by Pa Rock
Citizen Journalist
Our nation's highly decorated (tattooed) Secretary of Defense, former Fox News entertainer Pete Hegseth, clearly needs to be spending less time primping in his new Green Room and more time working in his office. What follows are three noteworthy tales that were generated in his political domain just this week.
Pentagon Tale #1:
Pentagon and White House officials are struggling to come up with a plan for spending an additional $500 billion that Trump wants to give our military in the next fiscal year. A normal budgeting routine would require a federal agency, such as the Pentagon, to come up with a list of needs and wants along with estimated costs, and then put that in a budget request, but the Trump administraation doesn't do "normal." There ass-backwards approach has the President picking an arbitrary sum, much larger than they have ever received before, and the having the Pentagon come up with a plan for spending it.
A half-trillion dollars just handed to the Pentagon without so much as even a simple request. This, at a time when Americans are losing healthcare by the thousands, safety net programs - like school lunches and food stamps - are being cut willy-nilly, the cost of everything, and especially food, is on a steady rise thanks primarily to Trump's insane tariffs which are being paid by American consumers, and masked gestapo on the government payroll are in the streets threatening the safety and security of Americans. It certainly sounds like a good time to give the military more money than it knows how to spend!
Pentagon Tale #2:
On the evening of January 29th, 2025, just nine days after the Trump administration came back into power, an Army Black Hawk helicopter collided with a passenger airliner over the Potomac River near Reagan Airport in Washington, DC, killing all 67 people aboard both aircraft. This year, with that particular air disaster as their focus, the United States Senate unanimousuly passed the "Rotorcraft Operations Transparency and Oversight Reform (ROTOR) Act, an air safety measure that would require almost all aircraft to use a technology that would transmit that aircraft's location. Use of that technology would have prevented the mid-air disaster over the Potomac last January.
The ROTOR air safety bill provided exemptions for classified and high level military missions.
The Pentagon initially supported this important air safety regulation, but changed its mind after the bill went to the House. The House took it up in a process that required a 2/3 majority in order to pass, and despite support from consumer safety groups and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), it still failed by two votes - with Speaker Johnson's entire leadership team voting against the measure. Part of the Pentagon's logic in pulling its support from the bill was that it would create "significant unresolved budgetary burdens," (See Pentagon Tale #1)
The House is rushing to get an alternative bill to the floor, but it is not as widely supported at the original bill which was backed by families of air crash victims, safety advocates, air traffic controllers, pilots, flight attendants, airports, and regional airlines - but not a super majority in the US House of Representatives and the decision-makers at the Pentagon.
Pentagon Tale #3:
The Pentagon is currently in a feud with Anthropic, an artificial intelligence provider that, until recently, was the only AI model to have access to the Pentagon's classified networks. Anthropic is apparently a company with a social conscience, something that does not fold well into the current administration's military strategies, both at home and abroad.
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Last month Anthropic stirred concern in the Pentagon when it began asking questions about how its services had been used in Trump's takeover of Venezuela. The company apparently has safeguards in place to prevent its AI model from being used to target weapons autonomously or to conduct US domestic surveillance. Pentagon sources are calling such safeguards "Woke AI."
In summary:
The Pentagon is about to receive more money than it knows how to spend, it has come out in opposition to commonsense air safety reforms, and it wants an AI system with no guardrails and one which will do the total bidding of whoever happens to be at the keyboard - including domestic surveillance!
Our tax dollars in action!

