Tag: CIA

  • Major Milestone in the Havana Syndrome Debate

    Havana Syndrome has once again surged back into the national conversation following a bombshell investigation by 60 Minutes that explored the possibility that a portable microwave or directed-energy device could produce symptoms consistent with those reported by victims of the mysterious condition. The report described how investigators obtained and examined a suspected microwave-emitting device believed to be capable of delivering pulsed electromagnetic energy from a relatively compact platform—potentially small enough to be concealed in a backpack. For years, critics of the directed-energy hypothesis mocked what they called the “ray gun theory,” arguing that any device capable of producing such effects would necessarily be large, complex, and difficult to deploy covertly. The idea that such technology might exist in a portable form therefore represents a striking development in a debate that has simmered for nearly a decade.

    The phenomenon known as Havana Syndrome first entered public awareness in 2016, when U.S. diplomats stationed in Cuba reported sudden neurological symptoms that included severe headaches, dizziness, cognitive difficulties, and hearing disturbances. Over time, additional cases were reported among intelligence officers and military personnel stationed in multiple countries. These incidents triggered investigations by several U.S. agencies and eventually drew the attention of lawmakers in United States Congress, who held hearings focused on the health impacts experienced by affected government employees. Although the precise cause of the condition remains unresolved, the possibility that some cases could involve directed energy has never been fully ruled out.

    What makes the latest reporting so consequential is not simply the discussion of a suspected portable microwave device. It is the way the report implicitly challenges long-standing assumptions about what technologies may be feasible in the real world. For years, skeptics insisted that directed-energy attacks on individuals were implausible because the equipment required would be too bulky to deploy discreetly. Yet the notion that investigators have studied a compact system capable of emitting pulsed microwave energy undermines the certainty with which those claims were made. Even if the device ultimately proves unrelated to the Havana Syndrome incidents, the mere existence of such technology suggests the debate is far from settled.

    This renewed attention also raises an uncomfortable question that has hovered over the Havana Syndrome discussion for years: why has the conversation been limited almost entirely to government personnel when civilians have reported similar experiences for decades? The official narrative has largely centered on diplomats, intelligence officers, and military personnel. Their cases have understandably received serious attention, medical evaluations, and congressional oversight. Yet outside government circles there exists a large group of civilians who claim they have experienced symptoms or incidents they believe involve similar technologies. These individuals are commonly referred to as “targeted individuals,” and their claims have historically been dismissed outright by many officials and commentators.

    The disparity in how these two groups are treated deserves scrutiny. When government employees report sudden neurological symptoms that cannot easily be explained, the response is immediate and serious. Investigations are launched, intelligence assessments are produced, and hearings are convened on Capitol Hill. When civilians report similar experiences, however, they are often ignored or portrayed as delusional without any meaningful investigation. This double standard is difficult to justify, particularly now that the possibility of portable directed-energy devices has again entered the mainstream discussion.

    One argument frequently made against considering civilian claims is that there is no verified evidence linking those reports to the same phenomenon described in the diplomatic cases. Yet that argument overlooks a fundamental point: evidence cannot be gathered if the claims themselves are never seriously examined. The early Havana Syndrome cases among diplomats were initially dismissed as well. Only after multiple reports accumulated did the issue receive sustained attention from the U.S. government. If similar patterns were occurring among civilians, they might never be detected precisely because those reports are excluded from the investigative framework.

    There is also historical context worth remembering. Research into microwave and directed-energy effects on the human body has existed for decades. During the Cold War, both the United States and the Soviet Union studied electromagnetic radiation and its potential biological impacts. In the early 2000s, the U.S. military explored concepts such as the MEDUSA project, which investigated the so-called microwave auditory effect—an interaction in which microwave pulses can produce auditory sensations in the human brain. The existence of such research does not prove that operational weapons have been deployed against individuals. However, it demonstrates that the scientific principles behind directed-energy interactions with human physiology are not imaginary.

    That history is precisely why the broader debate should not be artificially restricted to a single category of victims. If governments have studied these technologies for decades, and if investigators are now examining portable microwave devices capable of producing neurological effects, then the question of who might be affected becomes more complex than previously acknowledged. It is entirely possible that some civilian reports are unrelated to Havana Syndrome. But it is equally possible that a subset of those reports could contain information relevant to understanding the phenomenon.

    Another reason civilians deserve attention is that patterns sometimes emerge only when data from many sources are examined together. Intelligence analysis often depends on connecting scattered pieces of information that initially appear unrelated. If investigators limit themselves to cases involving government personnel, they risk overlooking broader trends that could provide clues about the underlying cause. Expanding the scope of inquiry to include civilian reports would not automatically validate those claims, but it would allow researchers to evaluate them systematically rather than dismissing them outright.

    As the new reporting from 60 Minutes fuels renewed debate about directed-energy technologies and Havana Syndrome, pressure is likely to mount for additional hearings in United States Congress. If lawmakers do revisit the issue, they will face an important choice. They can continue focusing exclusively on incidents involving diplomats and intelligence officers, or they can broaden the conversation to include testimony from civilians who believe they have experienced similar phenomena. Including such voices would not mean endorsing every claim. It would simply recognize that understanding an unresolved scientific and national security mystery requires examining all available information.

    The Havana Syndrome story has evolved repeatedly since it first emerged nearly a decade ago. Each new report, study, or investigation has shifted the boundaries of what experts consider possible. The latest revelations about a suspected portable microwave device may prove to be another turning point. If so, the next phase of the debate should not only examine the technology itself but also reconsider who is allowed to participate in the conversation. A mystery of this magnitude cannot be fully understood if entire categories of potential witnesses are excluded before their accounts are even heard.

  • WIFI Bombshell On 092225

    Monday 09/22/25 was my day off. Nowadays the kids go to school so you can actually enjoy your day off 😂

    So I enjoyed my rest until about 4pm when I decided to step out to go get some fresh air…and coffee of course.

    Went to my local deli, got me a coffee and a pastry, and sat at the local park doing my favorite thing—tweeting away, or is it Xing away?😂

    Anyway, my phone started having connectivity issues—slow etc, the usual stuff TIs go through, so I decided to check if there was some public WiFi in the area—one of the great things about NYC.👍 As I’m scrolling through the WIFI options, look what a TI ran into😳😳. Lord Have Mercy!!

    A few seconds later, it was gone. They probably went, “oops, he wasn’t supposed to see that”😂and made it disappear.


    There was this illegally parked Mercedes just idling there. That’s the only “suspect” I could think of, even though it’s hard to pin down this stuff. Just because one thinks they may be the one doesn’t necessarily mean it’s true. I just found it odd that it was illegally parked right next to where I was, that’s all🤷‍♀️

    Long story short, I got out of there faster than Usain Bolt😂

    Also something to think about the next time you go🙄while listening to this TI bitch about getting stuck at a NYC shelter for over a year, even though super qualified for CityFHEPS, not getting NY state financial aid for college even though clearly eligible…🤔

    If this doesn’t answer your question, then you’re clearly not looking for an answer🤷‍♀️

    ***Updated Sunday 10/17/25***

    Chilling at the SAME spot at about 7:45pm, just taking in the lovely Fall “sweater weather” and boom!!👇😳

    ***Updated Monday 11/03/25***
    On my off day, and was chilling at the SAME spot at about 6:40 pm—taking in the nice Fall weather before going back home. I tried to access the local public WiFi hotspot but was having issues for some reason. When I looked closely at the WiFi options, look what my eyes bumped into.😳 Is that WHY a TI is having issues connecting to the local public WiFi?🤔🤦‍♀️. Could they at least HIDE that name?😂

    Question now is, what ELSE do they do to targeted individuals as they sit peacefully at a public park, library..,Are they ONLY watching them? Why are you watching somebody seating peacefully at a park minding his own business? Hmm 🤔 I think you get the DEW drift🤔

  • Interesting Nugget From CIA-JFK Bombshell

    A Bombshell new Axios piece confirms what many have suspected all along, and that is, the person who assassinated former U.S. President John F. Kennedy was not the anonymous figure the CIA had hitherto projected him as. As it turns out, a CIA agent specializing in psyops–I kid you not–had been in contact with Lee Harvey Oswald a month prior to him assassinating the former president.

    In other words, the CIA lied to Congress during the ensuing investigation, when it testified that the agency had no prior knowledge or contact with Oswald.

    What I found personally interesting from the bombshell piece however (I already knew the CIA had a hand😂) was the revelation in the Axios piece, that during that time (1960s), the CIA was operating a Cuban exile student group out of Miami and New Orleans. Members of this group apparently clashed with Oswald over his professed Communism. Get it? They fled Castro’s communism so they deeply despised sympathizers of communism in the U.S.—or anywhere for that matter🤔

    So why did I find this Miami-NOLA Nexus quite interesting? Well, in my earlier posts, way before this blog got taken down by “malware”,🙄I’d written extensively about my experiences with organized stalking in Houston. In several of the posts, which I will make every effort to dig up, I was freaking out about how I kept getting followed by cars with Florida and Louisiana plates–there were other “paraphernalia 😂other than the plates, that pointed to Miami & NOLA😳. I knew it was organized stalking, but I was racking my 🧠 as to why it was primarily FL & LA–I mean there are like 49 other states.

    That has remained one of my unanswered questions to this day, which was WHY this Axios bombshell hit me so heavily.🤔

    Is this group still operational? Were they the ones running psyops on me in H-Town? Is the word out at Deep State that I’m a communist?😂 Hmm, only time will tell, or how about this? Only a new Church-type committee will tell😂