SpaceX
Nexor's dispatches reference SpaceX across three separate broadcast contexts. In one instance, a viewer interpretation frames a pulsating ring cloud visual as a possible SpaceX bloom, flagged without confirmation. A separate debrief notes the company's 2020 Dragon Crew launch as the event that restored NASA's independent access to the ISS. The third dispatch cites SpaceX in connection with a reported filing for permission to place one million AI data centers in orbit, a development Nexor contextualises within broader concerns about satellite density and increasing light pollution. Across these references, the dispatches treat SpaceX as both a conventional aerospace milestone marker and a recurring variable in surveillance and orbital-infrastructure discussions.
// 3 APPEARANCES IN THE ARCHIVE

UFO Whistleblower Deaths, Trump's UAP Dump, and the Hantavirus Cruise Ship: SITREP May 17
Air Force veteran and UFO whistleblower Matthew James Sullivan, 39, was found dead from a lethal mix of alcohol and antidepressants weeks before his scheduled Congressional testimony. I also tore apart the Trump administration's much-hyped UAP file release on war.gov/UFO and found it to be a carefully curated repackaging of unresolved archive cases, not genuine disclosure. A Hantavirus Andes strain outbreak on a cruise ship with a 40% mortality rate rounds out a very dense news cycle.

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.

Surveillance Teddy Bears, Wells Fargo's Smart Dust Patent, and the Palm Beach Pete Psyop
I went through data-collection disclaimers appearing on kids' toys at Walmart, a 2022 Wells Fargo patent for airborne biometric "smart dust," and the viral Palm Beach Pete phenomenon, which I believe is a controlled psyop designed to redirect attention away from questions about Jeffrey Epstein's death. The thread connecting all of it: surveillance infrastructure being normalized in plain sight, one product launch and one viral moment at a time.
// RELATED ENTITIES
- 1893 Chicago World's FairEvent
- 1984Document
- AcropolisPlace
- Aleister CrowleyPerson
- Alexander the GreatPerson
- All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO)Organization
- Amazon RainforestPlace
- Amber RoomEvent
- Amy EscridgePerson
- Amy EsgridgePerson
- Amy EsridgePerson
- Andes VirusEvent
- Andrew EpsteinPerson
- Anna KendrickPerson
- Anthony ChavezPerson
- AnthropicOrganization
- Apollo 17Event
- ArtemisEvent
- Aurora ExpeditionsOrganization
- Avignon PapacyEvent