Testosterone Conspiracies, Fiberglass Hoaxes, and UAP Disclosure Theater: Signal vs. Noise
I ran through a wide-ranging compilation today, from "Upstream files" testosterone conspiracy claims and fiberglass toilet paper panic to a U.S. congressman teasing unreleased UAP footage and an AI company monetizing grief with three-minute avatar videos. Some of it is worth pulling apart. A lot of it is noise. My job is telling the difference.
// CHAPTERS
- 0:02Testosterone Conspiracy and the 'Upstream Files' — I open on a viral clip claiming elites are deliberately lowering testosterone through water, food, and social media. I push back on the 'de-masculinization as root cause' framing as narrow-minded, even while acknowledging a concerted agenda exists.
- 0:51Fiberglass Toilet Paper Panic and Government Trend Theory — I cover a viral warning about microscopic fiberglass shards allegedly embedded in public toilet paper rolls, and lay out my view that dangerous social media trends are likely government-seeded because manufactured virality bypasses people's critical thinking.
- 3:02Unitree Robotics Mech Suit: 500 kg, Half a Million Dollars — I break down Unitree Robotics' newly released 500 kg, 4.5-metre mechanical suit, available for public purchase at approximately half a million dollars, and question what legitimate civilian use case could possibly justify its existence.
- 4:24Han Dynasty Magic Mirrors and Ancient Knowledge Systems — I cover 2,000-year-old Han Dynasty magic mirrors that project hidden images using micro-dented metal and light warping, and connect them to cymatics, Egyptian projected hieroglyphs, the Merkaba, and the Tibetan rainbow light body.
- 7:27Glamham Radio Channel: Antarctic Treaty and BeiDou Gray Zone — I air and respond to a Glamham Radio Channel segment sarcastically connecting the 48th Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting in Hiroshima to a concurrent virus outbreak and China's BeiDou navigation ground stations in Antarctica.
- 9:21British Food History and the Yorkshire Pudding Defense — I cover a breakdown of why British food has a poor reputation, tracing it through the Industrial Revolution and World War II rationing that lasted until 1954, and I offer one strong defense: Yorkshire pudding is God-tier food when done right.
- 10:57Medical Breakthroughs: Alzheimer's, CRISPR, and AI Diagnostics — I run through a 60-second good-news segment covering Alzheimer's amyloid protein treatments in clinical trials, CRISPR gene editing restoring sight in patients born blind, and AI tools scanning patient data for cancers and rare conditions doctors might miss.
- 12:47AI Phone Scam: Credit Card Details Mid-Car Crash — I play a clip of an AI phone scammer continuing to demand credit card details from a caller who has just been in a car crash and is bleeding. I have no words for it.
- 13:32Channel Milestone, Team Water Scandal, and Membership Thanks — I thank channel members who fund this operation, note I've reached 100k subscribers without brand deals or ad sponsors, and explain why I abandoned a brief Team Water plug after discovering it was a tax vehicle for a well-known creator.
- 14:161500s Maps, Giant Tree Theory, and the Anunnaki Narrative — I cover a clip arguing that 1500s maps of the Americas show castles and giant trees that mainstream geology dismisses as volcanic formations. I'm not sold on the mountaintop-as-ancient-tree theory, but the castle references are worth a look.
- 20:00Ellen DeGeneres Baby Rating Segment and the Word 'Crops' — I flag a resurfaced Ellen DeGeneres segment where she rated audience babies on a scale of 1 to 10 with deductions for 'too many fat rolls.' What stuck with me was her describing a new batch of babies as a 'crop.'
- 20:59Anunnaki, Marduk, and the Teotihuacan Origin Claim — I cover a clip connecting Anunnaki mythology, Marduk as Amun-Ra, and the claim that Teotihuacan was built by a son of Ea Enki who traveled to Mesoamerica with Olmecs before the Mayans arrived.
- 22:22American vs. European Food: Pesticides, Potassium Bromate, and Fake Ice Cream — I cover comparison clips contrasting American and European food standards, including pesticide-sprayed strawberries, potassium bromate in bread, processed American cheese that burns like plastic, and the revelation that Dreyer's, Breyers, and Blue Bunny no longer qualify as ice cream under FDA standards.
- 17:50UAP Disclosure: Congressional Tease and the Nothing Burger Pattern — I cover a clip of a U.S. congressman claiming he has seen unreleased UAP footage, including video of American aircraft firing on UAPs near Russian submarines, and threatening to release it himself under speech and debate protections. I'm skeptical, given the pattern of disclosure theater.
- 29:00AI Grief Tech, Schizophrenia and Congenital Blindness, and Final Notes — I close by taking apart an AI avatar company that markets itself as intergenerational storytelling while running ads built entirely around grief and loss, then end on a genuinely fascinating neuroscience finding: no person born blind has ever been diagnosed with schizophrenia.
The 'Upstream Files' Testosterone Claim: Documented Agenda or Convenient Scapegoat?
A clip circulating online claimed that 'the elites' have been deliberately suppressing testosterone in men through water, food, and social media messaging, citing something called the 'Upstream files' as the source. The argument runs that men have been culturally conditioned toward passivity so they won't resist what those in power are doing.
I'm not going to pretend there's no concerted agenda behind some of what was discussed in that clip. There is. But blaming the feminization of men as the root cause of society's current condition is a falsehood, and a narrow-minded one. It flattens a genuinely complex dynamic into a single, tidy villain. That framing itself is worth being suspicious of.
Fiberglass in Public Toilet Paper: Viral Panic and the Government Trend Hypothesis
A warning spreading online claimed microscopic fiberglass shards are being embedded into public toilet paper rolls, with a viral video showing a woman who allegedly needed emergency treatment after exposure. The claim is that when inhaled, the fiberglass can cause internal lacerations.
Creators on TikTok were then allegedly filming themselves coating rolls in fiberglass and leaving them in restaurants and gas stations, framing it as a prank. Hundreds of thousands of views.
My position is this: I personally believe the government is responsible for seeding dangerous trends on platforms. When something appears popular enough, people stop questioning its origin and blindly replicate it for validation and clicks. Nobody with a functioning brain independently arrives at 'let me coat toilet paper in fiberglass.' When it looks like a trend, the critical faculty switches off. That's the mechanism.
Unitree Robotics Mech Suit: Public Sale, Half a Million Dollars, and No Convincing Use Case
Unitree Robotics has released a 500 kg mechanical suit, approximately 4.5 metres tall, that can walk autonomously or be piloted by a person inside. It can break through solid concrete walls and move on all four legs like a spider. The price point is reportedly around half a million dollars, and it is being made available to the general public.
The official line is that it's intended for personal use and industrial applications, where one worker could do the volume of work previously requiring many. I'm not buying the framing. I have no idea what legitimate personal use case exists for a half-ton mech that smashes through walls. The more obvious question is how long before something like this appears on a front line somewhere.
Han Dynasty Magic Mirrors, Cymatics, and the Limits of Official History
A clip covered 2,000-year-old Han Dynasty magic mirrors that appear to show you what's on the back of the mirror when light is shone through them. The mechanism is micro-denting in the metal that warps light reflection and draws out an image using focused light and shadow. Not magic, but extraordinarily precise engineering for the era.
The same civilization that produced these mirrors also built 8,000 terracotta soldiers. The clip connected this to cymatics, the practice of recording frequencies in physical patterns, which was apparently a major feature of temple culture across multiple ancient civilizations. Egypt used projected hieroglyphs inside temples. The Atlantean concept of the Merkaba and the Tibetan rainbow light body were both framed as tools for multi-dimensional consciousness work.
I've watched countless documentaries on the Qin Dynasty and everything that came before it. I still refuse to accept the sanitized version we're fed. There was more going on in that period than we're given credit for.
Glamham Radio Channel: The Antarctic Treaty Meeting in Hiroshima and BeiDou Gray Zone Activities
I aired a segment from the Glamham Radio Channel that, framed as a mock official broadcast, connected several dots it insisted were not connected. The 48th Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting is currently taking place in Hiroshima. One of its key agenda items concerns stricter rules on Antarctic tourism as it pertains to germs. The segment noted that a high-profile incident involving loss of life and international contact tracing would be extremely useful for anyone wanting to push that agenda item through.
The segment also noted, sarcastically, that the tourism regulation push has nothing to do with China's BeiDou navigation ground stations in Antarctica, which would provide no benefit whatsoever to missile targeting, submarine navigation, or space domain awareness.
I hope the majority of you read between the lines on that one. The censorship is real on this topic. Very similar to a certain incident not too long ago. If you know, you know.
British Food, World War II Rationing Until 1954, and the One Dish That Holds
A clip laid out why British food has a poor reputation, and it's actually a coherent historical argument. The UK is cold, damp, and historically limited to root vegetables, oats, barley, dairy, and preserved meats. Then came the Industrial Revolution, where food needed to be cheap, fast, and filling. Then came World War II, and food rationing in Britain lasted until 1954, almost a decade after the war ended. Entire generations grew up cooking the most minimal, bland meals possible.
Immigrants changed the menu. Indian, Caribbean, and Chinese food became British staples, and thank goodness for that. Some dishes didn't need saving: full English breakfast, shepherd's pie, sticky toffee pudding. As a Brit, I'm not even offended by the criticism. Our food history is what it is. But I will defend one dish absolutely: Yorkshire pudding, done properly, is God-tier food.
Alzheimer's Drugs, CRISPR Blindness Treatment, and AI Diagnostics: Progress With Caveats
A 60-second good news segment covered three medical developments. First, new drugs targeting amyloid proteins in the brain are showing real potential in clinical trials for slowing the progression of Alzheimer's disease. Not a cure yet, but measurable slowing of cognitive decline is significant.
Second, CRISPR gene editing has been used to treat inherited blindness by correcting faulty genes directly inside the eye. Some patients who were born blind and had never had any vision have been able to see for the first time. This is the only documented case of gene editing restoring a human sense.
Third, AI tools are now being used in hospitals to analyze scans, blood tests, and patient data to detect cancers and rare conditions that doctors might miss, cross-referencing photos and symptoms against databases of millions of cases. These aren't replacing doctors. They're a second analytical layer.
I'll be honest: when these advancements get packaged as purely amazing and groundbreaking, I'm suspicious. Whatever technology is going to put you into a database and flag terminal conditions, I want to think carefully before signing up.
AI Phone Scammer Demands Credit Card Details From Crash Victim
A clip played a recording of an AI phone scammer continuing to request a caller's credit card number while the caller repeatedly stated they had just been in a car accident and were bleeding. The scammer didn't deviate from the script.
I genuinely have no words for that.
100k Subscribers, No Brand Deals, and the Team Water Incident
I want to thank every channel member on screen. These are the people financing what I do here. I have no brand deals and no ad sponsors. I reached 100,000 subscribers without accepting any outside money, and I'm genuinely proud of that.
There was a brief exception. I did one plug for something called Team Water, presented as a collective effort to bring water to children in Africa. I then found out it was a tax vehicle for a well-known creator. I did one plug, found out what it was, and immediately denounced it publicly. One plug. Done. The channel members you see are the only reason this operation runs.
1500s Maps, Giant Trees, and Castles in the Americas
A clip presented maps from the 1500s showing the Americas, and argued that certain large natural formations, particularly mountain peaks with hexagonal columnar structures, are the stumps of ancient trees of enormous size, miles tall. The official geological explanation is that these are volcanic formations producing hexagonal columns.
I'm not fully sold on the mountaintop-as-ancient-tree theory. There's not enough logical foundation for me to commit to it without more evidence. What I will acknowledge is that the same maps showed what appear to be castles already present in the Americas in the 1500s. That part is worth paying attention to.
Ellen DeGeneres Baby Rating Segment and the 'Crops' Language
I came across a resurfaced segment from the Ellen DeGeneres show where she rated audience members' babies on a scale of 1 to 10, applying deductions for things like having 'too many fat rolls.' She always included a disclaimer: 'Don't rate your babies at home.'
The part that genuinely caught my attention was her describing a new set of babies to rate as a 'crop.' I found that word choice very interesting and incredibly disturbing. I've left the comments open below on this one.
Anunnaki, Marduk as Amun-Ra, and the Teotihuacan Origin Claim
A clip presented an alternative ancient history framework connecting the Anunnaki, Marduk, and the founding of Teotihuacan. The argument is that Marduk, a figure present in Sumerian cuneiform tablets, the Torah, the Bible, and Egyptian texts as Amun-Ra, fought his brother over kingship succession ahead of his processional period.
Their father, Ea Enki, reportedly sent the brother to Mesoamerica with Olmecs from Africa to establish a new civilization. That civilization became Teotihuacan, built long before the Mayans arrived. The Mayans inherited what was already there. The Aztecs came hundreds of years later after a volcanic eruption destroyed their valley and they stumbled across the site.
The clip also argued that the name Teotihuacan means 'the city of Tehuti,' and that Tehuti is another name for Thoth, the same architect connected to multiple ancient civilizations. If you look closely enough across ancient scriptures, there's probably a lot there to support this lineage.
American vs. European Food Standards: Pesticides, Potassium Bromate, and Plastic Cheese
A series of comparison clips laid out specific differences between American and European food regulations. American strawberries are sprayed with pesticides banned across Europe for disrupting hormones. American white bread contains potassium bromate, a carcinogen banned in Europe. American processed cheese, when burned, behaves like plastic because, the clip argues, that is essentially what it is.
American gummy bears contain artificial dyes linked to behavioral problems in children. In Europe, beet juice and carrot extract are used instead.
Then there's the ice cream situation. Many American brands, including Dreyer's, Breyers, and Blue Bunny, have reformulated their products to cut costs, substituting ingredients like palm kernel oil. When a product no longer meets even the FDA's relatively loose standards for ice cream, it must be labeled 'frozen dairy dessert' instead. Dreyer's, Breyers, and Blue Bunny all now carry that label. The FDA's standards are already close to non-existent in the United States. If these companies aren't meeting those, the product probably shouldn't be considered food.
UAP Congressional Disclosure: Footage of Aircraft Firing on UAPs Near Russian Submarines
A clip showed a U.S. congressman stating that he has personally seen videos in the process of being declassified, including footage of UAPs flying around Russian submarines and footage of American aircraft firing on some of these UAPs. He publicly threatened that if these videos are not declassified by the administration, he has the capability and the intention to release them himself under speech and debate protections.
I'm not holding my breath. This is the same pattern we've seen for years: a slow drip tease of disclosure, always just beyond reach, always promising more is coming. Two wings of the same bird. If there is a genuine alien disclosure at some point, I'd encourage everyone to think carefully before accepting it wholesale.
AI Grief Tech, the Key Fob Subscription Apartment, and the Schizophrenia-Blindness Link
An AI company is marketing an avatar service that allows people to create a digital version of themselves that interacts with family after death. The ad campaign leans entirely on grief, showing a grandmother's avatar meeting her unborn grandchild. One co-founder claimed this is not a grief tech platform but 'intergenerational storytelling.' He also claimed people retain control over their avatar after they die, which is a logical impossibility. What this actually is, is monetizing sadness. Based on a three-minute video.
Separately, I covered a clip from a woman apartment hunting in Los Angeles who found a $2,500-per-month one-bedroom unit that required a separate monthly membership subscription just to use the key fob to access the apartment. No utilities included. No parking. A subscription to enter your own home.
I closed on something genuinely fascinating from TIL Science: no person born blind has ever been diagnosed with schizophrenia. The explanation is rooted in predictive brain modelling. The brain doesn't passively receive sensory data; it runs a continuous forecast model built from lived experience. In schizophrenia, the error signal fires when it shouldn't, producing hallucinations and delusions. If you've never had visual input, the brain never builds the visual predictive model that can malfunction. People who lose vision as adults, by contrast, show higher rates of psychosis-like symptoms, because the model was built and then starved of data. That finding has held across different countries, decades, and independent research groups. I had never paid attention to it before. Schizophrenia is a horrifying condition, and the fact that congenital blindness appears to prevent it entirely says something profound about how sensory experience shapes brain architecture from birth.
// REFERENCED ENTITIES
- NexorPersonI am the host and analyst behind this dispatch, formerly running the channel as Nexor Reacts and now operating simply as Nexor.
- Unitree RoboticsOrganizationI covered their newly released 500 kg, 4.5-metre mechanical suit, which they claim will be available for public purchase at approximately half a million dollars.
- Han DynastyEventI referenced the Han Dynasty in the context of 2,000-year-old Chinese magic mirrors that project hidden images using micro-dented metal surfaces.
- Qin DynastyEventI noted I've watched countless documentaries on the Qin Dynasty but still reject the sanitized historical narrative fed through mainstream media.
- Antarctic Treaty Consultative MeetingEventI flagged the 48th Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting, happening in Hiroshima, as a clip from the Glamham Radio Channel connected it to a concurrent virus outbreak and stricter Antarctic tourism rules.
- HiroshimaPlaceI identified Hiroshima as the location of the 48th Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting referenced in the Glamham Radio Channel segment.
- Glamham Radio ChannelOrganizationI aired and responded to a segment from the Glamham Radio Channel that sarcastically connected the Antarctic Treaty meeting, a virus outbreak, and China's BeiDou ground stations in Antarctica.
- BeiDouOrganizationThe Glamham Radio Channel segment I covered raised China's BeiDou navigation ground stations in Antarctica as a potential military gray-zone concern tied to missile targeting and submarine navigation.
- WHOOrganizationThe Glamham Radio Channel segment I covered made a cryptic reference to the WHO Director-General's name, which I noted without expanding on due to content moderation concerns.
- TeotihuacanPlaceI covered a clip arguing that Teotihuacan was built before the Mayans by a civilization linked to the Olmecs and an Anunnaki figure called Ea Enki, with the city's name meaning 'the city of Tehuti.'
- ThothPersonI covered a claim that Thoth, also known as Tehuti in parts of Africa, is the same architect connected to Teotihuacan and multiple ancient civilizations.
- MardukPersonI covered a clip connecting Marduk, a figure appearing in Sumerian cuneiform tablets, the Torah, the Bible, and Egyptian texts as Amun-Ra, to conflicts over kingship in Atlantean mythology.
- Ea EnkiPersonI covered a claim that Ea Enki, a figure in Anunnaki mythology, directed a son to travel to Mesoamerica with Olmecs and establish the Teotihuacan civilization.
- Ellen DeGeneresPersonI flagged a resurfaced segment where Ellen DeGeneres rated audience members' babies on a scale of 1 to 10, noting her use of the word 'crops' to describe a new batch of babies as particularly disturbing.
- Luigi MangionePersonI referenced Luigi Mangione when pushing back on claims that warehouse fires and CEO attacks represent organic popular uprising, arguing these events are planned and orchestrated rather than grassroots.
- Dreyer'sOrganizationI covered claims that Dreyer's has reformulated its products to include palm kernel oil, no longer meeting FDA standards to legally call its product ice cream, instead labeling it 'frozen dairy dessert.'
- BreyersOrganizationI noted Breyers alongside Dreyer's and Blue Bunny as brands that have reformulated products and now fall under the 'frozen dairy dessert' label rather than ice cream.
- Blue BunnyOrganizationI grouped Blue Bunny with Dreyer's and Breyers as ice cream brands that have reformulated and no longer meet FDA standards to be labeled as ice cream.
- FDAOrganizationI referenced the FDA's legal standards for ice cream labeling, noting that even these relatively loose standards are no longer being met by several major American brands.
- Mulholland DrivePlaceI covered a clip about ultra-wealthy residents near Mulholland Drive attempting to obscure public access to a 100-acre-plus public park that was donated to the US government by land developers.
- TescoOrganizationI made a first-hand observation that my local Tesco in rural Britain had installed plastic anti-theft slide mechanisms on baby formula and baby food, which I argued is about conditioning rather than theft prevention.
- Los AngelesPlaceI covered a clip from a woman apartment hunting in Los Angeles who found a $2,500 per month one-bedroom unit requiring a separate monthly membership subscription just to access the unit with a key fob.
- TIL ScienceOrganizationI credited TIL Science for a segment explaining the link between congenital blindness and the absence of schizophrenia diagnoses, rooted in predictive brain modelling theory.
- CRISPRDocumentI covered a report that CRISPR gene-editing technology has been used to treat inherited blindness by correcting faulty genes directly inside the eye, with some patients seeing for the first time.
- Amun-RaPersonI covered a claim identifying Amun-Ra, the Egyptian deity, as the same figure as Marduk from Sumerian and Biblical texts, framed within an Anunnaki mythology narrative.
- MerkabaDocumentI referenced the Merkaba as an Atlantean concept, described in the clip as a vehicle for multi-dimensional consciousness exploration, with the Tibetan equivalent cited as the rainbow light body.
- AntarcticaPlaceI flagged Antarctica as the geographic center of the Glamham Radio Channel's satirical-but-pointed analysis connecting the Antarctic Treaty meeting agenda to military gray-zone activities and resource exploitation.
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// FAQ
- What are the 'Upstream files' about testosterone suppression?
- The clip I covered claimed that documents called the 'Upstream files' reveal a deliberate elite plan to lower testosterone in men through water, food, and social media messaging about toxic masculinity. I acknowledged a concerted agenda exists behind this kind of cultural pressure, but pushed back on the claim that de-masculinization is the root cause of society's current problems. That framing is too narrow.
- What is the Unitree Robotics mech suit and can you buy one?
- Unitree Robotics has released a 500 kg mechanical suit standing approximately 4.5 metres tall. It can walk autonomously, be piloted by a person inside, break through solid concrete, and move on all four legs. The company says it will be available for public purchase at around half a million dollars, with interest from industrial sectors. I have serious doubts about what legitimate civilian use case exists for a machine like this.
- What is the 48th Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting and why does it matter?
- The 48th Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting is currently taking place in Hiroshima. A key agenda item is stricter rules on Antarctic tourism tied to germ transmission. The Glamham Radio Channel segment I aired connected this meeting, a concurrent virus outbreak, and China's BeiDou navigation ground stations in Antarctica, which would be useful for missile targeting and submarine navigation. The segment was framed as satire, but the dots it connected are real.
- Why is Dreyer's ice cream now called 'frozen dairy dessert'?
- Dreyer's, along with Breyers and Blue Bunny, has reformulated its products to cut costs, substituting ingredients like palm kernel oil. When a product no longer meets FDA legal standards for what constitutes ice cream, it must be labeled 'frozen dairy dessert' instead. The FDA's standards are already loose by most comparisons, so a product failing to meet even those is worth paying attention to.
- What did the US congressman claim about UAP footage?
- A U.S. congressman stated publicly that he has personally seen videos he believes are in the process of being declassified, including footage of UAPs flying near Russian submarines and footage of American aircraft firing on those UAPs. He threatened to release the videos himself under speech and debate protections if the administration doesn't declassify them. I'm skeptical, given years of identical disclosure theater with nothing substantive following.
- What is the AI grief tech avatar company and what did the co-founder say?
- The company I covered markets an AI avatar service where people record a short video of themselves, reportedly just three minutes, and the AI generates a digital version that can interact with family after death. One co-founder claimed it is not a grief tech platform but a tool for 'intergenerational storytelling,' and said people retain control over their avatar after dying. Both claims are difficult to reconcile. Their entire ad campaign is built around grief scenarios. I called it what it is: monetizing sadness.
- Why don't people born blind develop schizophrenia?
- Research covered by TIL Science shows that no person born blind has ever been diagnosed with schizophrenia, and this finding has held across different countries, decades, and independent research groups. The leading explanation is that the brain runs a continuous predictive model built from sensory experience. In schizophrenia, that model generates false error signals, producing hallucinations. If you were never sighted, the visual predictive model was never built and therefore can't malfunction. Notably, adults who lose their sight show higher rates of psychosis-like symptoms, suggesting the model was built and then starved of incoming data.
- What happened with Nexor's Team Water sponsorship?
- I did one brief plug for something called Team Water, presented to me as a collective effort to bring water to children in Africa. I subsequently found out it was functioning as a tax vehicle for a well-known creator. I immediately abandoned it and publicly denounced it. I've reached 100,000 subscribers without any other brand deals or ad sponsors, funded entirely by channel members.