Every system we've documented lives on top of something physical. This is the foundation deck — who controls the territory, who's contesting it, and what's already been quietly captured.
Every conversation in this library — about food, water, energy, housing, surveillance, military power, corporate consolidation — ultimately rests on one question: who controls the physical territory? Land is where food grows, where communities exist, where resources are extracted, where power is exercised. Airspace is where data travels, where weapons are deployed. The oceans carry 90% of global trade and regulate Earth's climate.
Control of land, air, and sea is control of civilization itself. And that control is being actively contested, concentrated, and redefined — by corporations, foreign governments, federal agencies, and technologies that didn't exist a decade ago. This deck maps the foundation every other deck stands on.
The federal government owns approximately 640 million acres — 28% of all U.S. land. That ownership is not evenly distributed: in Nevada, the federal government owns 80.1% of the state. Utah: 63–66%. Alaska: 61%. Idaho: 62%. Oregon: 53%. The political fight over this has intensified sharply. Utah filed suit directly with the Supreme Court in August 2024 to compel disposal of ~18.5 million BLM acres. SCOTUS denied the case on January 13, 2025 — one line, no comment.
The Trump administration moved aggressively on energy development: BLM held 22 onshore lease sales in 2025 generating $187 million, approved 6,106 drilling permits (most in 15 years), and generated $356.6 million in oil/gas revenue — more than all four Biden years combined. On national monuments, a May 2025 DOJ opinion claimed presidents can abolish monument designations entirely under the Antiquities Act. Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante remain in litigation.
The Land Report 100 (2026 edition) revealed Stan Kroenke vaulted to America's largest private landowner after acquiring the ~937,000-acre Singleton Ranches in New Mexico in December 2025 — the largest U.S. land purchase in over a decade. His total: 2.7 million acres. The #100 entry threshold has risen from 75,000 acres in 2007 to approximately 170,000 acres in 2026. Average holdings among the top 100 are now roughly 430,000 acres.
At contact, Indigenous peoples occupied 100% of the continent. Today, tribal nations hold approximately 56.2 million acres in trust — 2.3% of U.S. land. The Trump administration's closure of ~200 BIA offices in March 2025 and proposed $24.5 billion in funding cuts to Native communities have functionally impaired land-into-trust processing. The Yurok Tribe's 2025 acquisition of ~47,000 acres in California — the largest land-back deal in state history — happened against this backdrop.
The FAA reports approximately 855,860 registered drones in the U.S. as of early 2025, with over 400,000 certified remote pilots. Remote ID compliance (mandatory since September 2023) reached 95% among commercial operators. But the real transformation is about to land: on August 7, 2025, the FAA published a proposed Part 108 BVLOS rule — the regulatory framework that will, for the first time, allow routine commercial drone flights beyond the operator's line of sight. Without it, commercial drone delivery at scale is legally impossible. The final rule is expected in 2026.
Seven companies now hold FAA Part 135 air carrier certificates for drone delivery: Amazon Prime Air, Wing (Alphabet), UPS Flight Forward, Zipline, Causey Aviation/Flytrex, DroneUp, and Drone Express. Wing has surpassed 750,000 deliveries worldwide with partnerships across 150+ Walmart Supercenters. In urban air mobility, Joby Aviation reached Stage 4 of 5 in FAA type certification in November 2025 — the first eVTOL to do so — with commercial launch targeted in early 2026, starting in Dubai.
The orbital shell between 200 and 2,000 km altitude has become the most contested territory that isn't technically on Earth. As of early 2026, approximately 13,000+ active satellites orbit Earth. SpaceX's Starlink accounts for over 10,000 — roughly 65% of all active satellites. SpaceX launched 2,500+ Starlink satellites in 2025 alone, and has FCC authorization for 12,000, with long-term plans for up to 42,000.
The space debris risk is escalating measurably. ESA tracks approximately 40,000–43,500 catalogued objects, with an estimated 1.2 million fragments between 1–10cm. A January 2026 study introduced a "CRASH Clock" metric: a complete loss of satellite collision-avoidance capability would result in a catastrophic collision within ~2.8 days — compared to 121 days in 2018. That's a 43x acceleration of risk in seven years. The ISS now performs avoidance maneuvers multiple times per year.
"China's Guowang constellation plans ~13,000 satellites. Its Qianfan ('Thousand Sails') constellation targets ~15,000. There is no international authority capable of managing this orbital race. Once slots are occupied, they are effectively captured."
Approximately 532 active submarine cable systems carry 95–99% of all international internet traffic across ~1.4–1.5 million kilometers of ocean floor. Satellites handle less than 1%. Big Tech now uses 66–71% of undersea fiber-optic capacity — up from less than 10% before 2012. Google has stakes in approximately 33 cables. Meta's Project Waterworth (announced February 2025) is a $10 billion, 50,000km cable connecting five continents — deliberately routed to avoid the Red Sea and South China Sea.
Cable cuts are now a geopolitical weapon. In November 2024, a Chinese bulk carrier was at the precise time and location of two simultaneous Baltic Sea cable cuts — the BCS East-West Interlink and C-Lion1. In December 2024, a Russian shadow fleet tanker dragged its anchor for 62 miles, damaging Estlink 2 and three additional cables. In the Red Sea, Houthi-related incidents in February 2024 severed four cables, disrupting approximately 25% of Europe-Asia data traffic. The global cable repair fleet: fewer than 100 vessels. The U.S. Cable Security Fleet, established in 2019 with two dedicated repair ships, was defunded by the Biden administration in 2024.
The world's oceans cover 71% of Earth's surface. They carry 90% of all global trade, produce 50%+ of the oxygen we breathe, and regulate the planet's climate. The United States has the world's largest Exclusive Economic Zone — 4.4 million square miles of ocean where the U.S. has sovereign rights over resources. The strategic and ecological importance of these waters is being tested simultaneously from multiple directions.
CSIS satellite imagery (March 2026) revealed China has reclaimed Antelope Reef in the Paracels to 1,490 acres, with 50+ structures and foundations for a potential 9,000-foot runway. In August 2025, a China Coast Guard vessel collided with a PLA Navy destroyer near Scarborough Shoal, likely killing at least 2 personnel. In December 2025, CCG vessels fired water cannons at Filipino fishermen near Sabina Shoal. The U.S. conducted its first FONOP near Scarborough Shoal in over 6 years on August 13, 2025.
On April 24, 2025, Trump signed an executive order invoking the 1980 Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Act — creating a unilateral U.S. framework that bypasses the International Seabed Authority. The Metals Company filed immediately for commercial recovery permits. The ISA Secretary-General called it a violation of international law. More than 40 nations criticized the action. France's President Macron called deep-sea mining "madness" at the June 2025 UN Ocean Conference. Over 930 marine scientists from 70+ countries have signed an open letter calling for a precautionary pause.
Trump escalated his Greenland acquisition ambitions throughout 2025, stating he could "not rule out military force" and declaring the U.S. would get Greenland "one way or the other." A January 2026 White House statement said "utilizing the U.S. Military is always an option." Greenlandic PM Múte Egede: "Greenland is ours. We are not for sale." A January 2025 poll found 84% of Greenlanders support independence from Denmark — and 85% reject joining the United States.
While Washington postures, Russia builds. Russia's icebreaker fleet: 42+ vessels including 8 nuclear-powered. The U.S. has 2–3. In September 2025, Russia commissioned the Ivan Papanin — a combat icebreaker armed with a 76.2mm gun and capacity for 8 Kalibr cruise missiles, the first icebreaker with permanent heavy armament. In December 2025, Russia deployed its entire nuclear icebreaker fleet simultaneously for the first time. The USGS estimates the Arctic holds 90 billion barrels of undiscovered oil (13% of world total) and 1,669 trillion cubic feet of natural gas (30% of world total).
2024 was the hottest year on record for ocean temperatures, with annual average sea surface temperature reaching 20.87°C — 0.51°C above the 1991–2020 average. Upper-ocean heat content exceeded 2023 by 16 zettajoules — equivalent to 140 times the world's annual electricity generation. These aren't background statistics. They drive every other trend in this deck: storm intensity, fisheries collapse, coral death, sea-level rise, and the strategic instability that follows resource scarcity.
Every deck in this library traces back to territory. The surveillance state needs towers and data centers on land. The military industrial complex needs bases and sea lanes. The food system needs farmland. The housing crisis is a land pricing crisis. Energy infrastructure runs through federal and private territory. The opioid crisis hit hardest in communities where the economic land — the factories, the tax base — was extracted and abandoned.
Land: 640M federal acres. Private land concentrating in institutional and billionaire hands — the top 100 private owners collectively hold more land than the state of Georgia. The Arctic has gone from frozen buffer to contested resource frontier. Indigenous nations hold 2.3% of land they once held 100% of.
Air: 855,000 drones registered; 7 companies certified for commercial delivery; the first air taxis approaching launch. LEO orbit: 13,000+ active satellites — 65% from one company — in a shell growing so crowded that the risk of a catastrophic cascade collision is now 43x what it was in 2018. No international authority governs this. First movers win.
Sea: 90% of global trade, 99% of international internet, 50%+ of planetary oxygen. The South China Sea is militarizing in real time. Undersea cables are being cut. Deep-sea mining is being carved up unilaterally. Ocean temperatures hit record highs in 2024. The oceans are simultaneously the planet's life support system and its most actively contested resource frontier.