What Quantum Technologies Mean for American Values
Quantum technology as a values test
Quantum technologies will reshape medicine, energy, security, and the economy within our lifetimes. This post reads quantum computing, sensing, networking, post-quantum cryptography, and quantum-AI as a test of American values: privacy, verifiability, open knowledge, shared prosperity, and democratic leadership. The question is whether free societies build those values into the systems early enough, while standards, procurements, research programs, and security migrations are still taking shape.
Preparing for Q-Day
Q-Day is the moment when a cryptographically relevant quantum computer can break the public-key encryption that protects hospitals, banks, grids, government systems, lawyers, journalists, dissidents, and ordinary private life. The point is not panic. The point is preparation before the deadline arrives, through post-quantum migration, cryptographic inventory, and public institutions that make the record visible.
The Genesis Mission and the public record
The piece connects the Genesis Mission, NSF Project Triad, Executive Orders 14412 and 14413, OMB M-26-15, Korea’s finance-sector PQC pilot, and the ASML supply-chain question into one civic argument: the free world needs truth-grounded intelligence before quantum capability hardens into infrastructure. The conclusion points both boards and citizens toward preparation, open briefings, and support for keeping Quentir’s public intelligence work accessible, in plain language and with sources readers can check.