Keen On America

Politics in the Age of Total Control: Jacob Siegel on the Information State that Came Home

Mar 25, 2026
Jacob Siegel, a former Army intelligence officer and author of The Information State, traces how battlefield surveillance tools migrated to daily life. He discusses the Obama-era institutionalization of surveillance, contrasts technocratic and overt control styles, and explores how digital infrastructure enabled a Kafkaesque system that keeps expanding despite repeated failures.
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ANECDOTE

Surveillance Tools In Afghanistan Failed To Explain The War

  • Jacob Siegel used advanced surveillance tools as an intelligence officer in Afghanistan yet couldn't get a coherent answer about the war's objective.
  • He had drones, sensors, Palantir-style databases and predictive models at a tactical center while the conflict on the ground remained incoherent and fragmented.
INSIGHT

The War Tools Came Home To Shape Domestic Politics

  • The same war-on-terror informational tools later reappeared domestically to surveil and shape American politics.
  • Siegel traces the Information State from Herat and Kandahar into U.S. NGOs, media, and tech platforms.
INSIGHT

Progressive Technocracy Built The Information State

  • The information state is built from a progressive technocratic ideal that society can be rationalized through data and algorithms.
  • The Obama administration elevated surveillance tools into governance by framing them as rational, progressive policy.
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