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Introduction
The basic story of the modern government computerised surveillance system is that a team in the National Security Agency in the US, including people like William Binney, worked on a way of gathering together different digital streams of data that came to them from the state, telephone/internet companies and others, and combined them, using an early and primitive form of Artificial Intelligence, to form real time files on certain targeted people, foreign terrorists. Then after 9/11 they discovered, to their horror, that the system was now working all across the US, and its allies, and targeting all Americans and others all across the world.(1)
Now the Globalists are moving quickly to built huge data centres all over the world to consolidate this giant haul of digital data. If you don’t believe me watch this short clip in the footnotes from the World Government Summit where Tony Blair was asking Larry Ellison, of Oracle, one of the big database software companies, and also one of the world’s richest men, about this push.(2)
Note that is not a misprint, it is indeed the ‘World Government Summit’, the Globalists are very busy and very openly building this nightmare totalitarian world government, it is not in any sense a ‘theory’.
A further example of what Larry Ellison is talking about can be seen, I believe, in Elon Musk’s short term but hugely influential role in the US government in early 2025. He took over the offices of the US Digital Services agency, which was already involved with consolidating the various digital streams of US government data, and energised that effort with a huge push, going in and seizing digital data all over the US Federal system, e.g. note this even from wikipedia on his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE):
You can be sure the resulting consolidated data stream has been sent into these new AI assisted data centres that we are talking about here.“Executive order 14222 Sect. 3a tasks DOGE teams with assisting agencies in the elaboration of “a centralized technological system” to record every payment issued by the agency, along with justification by the employee who approved it; this system shall also give agency heads a kill switch to override decisions.”(3)
Ulster as the first great experiment in total digital surveillance
The above is I think, the basic simple story of the modern effort here but obviously computerised government surveillance goes back a lot further as does Artificial Intelligence in reading the data. For example in the North of Ireland in the 1970s the British Army developed an AI system to read the vast streams of data they were picking up by their very extensive surveillance of that time. As far back as that time they developed computer systems to handle this data, with codenames like Caister and Vengeful. So in a kind of a way Ireland has pioneered the practice of computerised surveillance. This was described in a book published as long ago as 1983, and while this quote is quite lengthy you might find it of some service in understanding what these new data centres are all about. It begins with a quote from the famous Kitson in 1971, the well known guru on British military and intelligence strategies of the time:
““All that would be necessary would be a central computer to store all the information held in all the branches of the intelligence organization throughout the country, and for each member of the intelligence organization to be equipped with some form of wireless which would enable him to contact the computer from anywhere in his area. By this means the interrogator in the forward area could, in theory get the information which he needs in order to break down the prisoner without delay...”
“By April 1977, with the introduction of a central computer the already impressive quantity of information concerning the population of Northern Ireland became systematized. In January 1976, before resigning, Harold Wilson announced the introduction of an SAS squadron in South Armagh and the future employment of this key computer, which, he added, would process information on weapons, vehicles, suspects and any other matter, and replace the manual filing system. The British Army would have to wait a year before this computer was serviced because of the impressive quantity of data to be processed on a million and a half people in Northern Ireland, as well as others in the South and the Irish in Britain. This data included names, descriptions of people, work places, car registrations, crime records, and details of trials and political activity since the beginning of the conflict in 1969, and even during the previous IRA campaigns. In other words, the information was relatively basic but indispensable to setting-up a comprehensive system to outstrip the guerrilla force.
This computer system was linked to entry check-points in both Britain and Northern Ireland, and allowed immediate information to be obtained on a suspected person. Thanks to this scheme, dozens of Irish citizens and others have been expelled from the mainland, since the introduction of the Prevention of Terrorism Act that followed the 1974 explosions in Birmingham, which certainly played their role in speeding up the process of introducing computers to exploit quick intelligence.
As early as 3 December, 1974, the Financial Times published a most revealing article under the title, ‘A Computer Programme to Hunt the Bombers’:
The author lists another 12 major computer networks available to the police before concluding:“The method involves the ruthless use of computers and the information stored inside them...Assume, for the sake of argument, that a new Extra Special Branch of the Secret Service were set up, armed with the over-riding power to requisition data from any computer anywhere in the country...First they would start with profiles of would-be IRA recruits...then requisition the census records of all persons either born in Ireland or with Irish parents...This would be cross-checked and brought up to date by National Insurance payments at the DHSS...plus records of rent and rate collecting by local authorities...records of car ownership and licences...cross-checked with Family Allowances...and the ‘Hospital Activity Analysis’ kept by the NHS...and records of mental illness.”
“All this can be done by using software now in existence and information already collated. The only thing necessary is Parliament’s approval...Anyone would find it hard to argue against such a proposal, particularly if it were made at the time of a fresh attack.”
This was precisely how the computer network developed in Northern Ireland in the subsequent three years. In 1974, the Army already had a computer manned by the Intelligence Corps, at the Lisburn headquarters, that had cost the British tax-payer £500,000.