Somewhere in the Trump administration’s budget request, between numbers and administrative language, there is the description of a new center. The FBI operates it. It is called the NSPM 7 Joint Mission Center. Ten federal agencies are involved. Its task is to proactively identify people in the United States who could be classified as domestic terrorists. We had already published our research on this on October 7, 2025.
See also our article: In the Shadow of Power - How Trump and Thiel Are Building a Digital System of Control - An Investigative Report
The list of beliefs that can put someone on the radar is written in black and white in the budget request. Anti Americanism. Anti capitalism. Anti Christianity. Support for the overthrow of the US government. Extremism on issues of migration, race, and gender. Hostility toward traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.

The US Department of Justice and the FBI warn in their budget request for 2027 of a growing threat from domestic terrorism. Perpetrators would act from different ideological motives and are further mobilized by political and social developments.
Particularly problematic is the use of social media, specialized websites, and encrypted communication services through which followers are recruited, actions are planned, and violence is propagated. A growing challenge are lone actors who radicalize independently, operate inconspicuously, and have access to weapons. At the same time, there has been a significant increase in politically motivated violence and targeted killings in recent years.
The authorities point to a broad spectrum of extremist positions - from anti American and anti capitalist to migration, race, and gender related ideologies. Based on a presidential directive, a coordinated national strategy has been built to combine investigations, prosecutions, and the dismantling of such networks. A new interagency center is intended to help identify and combat domestic terrorism at an early stage.
These are not beliefs that grow in the dark. This is the political conviction of a significant part of the American population.
The center goes back to National Security Presidential Memorandum 7, signed in September of last year. As a trigger, the budget request cites the killing of the conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, which according to its own account prompted the formulation of this directive. FBI Director Kash Patel had told Congress after Kirk’s death that he was overseeing a 300 percent increase in investigations into domestic terrorism. He announced that he would investigate every single user of the Discord channels that the accused perpetrator Tyler Robinson is said to have used. Leaked screenshots of these channels showed that people there were talking about gaming, not politics. Patel investigated anyway. He later concluded that there was no evidence of accomplices or foreign involvement. By that time, theories about possible Israeli involvement in Kirk’s death had already spread widely on social media. Joe Kent, until his resignation last month Trump’s head of the National Counterterrorism Center, had tried to pursue these theories within the government and then repeated them publicly.

According to its own description, the new center integrates intelligence, operational support, and financial analysis to combat these threats. Social media is described in the budget request as a breeding ground for domestic terrorism. Encrypted chats, small websites with targeted audiences, established platforms - all are classified as potential recruitment infrastructure.
At the same time, the FBI has replaced the Terrorist Screening Center, created after September 11, with a new Threat Screening Center that has expanded its mandate to all national security threats. The domestic terrorism list is growing. This receives little public attention.
In Minneapolis, public resistance to ICE operations pushed the government back. Kristi Noem and Gregory Bovino were fired. The government backed down. Renee Good and Alex Pretti, originally labeled as domestic terrorists, were rehabilitated by virtually all official bodies.

The center is still running. The lists are still growing. The budget request contains the largest increase in counterterrorism spending in years.
There is a certain way of exercising power that does not need a stage. That sits in budget lines, in agency names, in lists of criteria that no one reads until someone is on one of them. The NSPM 7 Joint Mission Center is that kind of power. Quiet, bureaucratic, with ten federal agencies behind it and a list of beliefs that can make someone a security risk.
Anyone who thinks anti capitalism is on it. Anyone who rejects traditional moral views is on it. Anyone who answers questions about migration or gender differently than the government may be on it.
This is not the future. This is the budget request for next year.
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