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  • 19:40

    Kim Saxman (@KimSaxman)

    RT @DanielLDavis1 (Daniel Davis Deep Dive): ⚠️ Scott Ritter: Russia Has Decided to Strike Europe — Only Timing Remains 🕰️ Scott Ritter [@RealScottRitter] joins the Deep Dive with a chilling warning: Moscow has already mentally moved beyond the borders of Ukraine. Russia has expanded its military to 2.2 million men, building a logistical machine "fully prepared to wage war against NATO" while the West is lulled into a false sense of stalemate security. "It's already triggered. The decisions have been made. So now just the question of timing." * While the West talks of attrition, Russia has built a 70,000-strong mobile army corps on the Finnish border, ready for high-intensity conflict. "Russia will do what it needs to do unless there is a change of behavior on the part of Europe." * Moscow sees a leadership vacuum in the West, viewing current European heads of state as having "no political future." The clock is ticking on a failed U.S. strategy. Don't wait for the next strike to understand the reality of this expanding global threat. 📺 Watch the full, high-impact clip here: https://t.co/P4QvbI51AB 👉 #RussiaUkraineWar #ScottRitter #NATO #EuropeAtWar #Geopolitics #USStrategy #NationalSecurity #MilitaryAnalysis #Russia #DefenseIndustry #GlobalConflict #DeepDive

  • 12:20

    Peter Nørregaard (@peternorregaard)

    RT @Unveiled_ChinaX (UnveiledChina): A Fox News crew parked illegally in Beijing for two minutes. Before they could walk away, their driver received a $40 ticket on his phone. The camera had already seen it, processed it, and issued the fine. Nobody had to be there. Fox News anchor Bret Baier said from Beijing this week describing what standing on a single street corner looks like: over 20 visible cameras at one intersection near Haidian Station. Beijing added 1,500 new cameras this year alone. Nobody jaywalks because the fine arrives on your phone before you finish crossing the street. The scale behind that single street corner is staggering. China operates an estimated 700 million surveillance cameras nationally, roughly one for every two citizens. Eight of the ten most surveilled cities in the world are in China. The cameras do not just record. They feed into AI-powered facial recognition systems that can identify a person within seconds, cross-reference them against criminal and social credit databases, and flag them to authorities automatically. Chinese AI firm Watrix has already deployed gait-recognition software that identifies individuals from 50 meters away based on how they walk, even with their faces covered. The system feeds into China's Social Credit framework, which aggregates legal violations into blacklists that can restrict travel, loans, and access to public services. Subway stations in cities like Guangzhou already sort passengers using facial recognition pulled from credit and criminal databases. Beijing plans to link facial IDs with healthcare and utility records. None of this is hidden. The CCP calls it public safety. What it actually is: a government that has built the most comprehensive citizen-monitoring infrastructure in human history, tested it on its own population, and is now selling it to every authoritarian government willing to pay. #China #CCP #Surveillance #BigBrother #FacialRecognition #SocialCredit #Geopolitics #Privacy #AI #Beijing