White Hat Auxiliaries

A Reconnaissance In Force Sending Dispatches From The Front Exclusive Global Re-funding News Vox Populi

Whitehatauxiliaries@frontier.com

Home

Briefing #226


new infrastructure mobilizes as elders pause and ponder


Greetings!

We stand on the precipice of transformational developments. They are all there for you to see, and no reminding or mentioning of it is needed. Notwithstanding the turmoil in the Gulf and the lingering war in Ukraine, the world is getting on with getting on. And doing so in a faster, more efficient and leaner way.

And so shall we. Future articles will be as brief as possible, focused more and will have no to minimal graphics as needed. Metrics have shown that you all appreciate such a format so we will accommodate this desire.

Bitcoin (BTC/USD) arrived in May with a comfortable $75-77K range. It may be certainly right to express concern that this is well below the 50-week moving average. A clear countertrend rally from April lows.

It remains fixed and ever-present. Technical realities are going to be as they are until CLARITY becomes reality. New capital will not arrive until that reality is really real.

That said, it does not mean the longer term expectations as previously outlined in earlier reports are kaput. Infrastructure building continues. Stablecoin payment rails continue to be laid deeply in the global financial system at a pace that has never been seen before in any similar past technological upgrade. The 401(k) rule is progressing. Coinbase has its trust charter. Australia has its licensing framework. The next boom cycle, which will be fueled by valid institutional demand, AI commerce, tokenization and, eventually CLARITY is soundly intact and becomes more impressive as every week passes. The progress is stunning.

The legislative clarity is coming. That, along with a macroeconomic landscape allowing lower rates and the follow-through of the halving processes are indeed real, but are not quite at the station yet.

The markets know what is approaching and are eagerly awaiting it. Until then, we will most likely watch the final dance of this current “bust cycle” play out until the real catalysts arrive.

For those if you who are in for the long haul (the smart play), remain patient and accumulate your risk capital and keep it ready for the breach. When the 200 day MA is exceeded on a steady weekly basis, you will want to have your gunpowder ready for the rammer.

The setup for it is most assuredly coming. It’s just not here yet. But the processes are ticking off the necessary boxes and the pressure is mounting, notwithstanding the grinding.

Approach the market as appropriate for your financial circumstances, use cash only, and avoid foolhardy borrowing that exceeds your ability to recover from sudden unexpected market shocks.

This month may be one for the books if CLARITY is finally set loose. This year will naturally be one for the books if all the above plays out, set against the new re-industrialization that the USA is currently pursuing in manufacturing and energy sectors. March US steel output, alone, was up 10.8% month over month, and up 5.7% more in Q1 2026 than in Q1 2025.

Productive capacity, alone, will determine the standard of living of a country. Efficiency in financial processes will certainly contribute to this as markets transact with lower payment costs and wait times.

Further to this is the ongoing cleanup of financial fraud to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars from Learing Centers to Hospice Centers that contain people who never die.

As we progress into the 21st Century, it’s no surprise that big government has suddenly found religion in the “First Church of Efficient or Die” to be not only necessary but vital. CLARITY + EFFICIENCY = THE WAY OF THE FUTURE. And investment dollars will wager on that game. Big governments are already falling out of favor with people. They will have to slim down and compete with the very technology they are going to lawfully allow to operate.

All of you can own a piece of that action.

What a time to be alive!

It has been reported that as the Elders started to prepare for a new volume entry to the market, the situation in the Persian Gulf has caused concern. The Elders now watch the matter.

No further details have been received as of this report. We will certainly report anything new as permitted.


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

“The great majority of men attend to what is necessary only when they feel a need for it—the precise time when it is too late.” — Napoleon Bonaparte

987 responses to “Briefing #226”

  1. Like

  2. Tennessee Doubles Down on New Toxicology Law that Broke the Silence on Psychiatric Drugs & Mass Shootings

    https://joehoft.com/tennessee-doubles-down-new-toxicology-law-that-broke/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=tennessee-doubles-down-new-toxicology-law-that-broke

    Sheila Matthews of AbleChild and Amy Miller, a leading voice on medical freedom for over a decade in Tennessee, pressed the question many lawmakers and institutions did not want asked: what was in Audrey Hale’s system, what psychiatric treatment had been provided, and why was the public being denied access to potentially critical facts? Their position was simple and direct, no honest investigation of mass violence is complete if toxicology, prescription-drug exposure, and treatment history are ignored or withheld.

    Like

  3. https://nypost.com/2026/05/22/us-news/nj-dad-thomas-diiorio-charged-with-bias-intimidation-after-viral-confrontation-over-bullying-dispute/

    So let me understand… a white man used harsh language towards a black woman… and now “you people” is a criminal offense? Under what goddam statute? Oh wait — something called “bias intimidation”? Unreal.

    And while the NY Post is virtue signaling with this article, the money-quote in there — the one that will do more damage than anything the guy said is: We never seem to have these problems with white people.

    Like

  4. Company That Fired Workers Over COVID Vaccine Mandate to Pay $4.25M

    Another COVID mandate fight just ended with a multimillion-dollar payout.

    https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/company-that-fired-workers-over-covid

    Liked by 1 person

  5. It’s as if the immigration process is following my orders.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Trumps ex Epstein Rent Girl wife?

      Like

      1. She became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 2006.

        As to her being an Epstein Rent Girl, I leave that to her attorneys to answer anyone who wishes to openly make such claims. That’s not a claim I would make without something substantial behind it. And I don’t have it.

        Like

  6. Oscar material

    Like

  7. Get rid of federal congress. Old, outdated, useless, corrupt, pointless in a modern age. Reorganize to secure all existing civil rights and protections via the Executive and Judicial.

    Liked by 3 people

  8. AFP, Reuters

    A French court on Wednesday delivered a dramatic verdict against Airbus and Air ‌France over France’s worst air disaster, ruling that both companies were guilty of corporate manslaughter in the 2009 Rio-Paris plane crash off Brazil.

    Both companies have been ordered to pay the maximum fine of €225,000 ($260,971) each. While the amount is symbolic, it damages the reputation of both companies. The two companies said they would appeal the ruling.

    The Paris Court of Appeal said that the French flag carrier and Europe’s leading aerospace manufacturer were “solely and entirely responsible,” for the incident.

    On June 1, 2009, Air France Flight 447 was traveling from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to Paris, France. The Airbus 330 crashed into the Atlantic Ocean at 2:14 a.m. local time, killing all 228 people aboard. 

    The Brazilian Navy recovered some wreckage in the immediate aftermath, but it wasn’t until 2011 that French specialists collected the black box flight records from the ocean floor.

    French investigators determined that the crew reacted incorrectly to inconsistencies between instruments that displayed airspeed measurements. Ice crystals were likely blocking the aircraft’s pitot tubes, causing the autopilot to disengage and the plane entered into a stall that the crew failed to correct.

    A final report found that the accident resulted from a combination of small mechanical issues the crew was not thoroughly trained to correct, as well as poor communication between the pilot and co-pilot that resulted in continued human error. 

    Much has been made in the aftermath of the relationship between pilots and co-pilots in airlines around the world, with experts from both the official investigation and independent analyses suggesting that co-pilots are often hesitant to contradict their superior officers in emergency situations.

    Air France paid family members €17,500 ($20,300) compensation per victim in 2009.Why has the case taken so long?

    The long time required to recover the plane’s wreckage and carry out a thorough investigation hampered a speedy start to the legal process. 

    The French justice system is also notoriously slow and backlogged and most cases take years to come before a judge. After the trial finally began in 2022, Airbus and Air France were initially acquitted of wrongdoing in 2023. However, prosecutors appealed, which resulted in Thursday’s verdict.

    Edited by: Sean Sinico 

    Liked by 1 person

  9. So OpenAI has just crippled Codex 5.5. I’ve been operating on Codex 5.4 quite happily and was about to consider an upgrade to 5.5.

    Well, Reddit is now flooded with tales of woe. OpenAI has done exactly what Anthropic has done. Codex 5.5 is acting “stupid” and there is an “error” component. Basically 5.5 has been nerfed.

    Additionally, token burn is out of control. Simple agentic workflows and operations that shouldn’t burn out hundreds to thousands of tokens, do. And the limits of how many operations you can request keep getting lowered.

    So Dumpster Fire #2.

    It’s a pity, because I was willing to spend more money but now, nothing at all.

    Can you imagine being sold a 4K subscription that degrades first to 1080P, then 1080i, then to 720P, to 480P?

    {Insert 4 letter words} Anthropic. {Insert 4 letter words} OpenAI.

    The behavior is blatant fraud.

    Like

    1. Absolutely disgusting and getting out of hand. Do they really know how much damage they’re imposing on paid users? F’ing ridiculous man. There should be a law against this. We’re literally paying full price for an amputated product DURING the subscription. How can this be legal? Can you imagine your YouTube premium now allows for a max quality of 420p whenever they like?

      😮😮😮 The YouTube meme is making the rounds… it’s the simplest analogy,

      Liked by 1 person

  10. And now we are trotting out fake guests on news shows. It is NOT a shadow thrown by a collar. It is clearly a mask. Hence the blink suppression, minimal expression change. Astonishing.

    Like

  11. Rep. Byron Donalds Just Obliterated CNN After Host Tried Lying That Trump’s DOJ Is Going To Pay Out Funds To People Who Harmed Police

    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/05/rep-byron-donalds-just-obliterated-cnn-after-host/

    Like

  12. Like

  13. Rep. Tim Burchett Erupts in Fury After Spineless GOP Cuts Backroom Deal To Let Democrats Run The Show: ‘This Town Is Crooked As A Dog’s Leg And I’m Disgusted!’

    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/05/rep-tim-burchett-erupts-fury-after-spineless-gop/

    Like

  14. Like

    1. These things need to be called what they are: Crimes Against Humanity

      And I won’t bother stating just what a violation of Informed Consent this is.

      It is a hanging offense.

      Liked by 2 people

  15. Like

  16. The Butlerian Jihad will be fast upon us. It is however, not true that AI can do the jobs — that’s wishful thinking.

    Nonetheless, perception is reality and not fixed datacenter will be safe…

    Like

    1. Now really Tino…look what you have started.

      Like

      1. Well, ain’t that a kick to the head!

        Then again, we’ve watched the almost endless videos of folks stealing high tension copper wire and getting themselves electro-boomed, so why should this be any different?

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Now there’s an idea.

          Like

          1. oh my, I hadn’t thought of booby trapping the robots but the English can be read both ways.

            Like

  17. What a tragedy.

    Like

    1. I’d say pre-Covid “aneurysm”. Now, I’m at a loss. Pulmonary embolus? Clot? 41 is incredibly young for sudden death…

      Like

    1. Jew Control forever?????????????????????

      Like

  18. Washington D.C. historic fountain on again.

    Liked by 1 person

  19. LA Mayor Karen Bass says she is now considering allowing Illegal Aliens to Vote in Elections

    And Karen Bass is leading?
    — Bass 30%
    — Spencer Pratt, 22%
    — Nithya Raman, (who says she’ll ban Americans from BBQ’ing at Home) 19%

    Conspiracy theorists were right yet again.

    https://rumble.com/v7a6y8w-la-mayor-karen-bass-says-she-is-now-considering-allowing-illegal-aliens-to-.html

    Liked by 2 people

  20. RFK JR:

    Today’s arrests in Governor Tim Walz state represents the largest Autism FRAUD in American History.

    “This was an organized theft that exploited the most vulnerable children in America.”

    ARREST TIM WALZ.

    https://rumble.com/v7a6s32-todays-arrests-in-governor-tim-walz-state-represents-the-largest-autism-fra.html

    Liked by 3 people

  21. FBI Shuts Down India-Based Call Center Scam Targeting Hundreds of Elderly Americans

    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/05/fbi-shuts-down-india-based-call-center-scam/

    Liked by 3 people

  22. One British frigate could stop the entire lot.

    Liked by 2 people

  23. Blame the Patient: The Medical Gaslighting Crisis Hiding in Plain Sight

    This clip of Dr. Peter Hotez is an extreme case of medical gaslighting that is easy to spot. But what about when it’s not?

    https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/blame-the-patient-the-medical-gaslighting

    Like

    1. Plus the lady doesn’t keep getting Covid. She keeps getting a positive test, which in this narrow case, is unlikely to mean anything whatsoever.

      Like

  24. https://www.zerohedge.com/political/residents-uk-town-forced-form-vigilante-security-team-protect-women-and-kids-migrants

    Residents of a quiet East Sussex town have been left with no choice but to patrol their own streets after the leftist Labour government dumped hundreds of unvetted male migrants into a former army camp on their doorstep.

    Crowborough, a small community of around 20,000 people, is now home to a volunteer security force called Crowborough Aware. With 81 vetted locals stepping up, the group is conducting regular patrols to deter trouble and keep women and children safe.

    This is the direct result of years of open borders policies that have seen tiny, peaceful towns turned into testing grounds for mass migration.

    The breaking point came when six migrants surrounded a member of the public. That incident pushed locals into action.

    The post continues, “Some are calling them vigilantes. Why? “Because the treasonous UK Government have just moved over 500 unknown military age fighting Men into their small town & they are trying to prevent the horrific headlines that are seen daily in every corner of the country from happening there.”

    Like

    1. Poor citizens. Shoot Wogs on sight.

      Liked by 1 person

  25. Star spangled banner by a104 year old WWII vet.

    https://fb.watch/Hf09kFS1IT/

    Liked by 3 people

  26. England experiencing more cultural enrichment.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Oh dear. What the heck?!

      Like

  27. Hop-a-Long Hottentot obviously running on a guilty conscience.

    Like

  28. And to think it’s just the ones they have caught.

    Liked by 3 people

  29. In my youth I was unemployed for a month and my live in girl was supporting us. One day she taped a polaroid pic of her privates to the bedroom door with a note under it that read: Closed until the user has a job.

    I found a job that week.

    Liked by 1 person

  30. Julia Bowman Robinson: the woman who outworked the system in silence.

    The chalk dust settled in a 1950 Berkeley, California classroom. The female mathematician copying the equations was unpaid.

    She had earned her doctorate from the university two years earlier. Her husband, Raphael, taught in the same department. They shared a house, a life, and a quiet understanding of numbers.

    When she walked into the mathematics building, she wore a visitor’s badge.

    The rules of the era were clear. According to the 1950 faculty census, the university employed over sixty professors in the mathematics and physics departments. All of them were men. If a theorem needed checking, the professors asked for her input. If a class needed a substitute, she stood at the blackboard and taught the students. She did the work of a faculty member. She just wasn’t allowed to be one.

    In 1948, she had started looking at a specific list.

    Fifty years earlier, a German scholar named David Hilbert had stood before the International Congress of Mathematicians in Paris. He had published twenty-three impossible mathematical puzzles. Problem number ten asked for a simple algorithm to determine if a specific type of equation had whole-number solutions. It was considered the holy grail of modern mathematics. Scholars had spent their entire careers on it and died with empty hands.

    She filled three notebooks that first year. She found nothing.

    Records show the University of California operated under strict anti-nepotism rules during this era. The policy was originally designed to prevent favoritism. In practice, it meant that if a husband and wife both held doctorates in the same field, the institution only hired the man. The woman legally became a faculty wife.

    Julia Bowman Robinson spent the 1950s at her dining room table. Raphael went to campus every morning. Julia stayed home.

    Her workspace was made of dark oak. It held a coffee cup, a stack of grid paper, and several sharpened pencils. She broke problem number ten into smaller pieces. She focused on prime numbers and exponential growth.

    In 1952, she published a paper titled “Existential Definability in Arithmetic.” It was a partial solution. It ran for fourteen pages in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. The global mathematics community read it. The UC Berkeley administration did not.

    The 1960s arrived. The campus outside her window erupted in protests and social change. Inside the house, the math remained the same.

    She partnered with two other scholars, Martin Davis and Hilary Putnam. They mailed thick envelopes of calculations back and forth across the country. Postage was four cents. They built a framework known as the Davis-Putnam-Robinson hypothesis.

    It was brilliant. It was incomplete. They needed one more mathematical proof to lock it together.

    She kept going. Her health was fragile. Rheumatic fever had damaged her heart when she was a child, leaving severe scar tissue on her valves. Some mornings, she couldn’t walk up the stairs. She just sat in a wingback chair in the living room, closed her eyes, and ran complex polynomial equations in her head while the neighborhood outside went to work.

    She worked this way for twenty-two years.

    No salary. No office. No title. Just a pencil, blank paper, and time.

    In February 1970, a twenty-two-year-old Russian named Yuri Matiyasevich presented a paper in Leningrad. He had found the final piece. He used the exact framework Julia had built over two decades. He proved that no such algorithm could exist.

    After seventy years, Hilbert’s Tenth Problem was finally closed.

    The Russian scholar sent her a telegram immediately. He refused to take sole credit. He stated publicly that his proof was only possible because of the foundation she had constructed.

    She was fifty-one years old. She had given twenty-two years of her intellectual life to an institution that legally considered her a dependent.

    The math world called her a genius. The university called her a faculty wife.

    The National Academy of Sciences elected her as a member in 1975. She became the first female mathematician in American history to receive the honor. Press photographers came to her house. The local newspapers ran her picture.

    The University of California finally noticed. They offered her a full professorship the following year, in 1976. She accepted it.

    She used the office for nine years before her heart finally gave out in 1985. The anti-nepotism rule was quietly erased from the administrative handbook. Her original notebooks are preserved in an archive today, cataloged under her own name, filled with the handwriting of a woman who was never supposed to be in the room.

    Source: Constance Reid (Biographical Memoirs).

    Verified via: American Mathematical Society, National Academy of Sciences Archives.

    (Some details summarized for brevity.)

    Liked by 1 person

  31. Goddam FDA wants 14 years of safety studies! Now, it should be rejected for the simple reason it is mRNA nanoparticle and every side effect of Covid mRNA will occur in a human subject. Mice have different immune systems than humans with persistent T-cell activation (which you’d think folks would know upfront, but it is buried deep in the literature), the net result is that it is possible nothing whatsoever would happen in humans. We’ve cured cancer in rats/mice a dozen-fold over, and yet each and every mouse cure fails in humans.

    What you should do is get a whole bunch of primates, say 300, per round, 3 rounds for roughly 1000 subjects. This empirically will put the side effect profile at a statistical accuracy that if any of the adverse events are above 1 per 1000 you can squash the therapy.

    OR

    Tell them that the real reason for 14 years of safety studies is because YOU KNOW, as a regulator, that the therapy is mildly lethal, and you want them to go away and retool.

    Only they can’t say that without opening themselves to a litany of lawsuits due to the regulatory precedents. So lets bankrupt them thru endless study — 14 years in theory will be 20-25 in practice.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Sigh. Apologies to all. It turns out to be a piece of AI slop. A deep dive yielded a minor paper that used mRNA to roll back some osteoarthritis.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Correct. Time is running out. Wogs Breed. Steel ,Rob. Worse R!

      *

      They were notorious. 

      *

      The cost of war is not cheap. None flown by Trump or his sons. 

      https://www.palestinechronicle.com/42-aircraft-shut-down-shocking-congress-report-details-us-setbacks-in-iran/

      *

      We left once I felt it would come.

      *

      Europe and fuel   TRUMP!!!!!

      Germany’s natural gas storage facilities are the largest in Europe by far and are currently less than 30% full, with traders reluctant to buy gas at current price levels. Tomorrow they will likely pay more if any is still availed/ 

      Dutch storage levels are even lower at just 12.5% full.

      Ireland is also very short on supply and may well run out first.

      How Europe intends to survive a tourist season is a mystery. 

      *

      Expose these Creeps

      Like

  32. Liked by 2 people

    1. Well you said it out loud and there you have it.

      Like

  33. Fat pig is worthless.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. It’s a damnable crime against humanity.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Pigs now living well.

        Like

  34. Let’s see who was on that jury. Either mostly Wogs or sniffing glue.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Disgusting .

      Liked by 2 people

  35. Marvelous!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. The update says it isn’t as extensive as we hoped…

      Like

    2. No hope for the UK!!

      Like

  36. 👽 Resistance was futile.

    Liked by 4 people

  37. The Empire strikes back…at what’s left of the Empire.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Shes psychotic. Luny tunes.

      Like

  38. The Incredibly Stupid One [NOT]

    The Gulf of Tonkin, just after midnight on April 6, 1967. The USS Canberra, a guided-missile cruiser, was lobbing shells at the North Vietnamese coast. Below deck, twenty-year-old Seaman Apprentice Douglas Hegdahl could not sleep through the booming. He climbed up to watch the five-inch guns fire. He had never seen a night bombardment. The next blast knocked him over the railing into black water. No one on the ship saw him fall.

    He swam for hours before a small North Vietnamese fishing boat hauled him aboard. Six feet tall, 225 pounds, no uniform, no story that made sense. His captors were certain they had landed a CIA commando. They beat him for days, then threw him into Hỏa Lò Prison in Hanoi. The Americans inside called it the Hanoi Hilton. Hegdahl, a postal clerk from Clark, South Dakota, was the youngest and lowest-ranking American POW the North Vietnamese ever held in the war.

    So he decided to be a fool. He spoke in a thick country drawl. He claimed he could not read. He pretended his eyes were too weak to see across the room. When his guards brought in a tutor to teach him to write, he botched the letters until the man quit in frustration. They named him “The Incredibly Stupid One” and stopped watching him closely. “I had probably the most embarrassing capture in the entire Vietnam War,” Hegdahl said years later. “I found that my defense posture was just to play dumb.”

    While they laughed at him, he worked. He swept the courtyard during the guards’ afternoon siesta and counted the cells. He learned the camp tap code from his cellmates. Air Force Captain Joe Crecca taught him the names of fellow prisoners and showed him how to memorize them to the tune of Old McDonald Had a Farm. Hegdahl repeated them every day until he held 256 names, capture dates, and hometowns in his head. He memorized the exact street address of the prison. He poured dirt into the gas tanks of enemy trucks.

    The POW leadership inside the camp ordered him to accept the early release the North Vietnamese were offering, so he could carry the names home. American military code forbade early release. He refused the order the first time. They gave it again. On August 5, 1969, after 852 days in captivity, he walked onto the plane out of Hanoi. He stole a guard’s prized cigarette case on the way. When he reached American hands, he opened his mouth and the names came out.

    Sixty-three servicemen were reclassified from missing in action to prisoner of war. Their wives stopped grieving funerals. In late 1970, Ross Perot flew him to the Paris Peace Talks, where he sat across from the North Vietnamese delegation and called out their public denials of prisoner torture. The pressure helped force changes inside the camps. He left the Navy in 1970, then returned as a civilian instructor at the SERE school in San Diego, teaching pilots and intelligence officers how to survive captivity. One of his students, CIA officer William Dougherty, was among the 52 hostages held in Tehran in 1979, and credited Hegdahl’s lectures with keeping his sanity intact.

    Hegdahl is 79 and still lives near the beach in San Diego. He has not spoken publicly about his captivity in roughly twenty-five years. In December 2024, Vietnam veteran and historian Marc Leepson published The Unlikely War Hero, the first full biography of his life. The book reached its third printing within two months. Tim O’Brien, the National Book Award winner who wrote The Things They Carried, called it one of the finest nonfiction narratives to come out of the war. Leepson is now publicly making the case that Hegdahl deserves the Navy and Marine Corps Medal. Hegdahl himself, true to form, is quietly refusing.

    He beat the Hanoi Hilton with a country drawl and a children’s song.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. A wonderful story, Thanks Tino.

      Liked by 1 person

  39. For those looking for a good show to watch.

    Liked by 3 people

  40. Can you hang someone twice?

    Just idle thoughts…

    Like

    1. Wow!

      Not sure what is going on but in my simple mind looks like greed.

      Liked by 2 people

  41. The tragedy of Gaza is magnified simply because Gazans are genetically related to the Jews.

    Unavoidably so.

    Palestinians are more genetically similar to the Semites who lived in the region in 0 BC, than the Israelis who moved there from Europe in the last 85 years.

    Like

  42. So I have been burning my last premium requests on Github Copilot to replace an application that was tied to a dead laptop. The application processes EEGs so that I can guide transcranial magnetic stimulation or make recommendations for same. I only process 1 or 2 eegs a month these days, but the application would cost $5000 to replace.

    So 2 days ago I started a conversation with Codex 5.3 in Github Copilot (GHCP) because I felt the AI could be guided to make a replacement application and I intend to kill the GHCP subscription because a 40x to 73x price increase on Jun 1st prices the AI out of financial reach for casual use. (It will also destroy vibe coding, which is a good thing. The vibe coders have no system and product deployment understanding, and 99.999% of them crater at 3 months when deploying a program as product leaving users out in the cold.)

    The epochs are not precisely the same and there is a slight difference in parameters, but you can see that the report from from the old app more or less matches the new app in the foreground.

    Like

    1. Assuming AI ever returns to reasonable pricing, you can see that even old-style knowledge barriers to entry can be overcome by talented outsiders.

      While I could have, in principle, replicated the old app by hand, it would have been a slog thru math, display and normalization code. On top of that, I would have had to code 6 different EEG file format ingestion pipelines and the ubiquitous exports to comma-delimited (CSV) and column text (TXT) files.

      Also, custom application via intrapreneurship (as opposed entrepreneurship) is now restored to companies. In my mis-spent youth between jobs, I used to help teach “Strategic Application Design and Purpose” at Open Environment Corp in Boston, Mass. It was actually a 4-month summer job before I moved on. Under the auspices of John Donovan ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_J._Donovan ). 25 years before any of his legal troubles.

      It is unfortunate that Donovan basically turned out to be a criminal, but when I met him, he was a typical bipolar genius with mild schizophrenia. As a computer scientist he was top notch. Our claim to fame at that time was our “SWAT teams” was given access to a Fortune 200 IT systems and we solved, more or less at beta level, an app integrating many separate systems that had been stove-piped in the that company. Usually solving somebody’s multi-year IT or reporting headache. In 4 days. Using multi-tier tech, screen-scrapers, and OSF DCE RPC. Yeah, I know that dates me, but everything that followed in terms of remote computing started with the OSF DCE RPC, and when it was propagated, I was briefly in the demo seat.

      Like

  43. Another profile in courage:

    He Had No Gun

    Rozwadów, southeastern Poland. Autumn 1942. Eugene Lazowski was 29. He ran a Red Cross clinic on the town square and lived a few streets away with his wife Maria and their infant daughter, Alexandra. Every morning he walked past German sentries to work. His back garden fence ended at the boundary of the Jewish quarter.

    Under German occupation, Poland was a labor pool. Poles were rounded up and shipped to slave camps in the Reich. Jews were executed on sight or starved inside ghettos. Helping a Jew carried the death penalty. Lazowski helped anyway. There was a small hole in his garden fence. When a Jewish neighbor needed a doctor, they hung a white rag on the wire. After dark Lazowski crossed through with medicine from the Red Cross supply. He carried a cyanide pill in his coat pocket for the day he got caught. He never told his wife what he was doing.

    His friend from medical school, Dr. Stanisław Matulewicz, brought him a finding. A patient injected with dead Proteus OX19 bacteria tested positive on the standard German typhus test. The patient never got sick. The lab never knew. And the Germans were terrified of typhus, which had gutted their armies in the First World War. They quarantined outbreaks. They stopped going in.

    Lazowski began inoculating quietly. A laborer on leave from a slave camp, terrified of returning. A villager about to be conscripted. He sent the blood samples to German labs. The telegrams came back: Weil-Felix positive. He paced the fake outbreak the way a real one would spread. He fudged his medicine records. He told patients yes, they had typhus, but a mild case, by the grace of God. Over months the “epidemic” spread to more than a dozen villages around Rozwadów. The Germans posted quarantine signs. Deportations stopped. Food seizures stopped. Inside the zone, an estimated 8,000 people simply went on living.

    In 1944 the Reich grew suspicious. Too few were dying. A German medical commission was dispatched to investigate. Lazowski met them with food and vodka, kept the senior officers drinking, and sent the junior ones to take samples from the oldest, sickest-looking patients he could line up. The commission left satisfied. Months later, a German soldier he had once treated tipped him off that the Gestapo had marked his name. He escaped to Warsaw through his back gate with Maria and two-year-old Alexandra as Soviet forces closed in.

    He told almost no one for nearly fifty years. In 1958 he emigrated to the United States on a Rockefeller Foundation scholarship. He became a professor of pediatrics at the University of Illinois at Chicago and treated children for three decades. In 1993 he finally published his memoir, Prywatna Wojna (My Private War). His daughter Alexandra translated it into English. In 2005 Poland awarded him the Officer’s Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta. An asteroid was named for him.

    Lazowski died in December 2006 at age 93. The Stalowa Wola Museum, in the district that includes the old Rozwadów square, keeps an exhibition for him today. The story still travels online. Sometimes with the wrong details, sometimes folded into Schindler-style legend. But the museum, the memoir, and a 2019 documentary by Barbara Necek all return to the same quiet fact. He was a country doctor with a syringe, a fence, and a cyanide pill. He outwitted an empire.

    He could not raise an army, so he raised a fever.

    Liked by 2 people

  44. BREAKING: The DOJ just indicted former Cuban president Raul CastroAnd Marco Rubio just sent a message Directly to the People of Cuba 🇨🇺

    In a nutshell… “People of Cuba… the reason you don’t have food, water, and electricity is because those who control you have plundered billions of your dollars — GAESA controls you, and you are slaves — The Trump administration is offering you a new path… and wants you to live in a free and sovereign country.”

    https://rumble.com/v7a4rpa-and-marco-rubio-just-sent-a-message-directly-to-the-people-of-cuba-.html

    Liked by 1 person

  45. https://thepostmillennial.com/elon-musk-claims-neuralink-brain-chips-bypassing-paralysis-blindness-are-jesus-level-technologies?utm_campaign=64530

    Elon Musk claims Neuralink brain chips bypassing paralysis, blindness are ‘Jesus-level technologies’
    “They’re sort of what I might call Jesus-level technologies. I mean miracles in the scientific sense.”

    Like

    1. oh please. What the hell is wrong with Musk lately? Maybe in another 10-15 years. Right now the vision is marginal at best and there’s some restoration of walking. I haven’t seen the latest, but I know that you can’t scale from there to Jesus in the time alloted.

      For those that don’t know we managed the some vision stuff and nerve bypass in the late 1950s. It’s unclear why it got blocked or stopped. Of course you can’t do with vacuum tubes what you do with micron level electronics.

      Like

  46. When I lived in San Diego with wife #1 I was 5 minutes from this mosque. At least we were out of range of the call to prayer. The funny thing is that the MSM was still trying to rev up furor about how the shooter was a probable “right wing Trump lover”… sigh…

    75 PAGE MANIFESTO | San Diego mosque shooters hated Trump, Muslims, Jews, women and gays.

    Like

  47. CO2.

    It’s all meaningless drivel.

    It’s all about “universal problems” so that “universal solution” can be “implemented universally on everyone”, which means, forced down your throat.

    Anyways, latest drivel

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/scientists-cracked-a-climate-paradox-co-is-cooling-the-upper-atmosphere-10-times-faster-than-it-would-without-human-emissions/ar-AA23gABH

    Liked by 1 person

  48. UK Police Listed a 1-Year-Old Baby Girl as a Crime Suspect

    She was part of a shocking tally: 683 children under 10 reported to police in just three years.

    https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/uk-police-listed-a-1-year-old-baby

    This toddler-as-suspect absurdity doesn’t emerge in a vacuum. It mirrors the broader UK push to turn nurseries, schools, and playgrounds into surveillance hubs for ideological compliance.

    Like

      1. That about sums it up!

        Like

  49. Liked by 1 person

  50. https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/uk-covid-inquirys-endorsement-censorship-sets-chilling-precedent

    According to the UK’s Covid Inquiry, whose fourth report was published in April, there was “in principle, nothing unlawful or inappropriate in the government monitoring publicly available social media to identify potential trends in disinformation or misinformation” during the pandemic period.

    “By suppressing free speech and intentionally distorting public debate in the modern town square, ideas and policies were no longer fairly tested and debated on their merits. Instead, policymakers implemented a series of public health measures that proved to be disastrous for the country.”

    Like

    1. Extraordinary! You’d think the government, which as a matter of reality would be more correct if it guessed which policy to implement *randomly*, would actually allow something to be debated on the merits.

      It is a fascinating psychological phenomenon. It’s clear that governments have been nothing but trouble since the beginning, every major disaster is the result of government action, and we keep implementing them. It makes one almost want anarchism.

      Like

  51. Better…faster…more secure. Backing with UST yields will keep the dollar as reserve currency for decades ahead. But that’s another story.

    Liked by 3 people

  52. https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/people-are-becoming-allergic-to-meat

     Across America, farmers are reporting scenes straight out of a nightmare: mysterious boxes of ticks appearing on rural properties while infestations explode at levels many say they’ve never witnessed before.

    Now those reports are colliding with documented Bill Gates-funded research into genetically modified ticks, growing fears over Alpha-Gal Syndrome, and scientific papers openly arguing it could be “morally good” to spread meat allergies through engineered tick populations.

    Social media is flooding with horrifying footage of animals overwhelmed by massive tick swarms while officials wave the crisis away as “climate change.” Meanwhile, more than 450,000 Americans are already suffering from Alpha-Gal Syndrome after tick bites, a condition with no cure that can trigger severe allergic reactions to red meat.

    Like

    1. You know Who!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Like

          1. We have more ticks here than ever before. They are really hard, move very fast, and are hard to smash. Never seen this kind here before. Some have white spots and some don’t.

            Like

  53. https://www.zerohedge.com/crypto/breakthrough-white-house-says-strategic-bitcoin-reserve-announcement-imminent

    The White House is on the verge of a formal announcement on the U.S. Strategic Bitcoin Reserve — and the official leading the charge says the hard part is done.

    The reserve holds an estimated 328,372 BTC — roughly 1.6% of total global supply — accumulated through law enforcement seizures, including the Silk Road takedown, the 2022 Bitfinex hack recovery, and years of criminal forfeitures.

    If the BITCOIN Act passes, the Treasury’s first open-market Bitcoin purchase is projected for Q4 2026 — making the U.S. the first sovereign nation to actively accumulate Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset. 

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Kind of like a Sperm Whale can sonar click a person under water I wonder?

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Next they will come ridden by Wogs

      Liked by 2 people

  54. https://www.zerohedge.com/political/trump-announces-expansion-trumprx-600-new-generic-drugs

    President Donald Trump announced Monday that the administration is dramatically expanding the number of medications available through TrumpRx.gov, adding more than 600 generic drugs in what the White House described as another push to lower prescription costs for Americans.

    Liked by 1 person

Post A Comment…

Discover more from White Hat Auxiliaries

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading