The big tech magnates protected by talented armed mercenaries and thriving at the whim of oblivious end-users in the Bay Area and Seattle have an identity issue and conflict of interest when it comes to peace of mind and personal security.
The mislabeled “leadership” or the dictators of the technology marketplace, a scathing indictment describing the billionaires and lesser billionaires of the software and hardware trillion-dollar industry, a cadre of inflated egos benign to the accountability demanded by commonsense and transparency, especially in reference to accessing limitless legal funds have selected their next victim outside of the rancid and dated love/hate relationship of Mike Pence. Gun smithers simply modernizing their trade are now the subject of viral torture and cancellation techniques spawned by ceaseless propaganda absent of remorse or substantiation.
The project to disarm Americans from the core, without fear of expedient repercussions from patriots, continues to plague the tenuous dynamic illustrating a separation of innovation and exploitation, as citizens struggle to distinguish the difference between demagogues and entrepreneurs.
The unrelenting and toxic campaign against the Second Amendment is morphing into uncharted territory, as decade-long threats through internal memos and manifestos on the e-campuses of Google, F***book, and Microsoft are pursuing aggressive efforts to inflict gun control through furtive and subversive channels. This unsettling reality is lowlighted by a collaboration between Silicon Valley and higher education to track individuals manufacturing components of firearms through 3-D printing technology, and indicates that the radicalized anti-gun lobby within the nation will stop at nothing to influence and dictate policy that hinders fundamental rights.
In the style of an ill-tempered homeowners’ association from hell, the mentality of unleashing outlandish behavior modification techniques upon neighbors is a trendy response by those who are indifferent to reason and could very well be the control group for a study mapping the mentality and contrails of conspiracy theorists.
According to Voxcellmatters.com, a tech watchdog website, a private business, 3DprinterOS, has partnered with the labs at Montclaire State University to code an algorithm that identifies Americans using 3D printers in the comfort of their own homes or businesses to build workable parts for firearms. Electronic stalking is the new flavor of the month as the Chinese have unofficially passed the baton of a burgeoning police state.
Simply producing a piece of hardware via a digital device connected online apparently lacks any level of discretion, and could be recorded within the database hosted by the two parties. Ironically, how the hijacked data is extrapolated by 3DprinterOS and Montclaire State is a little/big dirty secret. Attorneys on both sides of the ideological spectrum are on full salivation watch, as the interpretation of the First and Second Amendments will withstand another arduous test from extremists.
While the goal of the partnership between 3DprinterOS and Montclaire State is not as nefarious as global financial institutions, including major credit companies and banks following protocol to flag consumers purchasing guns and ammunition and selling to the highest bidder, the venture in a concerted attempt to regulate privately through shame and unofficial methods threatens the foreseeable future of basic rights and the trajectory for-profit organizations engaging in furthering self-defense technology.
As privacy hangs in the balance for law-abiding citizens obtrusively crowded by the expanse and the borders of anti-gun blue states, the legacy process of constructing firearms is fast becoming a victim of weaponized efforts by the digital realm to ultimately eliminate the gun marketplace at a foundational level. While overengineering is a viable culprit for simple solutions perverted and undermined by the unsubstantiated and the unproven leaves a wealth of data that could be a detriment to citizens through the will of governmental alphabet agencies illegally anointed by liberal elected officials to suppress Constitutional rights.
A certain percentage of researchers now claim that artificial intelligence can predict criminal acts apparently derived from evaluating a multitude of variables, a horrific narrative out of Phillip K. Dick’s futuristic dystopian novel “Minority Report”. The collaboration between 3DprinterOS and Montclaire State only perpetuates this potential nightmare, as the unethical sharing of information of 3-D printed gun parts through the appetites of a questionable moral compass for the sole purpose of outing a “detractor”, is a microcosm of a society based on groupthink and not ingenuity.