Friday, May 15, 2026

Friday Frequency Flip!

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

Sometimes the most rebellious thing you can do in a world fueled by fear, outrage, division, and endless noise is to protect your own frequency.

As headlines compete for your nervous system and algorithms profit from emotional exhaustion, it becomes more important than ever to intentionally create moments of peace, stillness, beauty, and inner homeostasis.

This can be through: 

  • Music
  • A walk outside
  • Prayer
  • Deep breathing
  • Laughter
  • Sunlight
  • Silence
  • Creativity
  • Human connection

Whatever reminds you that you are still alive beneath the chaos.

Today’s “Friday Frequency Flip” is a beautiful piece by Elke Neher called “I Am My Highest Potential – Raise Your Vibration.”

Elke writes:

“This recording will help you to raise your vibration and step into the expression of your highest potential.”

She continues by reminding listeners that when we reconnect to ourselves internally, we stop living entirely through the pressure, expectations, and chaos of the outside world.

And maybe that’s part of the real battle right now.  Not just surviving physically, but protecting the soul from becoming emotionally numb, hopeless, bitter, or spiritually exhausted.

The world may sometimes feel cold and uncaring, but every act of kindness, compassion, encouragement, honesty, or love still matters. Energy spreads. So does calm, courage, and goodness.

And the more people who choose not to sink into hatred and despair, the more that energy quietly ripples outward into the lives of others.

Take care of yourself this weekend. Protect your mind and protect your energy.

And remember that becoming the highest version of yourself may be one of the most powerful forms of resistance left.


More articles you may enjoy:

Humming: The Sound That Tells Your Nervous System You Are Safe



Thursday, May 14, 2026

The New World Order Isn’t Hiding Anymore

 

Julie Telgenhoff

There’s a strange feeling surrounding the latest Beijing summit that has little to do with tariffs, trade deficits, or even geopolitics itself.

At first glance, the headlines looked routine enough: another high-level U.S. China meeting, another carefully staged diplomatic performance, another flood of business executives accompanying political power onto the global stage.

But the deeper you look at the corporate roster surrounding this particular summit, the harder it becomes to dismiss the possibility that something far larger is taking shape beneath the surface.

For years, the public has been told the future would be shaped by competing nation-states. America versus China. East versus West. Democracy versus authoritarianism. Yet the architecture forming around this summit tells a very different story.... one where the real power may no longer revolve around governments at all, but around the infrastructure layers that increasingly govern modern civilization itself.

Look closely at who appeared around this meeting.

Nvidia’s Jensen Huang.
Elon Musk.
BlackRock’s Larry Fink.
Blackstone’s Stephen Schwarzman.
Executives from Visa, Mastercard, Citi, Meta, Apple, Qualcomm, Boeing, GE Aerospace, and Illumina.

Individually, these companies dominate sectors. Together, they resemble a systems blueprint.

AI.
Digital identity.
Biometric systems.
Asset tokenization.
Cashless payment rails.
Behavioral prediction.
Algorithmic moderation.
Surveillance architecture.
Centralized compute power.

To understand why this matters, you have to compare this summit to the U.S. China meetings that came before it.

What made this Beijing summit feel different wasn’t simply the presence of wealthy executives accompanying a U.S. president to China. That has happened before. Presidents have always traveled with business leaders hoping to secure deals, expand markets, or gain leverage against foreign competitors. But when you compare the delegations of the past to the corporate architecture surrounding this particular summit, something changes dramatically.

The Obama-era meetings with China in 2015 were dominated by media, entertainment, and consumer technology influence. Executives from Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, Disney, and Netflix wanted access to China’s massive population and growing middle class. They were still operating under the assumption that nation-states held the real power. The corporations were petitioners attempting to negotiate access into sovereign territory.

The 2017 Trump delegation reflected an entirely different phase. That summit revolved around industrial trade and physical commodities. LNG projects, soybeans, Caterpillar machinery, manufacturing, shipping, and energy infrastructure dominated the discussions. It was old-world economics: factories, exports, agriculture, and industrial leverage.

This latest summit no longer resembles either model.

The industrial giants have largely been replaced by the architects of digital infrastructure itself. The companies surrounding this meeting collectively represent artificial intelligence, biometric identity systems, digital payment rails, asset tokenization, global communications, behavioral tracking, genomic sequencing, aerospace logistics, and algorithmic compute power. Taken separately, each corporation appears understandable within its own industry. Taken together, they form something far more unsettling: the exact infrastructure required to build a programmable civilization.

Visa, Mastercard, and Citi represent the transaction rails. BlackRock and Blackstone increasingly dominate the movement toward tokenized assets and digitally managed ownership systems. Apple, Meta, and Qualcomm sit atop the devices and communication layers used by billions of people daily. Nvidia controls the AI hardware necessary to process civilization-scale behavioral data in real time, while Elon Musk’s expanding ecosystem of AI, satellites, robotics, and neural technologies increasingly functions like a parallel technological state operating above national boundaries.

Even the strange last-minute addition of Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang during the Alaska stopover carried symbolic weight. Delegations of this magnitude are usually coordinated months in advance through layers of diplomatic protocol. Yet the most important figure in global AI compute infrastructure was suddenly integrated directly into the center of the summit. Whether coincidence or not, it visually reinforced what many people are beginning to sense: the real global power structure may no longer revolve around elected governments alone, but around the technological and financial systems that modern civilization itself depends upon.

For years, people dismissed warnings about programmable money, digital identity systems, algorithmic social scoring, and centralized surveillance as paranoid fantasy. Yet one by one, the individual components have emerged openly into public view. Digital wallets. Biometric verification. AI-driven moderation systems. Cashless payment ecosystems. Real-time transaction monitoring. Asset tokenization. Predictive behavioral algorithms. Central bank digital currency discussions. None of these ideas are theoretical anymore. The infrastructure is already being built in plain sight.

And no nation on Earth has become more associated with that model than China.

China has effectively become the global prototype for a fully integrated digital society. One where financial access, surveillance systems, digital identity, behavioral monitoring, facial recognition, and state oversight increasingly merge into a unified structure. To critics of this trajectory, China represents the testing ground for the future of programmable governance itself.

That is what makes this summit feel historically different.

This was not simply a gathering of industrialists looking to move products across borders. It was a convergence of the very sectors required to finalize a globally interoperable system capable of tracking identity, controlling transactions, monitoring behavior, and integrating artificial intelligence directly into the management of society itself.

The deeper question is no longer whether the technological capability exists. It clearly does.

The question is why the exact corporations controlling the infrastructure for AI computation, digital payments, asset tokenization, communications, surveillance, and biometric data are suddenly converging around the same geopolitical axis at the same moment in history. And why that convergence appears to be happening around the one nation already serving as the world’s most visible model for digital currency integration and social credit governance.

Perhaps that is the real story hidden beneath the headlines about trade deals and diplomacy.

Not the creation of separate competing systems between East and West, but the synchronization of them.

The Presidency for Sale? How Politics, Branding, and Consumer Culture Became Normal

Julie Telgenhoff

For most of modern American history, presidents were expected to create distance between political power and personal profit. Wealthy presidents existed. Connected presidents existed. Presidents who earned fortunes after leaving office certainly existed. But the idea of an actively monetized consumer brand operating alongside a presidency was largely considered unacceptable territory.

That boundary appears to have changed.

What first caught my attention was not politics itself, but the growing realization that the Trump name had evolved into something far beyond a political campaign. Watches. Sneakers. Bibles. Gold-colored collectibles. Cryptocurrency ventures. Licensing deals. A reported Trump-branded phone launch taking deposits from supporters before manufacturing details became increasingly unclear. The scale of commercialization surrounding a sitting or returning president no longer resembled traditional politics. It resembled a corporate ecosystem.

And unlike many critics who approach this issue from a purely partisan lens, I do not view corruption as belonging exclusively to the left or the right. Political hypocrisy exists everywhere. Congressional stock trading, lobbying influence, revolving-door corporate appointments, and post-office enrichment have become normalized across Washington. But what makes this moment historically different is the openness of the monetization itself.

Donald Trump did not follow the modern presidential norm of creating broad separation between personal business interests and the office itself. While previous presidents typically moved assets into diversified holdings, management structures, or blind-trust-style arrangements designed to reduce conflict concerns, Trump retained ownership of a massive commercial empire tied directly to his public identity.

Legally, this enters a strange gray zone.

Ordinary federal executive employees are prohibited from participating in government matters that affect their personal financial interests under federal conflict-of-interest statutes. But Congress explicitly exempted the president and vice president from those laws decades ago out of concern that forcing a commander-in-chief to recuse themselves from major economic decisions could create constitutional chaos.

That exemption created a loophole unlike anything most Americans realize exists.

As a result, a president can legally maintain ownership of private corporations while serving in office without automatically violating standard federal ethics statutes.

But that does not end the debate.

The deeper constitutional battle centers around the Emoluments Clauses — anti-corruption provisions written directly into the Constitution itself. These clauses prohibit presidents from accepting certain financial benefits from foreign governments or additional domestic governmental compensation outside their official salary.

Critics argue that foreign licensing agreements, international partnerships, luxury developments connected to foreign interests, and even taxpayer spending at Trump-owned properties all raise serious constitutional questions. Supporters counter that many accusations are politically motivated and that no court has definitively established clear enforcement boundaries.

That legal uncertainty is important.

Much of the controversy surrounding Trump’s business empire exists in territory that is politically explosive but constitutionally unresolved. During Trump’s first term, multiple lawsuits stalled because courts ruled that plaintiffs often lacked legal standing — meaning they could not prove direct enough harm to sue successfully.

So why has there not been massive public outrage?

The answer likely reflects larger cultural changes taking place across America itself.

First, the media environment is now deeply fragmented. Different audiences consume entirely different realities. Some conservative outlets place little emphasis on Trump’s commercial ventures, while other national outlets cover them extensively. Many Americans simply never encounter detailed reporting on the scale of the monetization.

Second, Trump’s supporters often interpret the business activity differently than his critics do. His political identity was built around the image of a wealthy businessman long before he entered politics. To many supporters, selling products, licensing his name, or launching new ventures is not viewed as corruption but as evidence that he operates outside traditional Washington norms.

For some, buying Trump-branded merchandise feels less like ordinary retail and more like direct participation in a political movement.

Third, the public has developed what could be called ethical fatigue. After years of nonstop controversy, investigations, lawsuits, and media saturation, many Americans have simply become desensitized. What once would have triggered national shock now blends into the constant noise cycle of modern politics.

And finally, many voters have grown deeply cynical about political ethics in general. They look at congressional stock trading, billion-dollar lobbying networks, lucrative speaking tours, insider influence, and post-office wealth accumulation and conclude that the entire system already operates through financial self-interest. Against that backdrop, Trump’s open commercialism can appear to some as merely more transparent than the quieter enrichment mechanisms that already existed.

That may be the most important shift of all.

The real story may not be Donald Trump alone, but what his rise reveals about America itself.

Politics, celebrity culture, branding, entertainment, financial speculation, social media identity, and consumer tribalism have now fused together into one enormous ecosystem. The old lines separating governance from marketing no longer appear as clear as they once did.

Whether people see that transformation as dangerous, inevitable, corrupt, or simply modern politics evolving may ultimately depend less on facts and more on which version of America they believe still exists.

Perhaps the deeper issue is not any single politician, party, or scandal, but what the public has gradually become willing to normalize.

What once would have triggered widespread discomfort — the merging of politics with celebrity branding, monetized political identity, constant outrage cycles, inflammatory rhetoric, and consumer-style loyalty movements — is now absorbed into the daily background noise of American life.

Former Soviet defector Yuri Bezmenov once warned that societies do not collapse only through invasion or war, but through long-term cultural demoralization: a gradual erosion of shared values, ethical standards, and the ability to recognize when something unhealthy has become normal.

Whether one agrees with his broader theories or not, the question still lingers:

At what point does a culture stop reacting because it has simply adapted to the spectacle?

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The Quiet Disappearance Behind the Border Crisis

               Gitmo was the headline. The flights were the real story.

by Julie Telgenhoff
We live in an era of loud announcements and quiet disappearances. When the federal government announced an executive order to scale up the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base to a full target capacity of 30,000 beds for migrant populations, it dominated the news cycle. The public was sold a centralized, long-term holding site.
Then came the quiet retraction. 
CBS News reported that Guantánamo held only six immigration detainees on May 11, 2026, even though 832 detainees had been transferred there on more than 100 flights over the past year. Internal logs revealed that over 522 military personnel are guarding an almost empty facility, costing taxpayers over $73 million.

This leaves a glaring, uncomfortable question that the mainstream media quickly abandoned to focus on geopolitical conflicts and health crises: If the infrastructure is empty, where did the people go?

The truth is found by looking away from the political theater and looking directly at the sky. The immigration system did not stop moving people; it simply decentralized. Authorities shifted from a highly visible central hub to a fragmented, outsourced network of "ghost flights" designed to move human beings across a grid of privatized mainland warehouses and remote international jurisdictions.

Internal federal data and recent congressional oversight show that the vast majority of migrants entering the deportation pipeline are routed into mainland U.S. immigration facilities or transferred to third-party countries under explicit bilateral agreements.

Some are being moved through U.S. detention networks, including hubs tied to Louisiana and other ICE facilities. The other group is being sent to countries that are not their home country. The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants’ tracker says that, as of May 5, 2026, over 17,500 third-country nationals had been sent to at least 21 countries, including El Salvador, Ghana, Eswatini, Rwanda, South Sudan, Uganda, Panama, Costa Rica, and others.

The Guardian and Reuters reports have exposed massive U.S. cash transfers to foreign governments, including a $6 million payment to El Salvador and over $32 million distributed to nations like Rwanda, Eswatini, and Palau to accept deported non-citizens. The US government has spent more than $1 million per person to deport some migrants to countries they have no connection to

Reports from The Guardian and Reuters have exposed massive U.S. cash transfers to foreign governments, including a $6 million payment to El Salvador and over $32 million distributed to nations like Rwanda, Eswatini, and Palau to accept deported non-citizens. But the sheer financial waste is what truly exposes the corruption of this logistics operation: a Senate investigation revealed that the U.S. government paid Rwanda a staggering $7.5 million upfront, plus over $600,000 in flight costs, to accept a grand total of just seven people. That amounts to over $1.1 million of taxpayer money spent to treat each individual like a premium, high-priced piece of freight. 
Instead of this funding being used to provide humane care, these multi-million dollar payouts ensure that foreign regimes handle the dirty work of total legal isolation.
This money doesn't buy these people a better life; it buys an absolute black hole where they are stripped of the constitutional protections they would have on U.S. soil. 
Meanwhile, on the domestic front, organizations like Freedom for Immigrants have exposed how the system treats people as cargo within our own borders—using "circular transfers" to shuffle detainees across a grid of privatized mainland jails where they are subjected to systemic labor exploitation just to keep the facilities running.
By treating human beings as cargo—whether offshoring them to foreign dictatorships or hiding them in deep mainland private prisons—the system creates a deliberate wall of secrecy. When an individual is rapidly transferred between unpublicized regional airstrips, they effectively vanish from standard online detainee locators. Families cannot find them. Civil rights attorneys cannot serve them.

The system relies entirely on public exhaustion. It counts on the fact that a story will break, the public will get outraged, and then life will get busy, a new crisis will hit, and everyone will move on.

But you do not need to be a data scientist or an amateur radar analyst to expose this. A dedicated network of independent researchers, legal advocacy groups, and international watchdogs are already doing the heavy lifting—tracking the planes, cataloging the data, and helping families find their loved ones.


The Watchmen: Who is Tracking the Fleet?
If you want to look past the official press releases and follow the real-time movement of the modern detention pipeline, these are the essential organizations and databases keeping the light on.
The Core Flight Monitors & Data Analysts
  • The ICE Flight Monitor (Human Rights First): Pioneered by independent advocate Tom Cartwright, this project was officially absorbed by the research team at Human Rights First. They publish comprehensive, highly detailed data logs mapping every single domestic and international deportation flight—including the multi-million dollar military charters routed through Guantanamo Bay.
  • Witness at the Border: This activist collective acts as a public, chronological archive for flight data. They specialize in monitoring flight paths and identifying the specific private charter airlines (such as GlobalX and iAero) contracted by the government to quietly move people away from the border under the radar.
The Ground-Level Airport Monitors
  • Nick Benson & the MN50501 Activist Group: Professional aviation data analytics enthusiast Nick Benso is the perfect example of citizen-led tarmac tracking. Operating out of the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP) during sweeping federal enforcement campaigns, Benson and his fellow observers physically stake out the airport gates. They manually count the exact number of shackled detainees boarded onto each federally chartered aircraft. Because the government uses privacy lists to mask these charter operations from standard tracking platforms, Benson's ground tracking provides the public with an indispensable, independent tally of daily deportation counts. Here is the Facebook page to follow. 
  • The Brownsville Observation Team: Activists organized under the Witness at the Border Group have maintained physical watch points at small regional gateways like the Brownsville South Padre Island International Airport (KBRO). They show up before dawn with telephoto lenses to log tail numbers and document the treatment of individuals as they are loaded from buses onto charter flights. Their field reports highlight the exact mechanics of the pipeline—tracking everything from the laying out of chains to the processing of personal possessions. 
The Community Transit Mapping Networks
  • The Tuscon Migra Map Framework: For real-time community transit tracking, local grassroots coalitions have organized decentralized networks modeled on the Tucson Migra Map concept. These initiatives crowdsource data directly from community members who flag the movement of white transport buses and ICE staging points on the ground, plotting them onto localized maps to warn communities and document logistical flows
Tracking the Missing & Supporting Families
  • The Missing Migrants Project (IOM): Run globally by the International Organization for Migration, the Missing Migrants Project Database actively tracks individuals who disappear or perish along international transit routes. They provide targeted infographics, public research, and direct tracing resources for families searching for lost relatives.
  • National Immigration Law Center (NILC): When individuals disappear into the "ICE black hole," organizations like NILC publish emergency toolkits and legal guides to help families locate their relatives. They bridge the gap between families and local advocacy groups who cross-reference inmate locators with known flight manifest timelines.
Accountability does not happen because a television anchor reads a script; it happens when regular people refuse to look away when the news cycle changes. By supporting, sharing, and utilizing the data compiled by these independent watchdogs, we ensure that the people moving through these skies are never completely invisible.