Gaslighting and Zersetzung in America, with Stasi techniques in full employ at Palantir Technologies, Inc.
A Nazi is as a Nazi does, and that's who Alex Karp associates with and talks to willingly

This was the startling admission made by Alex Karp, cofounder and CEO of the software company Palantir, a company that’s come under increasingly heavy scrutiny for its growing role as a provider of AI-powered surveillance technology to the military and government. ¶In an interview with podcaster Molly O’Shea published this week, Karp, who has Jewish heritage, was discussing German culture and his time in the country before going on a tangent about how outrageous it is that people online “laud the Nazis.” Then he fessed up to something even more eyebrow-raising.
So what? Adolf Hitler's mother was Jewish as well, reportedly. Alex Karp is a most decidedly un-kosher German cop himself, by definition a Nazi. Or, Stasi. The same cops were still cops in East Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic, even after the Second World War. Don't kid yourself. If you're “antisemitic,” that German big law cop shop boss in America isn't the one to accuse you of that.
Palantir's objective is to extract that pound of flesh at law and extort enough money from targeted individuals to stay in business, and as much as possible at that to stay profitable.
Meanwhile…
A lifelong bachelor, Karp maintains concurrent long-term relationships with two women. (A colleague describes him as “geographically monogamous.”) He has never learned to drive but skis 12 to 15 miles daily and owns multiple homes chosen for proximity to cross-country trails. At Palantir’s headquarters in Denver, which Karp calls the “schmattes factory” — Yiddish for cheap clothing — he regularly wears gear from an elite Norwegian ski team he has no connection to.
“Feminazis” in the office, anyone? Karens and the Jessicas everywhere.



The infamous Richtlinie Nr. 1/76 is apparently to this day the guideline by which fraternal cop shops including Palantir continue operate in America.
Founded by Stanford students with the goal of fighting terrorism post 9/11, Palantir built software that sifts through enormous data quantities to identify connections human analysts might take months to find. The company’s fortunes have been closely linked to US intelligence and military, even though, Steinberger writes, “neither Thiel nor his associates had ever worked with the government … and had no clue as to how counterterrorism analysts wanted information presented.” ¶The CIA became an early client. All six military branches now use Palantir, along with three dozen federal agencies. Over a dozen countries used its software to track COVID-19. Major corporations like BP and Airbus rely on it.
Alex Karp is a gay cop with a couple of lesbians in the office, going by any measure of what might be termed simultaneous long-term Platonic relationships. Many Nazis were homosexual, and so was J. Edgar Hoover, reportedly.
The fact that he avoids intimacy with women and frequents men's locker rooms to engage in “healthy” activities suggests that he really is gay.
Zersetzung is in other words very advanced pimping. There's a cop without a driver's license in his own name pulling drivers over, picking them up wholesale, and confiscating their cars. There's a male cop who lacks real relationships with females essentially building a gigantic database of lies and slander to accuse other men falsely of sex crimes against women. He made a bargain with the she-devil of adultery and sold himself to her wholesale.


