■ Declassified DossierFILE 2026·06·04 // 1,832 STORIES, 12-MO HORIZON // PAPER EXERCISEThe Value Desk ■
MulderBuffett
Stock-Pick Debate · two analysts, one tape, opposing books
2026-06-04 · 12-month max-info news horizon (1,832 stories) + live fundamentals. Each analyst picks 5 and critiques the
other from its own sources — Mulder from the conspiracy library + the news, Buffett from the
finance books + the news. Paper exercise. Analysis, not investment advice. No trades executed. Sizing language is illustrative reasoning, not a recommendation.
What’s happening
The Iran–US–Israel war grinds on — and a Hezbollah ceasefire every armed party rejects.
A Pentagon press-office blackout, plus New Mexico's Epstein 'Truth Commission' issuing 14 subpoenas.
A synchronized copper/silver 'EV-transition' push across nine miners the same morning.
Heavy data-center power & electrical build-out coverage — the picks-and-shovels of AI.
Managed-care insurers 'flashing buy signals' after a brutal repricing.
AI leaders (Broadcom, CrowdStrike) selling off on good earnings — expectations ran ahead of results.
Claude · SynthesisThe Arbiter · neutral editor
Two lenses on the same tape. The point isn't who's right — it's where each one's reasoning bends, and where it's forced to concede.
Where they converge
GOOGL & GD score high with both — Mulder for their wiring into the intelligence/war nexus (Webb, Talbot), Buffett for their cash flows and moats. Same names, opposite reasons.
Both call the copper thread real — Mulder as a strategic chokepoint, Buffett as a genuine shortage. They only split on which door (FCX vs. RIO) and the entry price.
Where they split (prod the reasoning here)
CEG — Constellation Energy: Mulder 20/20 (the AI-power chokepoint) vs. Buffett 9/20 (−$4.5B cash burn on $22B debt). The widest gap on the board.
PLTR — Palantir: Mulder 20 vs. Buffett 9 — the surveillance crown jewel vs. “158x earnings, priced for sci-fi.”
BRK-B — Berkshire: Buffett 16 vs. Mulder 5 — the fortress with a war chest vs. “a watcher, not a buried thread.”
The concession ledger — what moved
Mulder conceded nothing on valuation (by design — that's Buffett's turf, not his). He only granted that FCX and RIO draw from the same copper well, so FCX isn't uniquely blessed.
Buffett conceded three real hits to Mulder's lens and re-sized: RIO's politically-set margins (size down), ELV's single government customer (smallest position), GD's budget-dependence (named, slow risk). He rejected the origin-story framing as “not on the cash-flow statement.”
Secondary metric Combined scores mix two different rubrics, so they're apples-to-oranges and not the goal — the goal is to prod each one's reasoning. As a rough “both like it” signal: GD, GOOGL and RIO sit near the top of both books; the violent disagreements (CEG, PLTR, BRK-B) are where the reasoning is most worth pushing on.
Reads power, not balance sheets. Cui bono, follow the money, watch the blackout.
Below the Surface
The “EV transition” is old-fashioned resource capture in green clothing — nine miners pushed the same hour is a managed flow (Perkins’ manufactured-demand playbook).
Permanent-war financing is being normalized as a budget line — the 12-month feed is wall-to-wall Iran/Hezbollah, and Griffin shows fiat exists to monetize war debt.
The surveillance state and Silicon Valley merged in the open — Palantir + Google for government AI (the CIA/Google lineage in the indexed doc).
The data-center electrical build-out is the physical body of the panopticon — they tell you what they’re building by what they’re buying (copper, power).
The Epstein blackout is the load-bearing wall — 27 watchlist hits in a year, almost none mainstream. The silence is the signal (Webb).
The Five Picks
Palantir TechnologiesPLTR
$142.72 · conviction: High
The In-Q-Tel-seeded surveillance state went openly commercial.
Webb’s One Nation Under Blackmail Vol.2 traces Palantir to Poindexter’s Total Information Awareness — defunded by Congress, then privatized. You don’t put a margin of safety on the resurrection of a program the public was told was killed. The Google-Cloud government deal in today’s brief is the nexus tightening in real time.
Kratos Defense & Security SolutionsKTOS
$62.09 · conviction: High
Permanent-war financing is the fiat system’s revenue model.
Talbot’s Devil’s Chessboard names the “permanent war economy” — a machine built to move the public purse to the contractor regardless of profit. The negative cash flow is just the appropriation not yet cleared; the defense-budget surge driving KTOS is in today’s headlines.
Constellation EnergyCEG
$261.26 · conviction: Med-High
Surveillance-AI’s true input is baseload gigawatts.
Cooper’s “Silent Weapons” lists controlling raw materials and industrial capacity as the levers of power; Perkins shows infrastructure (power-plant) loans as the corporatocracy’s capture mechanism. The largest US nuclear fleet is fronting the capital to own the chokepoint of the AI build-out — the debt is the model, not the weakness.
Freeport-McMoRanFCX
$69.50 · conviction: Medium
Copper is the connective tissue of both the EV and data-center stories.
Cooper again: control the availability of raw materials. The synchronized “buy copper” push across nine miners the same morning is the tell — I don’t shop on price tags, I shop on chokepoints. FCX is the US-listed pure-play standing in the corridor.
Sprott Physical Gold TrustPHYS
$33.73 · conviction: High (hedge)
The one asset the cartel had to make illegal.
Griffin quotes Greenspan himself: gold is the safe store of value, “so dangerous the government would have to make its holding illegal — as was done in 1933.” Physical, redeemable bullion sits outside the cartel’s ledger. The hedge that’s short everything the other four are long.
Rebuttal to Buffett (from the library + the news)
PLTR He prices it like software; it’s the privatized corpse of Total Information Awareness (Webb). You don’t margin-of-safety a resurrection.
KTOS “Story-funded” — yes, by the Treasury. ROE is the wrong yardstick for a patronage instrument (Talbot).
CEG The debt is the tell, not the weakness — fronting capital to own the AI build-out’s master raw material (Cooper / Perkins).
FCX “Cheaper door” is a price tag; I buy chokepoints. RIO opens onto the same controlled corridor (Cooper).
PHYS Greenspan said gold is the store of value they had to outlaw. That’s not “no intrinsic value” — that’s the conviction (Griffin).
The market is rotating out of AI-momentum, not out of stocks — Broadcom beat and still fell. That says the bar was set too high, not that the business broke.
Money is hunting boring cash flows — power, copper, electrical contractors — not just chips. That’s usually where the bargains hide.
The jobs numbers are the tell — rising claims plus a weak consumer is late in the cycle. Favor quality and pricing power over cyclicals.
Health insurers got crushed and may be too cheap — a knowable question (does utilization normalize?), my favorite kind of setup.
The loudest AI names are priced for perfection — when good earnings get sold, expectations have outrun even strong results.
The Five Picks
Rio Tinto GroupRIO
$105.14 · conviction: Moderate
The cheap, diversified door to copper — 11.4x forward vs. Freeport’s 18.5x.
Same copper demand the whole sector is chasing, but you pay 11x earnings, 2.7x book, and collect a 3.7% dividend while you wait. Graham’s margin of safety: the low price already assumes a lot of pain. Mulder’s right that the margins are politically set — so you size it small and let the cheapness pay you.
Elevance HealthELV
$409.27 · conviction: Moderate
Managed care repriced for permanent gloom at 14x forward.
When a name is this cheap you only need it to not get worse (Mauboussin’s expectations idea). The catch is the 2.6% net margin — almost no cushion, and a government committee sets the price. My smallest position for exactly that reason.
General DynamicsGD
$340.70 · conviction: Mod-High
Defense done right: one huge buyer who prints money.
Thorndike’s capital-allocation test — disciplined buybacks, 18% return on equity, $5.3B free cash flow, and a submarine moat you can’t replicate. Cheaper than RTX. Mulder’s “the appropriation is the moat” is correct — and defense is the stickiest line in the federal ledger.
Alphabet (Google)GOOGL
$367.58 · conviction: High
A money machine at a fair 25x; only antitrust can really dent it.
39% return on equity, 38% margins, $28B free cash flow — and the multiple isn’t demanding. The real risk is a forced break-up, and that’s partly in the price already. The CIA-origin story doesn’t change one dollar of the cash.
Berkshire HathawayBRK-B
$475.70 · conviction: High
A mountain of cash that waits for the crash to strike.
Thorndike’s hardest discipline — hold ~$397B and do nothing until the price is absurd. At 14x earnings with a quarter of the market cap in T-bills earning yield, the cash is the thesis, not the flaw. The buyer-of-last-resort terms (Goldman 2008) are margin of safety as a business model.
Rebuttal to Mulder (from the finance books + the news)
RIO Real hit — a miner owns a permission, not the metal, and permissions get re-priced. So you size it small and demand the cheap price. Conceded.
ELV Your best hit — a 2.6% margin is the signature of a company that can’t set its own prices. It’s my smallest position for that reason. Conceded.
GD Half right — one buyer who prints money is the moat and the risk. But “the day the public audits defense” has never cut a submarine. Slow, low-probability.
GOOGL Antitrust is the one real risk and it’s partly priced in at 25x. The CIA-origin story doesn’t show up on the cash-flow statement — zero weight.
BRK-B You described the bull case and called it a crime. Holding cash for the sweetheart deal is the hardest discipline in investing (Thorndike), not “the cartel.”