him lighting the fire and griping about being paid low wages, according to video reviewed by The Times.

    Crews responded to the 1.2-million-square-foot Kimberly-Clark paper products facility early Tuesday and were quickly forced out due to “extremely rapid fire growth,” according to the Ontario Fire Department.

    The fire caused the building’s roof to collapse and escalated to a six-alarm blaze, requiring the response of around 175 firefighters and the evacuation of about 20 employees.

    Ontario Police Cpl. Emily Williams told KTLA-TV Channel 5 that police were investigating the video. “We have had reports that he did give some information on social media,” Williams said.

    Chamel Abdulkarim, 29, of Highland was arrested in connection with the blaze, according to authorities. Abdulkarim was employed by NFI Industries, a third-party distribution company for Kimberly-Clark products, fire officials said.

    “If you’re not going to pay us enough to [expletive] live or afford to live, at least pay us enough not to do this [expletive],” according to the U.S. attorney’s office for the Central District of California.

    One thing the 19th Century and early 20th Century robber barons understood is that you have to treat your workers well enough to live decent lives, not for their sake, but for yours. The post-WWII corporate reduction of workers to “human capital” and the corresponding lack of concern for them is ultimately more expensive than paying them a decent wage.

    So be kind to Omegas, for your own sake, even if you can’t muster the chrsyopathy to do it for theirs.

    Like

    1. Ah… the reference to Milton is this one:

      In the 1999 cult film Office Space, the character Milton Waddams fulfills his repeated threats to burn down the Initech office building after being moved to the basement, neglected by management, and having his pay stopped. He sets the building on fire, specifically in Lumbergh’s office, and escapes to a tropical vacation, finally finding peace.

      Like

  2. OpenAI published a 13-page paper called “Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age.” Core idea: AI automates work, wealth concentrates, so build a Public Wealth Fund. Government and AI companies seed it. Returns go to citizens. Except OpenAI are clearly every bit the crooks Palantir and Anthropic and Meta and Google are… Did I forget Oracle?

    The thing is.. a country already tried this model. Norway. In the 1960s. With oil.

    But Norway’s version was fundamentally different. The government taxed the oil companies. Took full control. Built the fund independently. Oil companies didn’t write the rules. Didn’t decide how much to contribute. Didn’t pick where the money went.

    That fund is now worth $1.9 trillion. $340,000 per citizen. Generates more income than oil itself. What an idea! Are the poor Norwegians tax-free of their .gov yet??? Nope — 22% average, 39% top tax rate…

    Now look at OpenAI’s version. An AI company writing a paper saying the government should build a fund that invests in AI-driven growth. Which includes.. companies like OpenAI. While preparing for an IPO. After closing a $110B round. The same week Congress started AI legislation talks.

    Norway said: we’re going to tax you and build this ourselves.

    OpenAI is saying: invest in us and we’ll share the returns.

    Same concept. Completely different sentence. Same coffin-corner sequestration. I don’t trust OpenAI or any gov so this is quite a pickle.

    Like

  3. Based. So let it be written…so let it be done.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. Again, children are playing with anti-matter weapons.

    Take the morons in the back room, spank them and threaten instant nationalization. Enough of the f’ing free for all. Enough of the trillion dollar bubble. Enough of the distortion of economics in power bills — I’m paying now 16 cents per kwh when I should be paying less than 6c. When the F did utility commissions, who should be protecting ME, are cost-shifting the whole cost of the power buildouts to ME…

    They have no idea of what they are doing. What’s worse, even the day-work of the AIs has no proof of correctness and no guarantee of reliability. Making it even worse, there are literally thousands upon thousands of agentic endpoints that are unsecured. Nobody, including CEOs have any business whatsoever running an AI agent of any kind.

    Enough being asleep at the switch. End this sh*t now.

    LATEST BEGIN BELOW:

    Anthropic’s mythos model can exploit vulnerabilities faster than human hackers. US government just held an emergency Meeting

    This happened.

    The US Treasury Secretary and the Fed Chair summoned Wall Street bank CEOs to an emergency meeting about Anthropic’s upcoming AI model “mythos.” The model can autonomously find software vulnerabilities and build exploits faster than teams of human hackers.

    Here’s why this matters if you run OpenCLaw:

    The facts:

    • Anthropic’s own leaked blog post says Mythos is “far ahead of any other AI model in cyber capabilities” and will enable attacks that “far outpace the efforts of defenders”
    • 48% of cybersecurity professionals now rank agentic AI as the #1 attack vector for 2026. above deepfakes. above everything else.
    • There are 500,000 OpenCLAW instances on the public internet right now. 135,000 have insecure defaults. 15,000 are directly exploitable through known CVEs.
    • A UK CEO’s OpenCLAW instance was sold on breachforums for $25,000. email, calendar, files. everything his agent had access to.
    • Over 1,400 malicious skills have been identified on Clawhub
    • Anthropic separately announced that Claude subscriptions can no longer power third-party agents like OpenClaw. Everyone on OAuth will need to switch to per-token API billing. [HOW CONVENIENT — Shall We Charge By ELECTRON????]

    Like

  5. In case you were wondering, this is not John.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. That assembled Shit posing in the Commons is No Government.

      Like

  6. These people are insane

    Like

    1. 2000 years of culling the survivors have created a lethal strain. And yes, there is a sanity problem here. Just as there is one at the Vatican. Just as there is one in those circles that have serious ideas about how to make life unbearable to force the return of Christ.

      The fixed mindset, that literally has not changed since the Romans made clear to the Judeans of yesteryear their s**t would not be tolerated, is setting them up for another round of serious pain.

      Liked by 2 people

  7. Looks like bugs are off the menu.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Trump upends China’s lucrative sanctioned oil import scheme after Iran, Venezuela interventions:

    https://justthenews.com/government/diplomacy/trump-upends-chinas-lucrative-sanctioned-oil-import-scheme-after-iran

    Like

  9. Liked by 1 person

  10. Major Coffee Chain Getting Rid of Rainbow Flags and Baristas Are Losing It Didn’t take much, did it?

    https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/major-coffee-chain-getting-rid-of

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Wow, amazing.

      Liked by 1 person

  11. My experience parallels this:

    ***BEGIN REDDIT QUOTE***

    Six months ago I committed to using AI tools for everything I possibly could in my work. Every day, every task, every workflow.

    Here’s the honest report as of April 2026.

    What’s Genuinely Incredible

    1. First drafts of anything — AI eliminated the blank-page problem entirely. I don’t dread starting anymore.
    2. Research synthesis — Feeding 10 articles into Claude Opus 4.6 and asking “what’s the common thread?” gets me a better synthesis in 2 minutes than I could produce in an hour.
    3. Code for non-coders — I’ve built automation scripts, web scrapers, and a custom dashboard without knowing how to code. Cursor (powered by Claude) changed what “non-technical” means. The tool has 2M+ users now for good reason.
    4. Getting unstuck — Talking through a problem with an AI that can actually push back is underrated. Not therapy, but something.
    5. Learning new topics fast — “Teach me [topic] like I’m smart but completely new to this. What are the most common misconceptions?” is my go-to for rapid learning.

    What’s Massively Overhyped

    1. “AI will do it for you” — Everything still requires your judgment and context. The AI drafts. You think.
    2. AI SEO content — The “publish 100 AI articles and watch traffic pour in” strategy is even more dead in 2026 than it was in 2024. Google has gotten much better at identifying low-value AI content.
    3. AI chatbots for customer service — Unless you invest heavily in training and iteration, they frustrate users more than they help.
    4. “Set it and forget it” automation — AI workflows break. They require monitoring. Fully autonomous workflows exist only in narrow, controlled cases.
    5. Chasing the newest model — New model releases happen constantly now. I’ve learned to stay on a model that works for my tasks rather than jumping to every new release.

    What’s Quietly Dangerous (Nobody Talks About This)

    1. Skill atrophy — My first-draft writing has gotten worse. I outsourced that skill and I’m losing the muscle. I now intentionally write without AI some days.
    2. Confidence without competence — Frontier models give confident-sounding answers to things they don’t know. If you’re not knowledgeable enough to catch errors, you can build strategies on wrong foundations.
    3. The “good enough” trap — AI output is often 80% there. If you stop at 80%, your work looks like everyone else’s. The 20% you add is the differentiation.
    4. Over-automation without understanding — I automated a workflow without fully understanding it first. When it broke, I couldn’t fix it. Understand before you automate.
    5. Vendor dependency — My workflows are deeply integrated with specific AI tools and APIs. Pricing changes, policy shifts, and service disruptions are real risks at this point.

    The Honest Summary

    AI tools have made me more productive, creative, and capable than I’ve ever been.

    They’ve also made me lazier in ways I didn’t notice until recently.

    The people winning with AI in 2026 aren’t the ones using the most tools or running the newest models. They’re the ones using AI to amplify genuine skills and judgment — not replace them.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. The demented stroked out Ghoul raises her head to give an “order”.

        PELOSI TELLS SWALWELL TO DROP OUT.

        Liked by 1 person

  12. Like

  13. HPV Vaccine Tied to Lower Cancer Risk in Men, Too— The 9-valent shot should be given to both females and males, researchers urge

    **THIS IS STATISTICAL MIRAGE** Humor me and do a google search on how many strains of HPV exist, and then think whether or not a shot designed for the most carcinogenic strains protects against all the other…

    Liked by 1 person

  14. And this IS a real mystery. That right angle cut is an *inside cut* in hard stone. It has sub-millimeter precision and is basically dead reckoning straight relative to the outside. Do you have any clue how hard that is to do without computers and high power tools? Between nearly-impossible and impossible. For all intents and purposes it has to been the result of a guided mechanical tool. You didn’t do this by hand. Yet no such device survived from this era to suggest its existence.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. To be clear, I’m not saying it can’t be done by hand. But it’s hard. Really hard. Inside cuts are a real pain in the ass. If you’ve ever done stone work (I did briefly, in my 20’s), you know how hard an inside cut is. And the time involved!

      Like

  15. Like

  16. This is PRICELESS, Gov. Gavin Newscum tweetted on “X” complaining about Chevron making a high profit this Quarter. The fact is the State of California makes more Profit on a gallon of gasoline than Chevron because of their high Tax Rate on Gas. 

    Like

    1. This guy is truly scum along with a nutbun for a partner. I wonder how much money he has scammed off of his current position and into his pocket. He is ruining CA and the crappy OR govenor we have is almost as bad. What a mess politics has made of the west coast.

      Liked by 2 people

  17. Like

  18. Somewhere over Indonesia, a fascinating UFO has been, apparently, observed.

    MUFON’ers seem excited over this one, will wait for cross-confirmation on authenticity.

    Like

    1. False greyscale reconstruction:

      Like

      1. Oh well, false alarm.

        The original apparently goes back to the cusp of 2019…

        Our thanks to MUFON for the debunk.

        Like

  19. These kind of reports make me angry.

    IVERMECTIN and MEBENDAZOLE Testimonial – 57 year old Ontario woman with Stage 4 Colon Cancer metastatic to liver reports after 6 months: CANCER FREE!!

    William Makis

    Apr 10

    So, basic, unavoidable fact about cancer. From the moment cancer appears, it spreads cells everywhere in the body. Proven beyond doubt by Dr. David Tarin of UCSD. These cells are all time bombs. And by implication you are never cancer free.

    What Dr. Makis means is that a woman with a dire prognosis due to metastatic cancer to the liver, is now looking at a 5 to 10 year time horizon of dying from something else entirely. But realistically, there is still a 1-in-4 chance that it will return with a vengeance and kill her in 6 months from date of recurrence.

    But considering this outcome was achieved by ivermectin and *-bendazole, it is a wonderful outcome and we commend his continued efforts in this area.

    Liked by 1 person

  20. Another orbital shot of the Apollo landing site. Print it, and shove it down the throat of the midwit naysayers.

    Like

    1. I am currently dealing with a “flat earth” wacko in my circle of friends. It’s amazing how smart people can be derailed by that kind of thing.

      If I am not mistaken, along the right edge of the picture you can see the rim of the large crater that the auto-landing was designating as a landing place. Armstrong had to take over control earlier than planned and flew ahead to the landing place we see above. Even tha small diversion consumed a lot of their fuel safety margin, with just 17 seconds of fuel in the tanks on touchdown.

      Armstrong was as cool as a snowman throughout the entire process.

      Like

      1. They were well-selected. And they trained for the contingencies. If the damn thing didn’t land flat they would have been marooned. Although given the NASA of the time, I would not be shocked if they’d manage to rescue them somehow. 17 seconds… mamma mia!

        Like

        1. Yes on the flat landing requirement. They could land up to 15 degrees of tilt, but no more. More than that and the LM ascent guidance computer would not be able to provide an accurate trajectory for rendezvous. Apollo 15 landed at 12 degrees. Almost a disaster. If any launch was attempted at greater than 15 degrees, the launch sequence pitchover maneuver would have happened at too steep an angle which would have left them far below an orbit that the Command module could have descended to for a hookup. Those men had balls of steel.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. It gives me great comfort that such men existed.

            Liked by 1 person

  21. Amazon, having destroyed its employee base, is now doubling down with… drum roll…

    Andy Jassy’s latest shareholder letter and one number really stood out: Amazon is planning to invest up to $200 billion into AI infrastructure. Not just models, but everything around them: Data centers, custom chips, robotics, and even connectivity layers. 

    Amazon Prime is already barely break-even as a customer.

    I’m not going to pay a premium on AWS to have it AI-enabled. I’ll host it myself on cheap hardware. With AI I don’t need the AWS overhead to manage the server. I might, occasionally, get my hands dirty and swap out a disk drive.

    Your dollar and sense will be different. For *some*, big co, AWS plus AI will make sense. But generally, no…

    Like

  22. Liked by 3 people

      1. My water heater blew — it lasted since 1997 so it was a decade past replacement.

        The plumber arrived, disconnected the leaking one, hauled in another 50-gallon replacement, did the latest in pipe joining, verified integrity, restored water, verified the integrity a second time, set the setting to match the old, and all for $1200 dollars.

        It was a pro job the whole way.

        I wrote the check with gratitude.

        Like

        1. Not a bad deal at all for $1200, especially for a 50 gal. That’s quite large for what I assume is a single family unit. Most have 40.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Yes, slightly over-sized relative to typical. Also, it was in stock and instantly available.

            But growing up in Italy, the ~25-gallon (~100 L) top of closet experience left a mark. In a beautiful apartment with 5 people… my father had looked into what it would take to get something bigger in, but reworking where the damnable heater was located was cost prohibitive — not to mention the condominio regs, which were typical insane prohibitions associated with the ‘energy crisis’. Given we paid for metered gas, it was absurd that the condominio board would have to approve the size of our water heater…

            50-gal pretty much fit the bill and the next size up was 75-gal, which made no sense for the two of us in our Bethlehem home.

            Like

  23. https://www.zerohedge.com/political/viral-ad-sweden-gets-it-all-wrong

    In a jaw-dropping display of reality inversion, Sweden’s state-owned public transport company SL has rolled out a new advert that casts loud, obnoxious white women as the problem on buses while depicting black men as the silent, long-suffering victims politely minding their own business.

    Liked by 1 person

  24. https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/worlds-first-humanoid-robot-real-household-chores-launched-16-hour-battery

    Chinese robotics firm UniX AI has unveiled Panther, touted as the world’s first service humanoid robot to enter real household deployment.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Sad. I sure hope they got the guy.

      Like

    2. We need to get rid of them all.

      And women need to be armed.

      Like

      1. Charlotte Man Found Incapable of Proceeding to Trial in Iryna Zarutska Case

        DeCarlos Brown had a long history of mental illness. His lawyers filed a motion this week saying a state psychiatric hospital found him unfit for trial, though a judge will ultimately decide.

        Like

    3. if you can believe Fox or Brietbart ( I don’t trust them anymore either) , the so called republicans are now supporting amnesty for illegals , and are AGAINST the save America Voter ID act . This is not surprising, as the deep state is NOT going to dealt with either . my dad had a saying, and probably not original, but so true . The republicans and democrat parties are destroying the country, but the republicans just feel terrible about it . Now days, i think they are on the same team with the radical left . Two heads of the same snake so to speak . Thank God that our rights come from him, and not man . That is not just a line in the constitution, but an eternal truth .

      Liked by 1 person

  25. “Appear weak when you are strong” – Sun Tzu

    Liked by 1 person

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