The morning sun is hitting the peaks of the Eiger just right today. From the terrace of my chalet, the world looks perfectly still, almost silent. I am sitting here in my favorite purple suit, adjusted just so, with my golden shoes catching the light as I sip a double espresso. It is a moment of pure luxury sovereignty, the kind of peace I have worked my entire life to cultivate. But as I open my terminal to check the latest market movements, the serenity of the Swiss Alps feels increasingly disconnected from the chaotic data streams pouring in from across the Atlantic.
We are living through a strange intersection of technological marvels and systemic neglect. If you have been following my recent notes, specifically The May Velocity: Real Madrid, Cerebras Stock, and the Pursuit of Luxury Sovereignty, you know that the financial world is currently obsessed with one name: Cerebras. Their stock is not just climbing; it is practically vertical. We are seeing a massive influx of capital into specialized AI hardware, much of it backed by government incentives and subsidies designed to win the global compute race. Yet, as I look closer at how this processing power is being deployed, a troubling pattern emerges. We are subsidizing the chips, but we are choosing to ignore the crises where that intelligence is needed most.
The Compute Gap and the Hantavirus Crisis
While the markets toast to the success of Cerebras and their massive wafer-scale engines, our neighbors in the north are facing a biological reality that should be the top priority for any advanced civilization. The current hantavirus outbreak Canada is navigating has become a significant concern, particularly as it spreads through rural corridors. This is not just a health issue; it is a data issue. To contain a virus with such high mortality rates, we need massive amounts of real-time processing power to model transmission vectors, analyze environmental triggers, and sequence variants as they emerge in remote areas.
I was reflecting on this while rereading The Golden Dome and the Hantavirus Horizon: Navigating the Geopolitics of 2026. The infrastructure in place, particularly through entities like SaskPower, is under immense strain. SaskPower is trying to manage the energy demands of a shifting climate while also dealing with the logistics of a public health emergency. You would think that the billions being funneled into AI hardware subsidies would translate into a surplus of compute power for Canadian health authorities. Instead, they are left with legacy systems while the real “brain power” of the continent is being pointed elsewhere.
Where the Processing Power Really Goes
So, if the world’s most powerful AI chips are not being used to stop a hantavirus outbreak, where are they? The answer is as chilling as the wind off the glaciers. A massive portion of the new compute capacity is being diverted to automate the logistics of the FBI’s mass deportation sweep. This is the new reality of 2026. We are using the most sophisticated technology ever created by human hands to manage the identification, tracking, and movement of millions of people.
The sheer scale of the FBI deportation effort requires a level of logistics that makes Amazon look like a corner shop. They are using AI to predict movement patterns, cross-reference biometric data, and optimize transport routes. It is a masterclass in efficiency, but it raises a profound ethical question. Why are we subsidizing the explosive growth of Cerebras AI hardware for the purpose of bureaucratic removal, while the processing power needed to save lives in a viral outbreak is deemed a secondary concern? It seems our priorities have shifted from preserving life to managing populations.
I touched on this theme of misplaced focus in my previous article, Salmonella Recalls and Cruise Ship Hantavirus: The Only Real Events Left in 2026. We are witnessing a world where the government’s primary function has become the management of “friction” rather than the resolution of fundamental threats. The “humanity” in our systems is being replaced by a cold, automated logic that values the security of a border over the security of a respiratory system.
Building Your Own Fortress of Sovereignty
In times like these, the importance of financial freedom and personal sovereignty cannot be overstated. When the state chooses to prioritize deportation logistics over public health, you realize that you are your own last line of defense. This is why I have always advocated for building systems that you control. Whether you are managing an international investment portfolio or a small boutique brand, you need tools that offer independence from these volatile macro-shifts.
One of the most effective ways to maintain that control is by using Systeme.io to automate your own professional life. If the FBI can use AI to automate their logistics, you can certainly use Systeme.io to automate your marketing, sales, and customer engagement. It is about creating a self-sustaining ecosystem that thrives regardless of whether the government is focused on hantavirus or deportations. In the Swiss Alps, we value the fortress, and in the digital world, your business infrastructure is your fortress.
The Cerebras Stock Paradox
Cerebras stock remains a fascinating play for any serious investor. The technology is undeniably superior to traditional GPU clusters for specific deep learning tasks. However, as an investor, you must look beyond the balance sheet. We are seeing a “wartime” subsidization of tech. The government wants these chips because they are essential for the next generation of surveillance and logistics. This creates a high floor for the stock price, but it also ties the company’s fate to the political whims of the FBI and the Department of Justice.
Is this the kind of growth we want to fuel? As I look out at the snow-capped peaks, wearing my golden shoes and feeling the luxury of this moment, I can’t help but wonder if we are losing the “soul” of our innovation. We are building the most powerful brains in history, and we are teaching them how to be more efficient at exclusion. We are letting SaskPower and the Canadian health officials struggle with a viral horizon while the silicon is humming in a basement in D.C., calculating the fastest way to move people across a line.
The pursuit of luxury sovereignty is not just about having a nice suit or a home in the mountains. It is about the freedom to choose where your energy and your attention go. It is about refusing to be a mere data point in someone else’s logistics model. We must ask ourselves why our “intelligence” is being used to divide rather than to heal.
The Path Forward
We are at a crossroads in 2026. The velocity of change is staggering, but the direction of that change is still within our control, at least on an individual level. You can choose to be distracted by the latest “Royal Pop” hype, or you can look at the underlying structures of power and processing. The hantavirus is a physical threat, but the diversion of compute power is a structural one.
Take the time to audit your own dependencies. Are you relying on systems that prioritize your well-being, or are you just fodder for the next automated sweep? Use the tools available to you, stay informed, and never let the allure of a rising stock price blind you to the reality of how that technology is being used in the world.
Why do we accept a world where silicon is cheaper than human breath? If we can calculate the logistics of a million deportations in seconds, why are we still guessing about the spread of a virus in Saskatchewan?
Stay focused, stay sovereign, and as always, stay luxurious.
If we have reached the point where AI is more interested in borders than biology, what does that say about our future? Are we building a world of automated order at the expense of our own survival?
I wish you all a productive and insightful week ahead. Remember to take care of your own business and your own health, because the systems above us have other priorities. Catch you on the social networks!