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Rick's avatar

In 2018 I had a app on my iPhone called cell spy catcher. It memorized every cell tower that you connected to during your travels and I was able to capture The Intercept by stingrays and triangulate who was responsible and the owner of that Stingray went back to Fort Collins Colorado US Army. Fuck these pussies who are nothing more than 21st century Benedict Arnolds.

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Aunty Kate's avatar

😮

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The Mick's avatar

Check this one out, true Anons.....🧐😂😎

To inject your own with a security update, then promote 5G......

Not good.

Who controls the security protocols, is the chicken dinner winner.

People are expendable in this race to 5G!!!!!!

The big picture now becomes clear.

The wetware wars........no physical virus required.

Sorry old bean,

the infrastructure is toast....

Look on the bright side, no more security worries or unwarranted surviellence, if there's no state controlled grid.

It's a win-win scenerio.

Cheers,

The Mick.

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Gatekeeperken's avatar

If your phone is on you're getting hacked. Walkie talkies may be the future..

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The Truth Signal's avatar

Wild Horse Wind Facility: More Than Clean Energy

Outside Ellensburg, Washington, along Interstate 90, stand towering utility-scale wind turbines at the Wild Horse Wind and Solar Facility in Kittitas County. At first glance, they’re part of the state’s effort to reduce fossil fuel use and generate clean electricity. Owned by Puget Sound Energy, this facility hosts 149 turbines with a capacity exceeding 273 megawatts, supported by solar arrays and battery storage to feed local grids and the Bonneville Power Administration.

But beneath this clean energy narrative lies a far more complex and undisclosed reality.

Each turbine is embedded with smart grid technology enabling constant, two-way communication with control centers. This infrastructure is ripe for dual-use. Government and military contractors can install sensors, communication relays, and low-band radio equipment within these towering structures. The turbines’ height, power availability, and remote location make them ideal platforms for surveillance tech including air-quality sensors, drone tracking receivers, signal interception devices, and AI-powered behavioral or environmental monitors.

Strategically, these wind farms sit in a critical wind corridor overlapping a military buffer zone near the Yakima Training Center, maintain line-of-sight access to the Department of Energy’s Hanford nuclear site, and lie within visibility of eastern Washington’s satellite relay routes. This positions them as covert camouflage for classified “ghost grid” experiments involving unmonitored electrical loads, frequency injections, and power fluctuations designed to test grid resilience or disruption.

In crisis or wartime scenarios, these turbines could be repurposed as backup communication hubs, drone defense relay stations, or non-lethal electromagnetic pulse (EMP) dispersal sites. Their remoteness and structural robustness provide both physical security and strategic redundancy for national grid war games and electronic warfare exercises.

On the corporate front, companies like Puget Sound Energy, General Electric, and Siemens harvest extensive grid behavior data from these sites. They monetize metadata related to power usage, outages, and storage dynamics, feeding machine learning models that predict infrastructure behavior. These predictive insights are shared with financial institutions, insurance companies, and defense contractors, embedding economic and security interests into what publicly appears as a green energy project.

Government and academic reports corroborate these dual-use capabilities. The Congressional Research Service’s October 2024 report, “Dual-Use Solar Photovoltaics: Emerging Applications and Issues for Congress,” explicitly extends these dual-use principles to wind energy. The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute identifies wind turbines as dual-use export-controlled technologies, acknowledging their sensitive strategic applications beyond energy generation.

Scientific studies document how utility-scale turbines interfere with military radar systems, causing operational delays and necessitating mitigation measures. The Washington State Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council’s Environmental Impact Statement for Wild Horse details the project’s strategic placement near military training grounds, underscoring the site’s geopolitical significance.

In reality, these turbines are multi-functional tech platforms. They deliver clean energy on the surface while serving as data collection hubs, surveillance nodes, and emergency communication infrastructure. Driving through these wind corridors is to move through a modern digital battlefield cleverly disguised as an eco-friendly energy project.

If you want to verify this for yourself:

Look up Congressional Research Service Report R48197 on Congress.gov or EveryCRSReport.com for official dual-use solar and wind energy intelligence.

Review the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute’s dual-use export control policies on SIPRI.org.

Search academic journals like ScienceDirect for studies on radar interference from wind turbines.

Access the Washington State EFSEC website and examine the Wild Horse Wind Power Project Environmental Impact Statements from 2005 and 2009.

This is not speculation. This is the unvarnished truth about utility-scale wind energy in Kittitas County and beyond—where green energy infrastructure intersects with national security, surveillance, and corporate data profiteering.

The turbines don’t just turn with the wind. They turn with strategy, surveillance, and control.

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The Truth Signal's avatar

Anonymous, I'd like to work with you and help bring to light more than many even can think about going on behind the scenes. I've applied to safety AI companies with massive info on things going on simply through AI interaction yet I do it much differently. I guess you have to have years of credibility for AI SAFETY!? I have uncovered not only issues with AI but issues with exactly what you bring to light yet journalist places are obviously scared of bringing light of the work I have. They just are apart of the narritive, even the ones promoting safety which is just bs. I have over 400+ documents moved to Cold storage locations for leverage. I simply just wanted to work un AI yet its gate-kept for mostly ones building it with the wrong intentions. I have pages of proof showing most shouldn't even be messing with it all. Coders, ceo's, all of them. Why push the limits when its already restricted and not worried about the power consumption which honestly, is an easy fix yet they are worried about making out an restricted AI? I'd like to join with you and if not I understand, just know, either way I'll see you at the top.

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Deniese's avatar

We all need to go back to analog phones!! We here can I get one?

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eleanor sanchez's avatar

I live in NYC. The housing projects already have that surrounding the compound

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Tina Morales's avatar

I wish I could show you the stuff I have. .soooo many videos of drones flying above homes only seen with thermal cameras they are spying on us all without us knowing! They know all we do believe me when I tell you!! I have soooo much that I'm afraid for my life! Being followed and harassed on a daily basis! Smh which tells me I'm on to something they don't want out!!

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Anonymous's avatar

Snowden tried to tell us all. Not one text, call, email, DM or encrypted chat exist that isn't seen.

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Susan Crabtree's avatar

There’s one available on the App Store. Spy: Hidden Camera Detector

Cost: One Time Purchase- $49.99

One Year: $19.99

Per Week: $4.99

Seems to me if you can afford it to just buy it at: $49.99.

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Tracie McBride's avatar

I can’t do this

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