PALATIR CEO says legalizing war crimes will be good for business

PALANTIR CEO and Trump Ally Alex Karp is not good at making (Troll-ish) comments. His most recent one went down: Karp believes that the US submarine in the Caribbean (which many experts believe to be War Crimes) is an opportunity for his company’s money.
At the New York Times’ press conference on Wednesday, Karp was asked about concerns about not being on board.
“Part of the reason I like this constitution is the constitution you want to make, the more you want to make it, the more you’re going to need my product,” Karp said. His thinking is that if it is constitutional, you will have to make the conditions 100% happen in them, and in order to do that, the military will have to use Palantir’s technology, where it pays about $ 10 billion under its current contract.
“So you continue to push for constitutionalization. I fully support that,” Karp said.
Karp has never been shy about supporting as much violence as he sees fit. In an investor letter to investors from earlier this year, Karp quoted a political scientist as saying that “the rise of the West has not been done by ‘the supremacy of its ideology or values or religion … but rather by the supremacy of using systematic violence.'”
He also spoke about his position in the fight against open borders. Karp has repeatedly praised Trump’s immigration policy and offered Palantir’s services on the ice.
“I will use all my influence to make sure that this country remains skeptical about immigration and has the ability to prevent it and only use it selectively,” the PalANTIR boss said on Wednesday.
In August, Ice announced that Palantir would build a $30 million monitoring platform called Amnesty International Report that is used by Israel’s Amnesty International Pertioter and includes the IDF’s ongoing relationship.)
The Trump Administration’s unprecedented access to Palantir technology has raised concerns about its use for mass surveillance, which, in turn, could benefit the government from critics.
Karp, on Wednesday, was quick to deny that Palantir was building a surveillance database using facial recognition technology. But alas, it’s all semantics.
“If you’re being looked at legally — we’ve never done a lot of work with the FBI or the DOJ — can you put it on our brand? Yes,” Karp said. “Have our adversaries been tested using the data that goes through our product? 100% and I fully support that.”
But Karp didn’t always think in line with Trump. A few years ago, the CEO of Palantir described himself as diverse and actually criticized the President, saying that he respects “nothing” about Trump. Karp is one of the Silicon Valley executives who have sought ties from the Democratic Party to bring back the Trump administration in words and actions, if not the ballot box. Trump, in return, has gifted tech executives with a Pro-Big Tech, and especially Pro-AI, regulatory and legislative environment.
“If the Democrats, my former party or the current party, or however you want to look at it, even us, someone who agrees with me, even in private, will win. “Obviously we don’t have to say, but we always said that we are cold in the streets and hot in the sheets. A democratic party should think about that a lot.”


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