Why Kid Rock isn't terrified of AI music



Musicians, artists, and writers have notoriously been the group most against artificial intelligence taking over their line of work — but some of them are embracing it rather than fighting it.

And Kid Rock is one of them.

“Are you worried about art with AI?” Glenn Beck asks the country music star on “The Glenn Beck Program.”

“Not really, no. Everybody else is,” he responds.

“The way I look at it is, I looked at, like, Napster when that started, and I was like, ‘What’s going on?’” Kid Rock tells Glenn. “All the artists were up in arms, and the record companies wanted us to get behind, ‘They’re stealing, they’re pirating music.’”


“I could care less, I make all my money live,” he continues, noting that the technology behind AI is something he could use to his benefit.

“So I can give you some a capellas and my vocals, and you can model my voice, and then you can put it on your system, and however many people want to write songs for me with my voice can write them?” he asks, adding, “That’s kind of cool.”

“Let’s say I got a million people writing songs for me, if one of those people nails it, and they come up with this life-changing song, it’s great, I go play it live, I’m not seeing the evil in here yet,” he says.

Not only that, but because Kid Rock doesn’t believe there’s any chance of stopping it, there’s no reason to fight it either.

“We’re not going to stop it. I know that much. You are not going to stop it. So it’s like, let’s figure out how we use it as a new tool,” he adds.

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Google unveils new AI models to control robots, but the company is not telling the whole truth



Google announced two artificial intelligence models to help control robots and have them perform specific tasks like categorizing and organizing.

Gemini Robotics was described by Google as an advanced vision-language-action model built on Google's AI chatbot/language model Gemini 2.0. The company boasted physical actions as a new output modality for the purpose of controlling robots.

Gemini Robotics-ER, with "ER" meaning embodied reasoning, as Google explained in a press release, was developed for advanced spatial understanding and to enable roboticists to run their own programs.

The announcement touted the robots as being to perform a "wider range of real-world tasks" with both clamp-like robot arms and humanoid-type arms.

"To be useful and helpful to people, AI models for robotics need three principal qualities: they have to be general, meaning they’re able to adapt to different situations; they have to be interactive, meaning they can understand and respond quickly to instructions or changes in their environment," Google wrote.

The company added, "[Robots] have to be dexterous, meaning they can do the kinds of things people generally can do with their hands and fingers, like carefully manipulate objects."

Attached videos showed robots responding to verbal commends to organize fruit, pens, and other household items into different sections or bins. One robot was able to adapt to its environment even when the bins were moved.

Other short clips in the press release showcased the robot(s) playing cards or tic-tac-toe and packing food into a lunch bag.

The company went on, "Gemini Robotics leverages Gemini's world understanding to generalize to novel situations and solve a wide variety of tasks out of the box, including tasks it has never seen before in training."

"Gemini Robotics is also adept at dealing with new objects, diverse instructions, and new environments," Google added.

What they're not saying

Telsa robots displayed similar capabilities near the start of 2024. Photo by John Ricky/Anadolu via Getty Images

Google did not explain to the reader that this is not new technology, nor are the innovations particularly impressive given what is known about advanced robotics already.

In fact, it was mid-2023 when a group of scientists and robotics engineers at Princeton University showcased a robot that could learn an individual's cleaning habits and techniques to properly organize a home.

The bot could also throw out garbage, if necessary.

The "Tidybot" had users input text that described sample preferences to instruct the robot on where to place items. Examples like, "yellow shirts go in the drawer, dark purple shirts go in the closet," were used. The robot summarized these language models and supplemented its database with images found online that would allow it to compare the images with objects in the room in order to properly identify what exactly it was looking for.

The bot was able to fold laundry, put garbage in a bin, and organize clothes into different drawers.

About six or seven months later, Tesla revealed similar technology when it showed its robot, "Tesla Optimus," removing a T-shirt from a laundry basket before gently folding it on a table.

Essentially, Google appears to have connected its language model to existing technology to simply allow for speech-to-text commands for a robot, as opposed to entering commands through text solely.

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What AI got WRONG about the JFK files



Research teams across the nation, including Glenn Beck’s, have been utilizing xAI’s chatbot Grok to sift through the 80,000 pages of newly released JFK documents.

The verdict?

Well, it depends.

Glenn Beck explains why Grok and other AI chatbots can never be blindly trusted.

According to the findings of one research team that used Grok to sort through the files, Lyndon B. Johnson, the CIA with Allen Dulles, the mafia, Victor Petrov, and Lee Harvey Oswald “were all in collusion one way or another.”

When Glenn asked Grok himself, the chatbot gave the same answer.

However, one of Glenn’s researchers decided to hone in on a specific area and ask Grok to cite its sources.

When asked to point where in the files “LBJ told Allen Dulles to ‘proceed as discussed,’” which is a quote that appeared in Grok’s answer to Glenn, as well as other research teams, Grok said: “There is no verifiable evidence from the officially released JFK files that contains a direct quote from Lyndon B. Johnson to Allen Dulles stating ‘proceed as discussed.”’

The phrase, Grok claimed, stems "from speculation or unverified assertions rather than any documented evidence in the public record.”

“So we’re getting different answers,” says Glenn. “You should be able to ask and get to the same conclusion.”

“Never ever trust it. Know that [AI] was made in the image of its creator, and its creator is us. We're lazy, we cut corners, we lie sometimes ... it does all of those things,” he warns.

However, that doesn’t mean Glenn is against using Grok and other chatbots. There’s a strategy for using AI as a helpful tool. To hear it, watch the clip above.

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Dystopia: World's first 'biological computer' uses human brain cells that are 'raised in a simulation'



An Australian tech company has released what it is calling the world's first "biological computer" that fuses human brain cells with silicon hardware.

Cortical Labs, a company out of Melbourne, Australia, is led by CEO Hon Weng Chong and a team of researchers. Cortical Labs is boasting the release of the CL1, which is touted as a dynamic, sustainable, and energy-efficient computer that is better than any current artificial intelligence.

That is perhaps because the company says it uses human brain cells that are grown on a silicon "chip" and used as an organic computer. The technology, known as synthetic biological intelligence, allegedly outpaces silicon-based AI chips in terms of training language models, also commonly referred to as chatbots.

The company's website explains the life of the cells in detail, citing "real neurons" that are cultivated inside a nutrient-rich environment.

"They grow across a silicon chip, which sends and receives electrical impulses into the neural structure."

Under the heading "raised in a simulation," Cortical explains that the neurons exist in a world the company created, which is admittedly a "simulated world" where the neurons are fed information about their environment.

"Their impulses affect their simulated world," it reads. "You get to connect directly to these neurons. Deploy code directly to the real neurons, and solve today’s most difficult challenges," the company goes on.

The neurons are further described as self-programming, infinitely flexible, and "the result of four billion years of evolution."

"Today is the culmination of a vision that has powered Cortical Labs for almost six years," said Weng Chong. "Our long-term mission has been to democratize this technology, making it accessible to researchers without specialized hardware and software. The CL1 is the realization of that mission."

Cortical Labs noted on its site that in 2022 it successfully taught 800,000 living brain cells to learn how to play the game Pong. As NPR reported, the cells were linked to a computer and gradually learned to sense the position of the game's ball and control the virtual paddle.

"If we allow these cells to know the outcome of their actions, will they actually be able to change in some sort of goal-directed way?" Chief Scientific Officer Brett Kagan asked at the time.

The company described itself as creating science "for the greater good" and claims to operate within its own established, ethical guidelines. While these guidelines did not appear to be immediately available, Cortical Labs assured readers that its research will enable solutions to complex problems that will improve human health and well-being.

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Your job, your future, your humanity: AI just crossed the line we can never undo



Artificial intelligence isn’t coming. It’s here. The future we once speculated about is no longer science fiction; it’s reality. Every aspect of our lives, from how we work to how we think, is about to change forever. And if you’re not ready for it, you’re already behind. This isn’t just another technological leap. This is the biggest shift humanity has ever faced.

The last call before the singularity

I've been ringing this bell for 30 years. Thirty years warning you about what’s coming. And now, here we are. This isn’t a drill. This isn’t some distant future. It’s happening now. If you don’t understand what’s at stake, you need to wake up, because we have officially crossed the event horizon of artificial intelligence.

If you don’t learn to master it, then you will be at its mercy.

What’s an event horizon? It’s the edge of a black hole — the point where you can’t escape, no matter how hard you try. AI is that black hole. The current is too strong. The waterfall is too close. If you haven’t been paying attention, you need to start right now. Because once we reach artificial super intelligence, there is no turning back.

You’ve heard me talk about this for decades. AI isn’t just a fancy Siri. It isn’t just ChatGPT. We are on the verge of machines that will outthink every human who has ever lived — combined. ASI won’t just process information — it will anticipate, decide, and act faster than any of us can comprehend. It will change everything about our world, about our lives.

And yet the conversation around AI has been wrong. People think the real dangers are coming later — some distant dystopian nightmare. But we are already in it. We’ve passed the point where AI is just a tool. It’s becoming the master. And the people who don’t learn to use it now — who don’t understand it, who don’t prepare for it — are going to be swallowed whole.

I know what some of you are thinking: "Glenn, you’ve spent years warning us about AI, about how dangerous it is. And now you’re telling us to embrace it?" Yes. That’s exactly what I’m saying. Because if you don’t use this tool — if you don’t learn to master it — then you will be at its mercy.

This is not an option any more. This is survival.

How you must prepare — today

I need you to take AI seriously — right now. Not next year, not five years from now. This weekend.

Here’s what I want you to do: Open up one of these AI tools — Grok 3, ChatGPT, anything advanced — and start using it. If you’re a CEO, have it analyze your competitors. If you’re an artist, let it critique your work. If you’re a stay-at-home parent, have it optimize your budget. Ask it questions. Push it to its limits. Learn what it can do, because if you don’t, you will be left behind.

Let me be crystal clear: AI is not your friend. It’s not your partner. It’s not something to trust. AI is a shovel — an extremely powerful shovel, but still just a tool. And if you don’t understand that, you’re in trouble.

We’ve already seen what happens when we surrender to technology without thinking. Social media rewired our brains. Smartphones reshaped our culture. AI will do all that — and more. If you don’t take control now, AI will control you.

Ask yourself: When AI makes decisions for you, when it anticipates your needs before you even know them, at what point do you stop being the one in charge? At what point does AI stop being a tool and start being your master?

And that’s not even the worst of it. The next step — transhumanism — is coming. It will start with good intentions. Elon Musk is already developing implants to help people walk again. And that’s great. But where does it stop? What happens when people start “upgrading” themselves? What happens when people choose to merge with AI?

I know my answer. I won’t cross that line. But you’re going to have to decide for yourself. And if you don’t start preparing now, that decision will be made for you.

The final warning: Act now or be left behind

I need you to hear me. This is not optional. This is not something you can ignore. AI is here. And if you don’t act now, you will be lost.

The next 18 months will change everything. People who don’t prepare — who don’t learn to use AI — will be scrambling to catch up. And they won’t catch up. The gap will be too wide. You’ll either be leading or you’ll be swallowed whole.

So start this weekend. Learn it. Test it. Push it. Master it. Because the people who don’t? They will be the tools.

The decision is yours. But time is running out.

The coming AI economy and the collapse of traditional jobs

Think back to past technological revolutions. The Industrial Revolution put countless blacksmiths, carriage makers, and farmhands out of business. The internet wiped out entire industries, from travel agencies to brick-and-mortar retail. AI is bigger than all of those combined. This isn’t just about job automation — it’s about job obliteration.

Doctors, lawyers, engineers — people who thought their jobs were untouchable — will find themselves replaced by AI. A machine that can diagnose disease with greater accuracy, draft legal documents in seconds, or design infrastructure faster than an entire team of engineers will be cheaper, faster, and better than human labor. If you’re not preparing for that reality, you’re already falling behind.

What does this mean for you? It means constant adaptation. Every three to five years, you will need to redefine your role, retrain, and retool. The only people who survive this AI revolution will be the ones who understand its capabilities and learn to work with it, not against it.

The moral dilemma: When do you stop being human?

The real danger of AI isn’t just economic; it’s existential. When AI merges with humans, we will face an unprecedented question: At what point do we stop being human?

If you implant a neural chip that gives you access to the entire internet in your mind, are you still the same person? If your thoughts are intertwined with AI-generated responses, where do you end and where does AI begin? This is the future we are hurtling toward, and few people are even asking the right questions.

I’m asking them now. And you should be too. Because that line between human and machine is coming fast. You need to decide now where you stand. Because once we cross it, there is no going back.

Final thoughts: Be a leader, not a follower

AI isn’t a passing trend. It’s not a gadget or a convenience. It is the most powerful force humanity has ever created. And if you don’t take the time to understand it now, you will be at its mercy.

This is the defining moment of our time. Will you be a master of AI? Or will you be mastered by it? The choice is yours. But if you wait too long, you won’t have a choice at all.

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Apple to invest $500 billion in US including new AI server factory in Texas



Apple announced a $500 billion commitment to infrastructure in the United States over four years, its largest commitment to domestic spending to date.

Apple said it will expand teams and facilities in Arizona, California, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, and Washington as part of its new spending.

With a new facility in Houston, Texas, Apple will reportedly double its investment in advanced manufacturing along with increasing investments in AI and silicon engineering. The company said in a press release that the Houston facility will produce servers to support Apple Intelligence, the "personal intelligence system that helps users write, express themselves, and get things done."

'We are bullish on the future of American innovation.'

Furthermore, the company will see an increase in supply management throughout all 50 states and increase employment in data centers, AI infrastructure, and Apple TV+ production in 20 states.

"We are bullish on the future of American innovation, and we're proud to build on our long-standing U.S. investments with this $500 billion commitment to our country’s future," CEO Tim Cook said.

He added, "From doubling our Advanced Manufacturing Fund to building advanced technology in Texas, we're thrilled to expand our support for American manufacturing."

While Apple boasted its increased domestic spending, reports have surfaced alleging that Microsoft has canceled contracts with at least two private data center operations in order to spend more money in the United States.

This reportedly involves Microsoft reallocating "a considerable portion of its international spend to the U.S.," according to Data Center Dynamics.

An analysis suggested that channel checks found that Microsoft seemed to be pointing its spending stateside and slowing down on its international leasing.

Microsoft announced plans in January to spend $80 billion on AI data centers in 2025, with CFO Amy Hood reportedly revealing that the company has been "short [on] power and space."

Microsoft was one of many companies in 2024 to announce investments in nuclear energy to power data centers and AI projects. The need for direct sources of energy to power these campuses has become an arms race for Microsoft, as well for as brands like Amazon and Oracle.

In fact, Texas Governor Greg Abbott (R) procured a report for possible small modular reactors in his state in hopes of bringing in over $50 billion in new economic output to Texas.

States like Virginia and Maryland have also become popular sites for SMRs and self-sustaining commercial campuses.

Apple added in its press release that the company is one of the largest taxpayers in the United States, having paid "more than $75 billion in U.S. taxes over the past five years, including $19 billion in 2024 alone."

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World's Largest Semiconductor Chipmaker Invests $100 Billion in US, Trump Announces

The Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world's largest chipmaker, will invest $100 billion in new chip manufacturing plants across the United States, President Donald Trump announced Monday.

The post World's Largest Semiconductor Chipmaker Invests $100 Billion in US, Trump Announces appeared first on .

DNC Operation To 'Combat Online Misinformation' Spreads Fabricated Audio of Donald Trump Jr. Calling To Arm Russia

After President Donald Trump’s electoral victory in November, the Democratic National Committee launched a rapid response social media account, "FactPost,"  to "combat online misinformation." On Wednesday, the account published fabricated audio—known as a "deepfake"—of Donald Trump Jr. calling on the United States to arm Russia in its war against Ukraine.

The post DNC Operation To 'Combat Online Misinformation' Spreads Fabricated Audio of Donald Trump Jr. Calling To Arm Russia appeared first on .

The quantum AI revolution is here — and we’re not ready



On Wednesday, Microsoft quietly announced a breakthrough that could change the world forever. No fanfare, no flashing sirens — just a casual revelation that it's unlocked an entirely new state of matter. This isn’t science fiction. This is real. And if you thought the pace of technological change was overwhelming before, buckle up, because everything changed yesterday.

In science class, we are taught there are three states of matter: solids, liquids, and gases. Microsoft has allegedly developed a new class of matter, called “topological conductors,” that form the foundation of a new kind of quantum computing. The tech world has been chasing this for decades, and now, after nearly 20 years of research and billions of dollars, Microsoft has found the key.

This breakthrough isn’t just another incremental tech update — it’s a paradigm shift — and shifts like this don’t come without consequences.

Computing power is about to explode beyond anything we’ve ever imagined. Right now, we process information linearly — one step at a time. However, with quantum computing, an infinite number of calculations can be solved simultaneously. If today’s best supercomputers are like an Olympic sprinter, quantum computers are like teleportation — and we’re on the verge of plugging artificial intelligence into that system.

Has AI already surpassed human intelligence?

This week, Elon Musk’s AI system, Grok, released its latest update, and it’s already surpassing ChatGPT. I asked Grok how fast it learns new information, and it told me that in just 12 hours, it gains the equivalent of five to 10 years of human intellectual development. Imagine what happens when AI of this capacity is connected to quantum computing. The AI itself estimated that instead of advancing five to 10 years in 12 hours, it would leap 50 to 100 years in intellectual growth. Let that sink in.

We are looking at intelligence that will be unimaginably superior to the smartest human beings on the planet, accelerating at a pace beyond comprehension. It won’t be a matter of decades before AI outpaces human intelligence — but days — and we’ve just given it the keys to quantum power.

This is an event horizon, the moment after which nothing will ever be the same.

Are you prepared for this?

Tech elites, corporations, and governments are sprinting toward artificial superintelligence without a single serious conversation about what happens next. We already see AI systems manipulating public perception, influencing politics, and transforming industries. But what happens when an intelligence 1,000 times greater than any human starts making decisions for us? What happens when it controls entire economies, military systems, and information networks?

Microsoft’s announcement should have been headline news. Instead, it was a tweet, a YouTube video, a whisper in the background of the cultural noise. But this breakthrough isn’t just another incremental tech update, it’s a paradigm shift — and shifts like this don’t come without consequences.

We stand at the precipice of a new world. Quantum-powered AI will redefine everything — from the way we work, to the way we think, to the very fabric of reality as we understand it. This isn’t just an upgrade. This is the rewriting of the human experience.

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Trump’s Greenland and Gaza moves: Wise strategy or pure madness?



“Amateurs study tactics; professionals study logistics.” But winning wars requires both to support a larger, coherent strategy. President Trump’s push to extend U.S. control to Greenland and Gaza follows a calculated method, not madness.

To win a war, the first step is understanding the enemy and his strategic objectives. The post-World War II order and the Cold War rivalry with the Soviet Union no longer pose the primary threat to U.S. interests. Today, China wages covert information and economic warfare while openly preparing for military action to seize Taiwan and dominate key shipping lanes in the South Pacific.

With Greenland, we gain strategic positioning and critical resources. With Gaza, we gain security leverage and economic opportunity.

Russia and Iran support China’s ambitions but play a secondary role. Tactics include sabotage, terrorism, Houthi-led attacks on shipping, and grinding attrition in Ukraine. Meanwhile, far-left movements work to undermine the U.S. from within, often using federal funding to do so. Decades of massive deficit spending have further weakened the U.S. dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency.

That is the threat. How can the U.S. effectively respond after years of economic decline, military stagnation, and the erosion of its workforce’s education?

Trump’s DOGE initiative and other efforts aim to rebuild America’s military and workforce by cutting wasteful spending and reforming domestic programs. But those steps alone do not address shifting global power dynamics or the role of rapidly advancing technology in shaping future conflicts.

That’s where Greenland and Gaza come in.

Urgent, evolving threats

For decades, most NATO countries have ignored their commitments to shared defense. Instead, they built welfare states while cozying up to Russia and China, sidelining Israel, and attempting to control U.S. and global policies through institutions like the United Nations, the World Economic Forum, and the European Union.

These nations felt secure in their defiance because the U.S. deep state, well entrenched within the bureaucracy, believed it could manipulate global geopolitics through unaccountable dark money. Often, this shadowy influence conflicted with the policies of elected leaders.

Those days are over — just in time.

A new and more urgent threat has emerged: China’s dominance in emerging technology and its implications for national security and defense. For decades, China has fast-tracked its most promising students into advanced science and technology programs. This strategy has fueled major breakthroughs in artificial intelligence and quantum computing, each posing serious risks to U.S. military capabilities, infrastructure, and cybersecurity.

China’s AI capabilities, applied to vast amounts of American personal and government data that it has stolen, provide key insights into U.S. vulnerabilities. Meanwhile, quantum computing threatens to break the encryption methods that currently protect critical systems and sensitive information.

The US must secure new strategic territory and key material sources while rapidly advancing technological capabilities at home.

Beyond technological advancements, China has also engaged in large-scale intellectual property theft, targeting key military and national security designs. This theft, enabled by America’s well-intentioned but often naïve embrace of Chinese students and researchers in universities and corporations, has accelerated China’s ability to project power across the globe.

Now add in policies in which we allowed China to dominate mining and sale of rare-earth minerals necessary for advanced semiconductor and sensor equipment in the name of environmental green virtue here at home and, for many, in the name of globalism. China can and will cut off our access to those minerals completely, thereby crippling short-term attempts to rebuild and rehome semiconductor and related industries in the United States.

Also factor in advances such as new low-horizon missiles for which existing detection systems are weak.

Territorial opportunities

These threats are real, and the war for dominance is already under way. How do we counter them?

First, the U.S. must secure new strategic territory and key material sources while rapidly advancing technological capabilities at home.

Greenland presents a major opportunity for two reasons. Controlling Greenland would allow the U.S. to deploy advanced missile detection and counter-missile systems, strengthening defense against Chinese and Russian movements in the northern seas. Additionally, Greenland holds valuable raw materials essential for developing advanced technology.

It is no coincidence that many top tech entrepreneurs and venture capitalists now support Trump. They understand the growing tech threat firsthand and recognize that only his proposed policies can effectively address both economic and national security concerns.

How do we know their support is genuine? Consider this: Google recently reversed a long-standing policy that explicitly barred the use of its technology for military or defense purposes.

That shift marks a seismic change in Silicon Valley, triggering outrage and panic among progressives — a good sign.

Meanwhile, the Pentagon is advancing its Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture, increasingly relying on SpaceX’s Starlink constellation for critical communications across U.S. military ships and installations.

Why Gaza?

Under President Trump’s direction, the Missile Defense Agency has also solicited proposals for an advanced Iron Dome-style defense system to protect U.S. territory from missile attacks.

Israel currently uses the Iron Dome to defend against rockets and missiles, which brings the conversation to Gaza.

Conservatives and liberals reacted strongly to Trump’s shocking announcement earlier this month, standing alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, that the United States would acquire Gaza, clear it of terrorism, and transform it into a prosperous resort destination.

It’s a bold strategy aimed at ending the decades-long cycle of Palestinian terrorism against Israel. But can it work — and what’s in it for the United States?

For this plan to succeed, neighboring countries would need to accept the permanent relocation of Palestinians — something they have long resisted. Many Arab nations use the Palestinian issue to pressure Israel, while others simply do not want Iranian proxies or an influx of an uneducated, indoctrinated population within their borders.

Beyond political resistance, rebuilding Gaza would be a long and complex process. Clearing debris, systematically removing mines and explosives, and assessing the damage caused by Hamas’ extensive tunnel network could take years. In many areas, underground tunnels may have compromised the structural integrity of the land, further complicating new construction.

Not so crazy?

But there’s a strategic reason why this plan might be worth pursuing. Consider the Abraham Accords, which the Biden administration actively sought to undermine.

During Trump’s first term, his first foreign visit was to Saudi Arabia, where he was welcomed with honor by the Saudi king — the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques. Most Arab nations recognize that Iran is their greatest threat, and they understand the urgent need to diversify their economies beyond oil production. The Abraham Accords laid the groundwork for economic partnerships between Israel and these nations, offering technological collaboration in exchange for recognition of Israel’s legitimacy.

Meanwhile, Iran — funded by the Obama-Biden administration — has sought to derail these efforts by fueling terrorism in Israel and threatening maritime security through the Houthis. If the U.S. takes control of Gaza, it would directly disrupt Iran’s destabilization strategy.

Though Trump has stated the plan does not include U.S. troops or ships in the region, he has left the door open for military intervention if provoked. The message to Tehran, Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and Syria is clear: America is watching.

Beyond geopolitics, Israel is a global hub for tech innovation. Partnering more closely with Israel would allow the U.S. to accelerate technological advancements while countering Iran’s sabotage efforts.

With Greenland, we gain strategic positioning and critical resources. With Gaza, we gain security leverage and economic opportunity.

Maybe Trump’s plan isn’t so crazy after all.