Cole Allen, the Time-Travel Tweet, and the Growing List of Missing Scientists
I cross-referenced the X account of Henry Martinez, a Lockheed Martin engineer, which posted only the name "Cole Allen" in December 2023, more than two years before Cole Allen was apprehended at the Washington Hilton during the White House Correspondents Dinner on April 25, 2026. That thread pulls in a growing list of at least 13 scientists tied to nuclear, defense, and space programs who have died or vanished since 2022, a Bayer Supreme Court immunity push backed by the Trump administration, and fresh footage from inside a Scientology building.
// CHAPTERS
- 0:00The Cole Allen Thread Begins: A 2023 Tweet Names the 2026 Suspect — I open with the Henry Martinez X account, which posted only the name Cole Allen in December 2023, years before Cole Allen was apprehended at the White House Correspondents Dinner on April 25, 2026. I trace the documented connections between Martinez, Lockheed Martin, the Orion spacecraft, and a 2014 NASA paper co-authored the same year Allen interned at JPL.
- 0:08The Cloud Factory Claim: Ingredion and What the Hat Gave Away — A viral video claims the poster works at a cloud factory creating rain for Chicago. I identify the company from his hat as Ingredion, a food products manufacturer, and confirm it has no weather-modification operations.
- 0:38North West and the Industry Machine — I cover the theories circulating about Kim Kardashian's daughter North West, including symbolic imagery in her TikTok content, a reported remark from Kim about withholding a last name for branding purposes, and a drawing that commentators found disturbing.
- 2:36Family Farms, Roundup, and Bayer's Supreme Court Gambit — I report that over 140,000 family farms are projected to close this year, tracing the chain from Monsanto's 1990s Roundup Ready crops through the Bayer acquisition to a current Supreme Court case seeking to immunize Bayer from cancer lawsuits, with the Trump administration backing the bid. HR7567, a bill before Congress, would codify that immunity.
- 6:08Scientology Removes Its Door Handles — I cover the viral trend of people rushing Scientology buildings to see what is inside, and the organization's response: removing external door handles and adding bike locks across multiple entrances, which I flag as an apparent fire-code violation.
- 6:57Amy Esgridge and the Missing Scientists: 2022 to 2026 — I build the full timeline of at least 13 researchers tied to nuclear, defense, and space programs who have died or vanished since 2022, from Amy Esgridge's 2022 death and her pre-recorded warning, through JPL-connected deaths in 2023 and 2024, to the cluster of Los Alamos and NASA disappearances in 2025, and David Wilcock's death in Colorado days before this broadcast.
- 13:54Congressman Comer Names Suspects, Skips One — I note Congressman James Comer's Fox News appearance naming China, North Korea, Iran, and Russia as likely actors behind the scientist disappearances, then flag the conspicuous absence of Israel from that list given Benjamin Netanyahu's March 2025 public confirmation that Israeli operations eliminated 14 Iranian nuclear scientists.
- 18:12Matthew James Sullivan: UAP Whistleblower Dead Two Weeks Before Testimony — I detail the official cause of death for Matthew James Sullivan, a 39-year-old decorated Bronze Star veteran and Air Force intelligence officer, who died May 12, 2024, in Falls Church, Virginia from accidental drug intoxication two weeks before he was scheduled to testify before Congress about a secret government UFO crash retrieval program.
- 16:07CERN, the Mandela Effect, and Max Loen — I cover the viral 2016 interview with a child named Max Loen who claimed CERN's 2008 Large Hadron Collider shifted humanity into a parallel universe, and debunk the framing that people who discuss such theories subsequently disappear.
- 22:02Chernobyl's Radioactive Claw and Two Tourists — I cover footage of two tourists sitting inside the Claw of Chernobyl, used after the disaster to handle debris so radioactive that workers were limited to seconds of proximity. A Geiger counter filmed at the same location already reads more than six microsieverts per hour.
- 1:38:00The Time-Travel Tweet: Full Evidence Walkthrough — I walk through the full evidentiary chain: the Henry Martinez X account, its single 2023 tweet naming Cole Allen, the Time Machine banner image verified by the Wayback Machine to 2022, the 2014 NASA paper overlap, the Oz Pearlman magic trick moments before the incident, and a reported pre-incident spike in searches for Cole Thomas Allen originating from Iran that Google has since removed.
- 1:27:01Doggerland: The Lost World Under the North Sea — I cover new findings from ancient DNA samples taken from the North Sea seabed confirming that Doggerland, the land mass connecting Britain to mainland Europe, hosted dense forests and animal populations over 16,000 years ago, suggesting entire human histories remain buried underwater and undiscovered.
- 57:11AI Surveillance in Your Car and the Credit-Score Gatekeeper — I examine emerging in-vehicle driver monitoring systems that track eyes, face, and attention, then extend the argument: I've been saying for years that fully AI-controlled vehicles will eventually require users to meet criteria spanning credit scores, carbon allowances, criminal history, employment, and political views before they can drive.
- 1:03:48Palantir's UK Expansion and the Virtue-Signal Contradiction — I cover Palantir's expansion of AI surveillance infrastructure into the UK alongside a manifesto claiming Silicon Valley has a moral obligation to defend the nation, then surface a statement from Palantir's own founders made exactly one year earlier in which they describe virtue signaling as a tell for doing something evil.
- 1:25:16Linda Napolitano and the 23-Witness Manhattan Abduction — I examine the November 30, 1989 case of Linda Napolitano, who reported being floated from her 12th-floor Manhattan apartment into a craft during a city-wide blackout, with 23 witnesses including a New York Post delivery driver on a nearby bridge who corroborated the account.
The Henry Martinez Account: One Tweet, One Name, Two Years Early
In December 2023, an X account under the name Henry Martinez posted exactly one thing: the name Cole Allen. No context, no link, no explanation. The account has posted nothing since.
Cole Allen is the name of the individual apprehended at the Washington Hilton during the White House Correspondents Dinner on April 25, 2026. That is two years and roughly four months after the tweet.
Henry Martinez is not a random name. I pulled the paper trail and found that a Henry Martinez at Lockheed Martin is listed as primary author on a 2014 NASA research paper out of Goddard Space Flight Center. Cole Allen interned at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory that same year. Two men, one institution, one year. Then nine years later, one tweets the other's name with no explanation and goes silent.
The header image on the Henry Martinez account comes from a website called Time Machine. The Wayback Machine confirms it was posted there as far back as 2022. Commentators online say the image bears a striking resemblance to the Butler, Pennsylvania event that happened in 2024, two years after the image was created and one year after Martinez used it as a banner. Make of that what you will.
Security Failures at the Washington Hilton: A Second Look at a Familiar Venue
The Washington Hilton is not a venue with a clean security record. In 1981, John Hinckley Jr. shot Ronald Reagan outside the same building, blending in with reporters because no one checked his identification. The hotel subsequently removed its VIP exterior entrance and installed a fortified underground driveway.
According to Cole Allen's own manifesto, the security apparatus at the 2026 event was entirely outward-facing, focused on protesters and arriving guests, with nothing in place to account for someone who checked into the hotel the day before. He reportedly mocked that gap in writing.
Allen was staying on the 10th floor. He took the stairs down with his weapons. I am not the only one who finds it bizarre that a president who has already survived two prior assassination attempts was hosted at a venue with documented historical security failures and no apparent protocol for pre-event hotel guests.
And then there is the detail that world-famous mentalist Oz Pearlman was performing a trick for Trump and Melania just seconds before the incident. I am not assigning meaning to that. I am noting it.
Caroline Levitt's Freudian Slip and What Happened After
Before the dinner, Caroline Levitt appeared on camera and said something that stopped a lot of people mid-scroll. The clip circulated widely. The man standing behind her laughed in a way that read less as 'that's funny' and more as 'I cannot believe you just said that out loud.'
The post-dinner press conference saw Levitt dismiss online conspiracy theories as crazy nonsense. That framing landed differently given what she had said hours earlier. Whether it was a genuine slip or something else, the juxtaposition is hard to ignore.
The Missing Scientists: A Timeline from 2022 to 2026
Amy Esgridge was 34 years old when she was found dead in 2022. Before she died, she recorded herself saying: 'If you see any reports that I took my own life, I most definitely did not.' She had been working on research aimed at canceling the effects of gravity, meaning propulsion at near-zero cost. Her home had been broken into. Strangers knew personal details about her. A member of her team with CIA weapons experience reportedly identified burn marks on her hands as consistent with a scanning device powered by five car batteries from an SUV parked outside. Her paper was never published. No one knows where it is.
In 2023, Michael David Hicks, connected to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, died under limited publicly disclosed circumstances. In May 2024, Frank Maywald, a senior JPL engineer working on space instrumentation and life-detection on distant moons, passed away. No cause of death was made public. No autopsy was performed.
Matthew James Sullivan died on May 12, 2024, at his home in Falls Church, Virginia. He was 39, a decorated Bronze Star veteran, former Air Force intelligence officer with top-secret clearances at the National Air and Space Intelligence Center and the NSA. He had reportedly been in contact with David Grusch and had agreed to testify before Congress about a secret government UFO crash retrieval program. The official ruling from the Northern District Office of Chief Medical Examiner in Virginia listed accidental drug intoxication, specifically a combination of alcohol, alprazolam, and other substances. He died two weeks before his scheduled testimony.
Then 2025 arrived. Anthony Chavez disappeared from Los Alamos National Laboratory in May, leaving all personal belongings. Monica Resza, a NASA senior aerospace engineer developing special alloys for rockets also at Los Alamos, vanished while hiking in June. Four days after that, Melissa Kaisus went missing in New Mexico, also leaving everything behind. Joshua LeBlanc, a 29-year-old NASA engineer working on nuclear propulsion in Alabama, was found burned beyond recognition in his Tesla after a crash; his belongings were at home and his car had sat at an airport with no trip planned. Steven Garcia, a property custodian at a facility that manufactures more than 80% of non-nuclear components for US nuclear weapons, vanished from New Mexico in August. Nuno Lorero, director of MIT's Plasma Science and Fusion Center, was killed outside his home with no arrests made.
In early 2026, astrophysicist Carl Gilmore was killed outside his Texas home. An arrest has been made but the case adds another specialist to the list. Retired Air Force general William Neil McCasslin, whose work reportedly centered on UFOs and classified space programs, went missing in New Mexico while hiking, leaving all personal belongings, and has not been found. Days before this broadcast, David Wilcock, perhaps the most publicly recognized UFO researcher on this list, was found dead in Colorado from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He had said on camera, within days of his death, that every day on Earth is a gift because people are disappearing.
Congressman Comer Names Suspects, Omits One
Congressman James Comer appeared on Fox News and named the usual roster: China, North Korea, Iran, Russia, and a vague category of Eastern European countries. He said the United States has the superior nuclear program in the world and that all the usual suspects are on the list.
He did not mention Israel. In March 2025, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly stated that Israel had successfully eliminated top Iranian nuclear scientists. Joshua Zarka, a French official, confirmed that 14 physicists and engineers described as the brains behind Iran's nuclear program had been eliminated. US military officials called it a significant blow to Iran's weapons capability.
This strategy is documented and not new. When scientists become strategic assets, they become targets. Comer's omission is either an oversight or a choice. Neither possibility is particularly reassuring.
Bayer, Roundup, and the Farm Bill That Could End Organic Agriculture
Over 140,000 family farms are projected to close this year. The chain of causation starts in the 1990s, when Monsanto introduced Roundup Ready crops, genetically engineered to resist glyphosate. That drove an explosion in glyphosate use, with approximately 60% of total crops now treated with it.
Roundup causes cancer. Bayer, which acquired Monsanto, has already paid tens of billions of dollars to settle related lawsuits. The company is now pushing a case before the Supreme Court to block future plaintiffs from suing. The Trump administration is backing that effort.
The Bayer-Monsanto merger cleared during the Obama administration in 2015 without regulatory intervention. According to testimony I covered from an Arkansas farmer, what had been five or six competing seed companies in his region are now all owned by Bayer. That is a monopoly built across two administrations from both parties.
Farm bill HR7567 is expected to come before Congress and, if passed, would codify legal immunity for Bayer and functionally eliminate the organic farming sector. This is not a fringe concern. It is a legislative vote with a documented corporate beneficiary.
Scientology Removes Door Handles, Adds Bike Locks
A viral trend of people rushing into Scientology buildings to see how many floors they can reach before being removed has prompted a specific organizational response: the Church of Scientology has been removing external door handles from its buildings and replacing them with bike locks on chained doors.
I covered footage of multiple entrances across at least one building with handles stripped and bike locks threaded through the door frames. That is almost certainly a fire-code violation.
One group documented in the footage took the stairs rather than the elevators, wore disguises, made it past the second floor, which is presented to visitors as a museum, and continued upward before leaving out of concern for their safety. They were accompanied by people dressed as Sonic the Hedgehog, an alien, and Jesus.
The more substantive point: former members report losing family contact, life savings, and inheritance. Members are reportedly moved between buildings in the middle of the night on organizational buses and kept on sleep-deprived schedules working without pay. The security guards stationed outside are, according to these accounts, also members operating under the same conditions.
CERN and the Mandela Effect: What Actually Happened to Max Loen
In 2016, a video went viral of a child identified as Max Loen claiming that CERN's 2008 launch of the Large Hadron Collider had altered the weight of a single electron and shifted humanity into a parallel universe. Shortly after the video circulated widely, the kid vanished from public view. No updates, no follow-up interviews.
The narrative layered on top of that disappearance claims that people who discuss such theories are silenced or removed. I want to be direct about that: it is not the case. I pushed back on it in the broadcast and I am pushing back on it here. The video is interesting without that embellishment.
CERN's Large Hadron Collider is the most powerful particle accelerator ever built, smashing particles at near light speed. Some physicists did warn at launch that microscopic black holes were a theoretical possibility. The Mandela Effect, the phenomenon of large groups sharing identical false memories, such as Nelson Mandela dying in prison in the 1980s rather than in 2013, did gain significant online traction after 2009. The causal link between the two remains unproven.
The Chernobyl Claw: Invisible Radiation and Very Visible Tourists
A photograph circulating online shows two tourists sitting inside what is known as the Claw of Chernobyl, the industrial excavator used after the 1986 disaster to handle highly radioactive debris. Workers were permitted proximity measured in seconds. The tourists are sitting directly in contact with the surface.
A separate video filmed at the same location shows a Geiger counter reading more than six microsieverts per hour around the claw, dozens of times above normal background levels. As the device approaches the surface, the reading becomes unstable, appearing to saturate the counter.
The primary danger is not acute: this level of exposure does not cause immediate death or obvious symptoms. The risk is contamination transfer. Invisible particles adhere to skin and clothing and can be carried out of the zone without detection. It is inadvisable and genuinely stupid, but survivable. I said so clearly.
Driver Monitoring Technology and the Access-by-Algorithm Future
Vehicles arriving in 2027 will carry built-in cameras tracking driver eye movement, facial expression, and attention continuously. The systems are being marketed as safety features to detect drowsiness, distraction, or impairment. The framing is familiar.
The question I have been raising for years is not whether the technology works. It is who controls the threshold. If the system decides you are impaired, it can slow or stop the vehicle. You do not make that determination. The system does.
I have argued consistently that the endpoint of this trajectory is a fully AI-controlled vehicle fleet in which access depends on criteria that extend well beyond sobriety: credit score, carbon allowance, criminal history, employment status, political activity, biometric data, social media behavior. Technology does not move backward. The question is when, not whether.
Palantir's Manifesto and What Its Founders Said One Year Earlier
Palantir published what its critics are calling a corporate virtue-signaling manifesto asserting that Silicon Valley has a moral obligation to participate in national defense. The engineering elite, the document claims, owes a debt to the country that enabled its rise.
Exactly one year and one day before that document was released, Palantir's own founders stated on camera that virtue signaling is a sign you are doing something evil, that it is how you shield yourself while stealing money from everyone.
I want to be precise about the translation: what the manifesto actually describes is an argument for building AI autonomous weapons and AI mass surveillance at unprecedented scale, with Palantir positioned as the primary contractor. The manifesto does not hide this. It reframes it as patriotism.
Palantir's reach is not limited to the United States. I flagged data centers and surveillance infrastructure being implemented in the UK. The architecture being built here is global.
The 1893 Chicago World's Fair and the Question of Who Built What
The 1893 Chicago World's Fair covered over 690 acres, drew 27 million visitors over six months, and featured more than 200 buildings constructed in under two years. That averages to approximately nine buildings per month, plus a canal system, full grounds infrastructure, and mature trees.
The Palace of Fine Arts, now the Museum of Science and Industry, is one of the only surviving structures. The creator I covered argues the construction timeline is physically implausible and that what was presented as a temporary exhibition was in fact a renovation of pre-existing architecture with fresh paint applied for the occasion.
My read on this: the architecture itself was genuinely impressive, whatever its origins. The world then was as corrupt as it is now. The buildings just looked better.
Doggerland: Forests, Settlements, and a Civilization Underwater
Researchers have extracted ancient DNA from the seabed of the North Sea and found genetic traces of oak, elm, and hazel alongside animal DNA from boar, deer, and bears. The site is Doggerland, the land mass that connected Britain to mainland Europe before rising sea levels after the last ice age submerged it.
Scientists now believe Doggerland hosted dense forests and likely permanent human settlements more than 16,000 years ago. Parts of it may have survived significantly longer than previously estimated before being erased by flooding.
The implication is not subtle: entire chapters of human history are sitting on the floor of one of the world's most heavily trafficked bodies of water, unexcavated and largely unexamined. Every time someone asks why we map space before we map the oceans, this is the kind of discovery that makes the question harder to dismiss.
The Iliad Inside an Egyptian Mummy: Ancient Greece Meets Ancient Egypt
Archaeologists working at Oxyrhynchus, an active dig site first documented by Napoleon's forces in 1798, have found a papyrus fragment from Homer's Iliad inside a 1,600-year-old mummy. The fragment is from Book 2, the Catalog of Ships, in which Homer asks the Muses to name the members of the Greek army.
Egyptian burial texts were typically magical or ritualistic, carefully sealed for the afterlife. This is the first known instance of a literary text used in the mummification process. The fragment was tucked under the wrappings of the abdomen.
The University of Barcelona team working the site notes this is not entirely surprising given Greek and Roman cultural dominance of Egypt following Alexander the Great's conquest in 332 BC and Augustus's conversion of Egypt into a Roman province in 30 BC. But it is the first time we have found it this way. I will follow this when more detail emerges.
Linda Napolitano and 23 Witnesses in Lower Manhattan
On November 30, 1989, a total blackout hit lower Manhattan. At approximately 3:15 a.m., a woman named Linda Napolitano reported waking to find a group of gray aliens in her 12th-floor apartment. She reported being floated out of her window in a beam of light and drawn into a craft that opened like a clamp. She regained consciousness in bed at 5:00 a.m.
UFO researcher Bud Hopkins subsequently identified 23 witnesses. One described a clear view of a flying saucer. A second watched the object for two minutes. A third saw a woman in a white gown emerge from a window. A fourth initially assumed it was a film production. A New York Post delivery driver working in Queens for 30 years said he encountered the blackout while driving on a bridge, looked up, and watched a woman float from a window and disappear into the air. He said he realized exactly what he had seen and could not let it go.
I think Linda's case is among the more credible accounts in this space. That said, it shares one consistent element with every case before and after it: the described entities are the classic grays. My working theory on those has not changed.
Ultra-Processed Food, Kellogg's Salt Admission, and Cooking from Scratch
Journalist and author Michael Moss, whose book Hooked examines how food companies engineer addiction, described a demonstration at Kellogg's in which salt-free cornflakes were prepared. The company's chief spokeswoman took a bite and said she tasted metal. The chief technical officer confirmed this is a known issue: salt masks metallic off-notes that are intrinsic to the industrial manufacturing process.
That is not a fringe claim by a food activist. That is a Kellogg's senior technical official explaining, in front of a journalist, that salt, sugar, and fat are used partly to cover up the taste of the manufacturing process itself, not just for flavor or preservation.
Ultra-processed products span well beyond junk food: breakfast cereals, granola bars, protein bars, frozen dinners, diet foods, sauces, and yogurt all qualify. The evidence base linking ultra-processed food consumption to disease is documented. I have been cooking everything from scratch at home and the difference in taste is not subtle. I think it is the intention that goes into it.
// REFERENCED ENTITIES
- Cole AllenPersonI traced Cole Allen as the suspected individual apprehended at the White House Correspondents Dinner at the Washington Hilton on April 25, 2026, whose full name was apparently posted on X in December 2023 by the Henry Martinez account.
- Henry MartinezPersonI examined Henry Martinez's X account, which posted only the name Cole Allen in December 2023 and carries a banner image from a site called Time Machine that bears a resemblance to a 2024 event, raising the time-travel theory circulating online.
- Lockheed MartinOrganizationI noted that Henry Martinez is identified as a Lockheed Martin engineer who worked on the Orion spacecraft, and that a 2014 NASA paper out of Goddard Space Flight Center lists him as primary author.
- NASA Jet Propulsion LaboratoryOrganizationI flagged that Cole Allen interned at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 2014, the same year Henry Martinez co-authored a NASA paper, creating a documented overlap between the two men.
- Washington HiltonPlaceI covered the Washington Hilton as the venue for the White House Correspondents Dinner on April 25, 2026, where Cole Allen was apprehended, and noted it is also the site of the 1981 Reagan assassination attempt.
- White House Correspondents DinnerEventI used the White House Correspondents Dinner on April 25, 2026 as the anchor event for the Cole Allen thread, examining security failures and the numerological claims circling online.
- Matthew James SullivanPersonI reported that Matthew James Sullivan, a 39-year-old former US Air Force intelligence officer and would-be UAP whistleblower, was found dead on May 12, 2024, at his home in Falls Church, Virginia, two weeks before he was scheduled to testify before Congress.
- Amy EsgridgePersonI covered Amy Esgridge, a 34-year-old researcher who reportedly warned on camera that any report of her suicide would be false; she was found dead in 2022, with her unpublished anti-gravity paper never located.
- Michael David HicksPersonI included Michael David Hicks, whose work was connected to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in the running list of researchers who died under limited publicly disclosed circumstances in 2023.
- Frank MaywaldPersonI noted Frank Maywald, a senior NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory engineer working on space instrumentation and life-detection on distant moons, whose cause of death was never made public and for whom no autopsy was performed, dying in 2024.
- Anthony ChavezPersonI reported that Anthony Chavez, a researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory, went missing in May 2025, leaving behind all personal belongings.
- Monica ReszaPersonI listed Monica Resza, a NASA senior aerospace engineer working on special rocket alloys at Los Alamos, as having disappeared while hiking in June 2025.
- Melissa KaisusPersonI noted that Melissa Kaisus, also in New Mexico, was reported missing four days after Monica Resza, similarly leaving all personal belongings behind.
- Joshua LeBlancPersonI covered 29-year-old NASA engineer Joshua LeBlanc, who was found burned beyond recognition in his Tesla after a crash in Alabama, with his personal belongings left at home and his car having sat at an airport hours earlier with no trip planned.
- Steven GarciaPersonI included Steven Garcia, a property custodian at a facility that manufactures more than 80% of non-nuclear components for US nuclear weapons, who vanished without a trace from New Mexico in August 2025.
- Nuno LoreroPersonI reported that Nuno Lorero, a top physicist at MIT and director of the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, was killed outside his home in 2025 with no arrests made.
- Carl GilmorePersonI noted astronomer and astrophysicist Carl Gilmore was killed outside his home in Texas in February 2026, with an arrest made but the case still marking another specialized researcher taken suddenly.
- William Neil McCasslinPersonI covered the disappearance of retired Air Force general William Neil McCasslin, whose work reportedly centered on UFOs and classified space programs; he went missing in New Mexico in early 2026, leaving all personal belongings behind, and has not been found.
- David WilcockPersonI reported that UFO researcher David Wilcock was found dead in Colorado from a self-inflicted gunshot wound just days before this broadcast, having said on camera only days earlier that every day on Earth is a gift amid the growing scientist disappearance pattern.
- Los Alamos National LaboratoryOrganizationI used Los Alamos National Laboratory as a recurring location across multiple disappearances in 2025, with at least two researchers, Anthony Chavez and Monica Resza, connected to the facility.
- MIT Plasma Science and Fusion CenterOrganizationI identified the MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center as the institution where Nuno Lorero served as director before his death in 2025.
- BayerOrganizationI reported that Bayer, which acquired Monsanto and its Roundup Ready crop portfolio, is currently pushing a Supreme Court case to block cancer lawsuit claims, with the Trump administration backing the bid.
- MonsantoOrganizationI traced Monsanto's introduction of Roundup Ready crops in the 1990s as the origin point of mass glyphosate use, noting its merger with Bayer went unchallenged during the Obama administration in 2015.
- HR7567DocumentI flagged HR7567 as a farm bill expected to come before Congress that would codify legal immunity for Bayer and effectively end organic farming protections.
- Church of ScientologyOrganizationI covered the viral trend of people rushing Scientology buildings and the organization's response of removing external door handles and adding bike locks, which I flagged as a likely fire-code violation.
- CERNOrganizationI examined CERN's 2008 launch of the Large Hadron Collider as the event cited by online theorists, including a viral interview with a child named Max Loen, to explain the Mandela Effect beginning around 2009.
- Large Hadron ColliderOrganizationI covered the Large Hadron Collider as the particle accelerator launched by CERN in 2008 that some theorists, including the interview subject Max Loen, claim shifted collective reality into a parallel universe.
- Linda NapolitanoPersonI examined the case of Linda Napolitano, who on November 30, 1989, reported being floated out of her 12th-floor Manhattan apartment into a craft witnessed by at least 23 people, including a New York Post delivery driver on a nearby bridge.
- PalantirOrganizationI noted Palantir's expansion of AI surveillance and data infrastructure beyond the United States, including data centers in the UK, and flagged the contradiction between the company's published virtue-signaling manifesto and statements its founders made exactly one year earlier.
- Benjamin NetanyahuPersonI quoted a March 2025 statement by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirming the elimination of top Iranian nuclear scientists, using this as context for why Israel is conspicuously absent from Congressman James Comer's suspect list.
- James ComerPersonI cited Congressman James Comer's Fox News appearance in which he named China, North Korea, Iran, and Russia as suspects in the scientist disappearances while notably omitting Israel, which had publicly acknowledged killing Iranian nuclear scientists in 2025.
- David GruschPersonI noted that Matthew James Sullivan had reportedly been in contact with UAP whistleblower David Grusch before his death, and I contrasted Grusch's continued public platform with the fates of lesser-known figures on the disappearance list.
- Steven GreerPersonI questioned why figures like Steven Greer are permitted to operate publicly and conduct press tours while other individuals with security clearances and classified project ties end up on the missing persons list.
- Ross CoulthartPersonI named Ross Coulthart alongside Steven Greer as among the high-profile UAP commentators who receive significant publicity without apparent personal risk, contrasting them with whistleblowers who have gone missing.
- DESIOrganizationI referenced DESI, the instrument behind the largest 3D map of the universe ever constructed, which charted 47 million individual galaxies over five years using 5,000 robotic fiber-optic eyes in a telescope.
- ChernobylPlaceI covered the viral image of two tourists sitting inside the radioactive Claw of Chernobyl, which was used after the 1986 disaster to handle debris so dangerous workers were limited to seconds of exposure.
- DoggerlandPlaceI covered the discovery of ancient DNA from the Doggerland seabed beneath the North Sea, confirming dense forests, animal populations, and probable human settlements existed there more than 16,000 years ago before rising sea levels submerged it.
- North SeaPlaceI used the North Sea as the location of the Doggerland submerged landscape discovery, noting researchers found genetic traces of oak, elm, hazel, boar, deer, and bears in seabed samples.
- 1893 Chicago World's FairEventI examined claims that the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, spanning over 690 acres and 27 million visitors, was not a construction project but a renovation of pre-existing architecture, as argued by the creator I covered.
- Museum of Science and IndustryOrganizationI noted that the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, formerly the Palace of Fine Arts, is one of the only surviving structures from the 1893 World's Fair.
- Oz PearlmanPersonI flagged that world-famous mentalist Oz Pearlman was performing a magic trick for Trump and Melania just seconds before the incident at the Washington Hilton.
- Caroline LevittPersonI covered a Freudian slip by Caroline Levitt at a pre-dinner press event where her choice of words drew significant online attention, followed by her dismissal of conspiracy theories at a post-dinner press conference.
- Jimmy KimmelPersonI covered Jimmy Kimmel's public response to Melania Trump's call for his firing over a joke he made at the correspondents dinner, in which he described her as having the glow of an expectant widow.
- Melania TrumpPersonI noted Melania Trump publicly called for Jimmy Kimmel to be fired following his expectant widow joke at the correspondents dinner, which Kimmel addressed in a subsequent broadcast.
- MadonnaPersonI covered viral footage of a purported Madonna appearance at a venue called The Abbey, with commentators questioning whether the person shown was actually Madonna or an impostor, citing changed vocal patterns and altered facial appearance.
- Northwest (North West)PersonI examined theories circulating about Kim Kardashian's 12-year-old daughter North West, covering claims about symbolic imagery in her TikTok content and a drawing posted by Kim Kardashian that commentators found unsettling.
- Kim KardashianPersonI referenced Kim Kardashian in the context of theories about her daughter North West's public image and an interview clip in which she reportedly discussed not giving her daughter a last name in order to use it as a brand.
- John Hinckley Jr.PersonI covered John Hinckley Jr.'s full release in 2022 and his recent statements that the Washington Hilton is not a secure venue for high-profile events, noting he simply blended in with reporters when he attempted to assassinate Reagan there in 1981.
- Ronald ReaganPersonI used the 1981 assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan at the Washington Hilton as historical precedent when examining the security failures alleged around the 2026 Cole Allen incident at the same venue.
- James BradyPersonI noted that James Brady, shot in the head during the 1981 Reagan assassination attempt, survived but died in 2014, with his death officially ruled a homicide due to the lasting effects of the gunshot wound.
- IngredionOrganizationI fact-checked a viral claim from a man who said he works at a cloud factory creating weather for Chicago; I identified his employer from the hat he wore as Ingredion, a food products company that does not make weather-altering clouds.
- Wayback MachineOrganizationI cited the Wayback Machine as the verification tool used to confirm that the Time Machine site image appearing on Henry Martinez's X profile was posted as far back as 2022, two years before the event it allegedly depicts.
- EcociaOrganizationI covered Ecocia as a search engine that directs all ad revenue toward planting trees and funding climate projects, having planted 250 million trees across more than 100 communities while generating more renewable energy than it consumes.
- Kellogg'sOrganizationI referenced a Kellogg's demonstration described by journalist Michael Moss in which the company's own chief spokeswoman reacted with horror to salt-free cornflakes, confirming salt is used to mask metallic off-notes produced during industrial manufacturing.
- University of BarcelonaOrganizationI noted the University of Barcelona as the institution whose archaeological team is currently working at the Oxyrhynchus site in Egypt where an Iliad papyrus fragment was discovered inside an ancient mummy.
- OxyrhynchusPlaceI covered Oxyrhynchus as the active Egyptian archaeology site, first documented by Napoleon's forces in 1798, where a 1,600-year-old mummy was found wrapped with a fragment from Book 2 of Homer's Iliad, the first time a literary text has been found inside a mummy.
- Panone 448CDocumentI covered Pantone 448C, the dull muddy greenish-brown identified in a 2012 scientific study as the world's most visually unappealing color, which was subsequently used on cigarette packaging in Australia to deter smoking.
- National Air and Space Intelligence CenterOrganizationI identified the National Air and Space Intelligence Center as one of the intelligence facilities where Matthew James Sullivan held top-secret clearances prior to his death.
- NSAOrganizationI noted the NSA as one of the intelligence agencies at which Matthew James Sullivan had reportedly worked in roles requiring top-secret clearance.
- SpaceXOrganizationI referenced SpaceX's 2020 launch of the Crew Dragon spacecraft as the moment NASA regained its own route to the International Space Station, ending the mandatory dependence on Russian Soyuz vehicles that began when the shuttle retired in 2011.
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// FAQ
- Who is Cole Allen and what happened at the White House Correspondents Dinner 2026?
- Cole Allen is the individual apprehended at the Washington Hilton during the White House Correspondents Dinner on April 25, 2026. According to his own manifesto, he checked into the hotel the day before the event, stayed on the 10th floor, and carried his weapons down via the stairwell, noting that security was entirely focused on exterior arrivals and protesters with no protocol for pre-event hotel guests. He previously interned at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 2014.
- What is the Henry Martinez X account and why does it matter?
- Henry Martinez is identified as a Lockheed Martin engineer who worked on the Orion spacecraft and co-authored a 2014 NASA paper out of Goddard Space Flight Center. His X account posted exactly one tweet in December 2023: the name Cole Allen, with no context. The Wayback Machine confirms his banner image, sourced from a site called Time Machine, was online as far back as 2022. Martinez has not been heard from since the tweet, leading some to speculate he is another entry on the missing scientists list.
- How many scientists have gone missing or died under suspicious circumstances since 2022?
- By the time of this broadcast, at least 13 researchers tied to nuclear, defense, or space programs had either died or disappeared. The list spans Amy Esgridge in 2022, Michael David Hicks and Matthew James Sullivan in 2023 and 2024, Frank Maywald in 2024, and a cluster including Anthony Chavez, Monica Resza, Melissa Kaisus, Joshua LeBlanc, Steven Garcia, and Nuno Lorero all in 2025. In early 2026, Carl Gilmore was killed in Texas, William Neil McCasslin vanished in New Mexico, and David Wilcock was found dead in Colorado.
- What did Matthew James Sullivan know, and how did he die?
- Matthew James Sullivan was a 39-year-old decorated Bronze Star recipient and former Air Force intelligence officer with top-secret clearances at the National Air and Space Intelligence Center and the NSA. He had reportedly been in contact with UAP whistleblower David Grusch and had agreed to testify before Congress about an alleged secret government UFO crash retrieval program. He died on May 12, 2024, at his home in Falls Church, Virginia, two weeks before his testimony date. The official cause of death from the Northern District Office of Chief Medical Examiner in Virginia was accidental drug intoxication involving alcohol, alprazolam, and other substances.
- What is Bayer's Supreme Court case about and why is it significant for farmers?
- Bayer, which acquired Monsanto and its Roundup herbicide portfolio, is currently arguing before the Supreme Court that cancer plaintiffs should be barred from suing over Roundup exposure. The Trump administration is backing Bayer's position. Bayer has already paid tens of billions of dollars in prior settlements. The case is significant because approximately 60% of total US crop acreage is treated with glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, which has been linked to cancer. A companion bill, HR7567, would codify legal immunity for Bayer and effectively end organic farming protections if passed.
- What is Doggerland and what was discovered there recently?
- Doggerland is a submerged land mass beneath the North Sea that once connected Britain to mainland Europe. Researchers have extracted ancient DNA from the seabed and found genetic traces of oak, elm, and hazel trees alongside animal DNA from boar, deer, and bears, confirming that dense forests and animal populations thrived there more than 16,000 years ago. Scientists now believe parts of Doggerland supported permanent human settlements before being erased by the rising seas that followed the last ice age.
- Why did the Church of Scientology remove its door handles?
- A viral trend of people attempting to enter Scientology buildings and explore as many floors as possible before being removed prompted the Church to strip external door handles from multiple entrances and secure them with bike locks. The footage I covered shows this across several doors at one building. Multiple people flagged this as an apparent fire-code violation. Former members quoted in the coverage describe an organization that isolates members from family, seizes savings, and restricts travel between facilities, with members moved at night by organizational buses.
- What was found inside an ancient Egyptian mummy at Oxyrhynchus?
- A team from the University of Barcelona working at Oxyrhynchus, an active archaeological site in Egypt, found a papyrus fragment from Book 2 of Homer's Iliad tucked under the abdominal wrappings of a 1,600-year-old mummy. This is the first time a literary text, rather than a magical or ritualistic text, has been found as part of the mummification process. The fragment is from the Catalog of Ships, in which Homer asks the Muses to name the members of the Greek army.