04/27/2026
Indiana Is Selling Our Future to the Surveillance Economy
While working people across Northwest Indiana are struggling with rising rent, stagnant wages, and disappearing stable jobs, our political leadership is busy cutting deals behind closed doors transforming our state into a hub for defense tech, data extraction, and surveillance infrastructure.
This isn’t abstract. It’s a direction. And it mirrors the worldview pushed by companies like Palantir Technologies and its CEO Alex Karp, a worldview where technology doesn’t serve the public, but instead strengthens state power, surveillance, and military priorities.
Let’s be clear about what’s happening.
Indiana politicians, under the banner of “economic development” are aggressively courting defense contractors, AI firms, and foreign-linked venture capital tied to security industries. They’re reshaping our universities, shifting programs away from broad public education and toward narrow pipelines feeding drone engineering, data analytics, and military logistics.
They call it innovation. But innovation for who?
Not for the warehouse worker in Gary.Not for the truck driver watching fuel and food costs eat into their paycheck.Not for the young person now priced out of college unless they enter a defense-linked technical track.
Instead of investing in housing, healthcare, or community infrastructure, the state is pouring resources into data centers and high-tech corridors designed to serve corporate and military clients. These facilities don’t employ thousands, they automate, consolidate, and extract. They generate profit, not stability.
And here’s the contradiction they don’t want you to see:
The same politicians who stir up outrage about migrants and working people crossing borders are the first to roll out the red carpet for foreign investors and defense linked capital. Millions in deals, exclusive meetings with foreign officials, and backroom agreements, while everyday people are told to tighten their belts.
So what does this “Palantir-style” model actually mean for us?
It means:
More surveillance, not more security for working people
More data extraction, not more economic opportunity
More alignment with military and geopolitical agendas, not local needs
This is a future where your labor is undervalued, your data is commodified, and your community is reshaped to serve interests far removed from your daily life.
Northwest Indiana doesn’t need to become a testing ground for surveillance capitalism or a satellite for defense tech expansion.
We need:
Investment in jobs that actually sustain families
Education that empowers people… not funnels them into militarized industries
Transparency in deals being made in our name
Accountability for politicians who prioritize corporate and geopolitical interests over their own constituents
The question isn’t whether this transformation is happening.
It is.
The real question is whether we’re going to accept a future built for data centers, defense contracts, and political elites, or fight for one built for the people who actually live and work here.
Whose Indiana is this going to be?