Wow, just wow.
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Pentagon moves to designate Anthropic as a supply-chain risk | TechCrunch
"We don't need it, we don't want it, and will not do business with them again," the president wrote in the post.techcrunch.com
That’s uh… Certainly a choice.

Wow, just wow.
![]()
Pentagon moves to designate Anthropic as a supply-chain risk | TechCrunch
"We don't need it, we don't want it, and will not do business with them again," the president wrote in the post.techcrunch.com
That’s uh… Certainly a choice.
Yes, in this one example, sadly others won’t follow this approach.I like the principled stand the company is taking against the US Government. A great example to all of us I would say.
When the company that makes and profits from AI in military applications says it’s not yet safe for AI to be used in fully autonomous weapons… Maybe listen to them?
Hegseth isn’t smart enough to do that of his own accord….When the company that makes and profits from AI in military applications says it’s not yet safe for AI to be used in fully autonomous weapons… Maybe listen to them?
Lots of new, cutting edge innovation coming out of the University of East Texas or Arkansas State University.
183rd and 384th respectively.Lots of new, cutting edge innovation coming out of the University of East Texas or Arkansas State University.
Our enemies? USA cannot be saved this point.
Only the best for the US Officer Corps going forward.183rd and 384th respectively.
Every iceberg has a tip.Yes, in this one example, sadly others won’t follow this approach.
Say the guy who went to Princeton and Harvard.
"The ICE academy is deficient, defective, and broken," former U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement attorney Ryan Schwank told members of Congress on Monday. Schwank, who joined ICE in 2021, resigned Feb. 13 after being assigned to teach cadets at the agency’s academy in Georgia. "On my first day, I received secretive orders to teach new cadets to violate the Constitution by entering homes without a judicial warrant."
Say the guy who went to Princeton and Harvard.
Pete Hegseth is a member of the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC), a network of churches founded by Doug Wilson, a prominent Christian nationalist pastor based in Moscow, Idaho. His church, Pilgrim Hill Reformed Fellowship in Goodlettsville, Tennessee, is affiliated with CREC, which promotes a rigidly patriarchal and theocratic interpretation of Christianity.
Hegseth has publicly praised Wilson’s writings and referred to him as a spiritual mentor. The CREC is known for advocating the integration of biblical law into government, rejecting the separation of church and state, and promoting a vision of America as a Christian nation. Institutions linked to Wilson—including New Saint Andrews College, Logos Schools, and Canon Press—are central to a broader movement that emphasizes classical Christian education as a form of ideological "warfare" against secularism.
Hegseth's religious views, shaped by this movement, include opposition to gender equality in the military, support for restricting voting rights for women, and a belief in Christian supremacy over secular institutions. These affiliations have raised concerns among experts and military leaders about the potential impact on the diversity, cohesion, and secular foundations of the U.S. military.
AI-generated answer. Please verify critical facts.