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All dispatch
// DISPATCH  //  2026-04-26

There Is No Going Back Now: AI Fakery, Surveillance Creep, and the Three Kinds of Blindness

// TL;DR

In this dispatch I run through a broadcast where three separate clips were obviously AI-generated while their creators swore they were real, at which point that stops being a mistake and starts being a pattern. Alongside the fakery I cover WEF admissions on brain-sensing consumer devices, the Mount Everest guide-poisoning scam, Roblox child-safety lawsuits in seven states, and a genuinely worthwhile rabbit hole into the Cult of Mithras buried beneath Vatican City.

// CHAPTERS

  1. 0:03Three Clips, Three Denials, One Pattern I open the broadcast by identifying three clips that are obviously AI-generated while their creators insist they're real. At a certain point that stops being an honest mistake.
  2. 0:40The Ritual of Minds and the Laugh Track Cover I cover a clip framed as a comedy skit that a creator identifies as the 'ritual of minds', complete with white antlers and people in robes being marked with red liquid. I note the argument that dark ceremony gets laundered through comedy.
  3. 4:08WEF Brain Sensors, Voice-to-Skull Patents, and the Delivery System I cover WEF footage confirming brain-sensing EEG technology is being embedded in consumer headphones, then trace a voice-to-skull patent and the argument that the delivery system has changed but the intention hasn't.
  4. 8:57ULEZ Blade Runners and the Surveillance You Can Actually See I cover London's ULEZ camera-cutting campaign, with claims that 50 percent of the city's surveillance cameras are down at any given time. I note this is the surveillance you can see, and flag that the kind you can't is coming.
  5. 10:23WWI Trench Foot, Enceladus, and Space Photo Skepticism I cover a creepy-fact segment on WWI soldiers fearing rain more than bullets due to trench foot, then pivot to legitimate NASA data on Saturn's moon Enceladus and its amino acid-containing water plumes.
  6. 12:49CNN's Online Rape Academy Exposure and the Arrest I cover a CNN undercover investigation into a platform described as an 'online rape academy', noting at least one arrest of a Polish man and asking how many female victims have no knowledge of what happened to them.
  7. 23:14Trump, Hegseth, and the UAP Declassification Announcement I cover Trump's announcement at a TPUSA event directing Pete Hegseth to review and declassify UAP documents, and note my prediction: underwhelming reveal, manufactured hype, sponsored controversy.
  8. 15:36Cult of Mithras: From the Rigveda to Beneath the Vatican I cover a detailed breakdown of the Cult of Mithras, tracing the deity from the Rigveda and the Zoroastrian Avesta through to Roman secret brotherhoods and the Mithraic temple that sits directly beneath Vatican City.
  9. 35:12Everest Guide-Poisoning Scam: The $20 Million Scheme I cover the Everest poisoning scandal, in which guides allegedly sickened climbers with contaminated food to trigger helicopter rescues, inflating payouts to roughly $20 million across a multi-year operation.
  10. 43:33Roblox, Hotel Elephant, and Seven State Lawsuits I cover the Hotel Elephant controversy inside Roblox, noting seven state lawsuits, Kentucky's attorney general describing the game as a hunting ground for child predators, and the platform's 111 million monthly users of whom 40 percent are under 13.
  11. 33:14NASA Compartmentalisation Claims and the Houston Problem I cover flat-Earth-adjacent claims that NASA's split between Cape Canaveral launch crews and Houston mission control proves the space programme is compartmentalised deception, and push back on the logic.
  12. 36:54Shimizu's Luna Ring and Wireless Energy from the Moon I cover Shimizu Corporation's Luna Ring concept, an 11,000 km solar panel belt around the moon's equator designed to beam unlimited clean energy back to Earth. My verdict: not happening, and if it does, it won't be real.
  13. 37:57Blaschko's Lines, Pets, and the Stripes You Can't See I cover Blaschko's Lines, the invisible embryonic stripe patterns on human skin, and the theory that animals perceiving UV light may already see what we can't. We're haunted houses to our pets.
  14. 39:39Mothman Kansas City Footage: Not AI, Probably Still Wrong I cover what I consider a compelling Mothman clip from Kansas City. I say it's not AI with the confidence of someone who is definitely wrong and knows exactly what they're doing.
  15. 46:02Three Kinds of Blindness: The Closing Brief I close by naming the three forms of blindness the broadcast surfaced: the AI we refuse to spot, the power structures we refuse to question, and the responsibilities we refuse to take. All three work for the same reason.

Three AI Clips, Three Denials, and When a Mistake Becomes a Plan

There were three clips in this broadcast that were obviously AI-generated, and three separate sets of people swearing they were real. I've given everyone the benefit of the doubt on one. Maybe two. Three is a pattern, not a mistake.

The tell is consistent across all of them: audio cadence that doesn't quite match the mouth, visual textures that flatten under scrutiny, and a social media apparatus that rewards outrage over verification. When the same move gets run three times in one feed, someone knows what they're doing.

The Ritual of Minds: Dark Ceremony Hidden Inside a Comedy Skit

One clip was played off as a random comedy skit. A creator I was covering identified it differently: they called it the 'ritual of minds'. The figure in the clip is wearing white antlers, which the creator describes as the symbol of the master of the hunt. People in white robes are being marked with red liquid in the background.

The argument being made, and I think it's worth sitting with, is that the laugh track is the mechanism. As long as a funny person is doing it, the audience classifies it as a joke and doesn't examine what's actually in frame. That's not paranoia. That's how misdirection works. Whether this specific clip is genuinely ritualistic or just weird performance art, the underlying media literacy point is solid.

WEF Brain Sensors in Bluetooth Headphones: What the Footage Actually Shows

I covered WEF footage in which a speaker confirms that brain-sensing EEG devices are being embedded into everyday consumer products, starting with mindfulness and meditation applications. The speaker acknowledges these sensors can pick up electrical brain activity, at what they describe as 'pretty low resolution' for now.

The creator presenting this footage connects it to a voice-to-skull patent, technology that in its documented form involves directing audio signals toward a target's skull. I looked for the original voice-to-skull patent and found a counter-patent instead, one that claims to fight against voice-to-skull technology. That distinction matters.

Klaus Schwab had recently stepped down from the WEF at the time of this broadcast, and a new figure had stepped up. The creator frames this transition as the 'last boss' arriving. I wouldn't put it that way, but the underlying data point is real: brain-sensing consumer hardware exists, it's being sold, and the resolution is only going one direction.

London ULEZ Blade Runners: 50 Percent Camera Destruction Rate

Footage circulating from London shows organised groups the creators call 'blade runners' cutting down ULEZ cameras across the city. The claim being made, which I can't independently verify from the footage alone, is that 50 percent of ultra low emission zone cameras in London are non-operational at any given time.

The clips show entire intersections being targeted simultaneously. Whether or not you agree with the tactic, the coordination is visible on camera. One creator makes a point I thought was worth flagging: the cameras you can see being cut down are not the surveillance you should be most concerned about.

WWI Trench Foot and Rain as a Weapon: The Atrocity Context

A creepy-fact TikTok segment covered the well-documented phenomenon of World War I soldiers fearing rain more than artillery. The reasoning is straightforward: trench warfare flooded the trenches, leading to trench foot, which caused tissue death and required amputation. The presenter cites approximately 10 million soldier deaths in WWI, with artillery shells as the primary cause.

The clip is genuine history, not conspiracy. I covered it because the framing around it, specifically the slide into 'every atrocity in history had one thing in common: we allowed it', is worth noting as a rhetorical transition device that appears repeatedly in this kind of content.

CNN's 'Online Rape Academy' Investigation: The Arrest and the Scale

CNN sent someone in undercover to expose a platform described internally as an 'online rape academy', a website where users allegedly share methods for drugging and assaulting partners, including specific milligram dosages of sleeping tablets. The content was being filmed, uploaded, and livestreamed, with users paying for access.

At least one arrest has been made, a Polish man. The presenter's figure for March traffic alone is 80 million viewers. If that number is accurate, the scale of the problem is not fringe. I have no way to verify the traffic figure from this broadcast, but the CNN investigation itself is the evidentiary anchor here.

Trump, Hegseth, and the UAP Declassification Announcement

Donald Trump announced at a TPUSA event that he had directed War Secretary Pete Hegseth to review and declassify UAP-related government documents, describing the contents as 'very interesting'. Florida Representative Anna Paulina Luna confirmed she would work with Hegseth through her declassification of government secrets task force.

My prediction on this: underwhelming reveal, manufactured hype, sponsored controversy. I'm clocking it now. The yearslong push to publish what the government knows about unidentified aerial phenomena has a track record, and the pattern of 'documents coming soon' has played out before without delivering material answers.

Cult of Mithras: From the Rigveda to Beneath Vatican City

A creator I covered spent significant time on the Cult of Mithras, and I'm going to say plainly that this is a worthwhile rabbit hole. Mithras appears in the Rigveda and the Zoroastrian Avesta, placing him in Indo-Iranian religious tradition thousands of years before Rome ever encountered the name.

The central image of Mithraic tradition, known as the Tauroctony, shows Mithras slaying a bull. Scholars have argued this is not a mythological scene but an astronomical map, encoding the moment the spring equinox shifted from Taurus into Aries, representing the precession of the equinoxes. The same image appears identically across hundreds of archaeological sites with zero variation.

When Mithraism entered Rome around the 1st century BC, it became the organising structure for a secret brotherhood that counted soldiers, senators, and emperors as initiates, all sworn to silence. Temples were built underground from Britain to Mesopotamia, all encoding identical symbols. When Christianity became the state religion of Rome in the 4th century, those temples were sealed, buried, and built over. Vatican City sits directly above one of them. The largest Mithraeum ever discovered is beneath the Circus Maximus in Rome.

Enceladus and NASA's Best Case for Extraterrestrial Life

One segment covered Saturn's moon Enceladus using legitimate NASA data, and it's worth separating this from the conspiracy content surrounding it. A spacecraft passed through Enceladus's ice-volcano plumes and collected samples. Those samples contained amino acids, which build proteins, and phosphorus, which is required for DNA, cell membranes, and bones.

The moon has an ocean beneath its south pole estimated at 10 km deep, approaching the depth of the Mariana Trench on Earth. JWST imaged Enceladus and captured a water plume extending 9,600 km from the surface. That plume is 20 times larger than the moon itself. The four tiger-stripe formations at the south pole are measurably hotter than the rest of the moon, and hundreds of geysers have been mapped inside them.

I noted that every space photo feels off to me lately and I can't unsee it. That's me being honest about my own perception, not a factual claim about the images.

Mount Everest Guide-Poisoning Scam: The $20 Million Helicopter Rescue Scheme

A segment covered an alleged scheme on Mount Everest in which guides, helicopter operators, and medical providers allegedly colluded to poison climbers' food, inducing nausea and dizziness severe enough that the climbers agreed to emergency helicopter evacuations. The operation is believed to have run for years and inflated payouts to roughly $20 million.

Dozens of individuals have now been charged. The poisoned climbers didn't die; they were made ill enough to consent to evacuation, which triggered the insurance and rescue payouts the scheme depended on. Mount Everest, the most remote place on Earth, being the site of a long-running financial fraud says something about where human ingenuity gets directed.

Roblox, Hotel Elephant, and Child Safety Lawsuits Across Seven States

The Hotel Elephant controversy involves a game within the Roblox platform that Kentucky's attorney general has described as a hunting ground for child predators. The game features eight numbered rooms across eight floors, secret rooms, and, according to the segment, has been used as a meeting ground between adults and children.

Roblox has 111 million monthly active users. Forty percent of them are under 13. Seven states have filed lawsuits against the platform. The only change made to Hotel Elephant, according to the presenter, was placing an age verification screen in front of the door, which any user can lie past.

I'll be direct on one point I raised in the broadcast: parents who hand a device to a child and don't monitor what that child accesses share responsibility here. That's not a popular thing to say, but I said it and I stand by it.

NASA Compartmentalisation Claims: The Houston Problem Examined

A conversation between two creators argued that NASA's operational split between launch crews at Cape Canaveral and mission controllers in Houston proves the space programme is a compartmentalised deception, with neither group able to verify what the other was actually doing.

I pushed back on this, gently, by raising the Chinese rocket incident in which a launch vehicle killed an entire village on impact, a real event that required a cover-up. If rockets weren't actually launching, you don't need that kind of cover-up. The compartmentalisation argument is real as an organisational observation; as proof of fabrication it doesn't hold.

Shimizu Corporation's Luna Ring: Real Concept, Distant Reality

Shimizu Corporation has a documented concept called the Luna Ring, a belt of solar panels stretching over 11,000 km around the moon's equator. With no atmosphere, the moon receives constant sunlight. The Luna Ring design proposes beaming that energy back to Earth via lasers or microwaves, functionally wireless electricity at a planetary scale.

The honest assessment is that this will cost trillions to build, requires a permanent robotic workforce on the lunar surface, and is nowhere near achievable in the near term. It is a real engineering concept, not science fiction. My view: it won't happen. And if it does, I'll be suspicious of who controls it.

Blaschko's Lines: The Invisible Stripes Every Human Carries

A science segment covered Blaschko's Lines, the invisible patterns on human skin that trace the migration paths of skin cells during embryonic development. They form V-shapes down the back, S-shaped swirls on the stomach, and vertical stripes along the arms and legs. They're not mapped to muscles, veins, or bones.

The lines aren't visible under normal light because skin pigmentation is too uniform. Under specific UV light they become apparent, and they're more visible in people with certain skin conditions. Some researchers theorise that cats and certain birds, which perceive light in the UV spectrum, may see Blaschko's Lines on the humans around them. We don't have definitive proof of that. But it does mean your pets might be seeing something you can't.

Three Kinds of Blindness: The Closing Brief

I closed this broadcast by naming what I think were the three forms of blindness the whole episode surfaced. The AI we refuse to spot. The power structures we refuse to question. The responsibilities we refuse to take.

Every single one of them works for the same reason: somewhere along the line, someone decided it was easier not to look. The only question left, and it's not rhetorical, is whether that someone is us. Thank you for looking.

// REFERENCED ENTITIES

  • Nexor
    Person
    I am the broadcaster and investigative reporter who curated, analysed, and delivered commentary on every clip covered in this dispatch.
  • WEF
    Organization
    I flagged WEF-sourced footage discussing the embedding of brain-sensing EEG devices into everyday consumer products like Bluetooth headphones.
  • Klaus Schwab
    Person
    I noted that Schwab had recently stepped down from the WEF at the time of this broadcast, contextualising the brain-sensor discussion as a leadership transition moment.
  • Pete Hegseth
    Person
    I covered a news segment in which Trump directed War Secretary Pete Hegseth to review and declassify UAP-related government documents.
  • Donald Trump
    Person
    I covered Trump's announcement at a TPUSA event directing Pete Hegseth to declassify what he described as 'very interesting' UAP documents.
  • Anna Paulina Luna
    Person
    I noted that Florida Representative Anna Paulina Luna stated she would work with Hegseth to declassify UAP files through her declassification of government secrets task force.
  • TPUSA
    Organization
    I identified TPUSA as the venue for the event at which Trump made his UAP declassification announcement.
  • NASA
    Organization
    I covered claims in the broadcast disputing NASA's operational structure, as well as a separate legitimate segment on NASA's Cassini spacecraft sampling Enceladus.
  • Enceladus
    Place
    I covered a segment presenting scientific data on Saturn's moon Enceladus, including NASA findings of amino acids and phosphorus in its plumes, and JWST imaging of a 9,600 km water plume.
  • James Webb Space Telescope
    Organization
    I referenced JWST imaging of Enceladus that revealed a water plume extending 9,600 km, roughly 20 times the moon's own diameter.
  • Roblox
    Organization
    I covered the Hotel Elephant controversy inside Roblox, noting seven states have filed lawsuits against the platform and that 40 percent of its 111 million monthly users are under 13.
  • Hotel Elephant
    Event
    I covered claims that Hotel Elephant, a game within Roblox, functions as a meeting ground for predators and that Kentucky's attorney general has described it as a hunting ground for child predators.
  • Mithras
    Person
    I covered a detailed segment on the Cult of Mithras, tracing the deity from the Rigveda and Zoroastrian Avesta through to Roman mystery religion, and noting that a Mithraeum sits directly beneath Vatican City.
  • Vatican
    Place
    I noted the Vatican sits directly above a Mithraic temple, and that the largest Mithraeum ever discovered lies beneath the Circus Maximus in Rome.
  • Circus Maximus
    Place
    I referenced the Circus Maximus in Rome as the site of the largest known Mithraeum, buried beneath the structure.
  • Rigveda
    Document
    I noted that Mithras appears in the Rigveda, placing the deity's origins thousands of years before the Roman mystery cult adopted him.
  • Zoroastrian Avesta
    Document
    I noted the Zoroastrian Avesta as a second ancient text referencing Mithras, establishing his presence across Indo-Iranian tradition prior to Rome.
  • Shimizu Corporation
    Organization
    I covered Shimizu Corporation's Luna Ring concept, a proposed belt of solar panels stretching 11,000 km around the moon's equator to beam energy back to Earth via lasers or microwaves.
  • Luna Ring
    Event
    I covered the Luna Ring as a real conceptual proposal by Shimizu Corporation, involving a solar panel belt around the moon's equator and wireless energy transmission to Earth.
  • Mount Everest
    Place
    I covered the Everest guide-poisoning scam, in which guides allegedly sickened climbers with food to trigger costly helicopter rescues as part of a scheme that inflated payouts to roughly $20 million.
  • Christina Koch
    Person
    I addressed footage of astronaut Christina Koch after splashdown, noting that commentators were treating normal post-spaceflight balance difficulties as evidence of fakery, and flagging that nobody seemed to check the six-day gap between splashdown and the footage in question.
  • Iron Dome
    Organization
    I covered a clip in which audio resembling Iron Dome intercept explosions was heard near a strange aerial object, with the broadcaster suggesting a possible military engagement with an unidentified structure.
  • CNN
    Organization
    I covered a CNN undercover investigation exposing an online platform described as an 'online rape academy', where users allegedly shared methods for drugging and assaulting partners, resulting in at least one arrest of a Polish man.
  • Great Wolf Lodge
    Place
    I covered a clip filmed at Great Wolf Lodge in which a young child refused to enter a hotel room, which commentators interpreted as a paranormal reaction.
  • Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition
    Event
    I covered claims about the 1909 Alaska Yukon Pacific Expo, including alleged baby incubator cafes, pyramid structures, and the raffling of orphans, with the site later converted into the University of Washington.
  • University of Washington
    Organization
    I noted that the site of the 1909 Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition was subsequently redeveloped as the University of Washington, which one clip framed as a deliberate cover-up of the expo's remains.
  • Nature's Own
    Organization
    I covered a segment comparing mouldy homemade bread with apparently mould-free Nature's Own commercial bread, with the presenter alleging the brand had relabelled enriched flour as 'cultured wheat flour' to obscure its chemical processing.
  • Kansas City
    Place
    I covered footage allegedly showing a Mothman-type figure on the side of a building in Kansas City, which I noted was at minimum not obviously AI-generated.
  • Boston, Massachusetts
    Place
    I covered a clip filmed in Boston, Massachusetts, in which a woman on a cigarette walk discovered what appeared to be a ritual or wicker-man-style structure in a backyard.
  • Oklahoma
    Place
    I referenced an Oklahoma property sold in 2023 for $270,000 whose Zillow listing was still active and whose second structure contained a room displaying a large collection of dolls.
  • London
    Place
    I covered footage of so-called 'blade runners' in London cutting down ULEZ cameras, with claims that 50 percent of the city's ultra low emission zone cameras are non-operational at any given time.
  • ULEZ
    Event
    I covered the London ULEZ camera-cutting campaign, in which activists described as 'blade runners' are reportedly destroying ultra low emission zone surveillance cameras across the city at a sustained rate.
  • Blaschko's Lines
    Document
    I covered a science segment explaining Blaschko's Lines, the invisible stripe patterns on human skin that trace embryonic cell migration paths and may be visible to animals that perceive UV light.

// RELATED DISPATCHES

// FAQ

What is the 'ritual of minds' shown in the viral comedy skit clip?
The 'ritual of minds' is the label a creator applied to a clip that was circulating as a comedy skit. In it, a figure wears white antlers, described as the symbol of the master of the hunt, while robed individuals are marked with red liquid. The argument is that wrapping the imagery in comedy gives it plausible deniability and allows it to be dismissed as a joke rather than examined.
What did the WEF say about brain sensors in headphones?
WEF footage included in this broadcast shows a speaker confirming that brain-sensing EEG devices are being embedded in everyday consumer products like Bluetooth headphones, initially focused on mindfulness and meditation applications. The speaker acknowledges the sensors can currently pick up electrical brain activity at 'pretty low resolution'. Klaus Schwab had recently stepped down from the WEF around this period.
What did Trump say about declassifying UAP files?
Donald Trump announced at a TPUSA event that he had directed War Secretary Pete Hegseth to review and declassify government UAP documents, saying there was 'some interesting stuff in there' and that the process was 'well underway'. Florida Representative Anna Paulina Luna separately confirmed she would work with Hegseth through her declassification of government secrets task force. My prediction is the reveal will be underwhelming.
What is the Cult of Mithras and what does it have to do with the Vatican?
Mithras is a deity who appears in the Rigveda and the Zoroastrian Avesta, placing him in Indo-Iranian religious tradition thousands of years before Rome. Around the 1st century BC, Mithraism became the organising structure for a Roman secret brotherhood with soldier, senator, and emperor members. When Christianity became Rome's state religion in the 4th century, Mithraic temples were sealed and built over. Vatican City sits directly above one of those temples, and the largest known Mithraeum is beneath the Circus Maximus in Rome.
What is the Mount Everest guide-poisoning scam and how much money was involved?
An alleged scheme operating on Mount Everest for multiple years involved guides, helicopter operators, and medical providers colluding to poison climbers' food, inducing illness severe enough to trigger emergency helicopter evacuations. The operation inflated insurance and rescue payouts to roughly $20 million. Dozens of individuals have been charged in connection with the scheme.
What is the Hotel Elephant Roblox controversy and which states are suing?
Hotel Elephant is a game within Roblox that Kentucky's attorney general has described as a hunting ground for child predators. The game features eight rooms across eight floors and has allegedly been used as a meeting ground between adults and minors. Roblox has 111 million monthly users, 40 percent of whom are under 13. Seven states have filed lawsuits against the platform, and the only access restriction added to the game was an age verification screen that users can bypass by lying about their age.
What evidence did NASA find on Enceladus that suggests the possibility of life?
A NASA spacecraft passed through water plumes ejected by ice volcanoes on Saturn's moon Enceladus and collected samples. Those samples contained amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins, and phosphorus, which is required for DNA, cell membranes, and bones. JWST later imaged a water plume extending 9,600 km from the moon's surface, roughly 20 times the moon's own diameter. An ocean estimated at 10 km deep is believed to exist beneath the south pole.
What are Blaschko's Lines and can animals see them on humans?
Blaschko's Lines are invisible stripe patterns on human skin that trace the paths taken by skin cells during embryonic development. They form V-shapes on the back, S-shaped swirls on the stomach, and vertical stripes on the limbs. They're invisible under normal light because skin pigmentation is uniform, but become visible under certain UV light or in people with specific skin conditions. Some scientists theorise that cats and certain birds, which perceive UV light, may be able to see these lines on the humans around them, though definitive proof doesn't currently exist.
Enriched 2026-05-23  //  @IAmNexor