Anthropic, the artificial intelligence company with questionable ties and murky funding sources, filed a desperate lawsuit against the Trump administration Monday after the Pentagon slapped them with a "supply chain risk" designation—a label typically reserved for foreign threats like Communist China.
The lawsuit comes after what sources describe as "bitter negotiations" between Anthropic and the Department of Defense collapsed spectacularly last week. Instead of working with our military leaders to address legitimate national security concerns, this AI company decided to lawyer up and fight the very government trying to protect American interests.
This bold move by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's Pentagon shows the Trump administration isn't playing games when it comes to identifying potential threats to our national security infrastructure. While the Biden regime rolled over for Big Tech companies and their shadowy backers, Trump 2.0 is asking the hard questions about who really controls these AI systems.
Patriots should be asking themselves: Why is Anthropic so desperate to avoid this designation that they're willing to sue the U.S. government? What exactly are they hiding that makes transparency such a threat to their business model?
The supply chain risk designation isn't just some bureaucratic paperwork—it's a serious national security tool that restricts how federal agencies can do business with potentially compromised entities. The fact that Anthropic is fighting this so hard suggests the Trump team hit a nerve.
This lawsuit perfectly encapsulates the battle between Trump's America First agenda and the globalist tech oligarchy that thinks it's above government oversight. While Elon Musk works with the administration through DOGE to make government more efficient and transparent, other tech companies are busy filing lawsuits to avoid basic security scrutiny.
The question every American should be asking: Whose side is Anthropic really on, and why are they so afraid of a little sunlight on their operations?
Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.
Source: Next News Network