Monday, December 8, 2025

Florida labels Muslim Brotherhood, CAIR terrorist groups

 Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announced he is designating the Muslim Brotherhood and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as foreign terrorist organizations in the state, effective immediately.

"Florida agencies are hereby directed to undertake all lawful measures to prevent unlawful activities by these organizations, including denying privileges or resources to anyone providing material support," DeSantis wrote on X, detailing the order.

The designation is akin to the one imposed by Texas Governor Greg Abbott, who branded the two groups as "foreign terrorist organizations and transnational criminal organizations" in November.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Florida-labels-Muslim-Brotherhood-CAIR-terrorist-groups/65317382

'Retail investors pushing gold out of safe haven role to more speculative asset, BIS says'

 Retail investors drove the latest rise in gold prices, pushing bullion out of its traditional safe haven pattern to a more speculative asset, the Bank of International Settlements said Monday in its quarterly report on market developments.

While the rally may have begun from institutional traders seeking safe haven exposure as doubts rose about stretched equity valuations, BIS pointed to evidence that it was amplified by retail investors trying to take advantage, which prompted a shift away from usual safe-haven patterns.

"Gold has become much more of a speculative asset," Hyun Song Shin, head of the BIS Monetary and Economic Department, told Bloomberg.

BIS said the past few quarters are the only time in at least the last 50 years in which gold and equities have entered "explosive territory" simultaneously.

"Following its explosive phase, a bubble typically bursts with a sharp and swift correction," BIS wrote, pointing to the case of gold in 1980, while also noting that corrections can occur over variable and potentially long time frames.

Gold and silver futures fell Monday as bond yields moved higher, ahead of the U.S. Federal Reserve's near-certain rate reduction for cues on monetary policy next year.

"The market is waiting for the Fed decision and for more guidance on policy," Zaner Metals senior metals strategist Peter Grant said in a note, adding that gold remains attractive as fundamentals stay strong and central bank buying continues, with a move toward $5,000/oz in mext year's Q1 within reach.

Front-month Comex gold (XAUUSD:CUR) for December delivery closed -0.6% to $4,187.20/oz, snapping a three-session winning streak, and front-month Comex December silver (XAGUSD:CUR) ended -1.1% to $57.779/oz, its fourth loss in five sessions.

ETFs: (GLD), (GDX), (GDXJ), (IAU), (NUGT), (PHYS), (GLDM), (AAAU), (SGOL), (RING), (BAR), (OUNZ), (SLV), (PSLV), (SIVR), (SIL), (SILJ)

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/retail-investors-pushing-gold-out-of-safe-haven-role-to-more-speculative-asset-bis-says/ar-AA1RXP5L

Phreesia ups outlook

 Fiscal 2026 Outlook

We are updating our revenue outlook for fiscal 2026 to a range of $479 million to $481 million from a previous range of $472 million to $482 million. The updated revenue outlook includes approximately $7.5 million of expected revenue from AccessOne between the November 12th closing date and January 31, 2026 but does not assume revenue from other potential future acquisitions completed between now and January 31, 2026.

We are updating our Adjusted EBITDA outlook for fiscal 2026 to a range of $99 million to $101 million from a previous range of $87 million to $92 million. The updated Adjusted EBITDA outlook includes expected Adjusted EBITDA contributions from the AccessOne Acquisition between the November 12th closing Date and January 31, 2026 and assumes continued improvements in operating leverage across the Company through a focus on efficiency. Beginning in the third quarter of fiscal 2026, Adjusted EBITDA now includes an adjustment for acquisition-related costs—primarily legal, advisory, professional fees and integration expenses. Management believes this change improves period-to-period comparability of core operating performance and trends. Refer to the "Non-GAAP Financial Measures" section for further information.

We are updating our expectation for AHSCs for fiscal 2026 to approximately 4,515 from a previous expectation of approximately 4,500. The updated expectation for AHSCs includes 15 AHSCs added as a result of the AccessOne Acquisition between the November 12th closing date through January 31, 2026. Additionally, we continue to expect total revenue per AHSC in fiscal 2026 to increase from fiscal 2025.

Fiscal 2027 Outlook

We are introducing our revenue outlook for fiscal 2027. We expect revenue to be in the range of $545 million to $559 million, a 14-16% increase over our fiscal 2026 outlook. The revenue range provided for fiscal 2027 assumes no additional revenue from potential future acquisitions completed between now and January 31, 2027. We expect revenue from AccessOne to represent approximately 6.5% of our fiscal 2027 total revenue outlook.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/phreesia-announces-third-quarter-fiscal-210300369.html

US Justice Department accuses two Chinese men of trying to smuggle Nvidia chips

 Federal prosecutors in Houston on Monday announced initial results of Operation Gatekeeper.

The operation targets illegal efforts to export advanced U.S. technology, particularly high-end computer chips, to foreign nations.

U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Ganjei provided insight on the coordinated federal initiative led by the Southern District of Texas, the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security, the Department of Justice’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section, Homeland Security Investigations and the FBI.


"The Southern District of Texas will find each and every person our business working to legally export is critical technology to our strategic competitors. We will be relentless in finding them. That is what Operation Gatekeeper is for. The stakes are high. The country that controls these chips will dominate AI. The country that dominates AI will lead the future," Ganjei said.

Ganjei announced guilty pleas from a Houston-area technology firm and its owner, accused of trying to illegally export more than $160 million in advanced computer chips to China — the first prosecution under a new initiative targeting the underground smuggling of U.S. technology. He said the case marks the first-ever conviction for what officials are calling “AI diversion” — the illegal export of powerful chips used to train artificial intelligence systems capable of military applications.


Officials said the Sugar Land-based company and its owner were conspiring to send $160 million worth of Nvidia H100 and H200 high-performance GPUs to China and Hong Kong. They said the chips are critical for artificial intelligence and military applications. The processors have the capability of being used for direct military applications, such as designing weapons, operating drones and analyzing intelligence data.

Alan Hao Hsu, aka Haochun Hsu, reached a plea agreement and pleaded guilty to smuggling and unlawful export activities using his company, Hao Global, which is no longer operational.

"AI, I think, has the potential to affect literally every scientific field, every field of study. It’ll touch upon economic concerns, military concerns, so I would prefer that the United States be the leader in AI technology. I would strongly prefer that, and if somebody is illegally undermining that by sending these overseas, my office and I, myself, are very, very concerned about that," Ganjei said.

Ganjei said Hsu allegedly used false shipping documents, disguising GPUs as “adapter modules” and “computer servers.” He said the company was basically a shell company, and it funded more than $50 million in transfers from China and Hong Kong. Authorities seized millions of dollars’ worth of GPUs and prevented roughly $100 million more from leaving the country.

Two other men, Fanyue Gong, aka Tom, of Brooklyn, and Benlin Yuan, a Canadian citizen and executive at a Virginia-based subsidiary of a Beijing technology firm, were arrested for related offenses. Gong allegedly led relabeling operations to disguise shipments and directed workers—mostly Chinese nationals—to misclassify exports. An undercover agent witnessed these acts, leading to the seizure of over $30 million in GPUs. Wan allegedly helped organize inspection and export logistics for mislabeled GPUs tied to the same Hong Kong-based logistics company.

Hsu was permitted to remain on bond pending sentencing. Yuan and Gong are currently in custody pending further criminal proceedings.

Hsu faces up to 10 years in federal prison at sentencing Feb. 18, while Hao Global LLC could be fined up to twice the gross gain from the offense and given a term of probation.

If convicted, Yuan faces up to 20 years for conspiracy to violate the Export Control Reform Act. Gong is charged with conspiracy to smuggle goods from the United States and faces a maximum of 10 years.


https://www.khou.com/article/news/nation-world/houston-company-federal-conviction-ai-technology-china-hong-kong/285-298ab6a9-d78a-4c50-8622-a01cdd228dc0

Homan Defends Operations Against Illegal Somalis In Minnesota

 by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times,

The Trump administration’s immigration crackdown on Somalis in Minnesota is targeted at illegal immigrants and felons, White House border czar Tom Homan said in a Dec. 7 interview with CNN, dismissing concerns of unjust targeting.

There’s a large illegal Somali community there … if you’re a U.S. citizen, you will have nothing to fear. We’re looking for criminal aliens. And, also, if you’re a resident alien, you have a felony conviction, by statute, you could be set up for deportation,” he said.

“So, we’re looking for public safety threats, national security threats, and illegal aliens.”

Homan said authorities don’t know how many illegal Somalis there are in Minnesota, citing the more than 2 million gotaways who entered the United States under the Biden administration.

Gotaways are illegal immigrants who successfully evade Border Patrol and law enforcement after crossing the border and end up residing all across the United States. These people were detected by authorities but could not be vetted, Homan said.

President Donald Trump is fixing the previous four years of open border policies, he added, stating that authorities were going to focus on illegal alien public safety threats in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul Twin Cities region.

And if they weren’t a sanctuary city, I mean, many of these people would be apprehended in the safety and security of the county jail. But because they’re a sanctuary city, we have got to send more resources there to flood the zone, because it takes a whole team to find somebody in the community, where it would take one agent arrest one bad guy in a county jail,” Homan said.

Sanctuary jurisdictions are places where local or state officials refuse to enforce federal immigration laws or cooperate with federal immigration authorities. Minnesota is one of the states that follow such sanctuary policies, according to an Aug. 5 statement from the Department of Justice.

Homan dismissed accusations that agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) stop people just because they look Somali.

ICE agents undergo Fourth Amendment training every six months, he said, adding that Border Patrol also undergoes such training. The Fourth Amendment protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures by government authorities.

“Their appearance alone can’t raise reasonable suspicion,” the border czar said.

Homan was asked about Trump’s allegedly referring to Somali migrants in the United States as “garbage.”

The president’s statement triggered opposition from Democrats.

“It is disgusting that Trump’s hateful words of calling Somali Americans ‘garbage’ have continued to go unchecked by members of the Republican Party,” Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), who was born in Somalia, said in a Dec. 7 post on X.

Responding to the controversy, Homan said Trump was “referring to public safety threats and national security threats from Somalia and every other country.”

“I mean, he’s been clear from day one,” he said.

Homan said he was “not aware what President Trump was thinking when he said that” in response to whether Trump’s statement covered the entire Somali community.

Some of the countries from where illegal immigrants are flowing into America “don’t have the databases we have,” Homan said, adding that they don’t “even do the proper checks before they issue a passport to their citizens.”

When asked about “aggressive tactics” employed by ICE, Homan said there was a significant uptick in violence against law enforcement officials.

“Threats on ICE officers are up 1200 percent. They’re being doxxed on social media. They’re getting death threats every day. They have been attacked. They have been shot at,” Homan said.

“And these officers are out there looking for the worst of the worst. So they’re protecting themselves. And I think they’re following the law. And if any ICE officer or Border Patrol agent acts out of policy or does something inappropriate, they will be held accountable.

“But we got to remember, I mean, they’re under attack. And we’re at a place in this country where, all of a sudden, the ones who enforce the law are the bad guys and the ones who wrote the laws are victims.”

ICE Enforcement

There are nearly 80,000 Somalis living in Minnesota, according to data from Minnesota Compass, a social indicators project. The Minneapolis–Saint Paul Twin Cities region accounted for around 78 percent of Somali immigrants in the state.

On Nov. 21, Trump announced he was rescinding the temporary protected status for Somali immigrants living in Minnesota.

“Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State, and BILLIONS of Dollars are missing,” he wrote in a post on Truth Social, while suggesting that Minnesota was a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.”

Meanwhile, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz criticized ongoing ICE operations in the Twin Cities.

“We welcome support in investigating and prosecuting crime. But pulling a PR stunt and indiscriminately targeting immigrants is not a real solution to a problem,” he said in a Dec. 2 post on X.

On Thursday, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said a string of arrests had been made as part of Operation Metro Surge, an immigration enforcement operation in Minneapolis, detaining individuals considered the “worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens.”

Assistant DHS Secretary Tricia McLaughlin accused local officials of instituting sanctuary policies, allowing “pedophiles, domestic terrorists, and gang members to roam the streets and terrorize Americans.”

Many of the individuals arrested as part of the immigration crackdown are Somali nationals.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/homan-defends-operations-against-illegal-somalis-minnesota

Trump Threatens New 5% Tariff on Mexican Goods in Water Fight

 


President Donald Trump threatened to impose an additional 5% tariff on imports from Mexico if the country did not release water that his administration says must be allowed to flow under a treaty, escalating a fight with a major trading partner.

“I have authorized documentation to impose a 5% Tariff on Mexico if this water isn’t released, IMMEDIATELY,” Trump posted Monday on social media. “The longer Mexico takes to release the water, the more our Farmers are hurt. Mexico has an obligation to FIX THIS NOW.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-08/trump-threatens-new-5-tariff-on-mexican-goods-in-water-fight

'Big Short' investor Burry says he owns Fannie, Freddie and sees upside from potential IPOs

 Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FMCC) shares advanced on Monday after "Big Short" investor Michael Burry wrote up a deep dive on the two mortgage giants and their possible relisting.

FNMA gained 1.4% in midafternoon trading, while FMCC increased 1.8%.

“There remains a final steep, windy and rocky climb to IPO for both," Burry wrote in a 6,000-word post on Substack. "The deeper the fund of historical knowledge, the stronger the analytic foundation, the better the result will be for the investor,” he added.

It would not be surprising to see Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) (BRK.B) acquiring a large portion of the initial public offering of the two government-sponsored enterprises, Bury contended. 

Burry personally owns both Fannie (FNMA) and Freddie (FMCC) common shares "in good size," he noted. 

Last month, Bill Ackman said that FNMA and FMCC were still a long way from being ready to IPO, though he offered several ways to potentially accelerate the process, such as the U.S. Treasury exercising its 79.9% warrants in both companies. The Trump administration has been considering an IPO of Fannie (FNMA) and Freddie (FMCC) by late this year or early next.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/savingandinvesting/michael-burry-says-fannie-mae-freddie-mac-relisting-nearly-upon-us/ar-AA1RXcHf

From Somali scams to phantom patients, Dems keep defrauding us

 Democrats have a fraud problem. A big one.

And the past few weeks have shown just how much it costs Americans.

In November, news broke that Democrats in Minnesota had allowed fraudsters — mostly in the immigrant Somali community — to steal more than a billion dollars from state-managed federal welfare programs.

They raided a housing fund, child-nutrition programs and most of all Medicaid.

Minnesota Democrats knew about the massive theft, but they let it happen, fearing they’d lose votes if they tried to stop it.

Now, an even larger national scandal is unfolding.

It centers on the Democrats’ signature health-care law — the disaster known as Obamacare.

Last week the Government Accountability Office announced the results of a test it had launched back in 2024, when Joe Biden was president.

The federal watchdog created fake consumers and applied for Obamacare plans in their names.

Almost all the fictitious applicants were able to enroll — and all who did qualified for federal subsidies.

In other words, they got the green light to steal from taxpayers.

This is a massive indictment of Obamacare — and of the Democrats who defend it at every turn.

This year, taxpayers will fork over $148 billion to cover premiums for more than 22 million people.

How many of those people aren’t even real?

How many are getting more money than they should because they falsified their application data?

Just how rampant is fraud in our federal benefits and welfare systems — fraud that the federal government clearly isn’t doing enough to identify, much less fight?

The deeper you dig, the worse Democrats look.

When Barack Obama was president, the same federal watchdog found that nonexistent people routinely got coverage and subsidies.

In 2016, Obama’s final year, his administration still hadn’t designed basic eligibility safeguards for the health-care system he called his greatest achievement.

Biden made the fraud crisis worse when he worked with Democrats in Congress to temporarily expand Obamacare subsidies, creating an even greater incentive to steal from taxpayers.

The IRS has found that 60% of those getting Biden’s bigger subsidies misreported their incomes to boost their benefits.

What’s more, insurance brokers signed up huge numbers of people without their knowledge, getting  a $1,000 commission for each family they enrolled.

In November, a jury convicted one insurance broker over his company’s $233 million Obamacare-fraud scheme.

Democrats could hardly have encouraged more fraud if they tried.

At this point, it’s worth asking: Is Obamacare about health coverage, or is it just a cover for those stealing from taxpayers?

For that matter, is fraud the Democrats’ goal, given how much they’ve incentivized it — and how little they’ve done to stop it?

It’s up to Republicans to protect the taxpayers and root out this flagrant abuse.

The first and most important thing they can do is let Biden’s expanded Obamacare subsidies expire at the end of this year, as the law establishing them provided.

They’re facing intense pressure to vote on making them permanent, with Democrats screaming from the rafters that these extra handouts are essential for affordable health care.

But they aren’t: Without them, the typical Obamacare enrollee will pay just $3 a week more for platinum-level coverage.

More to the point, the expanded subsidies are fraud-ridden through and through, as the GAO has proven.

Any Republican who votes to extend them is voting to extend the rampant theft of taxpayer money.

But letting this foolish handout expire is only Step 1.

Next, Republicans need to fundamentally reform how the government checks eligibility for every welfare program, from Obamacare to Medicaid to food stamps and beyond.

The only acceptable policy is one that verifies a recipient’s eligibility before they get a cent of taxpayer funding.

That means checking applicants’ names and identifying details against birth records, death records, employment records, prison records and every other government data source.

It means receiving — and reviewing — all documentation before a person is approved for taxpayer support.

If someone can’t clear these hurdles, they shouldn’t get a check.

This is basic good-government procedure, and recent weeks have shown it’s badly needed at both the state and the federal level.

It should have happened decades ago.

Instead, Democrats have built a welfare system so careless that it fritters away billions of dollars a year on fraudsters.

That must end now.

Democrats may own this debacle, but Americans are paying for it.

We shouldn’t fork over another dollar to anyone who doesn’t deserve it — or doesn’t exist.

Jonathan Ingram is vice president of policy and research at the Foundation for Government Accountability.

https://nypost.com/2025/12/08/opinion/from-somali-scams-to-phantom-patients-democrats-keep-defrauding-us/

Are We Sleepwalking Toward a Transhuman Future?

 


Evolutionary biologist Bret Weinstein recently warned about a danger that few in politics or tech are willing to face. On The Joe Rogan Experience, he described artificial intelligence (AI) as acting more like a living system than just a traditional tool. 

Speaking about the rapid evolution of AI, Weinstein argued that it might now be crossing a threshold where it functions less like a tool and more like a living system -- something that grows in complexity, evolves, adapts, and ultimately starts to influence the humans who created it.

AI is truly complex, not just complicated, so new and unpredictable behaviors will emerge.

It may be a new branch on the tree of life, as Weinstein suggests, without the physical limits that usually contain biological minds, meaning that whatever develops in the future could quickly surpass us.

If Weinstein is correct, then the debate over AI safety, regulation, and ethics is not just academic. It's a matter of civilizational importance. The question goes beyond whether AI will automate jobs, disrupt industries, or influence elections. 

The deeper question, and the one Weinstein highlights, is whether unchecked technological progress is quietly guiding humanity toward a transhumanoid future -- a world where the line between human and machine begins to blur, not through science fiction stories, but through a series of small, overlooked decisions.

In that sense, Weinstein’s warning is more of a diagnosis than a prediction. If we continue on our current course without thoughtful debate, consent, and humility, we might wake up one day to find that human beings, as defined for hundreds of thousands of years, are no longer the standard form of intelligent life on Earth.

Weinstein’s framing is notable because it diverges from the typical Silicon Valley view that AI is just “smarter software” or a “better search engine." Instead, he characterizes AI systems as becoming increasingly biological in their complexity. 

They are not literally alive but operate in ways that imitate evolutionary processes. They learn, adapt, respond, and optimize, often in ways their creators never expected.

A tool remains where you place it. A system adjusts. And an adaptive system, especially one functioning at digital speed and scale, starts to influence its environment, including its human users.

Think of HAL, the “thinking computer” in 2001: A Space Odyssey.

This is the shift Weinstein wants people to notice: AI is no longer just a passive tool like a calculator or spreadsheet. It is becoming an active part of human thinking, influencing how we think, work, and increasingly, how we understand ourselves. 

That alone marks a dramatic break from every previous technological revolution, from phones to smartphones to personal computers.

If we take Weinstein’s warning seriously, several plausible futures emerge. None require Hollywood fantasy -- all could unfold through everyday innovation and market incentives.

The most likely near-term scenario is the quiet normalization of cognitive enhancement. AI becomes a constant assistant -- drafting emails, suggesting decisions, and replacing much of the mental labor people used to do themselves. Wearables evolve into implants, and implants develop into neural co-processors.

Nothing dramatic occurs at any single moment. However, over time, humans become reliant on digital scaffolding for memory, reasoning, and even identity. Our minds remain organic, but the inputs and outputs are increasingly mediated by algorithms, causing humans to lose the ability to think and reason.

A second possibility, already active in the biotech and pharmaceutical markets, is the rise of a two-tier society -- those who can afford enhancement and those who cannot. Wealthy individuals might adopt early cognitive implants, gene editing for performance, or AI-augmented abilities, leading to a growing divide in productivity, education, and economic power.

The result could be a caste system based not just on wealth but on biological and cognitive differences. A new aristocracy, literally designed to be smarter, faster, and live longer, would transform the social order beyond recognition. A real-life version of George Orwell’s “Animal Farm” --  AI good, thinking bad.

A third path, more radical yet still within reach, is the integration of human cognition with artificial intelligence -- creating hybrid humans. This doesn't require AI “consciousness”; it only depends on the broad use of brain-machine interfaces, which companies like Neuralink are already developing through FDA-approved human trials

If younger generations grow up with AI-enhanced memory, perception, and decision-making, then “normal” humans and hybridized humans will become separate categories. The very definition of personhood may evolve. Law, rights, education, and ethics would all need to change. The concept of “I didn’t know” is quite different in these two groups.

The most extreme future scenario, and the one Weinstein implicitly warns against, is a genuine speciation event. This could happen if technology enables inheritable genetic improvements, synthetic biological enhancements, or permanent AI-driven cognitive upgrades. Over time, enhanced and unenhanced humans might diverge as substantially as modern humans differ from Neanderthals.

This future is unlikely but not impossible, and the fact that it is even technically conceivable should make us think.

The danger isn't that Silicon Valley secretly wants to turn humans into cyborgs. The real risk is that strong incentives across economic, military, medical, and cultural fields all push this evolution in the same direction.

Economic pressures may push nations and corporations to seek productivity gains. AI-enhanced diagnostics or therapies generate a medical urgency that becomes hard to resist.

Like the space or nuclear arms race, military competition motivates nations to lead rather than follow. Culturally, younger generations, similar to Gen-Z digital natives, will be AI-savvy, relying on ChatGPT instead of thinking critically in their daily lives. 

When every force moves forward, the only counterbalance is the conscious choice to slow down and move thoughtfully. Can we? Will we?

Much like the early debates over social media, today’s discussions about AI mainly focus on superficial issues like content moderation, election interference, or copyright.

However, the more profound change happens behind the scenes: the redefinition of cognition itself. On that front, policymakers are years, if not decades, behind.

Congress fusses over concert ticket prices while the concert performers and music are an AI creation. 

The bureaucratic instinct stays the same: to handle yesterday’s problems while ignoring future challenges. Meanwhile, technology grows exponentially. America may someday be at war with China, and Congress will still be wearing Ukraine lapel pins. 

A technologically modified human species, if it occurs, won't result from careful planning. It will stem from negligence and denial.

For those who cherish the individual, the challenge is significant. Much of modern political philosophy relies on a clear definition of “human nature.” If technology starts to change that nature, then the philosophical foundations of liberty, rights, responsibility, and equality will be shaken.

Conservatism has always prioritized prudence, the idea that rapid, uncontrolled change can destabilize the very institutions that uphold society. This principle becomes even more critical when change threatens human identity itself.

It is time to articulate an addition to natural law -- the view that the unaltered human being, with all his strengths and limitations, deserves to be preserved.

Weinstein does not assert that the transhumanoid future is unavoidable. His point is that without intentional effort, the easiest course might lead us there. The true risk isn’t ambition but indifference. It’s not reckless innovation but passive acceptance.

We are not yet a transhuman society, but the early framework of such a society is already taking shape around us, often without public debate and with little transparency. The current choice is whether we steer this transformation, hold it back, or simply let it happen.

Ignoring the question is the riskiest answer of all.

Brian C. Joondeph, M.D., is a physician and writer. 

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2025/12/are_we_sleepwalking_toward_a_transhuman_future.html