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The Propeller – God may be watching, but so is the Government – 6-22-2025

Tech: Don’t Plan Your Trip with Google

Planning a trip? DON’T START WITH GOOGLEI Let Microsoft Copilot or ChatGPT do all the work. Flights. Hotels. Budget. Activities. It can plan everything for you. Here are 5 prompts to make Microsoft Copilot or ChatGPT your personal travel agent:

Full Itinerary Builder
Prompt: Plan a 7-day trip to [destination] with a mix of sightseeing, local food spots, hidden gems, and downtime. Include daily activities, transport, and estimated costs.

Budget Travel Planner
Prompt: I have a budget of [$X] and want to visit [destination] for [number] days. Find me the cheapest flight and accommodation options, plus affordable activities.

Solo Travel Safety Guide
Prompt: Give me safety tips, local customs, and cultural dos/don’ts for traveling solo in [destination]. Include neighborhoods to avoid and apps I should download.

Packing Checklist Generator
Prompt: Create a packing list for a [number]-day trip to [destination] during [season]. Include clothing, toiletries, electronics, and travel essentials.

Hidden Gem Hunter
Prompt: List underrated places to visit in [destination] that locals love but tourists often miss. Prioritize nature, food, and authentic experiences.

Life: Human Ingenuity in the Face of Danger

May be an image of 1 person, car, aircraft and text that says 'IN 1985, A MAN SAVED A PLANÉ BY FIXING ציזו LANDING GEAR BY HAND IN A MOVING CAR'


It sounds and looks like something out of an action movie, but it really happened. On March 12, 1985, a small aircraft with a jammed landing gear was saved in mid-flight by a mechanic who stood through the sunroof of a moving car. The daring rescue took place on a runway in St. Augustine, Florida, and remains one of the most unbelievable moments in aviation history.

Pilot Scott Gordon was flying a Piper Turbo Arrow when he realized one side of his landing gear would not deploy. With the risk of a belly-landing threatening both the aircraft and his safety, Gordon radioed down to his team. Instead of preparing for impact, they came up with an outrageous yet brilliant plan. They would fix the landing gear manually, in real time, from the ground.

Mechanic Joe Lippo, with the help of Jim Moser, jumped into an Audi and raced down the runway. As Gordon flew just 10 feet above the ground, Lippo stood up through the sunroof. With steady nerves and precise timing, he reached up and managed to grab the faulty gear. Against all odds, he pulled it free and secured it into place.

The aircraft was then able to land safely, saving the pilot and preserving the plane. News outlets at the time were stunned, and the story quickly became legend in aviation circles. It was a stunning combination of courage, quick thinking, and mechanical know-how.

What makes this story even more remarkable is that no one panicked. Each person involved trusted their skills and stayed focused on the solution. It is a shining example of how teamwork and out-of-the-box thinking can turn a life-threatening emergency into a miraculous success.

The 1985 runway rescue is not just a thrilling tale. It is a reminder of human ingenuity in the face of danger.

Tech: The Church of Big Brother: How the NSA Built a Spy Cathedral in land of the Latter-Day Saints

In a remote patch of desert outside Salt Lake City, the U.S. government built something massive. A facility so vast, it could store the entire internet several times over.  In Utah, not every revelation comes from God, some come from Google logs.

There are no signs. No windows. And almost no public oversight.


This is the story of the Utah Data Center, the NSA’s most secretive and powerful surveillance hub.

After 9/11, surveillance became the beating heart of American intelligence. Data wasn’t just a tool, it was power. But as global communications exploded, the NSA faced a new problem: storage. Billions of emails. Phone calls. Texts. Video feeds. Metadata. They needed a place to keep it all. Their solution was to build a digital fortress in the Utah desert.

Construction began in 2011 in Bluffdale, Utah. Officially called the Intelligence Community Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative Data Center, but everyone just calls it the Utah Data Center. It cost over $1.5 billion. And it spans an area of more than 1 million square feet, with 100,000 square feet dedicated to servers alone. Its energy usage is as much as a that of a small city. It was engineered to hold yottabytes, that’s a trillion terabytes.

Publicly, the NSA said it was about cybersecurity and cyber defense. But insiders knew better. This wasn’t just storage. It was part of a sweeping surveillance architecture designed to ingest and index the digital world, not just foreign threats, but domestic data too. Especially after the Snowden leaks, it became clear: Utah was a key node in the PRISM and XKeyscore programs.

Data flowed in through fiber-optic cables, satellites, and upstream internet providers. Everything from Google searches to Skype calls, bank transactions, private chats, social media posts, and encrypted messages. If the internet touched it, Utah could store it. The facility didn’t just archive, it was a living, breathing analysis machine. Algorithms sifted through patterns. Keywords triggered flags. Profiles were built silently.

One chilling detail: the data stored here doesn’t vanish. Even if you delete your message or wipe your phone, if it passed through monitored infrastructure, a copy could live on, deep in Utah’s racks, humming in the dark. It’s not just what you said. It’s when, where, how, to whom, and why. That metadata builds a map. And maps can be more revealing than messages.

The data center operates under extreme secrecy. Employees are sworn to silence. The facility is protected by biometric gates, multi-layered fences, and classified protocols. It runs 24/7, cooled by massive water systems and powered by backup generators in case of grid failure. There are no public tours. No open records. No cameras allowed near the perimeter.

Critics argue it’s the physical embodiment of mass surveillance. A monument to unchecked power. A place where oversight ends and secrecy begins. The NSA defends it as essential to national security. But what’s stored there and how it’s used, remains one of the most closely guarded secrets in the intelligence world.

In the age of cloud computing, the cloud isn’t just metaphorical. It has servers. It has a power bill. And in Utah, it has walls. The Utah Data Center is the backbone of a surveillance age we’re still coming to understand. It doesn’t need cameras on every street. When you own the data, you own the future.  

God may be watching, but so is the government

Quote of the Week

“The era of artificial intelligence is not coming — it’s here, and we’re already living in its consequences.”
— Tech ethicist Tristan Harris


As AI tools become integrated into nearly every aspect of life — from education and healthcare to warfare and elections — we’re beginning to feel their real-world impact. With the rise of generative AI, misinformation can now be created faster than it can be debunked, deepfakes are challenging truth itself, and entire industries are being reshaped overnight. Just this week, world leaders at the AI Seoul Summit echoed growing calls for global regulation, while major tech firms continued racing ahead with even more powerful models. The quote reminds us that AI isn’t some distant innovation; it’s already transforming society — and demanding our urgent attention.

What are you plans for the 4th of July weekend?

 

This is re-published from the weekly email sent by Leonard Mack entitled The Propeller.  To subscribe, visit https://www.LeonardMack.com/subscribe and read it every Sunday evening.


This intellectual nourishment is intended for informational purposes only. One should not construe anything herein as being legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


My rule is this – I have no advice to give, only experience to share. I have no interest in being a guru or telling people what they should do. Rather, I share my own experience because there is no right or wrong. Your mileage may vary.