>
Pfizer's Tick Vaccine EXPOSED, Iran War Escalates & Trump's Greatest Reset | Sunday w/ Seth
"She's COOKED!" - AZ Governor Katie Hobbs Hit with THIRD Investigation as Pressure EXP
Carney to force young Canadians to stay in Canada?
October 7th Foresight, Netanyahu's Funding of Hamas, and the Settlers Murdering Palestinians
The Most Dangerous Race on Earth Isn't Nuclear - It's Quantum.
This Plasma Stove Cooks Hotter Than The Sun
Energy storage breakthrough traps sunlight in a molecule
Steel rebar may have met its match – in the form of wavy plastic
Video: Semicircular wings give Cyclone VTOL a different kind of lift
After 20 Years, Wave Energy Finally Works
FCC Set To "Supercharge" Starlink Space Internet With "Seven-Fold More Capacity"
'World's First' Humanoid Robot For Real Household Chores Launched With 16-Hour Battery
XAI Training 10 Trillion Parameter Model – Likely Out in Mid 2026

Ruler of the United States, Donald Trump, has proposed a $1.5 trillion "defense" budget in order to fund the war with Iran. On Friday, the ruler also requested a 10% cut in non-defense spending for the 2027 fiscal year.
This proposal includes a massive $500 billion increase in the military budget, as the U.S. continues its war against Iran.
The U.S. Department Of War Seeks "Killer AI"
This huge proposed surge in defense spending to $1.5 trillion, up from about $1 trillion in 2026, includes a 5% to 7% pay raise for military personnel at a time when thousands of servicemembers are actively deployed, according to a report by Reuters.
Reuters further reported that the White House is expected to employ a strategy similar to the one used to pass the 2026 budget, seeking a base National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) supplemented by a separate, large spending bill. Republican leaders in Congress have already begun preliminary work on the potential supplemental spending legislation required to reach the $1.5 trillion figure, according to congressional sources. The budget request's unveiling coincides with reported U.S. military preparations for potential ground operations against Iranian islands and ports, operations that analysts warn could lead to significant American casualties.
While the 2026 military budget marked the first to officially exceed $1 trillion, experts note that the true annual cost of U.S. national security has exceeded that threshold for many years.