Thielnomics
Peter Thiel's Control of the Worldwide Distributions of Goods (Supply Chain) - Part 1
Worldwide access to goods has become an ever-increasing issue since the beginning of the 2020 “Pandemic” and the Russo-Ukrainian war. Even high-income nations, including the United States of America, have had supply chain problems and failures, leading to fewer goods on the shelf. For example, I and others would find it challenging to acquire specific goods at the grocery store and would have to visit multiple grocery stores until we could locate the goods we sought. Outrage swept the United States as our comfortability was hindered. Some would say it was America reaping what it sowed as being the “world police” for the old world order, and I certainly can understand that position. Americans had sacrificed in the past, for example, rationing during World War Two, but were our current circumstances manufactured? Were these supply chain problems and failures only due to horrific worldwide events, or did nefarious elites, including Peter Thiel, come to the “rescue” to “solve” the problems caused by manufactured shortages?
American billionaire Peter Thiel’s company Palantir offers commercial supply chain solutions within its Foundry software suite. Foundry is supposed to be quite user-friendly and quickly brings drag-and-drop simplicity to data management by allowing you to create, access, and share informational databases with Palantir and/or other companies that can be analyzed, categorized, optimized, and utilized by Palantir artificial intelligence. Foundry can incorporate and consolidate data from a myriad of sources into a single, sharply workable, searchable, well defined, easy-to-navigate interface. Foundry can also integrate with your stored cloud data within Amazon Web Services and/or Google Cloud.1
Some of the capabilities Palantir through Foundry claims to offer their clients to enhance their supply chain include:
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