Jiang argues there is no real AI competition among states because AI is fundamentally a mechanism of maximum social control, so Britain, Canada, China, and the United States advance similar surveillance agendas rather than genuinely competing.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Intelligence agencies
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...it's something that people don't really appreciate about geopolitics where these intelligence agencies massad fsb mss cia they're actually friends with"
Showing 27 evidence items
No matching evidence on this topic page.
Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...it's something that people don't really appreciate about geopolitics where these intelligence agencies massad fsb mss cia they're actually friends with"
Key Notes
He says intelligence agencies such as Mossad, FSB, MSS, and CIA function less like true rivals than like parasitic institutions that cooperate by citing each other as threats in order to absorb more money and power.
Jiang argues that the larger Canada-China agreement is already in place, so intelligence agencies no longer meaningfully control the overall strategic direction.
Jiang says intelligence bureaucracies routinely invent or inflate threats in order to justify their existence.
Power consolidates by interlocking intelligence agencies such as Mossad, CIA, and MI6 with secret societies and criminal organizations.
Jiang defines empire not just as a state but as a nexus of organized crime, civil society, intelligence agencies, and concentrated evil power, and argues that imperial decline is producing the wars now visible around the world.
Jiang says attention is power and therefore expects intelligence agencies to monitor him as his reach grows, because controlling his voice would help preserve obedient public perception.
Timestamped Evidence
"...it's something that people don't really appreciate about geopolitics where these intelligence agencies massad fsb mss cia they're actually friends with"
"...have to defend against them right so this nation so the intelligence agencies militaries don't compete against each other they work with each other..."
"...I think there's still bad blood between these two sides. The intelligence agencies in Canada and the intelligence agencies in China have about bad..."
"Professor Zhang, what do you think the reality is there, and what is motivating these incessant So when I was younger, I read a..."
"...consolidates and coalesces what I mean by that is that these intelligence agencies Mossad CIA mi6 um they're all you know they're all interlocked..."
"So an empire is a nexus of organized crime, civil societies, intelligence agencies, the most evil, powerful people in the world. So now that..."
"...i have and i understand that eventually i'll be monitored by intelligence agencies because as you say attention is power um and they need..."
"...cults? I would be surprised. I mean, if you were an intelligence agency, what's the best way to exert control overseas?"
"...g asked is it possible kenneth is being influenced by foreign intelligence agencies specifically those or people who are involved in the game or..."
"...But I think I don't think that this is promoted by intelligence agencies. But this is what we could point out and look at..."
"...the first attack vector is mossad mossad is the most powerful intelligence agency in the world in that it is able to infiltrate and..."
"...Then you have Mossad. And so Mossad is the most effective intelligence agency in the world. And what they're very good at doing is..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
The stream begins as a thank-you and career update, but its real pressure is larger: leave China, refuse the influencer trap, build schools, democratize creativity, and prepare communities for a world Jiang thinks is...
This first founding-members stream matters less as a news recap than as a method demonstration.
The interview sounds scattered at first, but its logic is consistent.
Jiang reframes the Iran-Israel-U.S.-Russia conflict as a long-horizon contest in worldview and political systems, where structural elites, narrative control, and religious grammar shape strategy more than leaders changing seats.
Jiang treats the Middle East conflict and global monetary system as parts of one strategic architecture: empire, geography, and control of energy channels.
Jiang frames the Iran war as a structural problem: empires that enter forceful conflicts without strategic reserve burn out, and the current administration is trying to steer around collapse, domestic optics, and a volatile...
The interview starts with a ceasefire question and ends in a resource apocalypse.
Related Topics
How To Use And Cite This Page
This topic page is a discovery surface. For generated synthesis, cite the human-readable source reading or lens page. For Jiang-spoken claims, cite the transcript segment, source ref, and YouTube timestamp. Raw text and Markdown mirrors are fallback surfaces for tools that cannot read this HTML page.