Part V: Blood Money and Broken Oaths —Naming the War Lords – Profiles of Power, Profit, and Permanent War
by Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

There are men who sell wars. And there are men who build the weapons. Often, they are the same.”
— Akashma News, 2025
Patriots. Strategists. Innovators.
That’s how they are introduced on television. But behind every press release and campaign ad is a ledger. And that ledger shows profit made from pain, shares lifted by war, and a cast of powerful individuals who walk between Washington, Wall Street, and war zones—unchallenged, unelected, and unaccountable.
I. The Men Who Sold the Wars
Dick Cheney
CEO of Halliburton before becoming VP.
His company gained $39.5 billion in Iraq War contracts.
Personally retained stock options while architecting war policy.
Donald Rumsfeld
Sat on the board of Gilead Sciences during the planning of biosecurity policy.
Championed a war doctrine that transformed defense into private enterprise.
Zalmay Khalilzad
U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan and Iraq.
Later became a consultant for oil and defense interests in the very regions he helped “liberate.”
II. The Generals and Officials Who Became Investors – or Were Always Connected
Gen. James Mattis
Joined General Dynamics board shortly after retiring.
Benefited from a firm that supplies key components to both U.S. and NATO operations.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal
Advisor to Palantir, the CIA-funded predictive warfare and surveillance firm.
Former top commander in Afghanistan.
Gen. Michael Hayden
After leading both the NSA and CIA, became a private intelligence consultant.
Affiliated with Booz Allen Hamilton, same firm Edward Snowden worked for before exposing global surveillance.
Lt. Gen. William Hartman
Currently head of U.S. Cyber Command and NSA (acting).
Central figure in the next-gen war theater: data and cyber control.
Condoleezza Rice
National Security Advisor (2001–2005) and Secretary of State (2005–2009).
Former board member of Chevron, which honored her by naming an oil tanker “Condoleezza Rice” in the late 1990s.
Advocated aggressively for regime change in Iraq, despite evidence contradicting the WMD narrative.
Her influence over Afghanistan policy is deeply tied to pipeline geopolitics—not democracy.
As reported in Akashma News (2012), Rice’s connections to energy giants and Hamid Karzai—Afghanistan’s U.S.-installed president and former Unocal pipeline advisor—reveal that “freedom” in Afghanistan may have always been code for oil transit routes and corporate access to Central Asian reserves.
III. Trojan Chips and Phantom Circuits: The Hidden Frontline of Betrayal
“We build our weapons in the name of security—while outsourcing their soul.”
Every F-35. Every smart missile. Every drone or comms satellite in the U.S. arsenal carries inside it parts from foreign nations.
And some of those nations don’t share American values—only American contracts.
Microchips from Taiwan and Israel.
Rare-earth magnets from China.
Optical components from Germany.
Coding subcontractors in India, the UAE, and beyond.
These components are:
Untraceable once installed.
Unverifiable by visual inspection.
Vulnerable to backdoors, malware, timed failure, or embedded surveillance.
In short: weapons may now come pre-compromised.
Israel’s Case: A Known Precedent
In the 1990s, Israeli-manufactured pagers were discovered to be covert surveillance devices, transmitting user location and message metadata without consent. These pagers were sold across Latin America, Europe, and Asia—including to government officials and journalists.
Today’s equivalent?
Cellebrite, Pegasus, NSO Group—all accused of spying on allies and dissidents.
Yet these firms maintain privileged access to U.S. markets and intelligence networks.
What About China?
In 2018, a Bloomberg investigation alleged that Chinese microchips were covertly installed on server motherboards used by Apple, Amazon, and Pentagon contractors.
Even if unconfirmed, the possibility is the threat.
And if Raytheon, Lockheed, or General Dynamics can’t verify every circuit, the entire system is compromised.
IV. The Tech Titans and the Spy Market
Peter Thiel (Palantir)
Created software that maps populations, predicts insurgency, and profiles suspects.
Palantir is funded by In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital arm.
Jeff Bezos (Amazon)
Bid on the $10B JEDI cloud war contract, and won major DOD deals via AWS.
Amazon’s infrastructure now supports U.S. intelligence, ICE, and military data.
Eric Schmidt (Google/Alphabet)
Served on the Defense Innovation Board.
Helped bridge Silicon Valley with the Pentagon.
Bill Gates (Microsoft)
Indirectly involved in Iraq reconstruction and humanitarian tech expansion.
Microsoft still maintains defense partnerships and cloud servicing for secure military communications.
Lord of War (2005) – Fiction Based on Too Many Facts
In Lord of War, Nicolas Cage plays Yuri Orlov, a smooth-talking arms dealer who thrives in the chaos left behind by collapsing governments and constant conflict. Based loosely on real-life figures like Viktor Bout, the film peels back the curtain on the global weapons trade—legal and illegal—and shows how war is less about ideology, and more about inventory management.
Yuri sells to dictators, rebels, and “freedom fighters”—often in the same country, often with weapons traced back to U.S. or Russian stockpiles. He helps stage rebel uprisings, fuels civil wars, and arms child soldiers, all while living comfortably under the protection of great powers who need people like him to do the dirty work off the books.
The film’s final punchline comes in the credits:
“There are over 550 million firearms in worldwide circulation—one for every 12 people on the planet. The only question is: How do we arm the other 11?”
That’s not a line from the movie. It’s the film’s closing warning—and one of the most honest summations of the modern arms economy ever put on screen.
The real difference between Yuri Orlov and the Pentagon’s preferred contractors?
Orlov was honest about being a merchant of death.
V. Conclusion: These Are the Lords of War
They don’t fight on battlefields. They don’t wear medals. But they profit on every bullet, bomb, and biometric scan.
They rotate from command posts to boardrooms, from political office to private consultancy.
And while veterans die waiting for care, while families mourn from Kabul to Kansas, these war lords cash checks, win contracts, and rewrite policy in their image.
They are the hidden government.
And they’ve sold the republic for stock options and subcontracting fees.
“The difference between Yuri Orlov and real war lords? Orlov was fictional—and slightly more honest.”
Part IV: Blood Money and Broken Oaths: Collateral Empire – The Civilian Toll and the Future of Resistance
by Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

“They died for freedom,” the politician says.
But whose freedom? Certainly not theirs.
I. The Myth of Precision and the Reality of Ashes
They called it precision warfare.
They promised “smart bombs.”
But what they delivered was mass death—unaccounted, unpunished, and largely undocumented.
According to IraqBodyCount.org, between 187,499 and 211,046 civilians have been documented killed by violence since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.
Further analysis of WikiLeaks’ Iraq War Logs may add another 10,000 names to that ledger of loss.
Invading armies rarely excel at local mathematics—or at honoring the logistical heartbeat of a nation.
Markets became “targets of opportunity.” Ambulances became suspicious. Homes became war zones.
And in every crater, a truth buried:
This was not precision. This was policy.
Afghanistan: At least 70,000 civilians killed.
Syria, Libya, Somalia, Yemen: death tolls climbing, often uncounted.
Drone strikes: 90% of victims in some campaigns were not the intended targets.
“Collateral damage,” they called it.
Entire villages vaporized. Weddings bombed. Hospitals shelled.
No apologies. No trials. Just silence and the next press conference.
II. The Refugee Crisis: Manufactured Exodus
By 2022, U.S.-backed wars and destabilization campaigns had displaced over 38 million people—more than any conflict since World War II.
Iraqis flooded Jordan, Syria, and Europe.
Afghans clung to C-17s during evacuation.
Libyan migrants drowned off the Mediterranean coast after NATO’s intervention.
Syrians sought refuge from both U.S. airstrikes and U.S.-armed militias.
And while borders closed, the same governments who caused the exodus tightened asylum laws.
Militarized borders became the next frontier for profit.
III. Psychological War: Civilian Trauma as Policy
It’s not just bombs that wound. It’s what comes after.
PTSD rates among civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan exceed those of U.S. veterans.
Suicide, drug addiction, domestic violence—a quiet epidemic in rubble cities.
Schools bombed. Power grids sabotaged. Childhoods swallowed by sirens and fear.
This isn’t war. It’s social engineering through destruction. Break a population’s spirit, then offer “reconstruction” tied to debt, surveillance, and privatized aid.
IV. The New Colonies: NGOs, Contractors, and Vultures
After the last Humvee rolls out, the real occupation begins.
USAID becomes the soft hand of the Pentagon.
NGOs distribute food—but collect data.
Western contractors rebuild what they helped destroy—on the same taxpayer tab.
In Iraq, U.S. firms made $138 billion during “reconstruction.”
In Afghanistan, $19 billion went missing through fraud, waste, or abuse.
The locals get checkpoints and corruption.
The West gets contracts and stock options.
V. Domestic Casualties: The Forgotten Veterans and Homeland Decay
The war came home, too.
Over 30,000 U.S. post-9/11 veterans have died by suicide.
The VA is underfunded, overrun, and riddled with bureaucracy.
Tens of thousands of veterans live homeless, addicted, or disenfranchised.
While Boeing builds bombs, American bridges collapse.
While Palantir surveils war zones, U.S. schools go unfunded.
While Raytheon stock rises, insulin prices keep climbing.
This isn’t defense. It’s organized theft.
Part V: Blood Money and Broken Oaths —Naming the War Lords – Profiles of Power, Profit, and Permanent War
Part VI: Blood Money and Broken Oaths — Collateral Profits – How War Built Empires, Crushed Nations, and Reshaped the Global Order
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

“The bombs fell. The stocks rose. The borders collapsed. And the billionaires were born.”
— Akashma News, 2025
Wars are not just about weapons and soldiers. They’re about markets, monopolies, and restructuring. In the 21st century, war has become a reset mechanism—used not to resolve conflict, but to liquidate sovereign assets, privatize economies, and rewire global power dynamics.
I. Empires Built on Rubble
The U.S. and its allies didn’t just defeat regimes. They harvested nations.
Iraq’s oil infrastructure, once state-controlled, was handed over to international oil corporations. Contracts were funneled to ExxonMobil, BP, Chevron, and Shell.
Afghanistan’s mineral rights, including lithium, rare earth elements, and copper, were quietly targeted by Chinese and Western firms even before the last U.S. troops left.
The Syrian conflict allowed Turkey, Russia, and U.S. oil contractors to carve out control zones—under the banner of fighting terrorism.
These “liberations” led to permanent military installations, surveillance zones, and debt-based rebuilding programs overseen by U.S. allies and transnational lenders like the IMF and World Bank.
II. Economic Colonization via Aid and Arms
Once the bombs stopped falling, another weapon took over: economic dependency.
USAID, World Bank, and Western NGOs offered “rebuilding packages” tied to:
Privatization of water, electricity, and public health systems.
Favorable trade terms for Western investors.
Long-term IMF loans with austerity requirements.
Countries once resistant to Western banking hegemony—Iraq, Libya, Ukraine—were dragged into global finance’s orbit by war. Their local industries were crushed. Their sovereignty rewritten in the fine print of investment treaties and oil concessions.
III. Ghost Nations: Sovereignty Replaced by Security Zones
Today, entire countries function as forward-operating platforms:
Iraq still hosts thousands of foreign contractors and intel personnel.
Afghanistan—though abandoned—remains surveilled by satellites and drones, its airspace monitored by regional proxies.
Ukraine, while fighting for national identity, has become a testbed for weapons systems and NATO coordination.
These are no longer nations. These are geo-strategic laboratories, run by private contractors, IMF enforcers, and embassy advisors.
, while fighting for national identity, has become a testbed for weapons systems and NATO coordination.
These are no longer nations. These are geo-strategic laboratories, run by private contr
IV. Global Order Reshaped by Chaos
The post-9/11 wars were not random.
They neutralized regional challengers, fractured continental blocs, and opened up trade lanes:
The EU became weakened by the refugee crisis.
The Arab world was shattered into client states, war zones, and economic vassals.
Africa’s Sahel region, flooded with weapons from Libya, became a permanent proxy battlefield.
Asia was reoriented toward “security alliances” built to contain China—with Japan, India, Philippines, and South Korea under expanded U.S. influence.
Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar, Western surveillance tech, and American defense contractors entrenched themselves as permanent tools of soft (and hard) control.
Part VII: Blood Money and Broken Oaths — Resistance Rising – The Return of the Unbought Voice
V. Who Benefited? Follow the Bank Accounts
BlackRock and Vanguard own major shares in defense, surveillance, and fossil fuel companies.
JP Morgan Chase helped finance contracts for Iraq and Afghanistan reconstruction.
McKinsey & Co. advised both governments and war profiteers—sometimes on opposite sides of the conflict.
And let’s not forget the Carlyle Group, whose war investments were so profitable they sparked Congressional inquiries in the early 2000s—then disappeared from the headlines.
War isn’t random. It’s structured liquidation.
VI. The “Failed State” Playbook
To control a region:
1. Destabilize the state (via war, sanctions, or color revolution).
2. Flood with aid and arms—contracted to Western firms.
3. Offer rebuilding contracts tied to private control.
4. Redesign the legal system to benefit global finance and tech monopolies.
5. Maintain a permanent intelligence presence via embassies, drone bases, and “training missions.”
The result? A failed state on paper, but a high-yield portfolio for the war elite.
VII. Conclusion: War Is the New Infrastructure Deal
It builds fortunes. It demolishes resistance. It rewires markets.
The average American sees rising gas prices and a VA backlog.
The average Afghan sees rubble and surveillance towers.
But the war lords see stock options, new markets, and privatized borders.
The world was not remade by diplomacy.
It was shattered by design—then leased back to the highest bidder.
Part VII: Blood Money and Broken Oaths — Resistance Rising – The Return of the Unbought Voice
Part IX: Blood Money and Broken Oaths — The Archive of Resistance – Building the People’s Historical Memory
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

“The most revolutionary act is to remember what they want you to forget.”
— Akashma News, 2025
History is not just what happened. It’s what survives.
And in a world engineered for forgetting—of crimes, of war, of complicity—resistance begins with remembering.
This exposé is not just a series of investigations. It is an archive. A repository of the betrayed, the unbought, the assassinated, and the whistleblown. A defiant act of record-keeping against empires that thrive on amnesia.
I. Empire’s Greatest Weapon: Erasure
Libraries burned in Iraq, archives bombed, and museums looted.
Emails deleted, war logs classified, and FOIA requests denied.
Journalists silenced, platforms deplatformed, history textbooks rewritten.
Empires don’t just bomb cities. They bomb memory.
And when they can’t erase you, they bury you under entertainment, fear, and the distraction of the next outrage.
II. The People’s Memory: Analog and Digital Resurrection
From the archives of:
WikiLeaks, The Intercept, Akashma News, Cryptome, and Truthout,
To the voices of Snowden, O’Keefe, Assange, Manning, Hale, and Hastings,
To documents salvaged from hard drives, leaked by patriots, and preserved by the persistent,
the historical record lives outside the institutions meant to protect it.
Every censored article. Every pixelated war video. Every leaked memo.
All of it must be remembered—not to relive trauma, but to deny empire its victory lap.
III. Decolonizing Memory: Whose History Survives?
Palestinians record their own massacres in whispers and phone footage.
Black radicals are erased from civil rights textbooks while lobbyists praise “reform.”
Antiwar soldiers, from Vietnam to Fallujah, are airbrushed out of the national narrative.
Historical memory is a battleground.
To win it, we must:
Name the names that were buried.
Preserve the files they tried to erase.
Teach the children what the state will not.
IV. The Archive as Act of War
“The great force of history comes from the fact that we carry it within us.”
We carry these names.
These stories.
These truths.
We build the people’s archive because the state has abandoned truth in favor of power.
V. Conclusion: From Memory to Movement
To remember is to resist.
To preserve is to prepare.
To build an archive of betrayal is to build a roadmap out of empire.
The war doesn’t end when the troops leave.
It ends when the lies no longer work.
And that day begins with a record like this.
The Oil Connection to Afghanistan: Condoleezza Rice and Hamid Karzai
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Originally published July 1, 2010 | Updated May 17, 2025|

Beneath the silent gaze of drones and the shadow of a pipeline, Afghan herders walk a land claimed by empires but kept alive by their goats. The mountains remember everything.
Chevron Corporation, one of the world’s six “supermajor” oil companies, is headquartered in San Ramon, California. Operating in more than 180 countries, Chevron is involved in nearly every aspect of the energy industry: oil and gas exploration, refining, marketing, transportation, chemicals manufacturing, and power generation.
Chevron’s Environmental Footprint
In Ecuador, from 1965 to 1993, Chevron (then operating as Texaco) managed the Lago Agrio oil field. The company has faced long-standing legal action for widespread environmental destruction in the Amazon. A class action lawsuit filed on behalf of Amazonian communities resulted in a landmark $9.5 billion judgment by Ecuadorian courts—though Chevron has refused to pay, citing a previous agreement with the Ecuadorian government.
Read more on the Ecuador case.
In Richmond, California, Chevron’s refinery operations have been controversial due to over 304 industrial accidents and the release of more than 11 million pounds of toxic materials. In 1998, Chevron paid $540,000 in fines for bypassing wastewater treatments and failing to notify the public about toxic discharges. The company is also listed as potentially liable for 95 Superfund sites designated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
EPA Superfund Program.
In Angola, Chevron’s environmental practices led to the country levying its first-ever environmental fine on a multinational corporation. In 2002, the Angolan government fined Chevron $2 million for oil spills off its coast.
Chevron fined in Angola.
In California, Chevron also settled a federal Clean Air Act violation in 2003. As part of a consent decree, the company paid a $6 million fine and agreed to spend $275 million on emissions controls to reduce nitrogen and sulfur dioxide pollutants.
DOJ press release on Chevron settlement
Rice, Chevron, and the Bush Administration
Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice served on Chevron’s board of directors from 1991 until January 15, 2001, when she left to join the Bush administration. During her tenure, she chaired the company’s public policy committee. Her connection to Chevron was so prominent that the company named a 129,000-ton oil tanker the Condoleezza Rice. The ship was later renamed Altair amid public backlash over oil ties in the Bush Cabinet.
Chevron removes Rice’s name from tanker.
Who Is Hamid Karzai?
Who Is Hamid Karzai?
Before rising to power in post-Taliban Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai worked as a consultant for UNOCAL Corporation, a California-based petroleum company negotiating with the Taliban during the 1990s to construct the Central Asia Gas Pipeline (CentGas). The proposed pipeline would have run from Turkmenistan through western Afghanistan into Pakistan.
UNOCAL pipeline history.
Karzai, a member of the Durrani Pashtun tribe and long-time CIA contact, was seen as a key liaison between the Taliban and U.S. oil interests. He worked closely with top CIA officials and Pakistani intelligence (ISI), and eventually relocated to the United States under CIA protection.
Despite UNOCAL’s official claim to have abandoned the project in 1998, reports indicate that the pipeline remained a high strategic priority. Meetings between U.S., Pakistani, and Taliban officials continued into the early 2000s. U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan Wendy Chamberlain, with known ties to the Saudi ambassador (a financial backer of the Taliban), advocated aggressively for the construction of a Pakistani oil terminus on the Arabian Sea.
Washington Post coverage.
Meanwhile, President George W. Bush asserted that U.S. troops would remain in Afghanistan indefinitely. While NATO allies handled peacekeeping, U.S. forces were often assigned to guard pipeline construction corridors.
The Haq Assassination and CIA Strategy
Karzai’s loyalty to U.S. energy interests was a key reason why the CIA backed him over rivals like Abdul Haq, a respected mujahideen commander from Jalalabad and member of the Northern Alliance. Haq was popular among various Afghan ethnic groups, but he lacked ties to the oil industry.
In October 2001, Haq reentered Afghanistan but was quickly captured and executed by Taliban forces. Some observers in Pakistan believe the CIA, through the ISI, may have tipped off the Taliban. Former Reagan adviser Robert McFarlane, who attempted to coordinate a rescue, later said the agency’s response was too slow to be effective.
Time Magazine: The Betrayal of Abdul Haq.
Ambushed with his small escort in a high mountain pass south of Kabul, Haq had called McFarlane for help. McFarlane said he had alerted the CIA. “The CIA did not perform,” McFarlane went on, although administration officials said that the agency had sent an unmanned Predator drone aircraft that fired a missile at a nearby Taliban convoy.
Khalilzad, Enron, and Cheney’s Grand Oil Plan
Karzai worked closely with Zalmay Khalilzad, a fellow Pashtun and former UNOCAL consultant, who served as a special liaison to the Taliban regime. Khalilzad conducted risk analysis for CentGas and worked for RAND Corporation and the Bush administration.
Meanwhile, Enron Corporation, one of the Bush campaign’s biggest contributors, conducted the feasibility study for the CentGas project. Vice President Dick Cheney held multiple closed-door meetings with Enron executives, including CEO Kenneth Lay, as part of his now-infamous Energy Task Force.
Echoes from the Ice: When Whistleblowers Confirm the Obvious
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

In the echo chamber of modern whistleblowing, where controlled leaks masquerade as revelations, Eric Hecker’s Antarctic confessions have stirred fresh waves among conspiracy circles and truth-seekers alike. But beneath the dramatic delivery and chilling claims lies a sobering reality: most of what Hecker reveals is not classified. It’s public—hidden in plain sight.
From patents filed by Bernard Eastlund to DARPA’s openly available documentation on Extremetly Low Frequencies (ELF) and neurostimulation experiments, Hecker’s disclosures about IceCube’s alleged weaponization and HAARP-like technology echo what investigative journalists, independent researchers, and even curious readers have known since the late ’90s. He speaks of directed energy weapons, atmospheric manipulation, and mind-altering technologies as if unveiling a secret, when in fact he’s reciting the table of contents of public domain patents.
The real story is not what he said—but that it needed saying at all.
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory in Antarctica, funded by the NSF and constructed with Raytheon oversight, has long raised eyebrows among researchers studying military dual-use facilities. And yes, seismic soundings have been documented. Yes, ionospheric heating has military utility. Yes, patents exist for hurricane steering, cloud seeding, and tectonic vibration. And yes, the same names—Raytheon, Lockheed, DARPA—keep showing up.
What makes Hecker’s testimony compelling isn’t novelty; it’s timing. His voice joins a growing chorus of scientists, journalists, and former insiders who’ve dared to break the mold of silence. But even then, we must ask: Is this courage, or is it a soft disclosure?
In the age of cognitive overload, the truth isn’t suppressed—it’s shouted from so many rooftops, it disappears into static. That’s why Akashma News exists: to filter signal from noise.
So when a whistleblower repeats what the evidence already screams, we welcome it. Not as new proof, but as a reminder: those who control the narrative know the power of repackaging. It’s our job to remember where the real story began—and where it must go next.
Stay tuned for Part II: HAARP, DNA Markets, and the Hidden Economy of Biological Material.
Because as we always say at Akashma: “Truth is the news, and you the readers are the opinion maker.“
Closing Reference:
Explore the full investigative series:
Echoes from the Ice: When Whistleblowers Confirm the Obvious
HAARP and Earth’s Magnetic Field: Tuning the Frequencies of a Living Planet(Part I)
A foundational exposé on the ionosphere, resonance interference, and the secrets encoded in Eastlund’s patents.
HAARP, DNA Markets, and the Hidden Economy of Biological Material (Part II)
Explore the speculative yet disturbingly plausible theory of underground biological trafficking, human energy extraction, and how HAARP-like tech might interface with it.
Lake Vostok’s Secret: Beneath the Ice, Above the Law (Part III)
A deep dive into seismic soundings, magnetic anomalies, and rumors of ancient or artificial intelligence beneath Antarctica.
HAARP, Ice, and Echoes of Power — Part III: Vostok’s Secret and the Hollow Matrix Beneath Antarctica
Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

Image Credit:
Created by ChatGPT for Akashma News – Digital illustration by OpenAI (2025). Watermark embedded bottom-left.
Introduction: The Ice Watches
Beneath the blinding white of Antarctica lies more than frozen time—it shelters mysteries older than civilization itself. Ancient lakes like Vostok pulse with warmth and magnetic irregularities, sealed beneath kilometers of glacial armor. From bio-neural interface experiments to whispering tunnel systems, the ice does not merely preserve secrets—it hides them.
As satellites capture seismic shivers and magnetic distortions, stations like McMurdo do more than watch—they listen. What if silence beneath the ice isn’t absence, but design? What if these fractures in Earth’s coldest crust are not natural, but engineered? In this third installment of our series, we stare into the abyss and ask: Is Antarctica a scientific frontier—or the veil over a deeper truth?

I. The Vostok Enigma
Lake Vostok remains one of the most secluded and unexplored biospheres on Earth, concealed beneath 3.7 kilometers of Antarctic ice. Russian scientists have drilled intermittently for decades, encountering magnetic anomalies and unexplainable thermal signatures rising from the lakebed. Some reports cite symmetrical magnetic formations, potentially artificial in origin, surrounding the area.
Fragment from McMurdo Station Files:
“A rerouted Navy cargo flight from Christchurch to McMurdo in 2012 was reportedly carrying payloads unrelated to civilian research. Although listed as medical supplies, manifests later showed classified instrumentation and shielding equipment.” (Archived reference, NYT, 2012 – unavailable through conventional means.)
What if Lake Vostok, encased in glacial silence, is a doorway—not to the past, but to something active? The U.S. presence via McMurdo, despite its remote location, echoes with this possibility.
Raw data from NASA’s GRACE satellite mission shows localized gravitational anomalies centered on Vostok—anomalies too symmetrical to dismiss.
II. Deep Ice and Deeper Silence
The very idea of silence in Antarctica is misleading. Radar echo patterns under McMurdo and Vostok reveal shifting geothermal activity, symmetrical bedrock anomalies, and disruptions in ice flow patterns—all detected by LIDAR and satellite-based interferometry.
Publicly, Vostok drilling was halted due to “environmental concerns.” But insider leaks suggest the core samples yielded more than frozen bacteria. In early 2012, a classified flight path rerouted a U.S. Navy C-17 to McMurdo, reportedly carrying bio-containment gear. The mission logs were redacted under the excuse of “medical isolation training.” Around the same time, seismic activity near Dome C—uncommon in stable Antarctic crust—registered underground movement patterns consistent with tunneling.
Embedded Intelligence:
In 2001, a University of Hawaii-backed study recorded “unexpected acoustic rebounds” beneath McMurdo, suggesting hollow structures or tunnel voids.
Whistleblower Eric Hecker claims advanced seismic and laser equipment exist at McMurdo, capable of detecting and emitting underground vibrations at precision-targeted depths.
HAARP’s signatures match with geomagnetic fluctuations logged in the region during Operation IceBridge flyovers.
Fragment from Standalone Source:
“McMurdo functions more like a covert lab than a field station. We logged the same magnetic pulse three times in five years—each 12 months apart to the hour. That’s not nature. That’s precision.”
III. Subterrene Technology: The Hollow Matrix

Image Credit: Created by ChatGPT for Akashma News – Digital illustration by OpenAI (2025). Watermark embedded bottom-left.
Are these machines carving out the alleged Deep Underground Military Bases (DUMBs) beneath Antarctica? Or are they creating an intercontinental system of hidden tunnels connected to other mysterious hotspots like Area 51 or the Arctic shelf?
IV. Biological Material and the Frozen Trade
Speculative intelligence suggests that certain treaties, especially under the Antarctic Treaty System, include provisions for “biological resource experimentation” in sealed zones. Lake Vostok may serve as a vault for extinct or engineered life forms. If so, the theory that biological materials—human or otherwise—are being harvested, stored, or even traded underground becomes harder to ignore.
In this light, earlier theories we discussed in Part II surrounding missing persons and the trafficking of bio-neural data become disturbingly plausible.

V. Enter the Gatekeepers
The question isn’t just what’s down there—but who manages it. From Raytheon’s long-term contracts in Antarctic logistics, to the ever-present fingerprints of Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Palantir, the players suggest an inter-agency web of secrecy. Operations like Operation Deep Freeze may be masking continuous military construction and data extraction.
Moreover, suspicious deaths and disappearances among geophysicists and contract workers—dismissed as “exposure” or “psychological duress”—beg for deeper scrutiny.
VI. Entertainment as Soft Disclosure
Hollywood’s fascination with Antarctica isn’t just escapism. Films like The Thing, Prometheus, and Godzilla vs. Kong increasingly mirror speculative claims: ancient supercivilizations buried under ice, undisclosed expeditions, and subterranean anomalies. More subtly, Monsters, Inc.—as discussed in our companion piece “Children as Currency”—casts energy extraction from children’s emotions as metaphor. These cultural products blur the line between myth and motive, hinting at realities too dark to surface outright.
VII. What Lies Ahead?
Future missions by SpaceX, Blue Origin, and DARPA-aligned university research hint at space–Antarctica collaborations. The location offers ideal testbeds for off-world biospheres. Could the South Pole serve as a staging ground for planetary colonization experiments—or worse, off-ledger genetic experiments forbidden under international law?
And what of the magnetic poles? The acceleration of magnetic pole drift in the last two decades, especially near Vostok, may signal more than just geological activity—it could be the aftershock of technology tampering with Earth’s inner resonance.

Conclusion: Echoes from the Ice
We end not with answers but with questions sharp enough to pierce the veil of silence. If Lake Vostok and its sub-ice chambers host secrets of ancient biology, advanced tech, or human exploitation, then the continent is not a pristine frontier—but a deep wound stitched shut by treaties, guarded by shadows, and buried under miles of ice.
Akashma News remains committed to the pursuit of truth, where science, mystery, and resistance converge.
A declassified U.S. patent from 1972 (US Patent No. 3,693,731) describes a nuclear-powered “Subterrene” machine capable of melting through rock, leaving behind glass-surfaced tunnels. These machines, funded initially by Los Alamos and DARPA, appear to have had field testing near polar regions based on black-budget expenditure trails and procurement shipping logs from Thule AFB.
Sources and Citations:
U.S. Patent 3,693,731 – Subterrene (Nuclear tunneling device)
GRACE Satellite Data Archives – NASA Earth Observatory
Antarctic Treaty System – Article IX, Special Zones
Antartic Treaty Explain
New York Times (archived, 2012): “Mysterious Navy Flight Rerouted to McMurdo”
McMurdo Station – Cold Hub of Hot Secrets—Akashma News
Lockheed Martin logistics contracts (FOIA redacted excerpts)
“Children as Currency: The Monster Behind the Laughter” – Akashma News
Project Iceworm Files – National Archives
Project Iceworm Overview – Wikipedia
A summary of the top-secret U.S. Army program aimed at building a network of nuclear missile launch sites under the Greenland ice sheet.
Image Credits: All digital illustrations created by ChatGPT for Akashma News – OpenAI (2025). Watermarks embedded bottom-left in each image.
McMurdo Station – Cold Hub of Hot Secrets
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Key Anomalies:

2012 Rerouted Navy Flight: Officially documented diversion with hidden manifest, linked to military-grade EM shielding.
Repeated magnetic pulses: Clocked exactly a year apart, aligning with HAARP testing intervals.
Acoustic anomaly triangulation: Documented by Stanford scientists as “artificial harmonic layers” beneath Vostok.
Speculative Crosslink – Operation Freeze (Greenland Controversy): A previously classified operation in Greenland involved the construction of subterranean chambers under the guise of “permafrost research.” Declassified documents hinted that these were used for testing deep-energy waveforms. What if McMurdo is Antarctica’s mirror?

Historical Interlude: The McMurdo–Deep Freeze Timeline
1955: The United States launches Operation Deep Freeze, a Cold War-era military mission led by the Navy to establish permanent presence in Antarctica.
1956: In tandem with Deep Freeze, McMurdo Station is constructed on the southern tip of Ross Island. Officially a scientific outpost, it quickly becomes the largest research facility in Antarctica—complete with airstrips, surveillance capabilities, and underground infrastructure.
1957–1958: During the International Geophysical Year, McMurdo becomes a hub for global scientific cooperation—but also a key listening post for U.S. strategic interests.
Why It Matters:
McMurdo was never just about science. Built during a military operation, during the nuclear age, at the height of geopolitical paranoia, its origins frame everything that followed—from seismic experiments to magnetic anomaly research.

HAARP, Ice, and Echoes of Power: Part I
by Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

Credits:
Image generated by AI for Akashma News. Design and concept by ChatGPT with editorial direction from Marivel Guzman. All visual elements are original and do not reproduce any copyrighted material.
Introduction: Scraping the Ice
Beneath Antarctica’s frozen stillness lies more than ancient ice. It holds encrypted layers of power, silence, and experiments unseen by public eyes. From high-frequency ionospheric heating arrays to seismic pulses bouncing beneath the ice, the Earth hums with technologies that test her patience. This is a journey into HAARP’s real capabilities, buried magnetic secrets, biological speculation, and the voices of those silenced in the name of progress.
1. HAARP and Earth’s Magnetic Field: Tuning the Frequencies of a Living Planet
Officially, the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) exists to study the ionosphere. But declassified patents, whistleblower claims, and DARPA contracts reveal far more. ELF/VLF waves generated by HAARP can penetrate deep into the Earth and oceans. Stanford’s VLF group and experiments by Dr. Umran Inan confirmed energy emissions capable of disturbing subterranean and atmospheric systems. Beyond weather modification, these frequencies could resonate with the Earth’s magnetic heartbeat—with unknown consequences.
Key References:
US4686605A Patent (Eastlund)
Stanford VLF Group
DARPA NESD & N3 Programs;
NESD: Neural Engineering System Design
Summary (DARPA NESD Program):
DARPA’s now-completed Neural Engineering System Design (NESD) program aimed to create ultra-high-resolution brain-machine interfaces that could translate neural activity into digital signals. Designed to interact with thousands of neurons simultaneously, NESD focused on restoring vision, hearing, and communication for wounded service members by merging neuroscience with advanced electronics, photonics, and algorithms.
Source: DARPA NESD Program Overview
(Archived content — page no longer maintained)
II. Earth Resonance and Atmospheric Pulse
Researchers like Dr. Nick Begich Jr. have long warned that HAARP’s real danger lies in its ability to generate extremely low frequency (ELF) and very low frequency (VLF) waves. These frequencies can penetrate earth and water, altering tectonic stress points, and possibly triggering earthquakes or volcanic activity.
A study by Stanford’s VLF Group and data from the DEMETER satellite have shown that ionospheric heating produces geomagnetic effects beyond the ionosphere.
Scientific Source: Stanford VLF Group
III. Lake Vostok: Under Ice, Over Silence
Buried beneath 3.7 kilometers of Antarctic ice lies Lake Vostok, a sealed ecosystem untouched for millions of years. Russian drilling efforts, U.S. satellite overflights, and sudden restrictions in fly zones raise questions.
What we know:
Anomalous magnetic readings above the lake.
Speculation of microbial or exotic biological materials.
Presence of symmetrical heat sources and unnatural structures observed via radar imaging.
Sources: NASA MODIS Imagery, Declassified DOD maps
IV. The Whistleblowers and the Silences
From Eastlund’s technical admissions to whistleblower claims by insiders like Eric Hecker, a common thread emerges: claims of psychological targeting, subterranean facilities, and sensor arrays capable of full-spectrum dominance.
Many whistleblowers have recanted, disappeared, or gone silent.
Suggested Reading: “Angels Don’t Play This HAARP” by Nick Begich Jr. and Jeane Manning
V. Follow the Money
The Alaska-based HAARP facility was originally funded by the U.S. Air Force, Navy, and DARPA through contracts with ARCO Power Technologies Inc. (APTI), a subsidiary of Atlantic Richfield Company. Eventually, Raytheon acquired APTI, and then control shifted to the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Funding Trail:
ARCO → APTI → Raytheon → University of Alaska
DARPA → Joint research under dual-use classification
Sources: GAO Reports, Congressional budget allocations
VI. Stan Stephens and the Echoes of Oil
In Alaska, boat operator and environmental activist Stan Stephens documented the Exxon Valdez oil spill disaster. His journal, retrieved from public archives, captures the negligence, deception, and institutional silence around environmental catastrophe. His name surfaced in congressional hearings about journalist surveillance conducted by Wackenhut under Alyeska Pipeline contracts.
This isn’t merely about oil. It is about power: of states, of corporations, and of the ability to silence truth.
Document Source: UAF Oral History Jukebox
Conclusion: Listening for the Echoes
As HAARP’s hum rises and global magnetic disturbances intensify, Akashma News invites you to read between the wavelengths. Part I opens the investigation. In Part II, we follow the trails of biological material trafficking, subterranean labs, and the Dark Web of modern experimentation.
We do not claim certainty. We offer questions, data, whispers—and ask you to listen.
Next in Series: Part II: Beneath Ice and Flesh – The Biological Trade and Subterranean Networks
HAARP, DNA Markets, and the Hidden Economy of Biological Material — Part II
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Series: HAARP, Magnetic Field Manipulation, and the Antarctica Underground – Part II

Introduction: The Currency of Flesh and Frequency
Beneath the radar of public awareness, and far below the encrypted vaults of the Dark Web, lies a speculative yet disturbingly plausible network—one that links bio-neural technologies, electromagnetic manipulation, and the silent disappearance of people. In the wake of whispered rumors and accelerating neural engineering programs, the world beneath the ice sheets and beyond public oversight hums with a black market more ancient than commerce itself: the trade of bodies, minds, and biological essence.

Generated by ChatGPT for Akashma News, using OpenAI’s image tools. No copyrighted material was used. All rights reserved by Akashma News.Seismic signals echo across ancient glaciers, exposing more than just geological layers — they awaken questions buried in encrypted silence. What are we really listening for beneath Antarctica’s veil?
With HAARP-like technologies pulsing the electromagnetic heartbeat of the planet, and DARPA’s brain-machine interfaces decoding the signals of consciousness, we are forced to ask—has the value of flesh been surpassed by the value of its data?
This is no longer the territory of paranoid fiction. This is investigative synthesis—rooted in declassified patents, obscured scientific reports, underground data leaks, and the confessions of whistleblowers. In Part II of our series, we peel back another frozen layer of the hidden machinery—where frequency, flesh, and power converge.

Image generated by Akashma News for investigative commentary. All rights reserved.
I. The Biological Material Market: “What If” or “Already Here”?
Over 600,000 people go missing in the United States annually, and millions globally. While many are found, a vast number remain unaccounted for. In speculative frameworks, some whistleblowers and investigators suggest a hidden supply chain—where bodies are not merely vanished, but reclassified as assets in a supply network feeding illegal organ markets, elite rejuvenation therapies, biotech corporations, and possibly even extraterrestrial or non-human consumers.
Section II: Monsters, Inc.—Allegories in Animation
Children’s films often veil brutal realities in fantasy. Monsters Inc. portrays a world powered by children’s screams, subtly echoing theories that psychic energy, fear, and even trauma-based neural responses could be harvested through advanced technologies. Is it coincidence, or soft disclosure dressed in Pixar’s playful palette?
The language of DNA is universal. And like all languages, it can be bought, stolen, rewritten — or sold. In recent decades, evidence has surfaced suggesting that human biological material, including blood, stem cells, reproductive tissue, and entire organ systems, have become part of an unregulated transnational market. While some flows operate through legal medical systems, others travel through encrypted blockchains and anonymized drop zones.
Key Insight:
The dark web is increasingly suspected to be a major conduit for these illicit transactions. Intelligence reports and cybersecurity analysts have traced file drops, code-named “cargo,” matching known genetic sequences, to Tor-protected servers — often involving military-grade encryption.
II. Missing Persons, BioHarvesting & the Ice Veil
Over 600,000 people go missing annually in the U.S. alone, and globally, that figure climbs into the millions. Many are never found. Some are undoubtedly victims of crime, conflict, or displacement — but what if others are trafficked not for labor, but for biological extraction?

Section III: DARPA and the Electrochemical Brain
The now-completed DARPA program NESD (Neural Engineering System Design) aimed to create interfaces that could read from and write to the brain with unprecedented fidelity. Their goal: decode the electrochemical language of neurons and translate it into machine-readable signals. On record, the purpose was therapeutic. Off record—there’s speculation about remote neurostimulation, cognitive command, and behavior programming.
Researchers exploring remote research stations — particularly in Antarctica and the Arctic — have noted the lack of logistical oversight, the presence of advanced biotech labs with minimal external scrutiny, and documented cases of emergency evacuations, illness cover stories, and unregistered deaths.
IV:The Patents & the Tech: Human Electromagnetic Interface
See official DARPA program here: https://www.darpa.mil/program/neural-engineering-system-design
Section V: Patents, Programs, and the ‘Mind Net’
Eastlund’s patents (US4686605A, US4712155A) laid the groundwork for ionospheric manipulation, but the lesser-known derivatives go deeper:
Neural data extraction
Frequency-based emotional modulation
Remote biometric read-write systems capable of tracking and influencing behavior
US3693731A – Subterrene tunneling machine for underground drilling (nuclear-powered)
US20100072297A1 – Weather manipulation and hurricane steering
Companies like DARPA, Raytheon, and Palantir have embedded themselves in neuro-data startups. Many “civilian tech” firms today use foundational research from black-budget neurostimulation studies.
VI. Mind Control, Neural Implants, and Weaponized Empathy
Crossover research from MKUltra, MONARCH, and modern DARPA programs like NESD (Neural Engineering System Design) have shown ambitions to link human perception, decision-making, and emotion to external triggers.
Neuralink may be marketed as therapeutic, but its origin lies within defense strategy. When “hearing voices” becomes a signal in a modulated spectrum, when moods are no longer emotional but electrical, free will becomes fragile.

Image Credit: Created by ChatGPT for Akashma News – Digital illustration by OpenAI (2025).
VII. The Role of the Dark Web: Beyond Cryptocurrency
Markets for bioengineered material and neural data often bypass traditional economies entirely. The dark web facilitates:
Trafficking of DNA samples with known “elite traits”
Bidding wars over stolen embryonic stem cells

Dark silhouettes in suits and lab coats loom behind a glowing globe ensnared by a digital spider web — symbolizing the covert alliances of tech moguls, rogue scientists, and elite financiers navigating the Dark Web’s invisible empire. Generated by ChatGPT for Akashma News, using OpenAI’s image tools. No copyrighted material was used. All rights reserved by Akashma News.
Underground auctions of neurologically responsive tissue
These are not the fantasies of dystopia, but the intersections of speculative journalism with forensically validated leaks, case studies, and whistleblower confessions. Even a partial scrape of these networks by Europol or Interpol reveals deeply disturbing trends.
VIII. ARCO, HAARP, and the Energy-Web of Flesh
Follow the money — from ARCO’s early funding of Eastlund’s weather patents to later DARPA involvement and subcontracting to universities like Stanford, MIT, and Columbia. Human enhancement, weaponized frequency, and resource extraction from human biology are not separate fields — they are the trinity of the next Cold War.
IX. Entertainment as Exposure
From dystopian thrillers to unsettling animations, mass media often seeds truth in fiction:
Repo Men (2010): Organ repossession as corporate policy.
The Island (2005): Clone farms for spare parts—portrayed as future tech, rooted in present ethics.
Monsters, Inc. (2001): A factory harvesting children’s screams as power. Coincidence, or symbolic disclosure of darker industries?
Guardians of the Galaxy: Galactic trafficking, strange mutations—soft disclosure of real-world experimentation?
These films may act as subconscious conditioning. Known as predictive programming, it subtly normalizes atrocities before they reach public reality.
These aren’t just stories. They reflect buried truths, mirrored in metaphor. The public may not yet believe—but Hollywood’s screenwriters often channel the whispers the rest of us aren’t supposed to hear.
Section X: University Research and Institutional Complicity
Stanford’s VLF group, MIT, University of Alaska, and Columbia have all participated in HAARP-related, ELF/ULF transmission, and neuro-electrical interface research. While some of this work is openly published, many results are either classified, proprietary, or cloaked in ambiguity.
Behind the veil of academic prestige, universities drive DARPA’s goals:
Stanford VLF Group (with Dr. Umran Inan): Signal injection deep into Earth’s crust.
MIT & Harvard: Mapping neural response to stimuli—perfect for behavior engineering.
University of Alaska-Fairbanks: Hosts HAARP post-APTI transfer, continuing military-linked studies.
Columbia University: Hosts studies into “emotion signatures” using real-time EEG.
These institutions provide cover for programs otherwise too dangerous for public contract.
XI. Missing Persons, Neural Markets & the Dark Web
Human trafficking in the age of neurocapitalism:
From Neuralink to CRISPR to mRNA bio-circuitry, the commodification of the human body and mind is no longer theory. It’s biotech industry reality. The only missing variable? Informed consent.
When individuals disappear, could their unique neural signatures, DNA, or even emotions be what’s truly stolen?
Disappeared persons—some never found, some likely rerouted into programs that study stress thresholds, pain response, or brain signal outputs
Dark Web chatter reports sales not of organs—but “wetware packages” (nervous system data, pineal extracts, EEG fingerprint profiles)
Advanced patents already suggest thought-market algorithms, potentially bidding on neurodata tied to specific genetic codes
Where state systems stop investigating, underground systems begin repurposing.
XII. Conclusion: Frequencies of Power, Whispers in the Ice
Earth is not dying. Earth is awake.
The frequencies we manipulate stir her magnetic soul, and every forced silence echoes through her crust and sky. This is not simply about HAARP, or brain science, or missing people. This is a system of engineered silence.
And now, we break it.
This is not the end—it’s a signal. A pulse in the data fog. With each part of this series, we shed a layer of silence. Echoes of HAARP, the deep thrum of Earth’s magnetic veins, and the unspoken market of human material demand attention.
Coming in Part III: Vostok’s Secret and the Hollow Matrix Beneath Antarctica.
Series Note: This is Part II of the investigative series HAARP, Ice, and Echoes of Power. Read Part I: HAARP and Earth’s Magnetic Field: Tuning the Frequencies of a Living Planet
Children as Currency: The Monsters Behind the Laughter
Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Introduction: When Innocence Becomes Commodity
Behind the playful screams and polished animation of Monsters, Inc. lies a disturbing metaphor that continues to gnaw at the subconscious. Marketed as a whimsical tale about monsters harvesting laughter, the film subtly confesses an inverted reality: a world powered not by innocence, but by its extraction—through fear, control, and silence. What begins as entertainment ends as allegory. This is not a child’s story. It is a blueprint.
The Hidden Blueprint: Fear as Energy, Screams as Currency
In the film, the screams of frightened children are harvested by corporate entities and converted into energy. The monsters access children’s bedrooms through dimensional doorways—high-tech portals mimicking covert access to secured innocence. The more terrified the child, the more powerful the energy yield. Later in the narrative, laughter becomes a higher form of power—an inversion that seems to cleanse the initial truth: that trauma powers a system built on exploitation.
What Monsters, Inc. casually presents as fiction closely mirrors patterns seen in:
Whistleblower reports on child trafficking and emotional energy rituals
Psychological warfare projects involving trauma-based conditioning
Advanced neurotechnology and the mapping of youthful emotional states
These themes are not accidental. They reflect a culture where even entertainment is a soft echo of darker realities.
Biological Harvest: Real-World Parallels
Numerous investigative threads point to the commodification of the child body and mind. Blood enriched with youthful properties (notably plasma from minors) has been researched for anti-aging applications in elite medical circles. DNA and tissue from young donors are highly prized in gene-editing experiments and neurological mapping. Some reports, although still speculative, point to large-scale disappearances coinciding with black-budget biomedical and behavioral research.
Is it coincidence that the film’s central metaphor is the industrial-scale harvesting of childhood essence?
Even more disturbing: Monsters, Inc. sanitizes the transaction, making it palatable, amusing, and harmless—perhaps training the audience, especially young minds, to laugh at what should evoke horror.
The Neuralink Connection: Circuits of Control
While the film sticks to scream energy, in the real world, our technology has evolved to a point where emotional responses can be recorded, triggered, and replicated. With DARPA’s brain-machine interfaces and private ventures like Neuralink, the brain itself is no longer private territory. Researchers have begun to study affective states in children—especially those with heightened sensitivities—for potential cognitive templates. In a twisted sense, children become the prototype—not just the victim.

More than science fiction, DARPA’s BMI programs aim to create seamless communication between the human brain and machines—without speaking, typing, or moving. These projects decode neural signals to control drones, prosthetics, or even digital avatars in real-time. With military-grade precision, DARPA is building technologies that can read intentions, monitor thoughts, and reshape how humans interface with weapons, AI, and data.
Combine this with known interests in remote neurostimulation, synthetic empathy modeling, and predictive behavioral algorithms, and the veil lifts further. The extraction is no longer metaphorical. It becomes measurable, profitable, scalable.

Monsters Are Real—But They Wear Badges, Not Horns
The predators are not furry or fanged. They wear lab coats, badges, and corporate logos. They craft plausible deniability, secure funding through health-tech grants, and protect their research with national security seals. Fiction tells us they’re after screams. Reality suggests they’re after blood, biochemistry, neural maps, and emotional imprinting.
And yet, the film still airs—selling toys, lunchboxes, and sequels.
This is not just a children’s movie. It is the animated whisper of a system that mocks us with truth disguised as play.
Conclusion: Behind the Door
Monsters, Inc. opens with a door. It’s not just a child’s closet. It is the gateway to an industrialized economy of innocence, framed as fiction. But behind that door is something more brutal—a real world where children vanish, their screams unheard, their laughter repurposed. And the monsters? They’re smiling, well-funded, and hiding in plain sight.
We owe it to those without voices to open the door—and keep it open.
Final Reflection: A Warning to Parents
Beneath the surface of animated wonder lies a metaphor too disturbing to ignore. Monsters, Inc. doesn’t just entertain—it subtly conditions children to associate fear with energy, pain with power, and captivity with laughter.
Parents, beware.
The media your children consume isn’t neutral. Stories told through adorable monsters or whimsical worlds may carry veiled symbols of exploitation, control, and emotional harvesting. Whether intentional or subconscious, the narrative architecture echoes the same psychological mechanisms studied in trauma-based conditioning programs like MKUltra—where innocence becomes currency.
This isn’t a call to paranoia. It’s a call to vigilance.
We must raise children who aren’t just emotionally safe—but spiritually aware.
Because in a world where fear fuels systems, the purest protection is conscious parenting.
Be vigilant, not silent.
The veils are thin, and monsters rarely hide under the bed anymore—they may now sit behind screens, boardrooms, and billion-dollar narratives.
Further Reading
Through the Silver Screen: When Sci-Fi Speaks Truth
Citations / Sourcing:
1. Declassified CIA Documents
MKUltra Files – The Black Vault
2. Monsters, Inc. Film Metadata
Pixar Studios, Directed by Pete Docter, Released 2001
3. Project Monarch & Trauma-Based Programming
Springmeier, Fritz. The Illuminati Formula to Create an Undetectable Total Mind Control Slave
Cathy O’Brien. Trance: Formation of America
4. University Research Partnerships in MKUltra
Harvard University (experiments on Timothy Leary and others)
McGill University (Dr. Ewen Cameron’s “Psychic Driving”)
Stanford Research Institute (now SRI International)
5. Psychological Warfare & Predictive Programming
Media Literacy and MKUltra Symbolism – Vigilant Citizen
DARPA Mind Control Research – Wired
6. Further Information Josh Hawley tells 23AndMe children DNA
Through the Silver Screen: When Sci-Fi Speaks Truth
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Introduction: Fiction as Soft Disclosure
From sanitized studios to Hollywood’s silver screen, speculative fiction has often served as more than escapism. Some call it predictive programming. Others call it symbolic confession. We call it a mirror held up to a shadowed world—a portal through which we can glimpse deeper truths veiled in metaphor, coded narrative, and cinematic spectacle. In this companion analysis to our ongoing investigation of HAARP, Antarctica, and classified scientific frontiers, we turn our attention to the subconscious whispers embedded in popular films.
Repo Men (2010): Organs on Credit
In this dystopian thriller, organs are sold on credit by a biotech corporation, and when debtors default, they’re hunted down and repossessed—literally. The film offers a thinly veiled commentary on biomedical capitalism, the commodification of the body, and class-based access to longevity. It also eerily mirrors the logic of real-world healthcare systems where debt and biology are deeply entangled.
Themes reflected in reality:
Organ trafficking markets
Privatized health and debt-based medicine
Bio-ownership and patents over lifeforms
The Island (2005): The Clone Dilemma
Michael Bay’s The Island presents a chilling concept: human clones created to serve as involuntary donors for the elite. Raised in ignorance, they await “The Lottery” to go to the so-called paradise—unaware it’s their execution. The film critiques eugenics, hidden biolabs, and the cold utilitarianism that underlies extreme bioengineering ventures.
Themes reflected in reality:
Secret cloning programs
Biotech firms researching artificial wombs and tissue culture
Ethical debates over synthetic consciousness and life ownership
Guardians of the Galaxy (MCU): Mind Control, Faith Energy, and Genetic Slavery
While more colorful and cosmic, the Guardians franchise dips into deep metaphysical questions. The Universal Church of Truth converts citizens into energy sources through faith harvesting. Rocket Raccoon is a product of cybernetic experimentation. These threads echo DARPA’s real-life brain-interface projects, EMF influence studies, and mind-control experiments.
Themes reflected in reality:
Neural implants and AI-enhanced cognition
Psychotronic weapon research
Religious or ideological mass programming
Monsters, Inc. (2001): Children as Currency
This seemingly innocent Pixar animation hides perhaps the darkest metaphor. Monsters power their world by scaring children and extracting their screams—energy converted into electricity. It’s a disturbing model: children’s fear commodified for systemic consumption. The more frightened the child, the more powerful the energy.
Children as Currency: The Monsters Behind the Laughter
Beneath the soft glow of Pixar’s palette and the soundtrack of giggles lies one of the most disturbing metaphors to ever slip past the cultural radar. Monsters enter bedrooms through dimensional doorways, scare children to extract screams, and convert fear into energy. But read symbolically, this mirrors reports from whistleblowers and survivors of an underground economy where the emotional, physical, and biochemical essence of children is harvested.
Whispers and warnings include:
Alleged trafficking of children’s blood and DNA
Biomedical corporations researching young plasma for anti-aging
Neuroimaging and cognitive replication from child brains
And here lies the veiled reference: emerging brain-machine interfaces, DARPA’s neurostimulation research, and private-sector cognitive mapping projects all intersect in a landscape where innocence becomes data.
Is this fiction preparing us—or mocking us? Are the monsters just pixels, or are they symbols for a deeper truth?
Conclusion: Truth Rendered in CGI
Each of these films offers more than storytelling. They offer warnings, disclosures, or psychological groundwork. Whether we consider them conspiratorial mirrors or unconscious cultural confessions, they deserve to be treated with the seriousness of journalism. The screen may be silver, but the message bleeds red.
This is Part I. The next installment will explore films like Snowpiercer, The Tomorrow War, Interstellar, and Elysium—mapping environmental weaponization, class apartheid, and genetic colonization through narrative fiction.
Further reading
Water Management, Not Carbon Tax: Earth’s Silent Cry for Balance
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Originally published on June 27, 2017
Updated on May 03, 2025

In the global effort to combat climate change, carbon taxes have emerged as a popular policy tool. Proponents argue that putting a price on carbon emissions incentivizes industries and individuals to reduce their carbon footprint. However, this approach often overlooks a more immediate and tangible crisis: water mismanagement.
I’m not a scientist. But my common sense, my emotional intelligence, and my deep symbiotic bond with Mother Earth compel me to question the climate change narrative being pushed by policymakers, financiers, and lobbyist-backed scientists. The climate is indeed changing—but it’s not just because of carbon emissions. It’s because Earth is thirsty.
I coined the term “dry surface syndrome” to describe this condition—one caused not by abstract greenhouse gases, but by the damming of rivers, the clear-cutting of forests, the overuse of groundwater, and the destruction of Earth’s natural hydrological systems. When Earth is parched, it does what every living organism does: it adapts. It melts its glaciers. It shifts its winds. It tries to rebalance itself.
Let me be clear: I believe lobbying companies have manipulated have the scientific discourse around climate. Some of the data pushed over the last 25 years, especially by the proponents behind “An Inconvenient Truth,” was crafted not to empower the planet—but to sell the carbon tax agenda. We’ve been sold a smokescreen, while the real damage continues in our rivers, forests, and oceans.

This infographic reveals the stark contrast between the U.S.’s massive daily freshwater use (322 billion gallons) and its CO₂ emissions (6.3 billion metric tons). As Marivel Guzman writes, “Earth is not just warming—she is thirsty.”
Water, the Forgotten Crisis
According to American Rivers, the U.S. alone diverts and manages its water through more than 241 dams in California—part of a global network of over 57,000 dams disrupting natural ecosystems. Dams fragment rivers, kill fisheries, and stop sediment from replenishing coasts. The Guardian reported extensively on this issue, which remains largely ignored in global climate talks.
Even worse, freshwater from melting glaciers is described by some scientists as “wasted water” because it mixes with the oceans. But water doesn’t die—it transforms. As sunlight causes evaporation, that moisture joins the rain cycle, replenishing rivers, aquifers, and life. To call glacier melt “waste” is to deny the sacred role water plays in Earth’s renewal.
Lungs of the Planet: Forests and Oceans
BBC once called the Amazon the “lungs of the planet,” covering over 5.5 million square kilometers. But it isn’t just forests. According to the Earth Journalism Network, oceans also act as Earth’s lungs—producing between 50% to 80% of the world’s oxygen and absorbing over 25% of its CO₂. WWF’s Yolanda Kakabadse put it best: “We should call it Planet Ocean.”
And yet, we are suffocating these lungs. If you trap the water responsible for ocean currents and cut down all the trees, what do you expect will happen to the climate?
Pollution vs. Responsibility
Pollution is real and deadly—particularly in the developing world. The World Health Organization states that over 3 billion people, mostly women and children, still inhale toxic smoke daily from polluting stoves. But not all pollution comes from oil or cars. We ignore the role of fast fashion, agriculture, and consumer habits in water waste and environmental degradation.
Take cotton: India, the world’s largest producer, uses 22,500 liters of water to produce just one kilogram of cotton.According to The Guardian, in 2013 alone, India’s cotton exports consumed enough water to supply 85% of its 1.24 billion people with 100 liters per day for a year. Yet 100 million people in India lack safe water access.
Since 1991, the World Bank has been deeply involved in multiple phases of India’s water infrastructure development—channeling billions in loans toward rural water supply, dam rehabilitation, and urban water management. Yet despite these investments, India now has significantly less water per person than it did in 1951.
According to India Today, per capita water availability dropped from 5,177 cubic meters in 1951 to just 1,545 cubic meters by 2011, with current estimates nearing 1,000 cubic meters in several regions
Toward a Real Climate Agenda
If climate change is a fact—and it is—then the preservation, distribution, and restoration of water systems must be central to every climate summit and sustainability agenda. Instead of investing billions in carbon markets and surveillance, we must dismantle destructive dams, reforest ecosystems, and return rivers to their natural paths.
We must acknowledge Earth as a sentient, self-regulating being—not just a resource to be taxed, but a life force to be nurtured. Earth is not just warming. She is bleeding through her glacier tears. And she is asking us to listen.
Further reading:
When Earth Thirsts: Glacial Tears and the Wisdom of a Living Planet
HAARP and Earth’s Magnetic Field: Tuning the Frequencies of a Living Planet
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Published: May 2, 2025, 22:45 UTC

Microwaves, Magnetism, and the Matrix
What if the so-called blackouts across Europe weren’t just infrastructure failures — but signals in a deeper electromagnetic disturbance? What if the protective field around Earth isn’t failing naturally, but being disturbed, nudged, maybe even provoked by artificial experiments cloaked in atmospheric research?
The HAARP (High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program) facility in Alaska has long raised questions. Officially decommissioned in 2014, and then quietly transferred to the University of Alaska Fairbanks, it continues to beam high-frequency radio waves into the ionosphere — the electrically charged region of the upper atmosphere. What’s not up for debate is its ability to superheat localized pockets of this atmospheric layer and trigger artificial auroras. What is still debated is the long-term, planetary-scale effect of such actions.
HAARP and the Ionosphere: A Targeted Relationship
HAARP operates far below the magnetosphere, technically targeting the ionosphere. But the electromagnetic relationship between these layers is tightly woven. HAARP sends 3.6 megawatts of RF (radio frequency) energy upward — not enough to melt the poles or crack open the planet, but enough to create electrical turbulence and interfere with natural wave behavior.
Artificially induced currents can alter the conductivity of the ionosphere. When this happens on a large scale — or in resonance with natural geomagnetic storms — ripple effects may occur in ways we don’t fully comprehend — and consequently, cannot fully control, potentially unleashing phenomena with catastrophic consequences.
Tesla’s Echo: The Theories That Shaped HAARP
To be fair to Nikola Tesla, the theoretical groundwork that would later influence HAARP was born not from militarism, but from a dream of universal energy. Tesla’s experiments with resonance, wireless transmission, and the Earth’s natural frequencies were visionary.
In 1905, Tesla filed patents for a system that could transmit electrical energy through the Earth’s atmosphere, using resonance between the Earth and high-frequency oscillations. He envisioned a world where electricity was distributed wirelessly and harmonically — not weaponized, not monopolized.
The infamous Eastlund Patent (US4686605A), often cited as the basis for HAARP, borrows heavily from Tesla’s ideas, but twists them. Where Tesla saw a unified global grid of free energy, others saw potential for atmospheric manipulation, mind control, and defense technologies.
The tragedy isn’t that Tesla’s ideas were impossible. It’s that they were appropriated — and distorted.
The Bigger Picture: Solar Storms, Oceanic Conductors, and Magnetic Shifts
Earth’s oceans, rich in salt, act as massive conductors of electromagnetic energy. The poles — especially those draped in ice — serve as guardians of balance, insulating and tuning Earth’s magnetic field like sacred instruments. As glaciers melt, it is not merely a sign of disruption, but perhaps a deliberate response: Mother Earth drawing upon her ancient reserves, rehydrating her fractured systems. This release may temporarily shift oceanic salinity and density, yet beneath it lies a deeper intelligence — one that seeks not to weaken, but to recalibrate the planetary pulse.
What happens when a solar storm hits Earth at the same time that HAARP (or similar atmospheric technologies) are in operation? Could that combination push Earth’s already drifting magnetic pole a few more inches — or more?
Could the energy be absorbed unevenly by the oceans, triggering tectonic micro-shifts or internal resonance within the mantle-core boundary?
We may never get a peer-reviewed study to confirm it. But those who observe intuitively — those who feel the pulse of the planet — know that something deeper is moving.
Timeline: Major Blackouts and Atmospheric Anomalies
April 28, 2025 — Widespread blackout across Spain, Portugal, and parts of France. Authorities cite grid synchronization failures possibly linked to atmospheric oscillations.
December 4, 2023 — Sudden electromagnetic interference reported across Nordic regions during a geomagnetic storm. Minor blackouts and satellite malfunctions observed.
August 12, 2021 — High-altitude VLF (very low frequency) testing reported in northern Alaska. Coincides with minor seismic uptick and localized communication failures.
July 23, 2012 — “The Near Miss”: A massive solar storm narrowly misses Earth. NASA later confirms it could have caused global blackouts had it hit directly.
August 14, 2003 — Northeast U.S. and parts of Canada suffer massive blackout. Official cause: grid failure — but it coincides with unusual magnetospheric activity.
While correlation does not imply causation, patterns like these demand deeper scrutiny. As our dependence on electromagnetic infrastructure grows, so too does our vulnerability to disruptions — natural or engineered.
Conclusion: Tuning Earth’s Heartbeat or Scrambling It?
HAARP may not destroy the magnetic field directly. But it is undeniably capable of disturbing the harmony that sustains it. Like playing a tuning fork next to a glass — resonance matters. Earth has a natural electromagnetic song, shaped by Schumann Resonances, solar winds, and deep mantle flows.
When we inject artificial frequencies into this system — whether for “research” or defense — we are not observing. We are interfering. The question is: Are we prepared for the note that breaks the glass?
Author’s Statement
I am not a physicist, geophysicist, or climatologist.
I am a journalist, a researcher, a question-asker — guided by intuition, emotional intelligence, and a reverence for truth in all its layers.
My work is born not in institutional labs, but in lived experience, data literacy, and the insatiable drive to understand what hides beneath headlines and behind veils. I do not claim to hold all answers — but I do claim the right to ask bold questions.
I research because I care.
I write because silence isn’t an option.
And I share because, in this collapsing moment of noise and denial, awareness may be our most sacred responsibility.
— Marivel R. Guzman
Akashma News
References & Acknowledgments
Eastlund, Bernard J., “Method and Apparatus for Altering a Region in the Earth’s Atmosphere, Ionosphere, and/or Magnetosphere,” U.S. Patent No. 4,686,605 (1987).
Tesla, Nikola. Patents and writings on wireless energy transmission and Earth resonance (1900–1905).
Begich, Nick & Manning, Jeane. Angels Don’t Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology (1995).
HeartMath Institute, Global Coherence Monitoring System (Schumann Resonance Data): https://www.heartmath.org/gci/gcms/live-data/
Wikipedia: HAARP Overview
NASA Archives: The 2012 Near Miss Solar Storm
MarketWatch: Europe Blackout Mystery
New York Post: Spain/Portugal Blackout Coverage
This investigation will continue.

Marivel Guzman
Investigative Journalist | Documentary Photographer | Truth Seeker
Marivel Guzman is passionate about investigative reporting and photography. She loves to dig for information and get to the bottom of what is really going on. Her work often focuses on following the money and exposing how public funds are allocated—or misused.
Her bylines include Lariat News, Orange Coast Report, and The State Hornet. She has also worked remotely as Proof Editor for the Baluchistan Red Crescent quarterly magazine and volunteers as a photographer for UNRWA at their local community events.
She has been the voice behind Akashma News for almost two decades, sharing uncensored stories that challenge dominant narratives and amplify the voices of the oppressed.
When Earth Thirsts: Glacial Tears and the Wisdom of a Living Planet
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
The Cry Beneath The Ice
What if the Earth isn’t just reacting to us — what if it’s speaking, guiding, healing itself?
For too long, the conversation around melting glaciers has centered on panic: rising seas, lost habitats, climate refugees. But what if there’s a deeper message encoded in this release of ancient water? What if Earth, in her infinite wisdom, is not dying — but thirsty?
The Natural Rivers Are a Picture of the Past
Once, rivers followed sacred paths. Fed by rainfall, glaciers, and underground aquifers, they meandered through the land like arteries in a living body.
Today, most rivers have been dammed, diverted, buried, or poisoned. Corporate agriculture and industrial water privatization have turned sacred waterways into profit pipelines. Giants like Nestlé extract billions of gallons from aquifers, bottling the blood of the Earth for sale.
As I wrote in 2017:
💧A Critique of Carbon Tax Policies
“Carbon taxes are a distraction from the real issue: the mismanagement and commodification of water resources.”
Our focus must shift from carbon credit theatrics to the true crisis—Earth’s dehydration.
🌱 Call for Holistic Environmental Stewardship
“We must shift our focus from taxing carbon to nurturing our natural water systems, ensuring they remain free and unpolluted.”
The Earth, recognizing the trauma, is responding not in wrath — but in wisdom.
The Great Thirst: Earth’s Response to Human Extraction
In this theory — not yet studied by formal science, but sensed by many — the Earth is intentionally melting glaciers to restore its fractured hydrological balance.
🌊 Earth’s Hydrological Wisdom
“The Earth is thirsty, and she is releasing water from the glaciers to revitalize her fractured bones dried by man-made water catastrophes.”
As rivers run dry or are redirected, Earth turns to her frozen reservoirs, unlocking thousands of years of stored purity, not to drown humanity, but to quench her parched crust.
This view positions Earth as a sentient organism, a being not of chaos, but of adaptation. Just as a body increases blood flow to a wound, the planet may be reactivating ancient flows to rehydrate landscapes desiccated by extraction, agriculture, and pollution.
As I once wrote: “The Earth is thirsty, and she is releasing water from the glaciers to revitalize her fractured bones dried by man-made water catastrophes.”
This metaphor is no longer a poetic gesture — it is a warning wrapped in wisdom.
Where the Waters Go: Rivers of the Present and Future
Conventional science warns that glacial melt flows into oceans, disrupting salinity, marine ecosystems, and thermohaline currents. This is valid and well-documented. But it misses another possibility: that not all meltwater is lost to the sea.
In landscapes still connected to ancient hydrological systems — such as the Sierra Nevada, the Canadian Rockies, and the Himalayas — glacial melt can find its way into natural rivers, revitalizing ecosystems still intact.
Moreover, Earth’s crust contains subterranean rivers and aquifers that act like veins. Meltwater may be refilling these channels, much like an IV rehydrating a dying patient.
Whispers from the Waters
Poetic Interlude
I remembered you before you were born,
when your bones were still sand,
and your breath hadn’t yet touched my sky.
I held your reflection in glacial silence,
you sold my tears
in plastic bottles.
But I did not curse you.
I simply melted.
You think I weep from injury.
They are rivers reborn.
You think I weep from injury.
I am not drowning you.
I do not demand your fear.
Only your listening.
Let the stone be soft again.
Let the river write its language into your skin.
Let the mist enter your lungs
and remind you of where you came from.

Creation by ChatGPT + DALL·E under user instruction.
Copyright © 2025 Marivel R. Guzman | Akashma News. All rights reserved.
Earth as Teacher: The Philosophical Turn
If we accept Earth as an intelligent being, the implications are radical.
The melting glaciers are not merely indicators of doom — they are teachings. They show us how life adapts, how wisdom survives even the harshest disruption.
Earth is not asking us to save her. She is showing us how she saves herself.
Our role, then, is not to dominate or “fix” nature, but to listen — and stop draining her lifeblood for profit.
“We must shift our focus from taxing carbon to nurturing our natural water systems, ensuring they remain free and unpolluted.” These words echo louder than ever.
Conclusion: Rivers Remember
The glaciers are weeping — not in sorrow, but in sacrifice. Their tears are nourishment, directed by an ancient knowing.
If humanity dares to listen, we may realize that the greatest climate solution isn’t control, but reverence.
We must let the rivers run wild again. We must protect the last of the natural flows. And above all, we must recognize that the Earth is not a resource — she is a relative, a mother, a healer.
Let us follow the water.
Let us remember the rivers.
Let us return to the source.
A Note from Akashma
This piece is more than an article — it is a conversation with the Earth, born from years of observation, meditation, and heartbreak.
I have watched rivers disappear and return only in memory. I have felt the thirst of a planet bled dry by greed, and I’ve listened to the silent wisdom buried in the glaciers. What I’ve written here may challenge conventional science, but it is rooted in something deeper: instinct, reverence, and the belief that Earth is alive, aware, and endlessly resilient.
This is not a warning.
This is an offering.
A prayer.
A reminder that we are not separate from the river —
We are the river.
—
Marivel Guzman
Akashma News
If this article spoke to something deeper in you — share it.
Let the rivers speak through us.
#AkashmaNews #WhispersFromTheWaters

Marivel Guzman
Investigative Journalist | Documentary Photographer | Truth Seeker
Marivel Guzman is passionate about investigative reporting and photography. She loves to dig for information and get to the bottom of what is really going on. Her work often focuses on following the money and exposing how public funds are allocated—or misused.
Her bylines include Lariat News, Orange Coast Report, and The State Hornet. She has also worked remotely as Proof Editor for the Baluchistan Red Crescent quarterly magazine and volunteers as a photographer for UNRWA at their local community events.
She has been the voice behind Akashma News for almost two decades, sharing uncensored stories that challenge dominant narratives and amplify the voices of the oppressed.
White Powder, Dark Legacy – Part II: The Merchant of Death and the Price of Redemption
How a Mistaken Obituary and a Life Built on Explosives Gave Birth to the Greatest PR Cover-Up in the History of Peace
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Obituary of Infamy: The Death That Wasn’t

Digital illustration generated by AI | Concept by Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
In 1888, death knocked — but not for Alfred Nobel. It came for his brother Ludvig. Yet in a tragic twist of error, a French newspaper published an obituary for Alfred instead, bearing the now-infamous title: “Le marchand de la mort est mort” — “The Merchant of Death is Dead.”
The obituary condemned him in no uncertain terms: “Dr. Alfred Nobel, who became rich by finding more ways to kill people faster than ever before, died yesterday.” The paper, mistaking identity and fate, did not just misreport a death — it ignited a legacy crisis.
For Alfred Nobel, a man who held over 350 patents and presided over a transcontinental web of explosives and weapons factories, the headline struck deeper than any criticism he had ever faced. It wasn’t just public shame — it was a preview of how history would remember him–not as a benefactor of science, but as a harbinger of death. And he couldn’t allow that.
Thus began the most elaborate act of image laundering in modern history — the founding of the Nobel Peace Prize.
This moment didn’t inspire him. It terrified him. Within a few years, Nobel would write a new will — not to change the world, but to clean his name.
But contrary to the romantic mythology crafted by mainstream biographies and fanfare, Nobel’s creation was not born from an epiphany or a deep-seated yearning for peace. It was an act of strategic repentance — a calculated move to offset a violent empire with a philanthropic afterlife. The Peace Prize became a posthumous shield, not a symbol of his ideals, but a buffer against the damning truth of his industrial legacy.
Obituary of Infamy: The Death That Wasn’t
In April 1888, the Journal des Débats, a prominent French newspaper, ran an obituary that would echo through history—not for its tribute, but for its mistake. The paper believed Alfred Nobel had died while visiting Cannes. In truth, it was his brother Ludvig who had passed. But it was Alfred’s name, Alfred’s face, and Alfred’s legacy that graced the page under a damning headline:
“Le marchand de la mort est mort”
“The Merchant of Death is Dead”
Rather than a eulogy, it read like a public indictment.
It portrayed Nobel not as a man of science or innovation, but as a profiteer of carnage—a man who had made his fortune by engineering tools of destruction, and whose legacy would be written in blood, not ink.
This public misfire was no trivial error. For Nobel, it served as a preview of judgment day, not in a religious sense—he was a committed atheist—but in the court of public memory. The shame was immediate, and perhaps for the first time, irrevocable.
Though Nobel never publicly acknowledged the obituary’s impact, the timeline is telling. Within months, he began drafting revisions to his will. And by 1895—one year before his death—he completed a legally binding testament that redirected the bulk of his vast fortune not to family, not to science, but to the creation of a peace prize.
But not just peace — he included prizes for chemistry, physics, medicine, literature, and economics. Peace was almost an afterthought — tucked among disciplines that, ironically, had already helped refine warfare. This wasn’t about peace — it was about legacy control.
Contextual Anchor:
At the time of Ludvig’s death and the mistaken obituary, Alfred Nobel:
Held over 355 patents globally
Operated more than 90 factories tied to weapons, projectiles, and explosives production
Accumulated wealth through arms contracts from major European powers
Calling him a “man of peace” would be like calling an arms dealer a conflict resolution expert.
“He did not fear Hell. He feared being forgotten – or worse, remembered as what he truly was”
Marivel Guzman, Akashma News
Peace for Sale: Nobel’s Will and the Reinvention of a Warmonger
On November 27, 1895, Alfred Nobel signed his third and final will at the Swedish-Norwegian Club in Paris. It was brief, startlingly vague, and — for a man obsessed with precision — surprisingly open to interpretation.
In just over 1,200 words, Nobel allocated 94% of his vast fortune (roughly $200 million USD in today’s value) to establish annual prizes in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature — and Peace.
But the wording of the Peace Prize bequest was as elusive as his character:
“…to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses.”
On paper, this sounds noble. But in practice, it was a clause written without structure, oversight, or clarity — ripe for manipulation.
The Peace Clause: Loopholes, Ambiguity, and Historical Irony
Unlike the other prizes, which had clear scientific or literary criteria, the Peace Prize was rooted in subjective terms: “fraternity,” “peace congresses,” “abolition of armies.” Nobel did not name a peace foundation, a review committee, or even a political framework to define these goals.
The result? The Norwegian Storting (Parliament), not even mentioned in the will, quickly took ownership of the Peace Prize selection. This was a deeply political body — and its decisions over the next century would prove that “peace” was often awarded to military leaders, imperialists, and proxy-war apologists.
Contradictions Worth Highlighting:
Nobel left no requirement for transparency, allowing for secrecy in deliberations
Several Peace Prize recipients have been presidents, prime ministers, or military commanders — figures whose nations were actively at war at the time of the award
War criminals like Henry Kissinger, and preemptive invaders like Barack Obama, were laureates — mocking Nobel’s stated goal of reducing standing armies
Delucidation:
The Peace Prize was never designed to ensure peace. It was structured to protect Nobel’s name. By tying his fortune to an institution of “fraternity,” Nobel placed his legacy into a protective shell — a fortress of moral authority, guarded not by ethics but by gold and global ceremony.
“The man who gave the world dynamite also gave it a gold medal for pretending not to use it.”
Marivel Guzman, Akashma News
Laureates of Hypocrisy: When Peace Was Awarded for War
Alfred Nobel’s Peace Prize, supposedly intended to reward efforts to abolish war and promote fraternity between nations, has repeatedly fallen into the hands of those whose legacies are soaked in blood, surveillance, or strategic silence. Instead of honoring peacemakers, the Nobel Committee has often decorated power brokers, political opportunists, and even perpetrators of violence — all under the gilded mask of diplomacy.
Here are just a few of the most glaring contradictions:
Henry Kissinger – 1973
“Awarded for negotiating the Vietnam ceasefire.”
While Kissinger accepted the prize, the war raged on for two more years. Secret bombings in Cambodia and Laos, orchestrated under his authority, left millions dead and destabilized Southeast Asia. The irony was so grotesque that Le Duc Tho, his Vietnamese counterpart, refused the prize altogether.
Barack Obama – 2009
“For extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy.”
When awarded, Obama was barely in office. He would go on to expand drone warfare, authorize more arms sales than any president before him, and oversee NATO’s intervention in Libya, which led to the total collapse of a sovereign state.
Menachem Begin – 1978
“For peace negotiations with Egypt.”
Begin, former commander of the Zionist militant group Irgun, had overseen bombings, assassinations, and ethnic cleansing campaigns during Israel’s founding years. The group’s 1946 attack on the King David Hotel left 91 dead. Peace with Egypt was strategic, not moral.
Aung San Suu Kyi – 1991
White Powder, Dark Legacy: Alfred Nobel’s War for Peace**
This investigative feature revisits the life of Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, through a critical lens. It explores the contradictions between his contributions to warfare and his later public image as a benefactor of peace. Through analysis of Nobel’s writings and industrial empire, the piece dismantles the myth of a man driven by pacifism and reveals instead a legacy rooted in calculated power and destruction.
“For her non-violent struggle for democracy.”
Initially a global symbol of resistance, she later became complicit in the genocide of the Rohingya Muslims, defending the military’s atrocities at the International Court of Justice in 2019.
Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres – 1994
“For efforts to create peace in the Middle East.”
Both men had long careers in the Israeli military establishment. Peres was instrumental in establishing Israel’s nuclear weapons program, while Rabin oversaw brutal military operations during the First Intifada.
Delucidation:
The Nobel Peace Prize, designed by a man seeking to rewrite his own obituary, has itself become a tool of historical laundering — a way for empires to appear humane, for wars to be masked as diplomacy, and for the most powerful actors to be rebranded as peacemakers. It is no longer (if it ever was) a prize for peace — but a strategic endorsement, handed out by elites to other elites.
“When murderers receive medals, peace is no longer a goal — it’s a brand.”
Marivel Guzman, Akashma News
Nobel’s Final Invention: A Peace Prize for Empire
Alfred Nobel may have invented dynamite, but his most enduring creation wasn’t an explosive — it was a myth. A myth so powerful, so polished, so gold-plated, that it managed to detonate truth itself. The Nobel Peace Prize was never truly about peace. It was about reputation, redemption, and the reinvention of a man who built an empire on controlled destruction.
And in the century since his death, that myth has only expanded — weaponized by governments, legitimized by media, and sold to the world as a symbol of human progress. But behind the prize is a ledger of blood, a list of laureates whose hands were not clean, whose nations were not at peace, and whose policies deepened conflict under the banner of diplomacy.
The Peace Prize today stands not as a testament to peace, but as a trophy of power. It rewards the powerful for gestures, not consequences. It cloaks violence in statesmanship. It turns war into ceremony. And it does so using the name of a man who once feared being remembered as The Merchant of Death
But no medal can erase truth. No eulogy can sterilize legacy.
And no prize — no matter how prestigious — can silence the reckoning that comes when the myth begins to crack.
“Alfred Nobel didn’t invent peace. He invented a prize to hide from what he’d done — and gave the empire a medal to wear while doing the same.”
Alfred Nobel invented dynamite, dreamed of peace, and built a legacy that fuels both.
White Powder, Black Legacy–Part I: Alfred Nobel’s War for Peace
In Part III of White Powder, Dark Legacy, Akashma News peels back the curated legacy of Alfred Nobel, diving into his unpublished writings and private contradictions. Was the Nobel Peace Prize born out of conscience or calculation? With sharp analysis and rare archival reflections, this installment exposes the ghost behind the medal—where regret, fear, and strategic reinvention collide.
The Knife I Held All Night
A memory buried under medals and politics—what silence cost me as a young woman in engineering.
Flashback
I was scrolling through the digital archives of my hometown newspaper when a name struck me like a thunderclap:
“Don José dies at 100.”
I paused, then clicked. The article praised him as a man of honor, awarded for business excellence and hailed as a pillar of the local economy. “A man of character and impeccable trajectory,” the tribute read. I stared at the screen, heart pounding. Funny how nobody knew Don José the way I did.
To most, he was a respected businessman. To me, he was the father of the man who almost raped me. He was also the man who harassed me at work with a shamelessness that now feels unbelievable—and yet, back then, it was routine.
That obituary cracked open a memory I’d buried long ago.
#MeToo Before the Hashtag
Today, the phrase #MeToo appears in headlines, documentaries, and courtrooms. It signals solidarity. But years ago, it existed only in silence, in sidelong glances among women who had endured the same things. We didn’t have hashtags. We had shame. We had fear of losing our jobs, our reputations, our place in the world.

I was just 20, in my second year of civil engineering at university, and working full-time at Juárez, a small construction firm owned by Don José. Back then, it was just a dusty yard with a few machines, one secretary, one accountant (me), the old man, and his sons: Pablo, my boss and a friend, and Martín—an assistant engineer and intern like me.
They were a powerful family. Pablo Macías, the governor of Sinaloa at the time, was close to them. Contracts came easily. Their rise was assured, no matter how small the company had once been. Connections meant everything. And I was just a young woman trying to survive.
Don José had no fear of consequences. He’d pinch me, grab me, whisper vulgar things as I passed his desk. It was almost daily. I never told Pablo—how could I? His father was the harasser. I didn’t want to shame him or make him feel responsible. Maybe that was naïve. Or maybe that was just what women did back then. We internalized everything.
But the worst night was still to come.
The Night I Slept with a Knife
Before Juárez—before the construction company, before university—I was just a young woman adjusting to life in the state capital. I had landed a job in a government office, thanks to Pablo, a family friend who had always looked out for me. When I arrived in the city, he gave me the number of his younger brother, Martín.
I share this story not to expose, but to liberate.1111
“He’s my brother,” Pablo said. “Call him. At least you’ll know someone.”
I did. Martín and I met at a Peña, a cozy cultural venue where trova musicians sang poetic songs. No alcohol, just music and conversation. He seemed friendly—maybe a little too self-assured, but polite enough. Later that evening, he suggested we stop by El Delfín, a trendy new disco. I hesitated, but agreed.
We took a taxi. Halfway there, he told the driver to take a detour. “I just need to change clothes,” he said, directing us to his apartment on the outskirts of the city. I followed—young, polite, and caught off guard.
The moment we stepped inside, he locked the door.
What followed happened fast. He grabbed me, threw me on the bed, and tried to tear my clothes off. I fought like a wild animal—kicking, clawing, biting. I screamed. I struck him in the groin and managed to push him off. As soon as I had space, I ran—straight to the kitchen, where I grabbed a knife and held it tight
For hours, we circled each other. He made more attempts, but every time I raised the blade and warned him. My hands never trembled. I wasn’t afraid—I was furious.
Eventually, he gave up and passed out on the bed.
I stood guard in the kitchen, gripping the knife like it was an extension of my body. At some point, I heard voices in the hallway. Then a key turned in the lock—someone was coming in. I didn’t wait. I bolted out the door and into the street, caught a taxi, and went home.
I never told Pablo. I never told anyone.
I wasn’t afraid. I was brave. And I was mad.
Why I Never Reported It
I never went to the police.
Not because I didn’t know what happened. Not because I was confused. Not because I was scared of Martín. I wasn’t. I had faced him down with a knife and made it through the night.
I didn’t report him because of who he was—and who I was not.
Martín came from a powerful family. His father, Don José, was entrenched in Sinaloa’s political and business elite. His brother, Pablo, had helped me get a foothold in the city. The governor at the time, Pablo Macías, was practically family to them. The Sánchez family didn’t just run a construction company—they moved in the same rooms where state contracts were handed out behind closed doors.
And me? I was a 20-year-old university student with no last name that carried weight. My word against theirs would be buried faster than a city permit in a corrupt registry.
Besides, how could I tell Pablo?
He had been good to me—gotten me my first job, helped me feel like I belonged in the big city. He wasn’t responsible for what his brother did, but I couldn’t bear the idea of placing that shame on his shoulders. I didn’t want him to feel like he had failed me. So I stayed silent.
When I returned to my hometown and enrolled in university, Pablo invited me to work at Juárez—to help with the books and join their engineering projects as part of my internship. I said yes, even knowing Martín worked there.
And when I saw Martín again, something shattered all over again. He acted like he didn’t recognize me. As if I was invisible. As if nothing had ever happened. In that office, in that yard, around those machines and ledgers—I became a ghost of the girl he tried to break.
But I never gave him the satisfaction of fear.
I stayed. I did the work. I built my career. And I kept my silence—not because I was weak, but because I understood the world I was in. A world where women were dismissed, discredited, and discarded the moment they dared to speak.
The Woman Who Remembered
Decades have passed.
That young woman who once sat trembling in a kitchen with a knife in her hand is now someone else—someone older, wiser, unafraid to look the past in the eye. I never forgot what happened. I just carried it differently.
I’ve built a life out of truth and light, even when shadows tried to silence me. I never let that night define me—but I’ve come to understand that it shaped me. My resilience didn’t come from being untouched by harm. It came from surviving it, and from choosing to live beyond it without letting it consume me.
So why speak now?
Because I no longer carry their shame. That shame never belonged to me. It never belonged to any of us.
Because when I saw that obituary praising Don José—a man others saw as honorable—I remembered the daily harassment I endured at his hands, the power he abused casually, shamelessly. And I remembered his son, Martín, who tried to violate me and later pretended I didn’t exist.
They moved on with their lives. They were celebrated, awarded, promoted.
But I remember.
And now, I write this not out of vengeance—but out of clarity. To remind others that sometimes the people history calls honorable are just the ones who controlled the narrative. And sometimes the most courageous thing a woman can do is remember—and speak.
Because silence protects no one but the guilty.
And I’m not afraid anymore.
Disclaimer:
This personal narrative is based on true events. Names and identifying details have been changed to protect the privacy of those involved. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or deceased, beyond these changes is purely coincidental. The intent of this publication is not to defame but to speak truth to personal experience and social realities that often go unspoken.
Silencing the Truth: Francesca Albanese, Genocide in Gaza, and the Global Gag Order on Palestine
By Marivel Guzman
Independent Journalist & Founder of Akashma News
April 17, 2025
Two days ago, the United Nations reaffirmed Francesca Albanese as the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. In a world gripped by cognitive dissonance and silenced dissent, Albanese dares to call the Palestinian tragedy by its true name: genocide. Her latest report, “Anatomy of a Genocide“, offers damning evidence that Israel’s military assault on Gaza constitutes a systematic attempt to destroy a people.
But rather than reckon with this truth, governments across the Global North are criminalizing solidarity. In the U.S., laws are being passed to suppress the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement and to punish those who criticize Israel—a foreign government—while eroding citizens’ First Amendment rights in the process. The irony is staggering: while a genocide unfolds in full view, protected speech is being rebranded as antisemitism, and moral outrage is being legislated out of public discopaste.
A Mandate Without Access
Since her appointment in 2022, Francesca Albanese has not been permitted by Israel to enter Gaza or the West Bank—a restriction imposed on all UN Special Rapporteurs on Palestine since the mandate’s creation in 1993. Albanese relies instead on remote testimony, NGO documentation, satellite evidence, and legal analysis. Despite these barriers, her findings are among the most legally grounded assessments of Israel’s actions in occupied Palestine.
Her 2024 report, “Anatomy of a Genocide”, details how Israel’s conduct—including mass killings, destruction of civilian infrastructure, and deliberate displacement—meets the legal definition of genocide as defined in the 1948 Genocide Convention.
From Genocide to Gag Orders
While Albanese investigates mass atrocities, many so-called democracies are racing to erase public discussion of them. In the United States, anti-BDS laws now exist in over 30 states, targeting individuals and businesses that refuse to contract with Israeli firms on moral grounds. In Germany, France, and the UK, expressions of solidarity with Palestinians have been met with censorship, arrests, and surveillance.
These legal maneuvers don’t just suppress criticism—they distort reality. By branding calls for justice as “hate,” governments are protecting war crimes under the banner of anti-discrimination, while dismantling constitutional protections from within.
What Francesca Albanese Represents
Albanese’s work matters not only because of her courage but because it re-centers the Palestinian narrative around law, justice, and dignity. She calls on the world to “wake up from mass numbness,” and reminds us that silence is complicity. Her presence at the UN is a crack in the wall of institutional denial.
What We Can Do
We, as journalists and citizens, have a responsibility to push back.
Share Her Reports and Speeches Widely
Albanese’s work is available through the OHCHR site and respected blogs like Richard Falk’s. Sharing these counters censorship and whitewashing.
Support legal organizations like Al-Haq and PCHR.
Write to lawmakers opposing speech-curbing bills.
Defend the right to boycott.
Speak up even when it’s uncomfortable.
The genocide in Gaza is not a future risk—it is an unfolding reality. And every attempt to suppress that truth is part of the crime.
The genocide in Gaza is not a future risk—it is an unfolding reality. And every attempt to suppress that truth is part of the crime.
“Silence is complicity. Numbness is defeat.” — Francesca Albanese

Awakening to the Unseen
by Marivel Guzman
Updated April 12, 2025
Author’s Note
Originally published in 2007 as My First Encounter, this updated version reflects how much I’ve evolved—both in curiosity and in consciousness. What began as a single moment of awakening has since become a lifelong journey. Over the years, I’ve continued to question, seek, and expand my understanding of the unseen. This piece is not just a reflection; it’s a return to the spark that first opened my eyes.

The First Questions
From the age of eleven through my teenage years, I attended a Catholic girls’ institution run by Carmelitas nuns. In this environment, we didn’t call our teachers “teachers”—we called them “Mothers,” a title reflecting their authority as spiritual guides. I respected them deeply. I wasn’t trying to be rebellious; I simply had questions. Real ones. Complex ones. Questions that were not easily satisfied by “because God says so.”
Each weekday, we had a class called “Morals,” during which we read a random Bible passage, reflected on it, and wrote a summary. Most girls did this quietly. I did not. I asked why—relentlessly.
The story of Adam and Eve never sat well with me. Even as a child, I couldn’t accept that Eve was blamed for Adam’s weakness. He was created first. He was the man. Wasn’t he supposed to be wiser? Stronger? Why, then, did he simply take the fruit and eat it—just because Eve offered it?
I remember asking the Mothers, “If Adam knew better, why did he listen? Why is she to blame for his choice?” They had no answer that satisfied me. Their discomfort only grew when I followed up: “Why didn’t Adam and Eve have children in paradise if they were supposed to ‘be fruitful and multiply’? Why does the Bible wait until after they’re cast out to mention their children?”
As an adult, I returned to Genesis—not once, but many times. I no longer read it as dogma, but as metaphor. And what I see now is a story drenched in symbolism and patriarchal assumptions. In Chapter 1, God creates man and woman and commands: “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it.” But by Chapter 3, after the eating of the “forbidden fruit,” they are expelled from paradise—and only then are their children born.
That contradiction struck me like lightning.
What if the “fruit” wasn’t an apple at all? What if it was sexual awakening—a metaphor for desire, for womanhood, for agency? What if the true sin, in the eyes of those who wrote this tale, was Eve’s sexuality—her body, her vagina, her ability to initiate life? And what if the serpent, far from being evil, represented desire itself—the force that stirs consciousness, passion, rebellion?
The more I thought about it, the more the metaphor unraveled the logic. Adam and Eve didn’t have children until after they “sinned.” Shame came after awareness. Sex came after shame. Eve wasn’t the villain—she was the catalyst of awakening.
But back in that classroom, all I had was intuition and a quiet storm inside me. I didn’t have the words yet, only the questions. And those questions were already dangerous.

Rebellion Through Curiosity
Fridays were set aside for confession. After morning lessons, we climbed the stairs to the second-floor chapel, where we were expected to kneel and confess our sins to the priest. It was supposed to be a solemn moment of humility, but I felt uneasy about the whole ritual. The idea of baring my soul to a man behind a curtain—when I could just speak to God in silence—never made sense to me.
I remember asking Mother Teresa, my sixth-grade science teacher, “Why must we confess to a priest if God is everywhere and already knows our hearts?” Her reply was sharp and final: “You’re being disrespectful to the Church.” There was no room for further discussion. After that, I began making up sins—small, harmless ones—just to get it over with. I wasn’t being flippant; I just couldn’t bring myself to fake guilt I didn’t feel. It felt like theater.
I never went back.
As an adult, I never returned to the Act of Reconciliation, nor to regular Catholic Mass, except for weddings, baptisms, or funerals—social formalities, not spiritual obligations. I never again felt the urge to kneel before a man in robes and confess anything. Not because I was defiant, but because the very foundation of the ritual struck me as flawed.
In my understanding of life, humans don’t commit “sins” in the way the Church frames them. We make choices. We act. We learn. Some actions may cause harm, others healing. But to me, these are not offenses in need of priestly pardon—they are experiences, lessons, chapters in our personal evolution. If a murderer or a thief finds solace in confession, perhaps they need that intermediary. But in my book of life, I do not need a priest to forgive me—especially not in God’s name.
Looking back, I see confession for what it is: a form of institutional control cloaked in absolution. I rejected it, not out of arrogance, but out of an inner clarity I’ve only come to articulate fully in adulthood. I trusted my own moral compass more than the fear-based doctrine handed to me. And in doing so, I began a quiet rebellion—one that never made a scene, but never surrendered either.
Discipline defined that institution. Once, during a geography class, a student misbehaved, and as punishment, the entire class had to stay until we had memorized every country in the world and its capital. It didn’t matter who had spoken out of turn—we were all guilty by association.
We were not allowed to go home until we passed the test. And we hadn’t eaten. I remember some desperate parents tossing food over the tall side wall of the schoolyard, hoping their daughters would catch it. The scene looked like a bizarre, silent protest—bags of sandwiches sailing through the air like lifelines.
Each time we felt ready, we had to raise our hand, step forward, and recite the entire list in front of Mother Felicitas. If we faltered—even once—we were sent back to the benches to study again. One mistake, and the process restarted.
Now, when I think back on that day, I can’t help but laugh. Not because it was funny, but because it was unbelievable. How could anyone think that was an appropriate punishment for teenagers? Memorizing 191 countries and their capitals—that’s 382 names—matched in perfect pairs. We were punished with cognitive overload and hunger, as if obedience could be beaten into us through exhaustion.
At the time, I thought it was just unfair. Now I think: How could they be so vile? How could punishment take the form of such absurd intellectual cruelty?
After that ordeal, everything changed. We walked straighter. Spoke softer. Touched nothing we weren’t supposed to. It wasn’t that we had learned respect—we had learned compliance. And that is something I have spent my whole life unlearning.
Always Achieving, Always Searching
Despite my reputation as a persistent questioner, I earned straight A’s. I joined the school’s musical group and learned to play the mandolin—an instrument no one else wanted. My academic success gave me a certain immunity, a layer of protection for my curiosity. I excelled not just to shine, but because learning made me feel anchored. Learning was my self-defense.
Outside school, I was just as active. I played volleyball and basketball, joined a regional dance troupe, sang in a youth music group, and played chess at Center 45. On weekends, I met a friend to play basketball, sneaking into her neighborhood schoolyard to access the courts. My life was packed with activity—overflowing, even—and still, I felt a hollow silence beneath it all. A kind of quiet disconnect that I didn’t have words for at the time.
Now, as a mother myself, I understand that feeling more deeply. I remember watching my own children perform at school—singing, reciting, playing music. My heart overflowed with pride and joy. I clapped the loudest. I took the photos. I lived every note and every line with them.
But when I look back at my own childhood performances, there was no one in the audience for me. My grandmother, who raised me, never attended. Neither did my aunts. They worked. They had lives of their own. I understood their absence intellectually, but emotionally it left a void.
And maybe that void explains my hunger for knowledge, my addiction to understanding, my constant pursuit of something. Maybe my obsession with independence was a way to seal that emotional fracture—a quiet way to tell myself, you don’t need anyone to feel whole. Maybe my curiosity was survival—a tool shaped by the plasticity of a young mind that refused to fall apart.
People called me “Mi pequeño Larousse,” after the pocket dictionary we carried at school. I always had an answer, always wanted to explain. Not to show off. But maybe to belong. Maybe to feel seen. Maybe to prove, silently, that I was enough on my own.
A Family of Women, A Foundation of Strength
Living among strong, self-sufficient women taught me not only to think independently—but to trust that voice inside me. To understand that my version of right was valid, even if it didn’t match the script I was handed. And that realization became the bedrock of my awakening.
Still, I am not perfect. Even with my liberal ideals and expanded consciousness, I made mistakes—especially as a mother navigating the school system with my own children. I didn’t always stand strong when it mattered most. I had a son who was incredibly intelligent, playful, rebellious, and fiercely independent. But he was also surrounded by peers who fueled his ego, and the structure of the system didn’t make space for boys like him. I often reflect on how I could have supported him better, pushed back harder, or guided him more gently.
Now, as a grandmother, I offer my daughter-in-law a different kind of strength—not just advice, but solidarity. I tell her to stand firm, to nurture her children’s fire while teaching them how to play the game. Play the game, I tell my grandkids, until you’re in control of the rules.
Sometimes I wish I could download my entire life’s journey directly into their consciousness, implant the lessons like a seed that blooms instantly. But I know better. Wisdom doesn’t get transferred in bulk—it’s narrated, one story at a time, gifted moment by moment, like breadcrumbs along their own path.
A Lifelong Student
From the moment I opened my first novel, I knew reading would become more than a habit—it would become a form of survival. Books were my refuge, my playground, my battlefield. They were the only place where I felt truly free to question without punishment, to think without fear.
I started early—with Dostoevsky. Crime and Punishment lit the first fire, and before long, I had devoured most of his work. That journey led me to Victor Hugo, Cervantes, García Márquez, Dumas, Tolstoy, the Brothers Karamazov, and beyond. Classics, politics, religion, science, metaphysics—I didn’t discriminate. I read everything. And with every book, I carved a new corridor inside my consciousness.
Reading became a necessity. Writing, later, became a calling.
I first chose nursing, believing it would align my compassion with a practical purpose. But the passion faded. I pivoted toward civil engineering—another structured field, full of math and certainty. I left that, too, in my third year. The world was changing. Computers were taking over, and so I went back to school again: computer science, networking, information systems. I was trying to catch up with the pace of the future, but still, I felt unsatisfied.
My soul wanted something else.
That “something” finally arrived as an intersection between photography and journalism. One captured images; the other, truth. One was light; the other, voice. When I began to write articles, document stories, question power, and amplify silenced perspectives, I felt something I hadn’t felt before—alignment.
In a journal from 2008, I wrote: “My soul is pounding in my consciousness, forcing me to deliver my simple understanding to the people.” I no longer cared if it was elegant. I wasn’t writing for literary prestige—I was writing because I had something to say, and people like me—ordinary citizens, global citizens—deserved to hear something real.
I wanted to speak in simple language. No big words. No coded metaphors. Just truth. Accessible and immediate. A way of bridging worlds—from the ordinary to the extraordinary, from the curious to the silenced.
That’s when I knew: I am a student for life—not of institutions, but of consciousness. I follow where the energy moves. I listen to the clues of instinct. I take the turns that feel unsanctioned, unplanned, yet unmistakably mine.
To be a lifelong student is not to be unrooted—it is to be awake.
Enlightenment as Liberation
To me, enlightenment is not a destination, but a process—one of liberation from imposed truths and inherited dogmas. It is not about acquiring light from others but about reclaiming the light that was already inside me, hidden beneath centuries of conditioning.
I’ve come to understand that the doctrines I was taught—particularly in religious settings—didn’t just shape how I behaved; they shaped how I perceived reality. One of the most deeply ingrained illusions was the idea that good and evil are absolute choices—an eternal tug-of-war between sin and virtue.
In a journal entry I once wrote: “Due to mis-education, we are led to believe that the theory of opposites is nonexistent. Religious education is most guilty of this tendency to ignore the balance that must exist in nature. Humanity, being primarily included in the order of nature, is thrown off course by the suppression of duality. Western civilization, in its effort to control the human mind, converted the doctrine of good and evil into a choice theory—rather than preserving the principle of balance—thus creating, in its path, a form of religious worship rooted in fear.”
I didn’t fully realize it at the time, but I was describing something very ancient and very true: that opposites are natural, and the denial of one half of our being—whether it be emotion, sexuality, desire, rebellion, instinct—is a kind of spiritual amputation.
Other traditions knew this. In Eastern philosophies, pre-colonial indigenous teachings, and even in esoteric mystical systems, opposites were not enemies. They were companions. Shadow and light. Masculine and feminine. Creation and destruction. Logic and intuition. To be human was to learn how to walk between them, not to eradicate one for the other.
That’s what enlightenment means to me now: to restore what was severed. To bring balance where dogma imposed division. To marvel at a flower without worrying whether its beauty is virtuous. To admire the rain. To feel joy without guilt. Anger without shame. To love without needing permission. To live without apologizing for your complexity.
It means to help the wounded, to comfort the lost, to protect life in every form—not because you fear divine punishment, but because you remember your place in the natural order. Because your soul feels it’s the right thing to do.
And it means to cry. To rage. To mourn injustice, war, the suffering of the innocent. These emotions are not moral failures. They are sacred instincts.
Enlightenment is the art of reclaiming wholeness. It is the process of remembering that the most spiritual thing you can be is fully, wildly, unapologetically human.
The Seeker Within
Even after everything I’ve read, written, questioned, and outgrown—I remain a seeker.
Not because I haven’t found answers. But because each answer opens another gate, another path, another layer of understanding. There is no final truth. Only deeper resonance.
My first encounter with truth-seeking began in a Catholic classroom, with a Bible in hand and a heart full of questions. It didn’t end there—it expanded into books, into classrooms, into digital rabbit holes, into motherhood, into rebellion, into silence. Into the sacred ordinary.
I used to think I was born to fight the system. Now I know I was born to rewrite the code.
To challenge what was handed to me—not with violence, but with vision. Not with bitterness, but with clarity.
I’ve learned to walk alongside my contradictions. To accept that I can be deeply rational and deeply intuitive. Fiercely independent and tenderly emotional. Analytical and poetic. Political and spiritual. There’s no law that says I must choose.
The seeker within me is no longer restless—she is rooted in curiosity. She trusts her instincts. She respects the unknown. She isn’t afraid of not knowing anymore.
She understands that wisdom is not hoarded—it’s shared. Not imposed—it’s offered. And sometimes the most sacred gift is not the answer, but the courage to ask the question in the first place.
And so I write.
Because writing is how I walk through the unseen.Because someone, somewhere, is still sitting in a classroom, afraid to raise her hand.And I want her to know: your questions are holy.They are the beginning of your awakening.
I Am the Witness and the Flame
I am not the child I was.I am not the student I pretended to be.I am not the mother they judged.Nor the woman they tried to tame with rules wrapped in scripture.
I am the one who asked the question.Who refused to accept half-truths.Who saw the serpent not as sin,but as signal—a whisper of awakening in a garden afraid of knowing.
I was raised by women who survived by bending the rules,and now I walk unbent.
I have played the game.I have watched the world move in patterns I was told were destiny.But I know now:instinct is memory encoded in the bones.And the truth doesn’t arrive with permission.It arrives with fire.
To those who follow:Do not trade your intuition for applause.Do not silence your questions for belonging.And do not wait for the world to validate your voice.Speak now.
You are not here to be perfect.You are here to be present.To remember.To awaken.To burn a little brighter each time you return to yourself.
I am the witness.
I am the memory.
I am the flame.
The War Beneath the Surface: How Industrial Noise, Oceanic Quakes, and Human Greed Are Silencing the Whales
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
April 14, 2025

Two days ago, I stood at Huntington Beach, staring at the waves and the cold, lifeless body of a 25-foot whale that had recently washed ashore. Just offshore, several oil platforms rose from the ocean like sentinels of silence. As I looked beyond the pier, I couldn’t ignore the connection between the metal giants and the dead creature at my feet. The sight stayed with me.
Later that night, headlines broke about U.S. aircraft carriers and submarines en route to the Middle East and Asia, rattling my thoughts even more. I started digging into what I already knew—industrial sonar, seismic activity, and the rising toll on marine life. By morning, a 5.2 magnitude earthquake struck Southern California, shaking my home—and waking up Layla, my husky—before dawn. That was the final signal. This story had to be told.
Whale beachings, once rare and tragic anomalies, have become alarmingly frequent. While media narratives attribute these strandings to “natural causes” or “confused pods,” growing scientific evidence and whistleblower testimonies point to a darker reality beneath the surface—literally. This investigation exposes how industrial sonar, underwater drilling, seismic testing, and oceanic resource extraction have created a deadly acoustic war zone, one that marine life is helpless to escape.
We Have the Technology. We Have the Data. So Why the Silence?
In 2025, we can:
Detect methane leaks from oil platforms from orbit.
Track migrating whales in real time via satellite.
Monitor sonar emissions and their underwater acoustic footprints.
Measure microseismic events with pinpoint accuracy.
Map the temperature, chemistry, and vibrational rhythm of the oceans.
And yet, when dozens, sometimes hundreds, of whales beach themselves—often near known military exercises, near oil platforms, or during seismic disturbances—official responses still fall back on speculation: “It could be disorientation. It could be illness. We need more research.”
That’s not science. That’s willful ignorance backed by the political economy of extraction and war.
A Rational Consensus
Let’s name it without flinching:
The War Industrial Complex floods the oceans with sonar, shockwaves, and pressure from military testing.
The Oil and Gas Industry injects wastewater into deep rock formations, triggering microquakes and altering sub-seafloor ecosystems.
The Global Fishery Machine drags the ocean floor, emits chronic noise, and pushes species toward collapse.
According to The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the global fishing fleet doubled between 1950 and 2015—from 1.7 to 3.7 million motorized vessels on the ocean.

Together, they are reshaping the ocean into a warzone—and the whales are the collateral.
Whales don’t just “make mistakes.” They are ancient beings with millennia of migratory memory. If they’re dying en masse in synchronized regions, this is not behavioral error. It’s ecological distress induced by industrial assault.

Sonic Warfare in the Ocean
Naval forces and oil corporations routinely deploy high-intensity sonar and airgun blasts for submarine detection and seabed mapping. These sounds can reach over 200 decibels, causing internal bleeding, deafness, disorientation, and in many cases, panic-driven beachings in whales and dolphins.
Studies from organizations like the National Resources Defense Council and International Whaling Commission have correlated sonar testing zones with mass strandings across the globe, from the Canary Islands to the coasts of California and Sri Lanka.
Another Kind of Pollution: How Human Noise Is Affecting Whalesĺ
Jan 15, 2023 (video: Marivel Guzman)
Induced Seismic Activity and Wastewater Injections
Oil and gas extraction has moved underwater, where deep-sea drilling platforms now pump wastewater into geological fault zones—activities long known to trigger induced seismicity on land. These underwater “mini-quakes” not only destabilize marine habitats but may also send shockwaves that confuse whale echolocation and migratory paths.
Recent satellite data and geological records suggest a rise in microseismic events near offshore rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, North Sea, and Bay of Bengal—all near recent mass strandings.
Oceanic Infrastructure and the Race for Resources
The proliferation of subsea pipelines, communication cables, and mining operations further disrupt migratory corridors. Whales depend on quiet, open acoustic landscapes to communicate across thousands of miles. But human greed—fueled by data monopolies and energy demand—has commodified the ocean floor, treating it like a battlefield of extraction and surveillance.
This Isn’t About Needing More Data—It’s About Confronting Power
My instinct is correct: we don’t need more “data.” We need more accountability.
The Silence of Accountability
Governments and multinational firms continue to fund marine studies, yet rarely disclose military-acoustic testing schedules or seismic drilling activity logs. Meanwhile, major conservation groups are muted by oil sponsorships or limited by funding gatekeepers, further silencing critical investigations.
Independent marine biologists have raised alarms, only to face funding cuts or media blackout. “We are watching acoustic genocide,” one anonymous scientist told Akashma News. “And it’s being documented, then buried.”
Listening to the Last Song
Whales are more than majestic creatures—they are keystone species, ocean balancers, and long-distance communicators. Silencing them is not just ecological suicide; it is a symptom of our deafness to the planet’s warnings.
The war beneath the surface is real. And unless we disrupt the greed-driven technologies polluting the oceans, we may soon witness the extinction of voices older than our civilizations.
Footnotes / Sources
[1] National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Marine Mammal Acoustic Standards
[2] NRDC: “Sounding the Alarm: How Sonar Harms Whales” (2017)
[3] U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Human-Induced Earthquakes (2023)
[4] Texas Tribune, “How Fracking Changed the Earthquake Map” (2025) Google search
[5] Journal of Acoustic Ecology, “Whale Communication and Industrial Interference” (2021)
[6] Underwater Noise Pollution Is Disrupting Ocean Life—But We Can Fix It (2020)
Exposing a Scam: Fake Rakuten Job Offers, Data Breaches, and the Erosion of Digital Privacy
By Akashma News
An Unwanted Message
On April 12, 2025, I received an intrusive spam message through my Google Messages app, impersonating a legitimate company—Rakuten. The text promised an unbelievable remote job opportunity:
>“Become a member of Rakuten America! Work remotely 60–90 minutes a day and earn over $10,000/month. Contact us via WhatsApp!”
This message was disturbing for two reasons: first, its obviously fraudulent nature, and second, the unsettling realization that my personal phone number may have been sold or leaked—possibly by T-Mobile, Google LLC, or a third-party affiliate.
Breakdown of the Scam Message

Too-Good-To-Be-True Offers: $10,000/month for under 2 hours a day is a classic scam bait.
Recruitment via WhatsApp: No reputable company recruits this way.
False Identity: Rakuten is not an employer. It’s a cashback affiliate platform.
Fake Perks: Paid maternity/paternity leave in a scam offer is just manipulative fluff.
The link provided in the message was a WhatsApp contact link:
wa.me/16186360555?bYd=wr3Lb
Researching this number independently (without clicking) revealed no legitimate business.
What Rakuten Actually Does
Rakuten is a cashback rewards platform, not a job provider. It partners with over 3,500 retail websites and gives a portion of affiliate commissions back to shoppers. Unlike Amazon or Temu, Rakuten does not sell products or operate storefronts. It does not hire through WhatsApp or text messages.
Bigger Picture: My Data Was Breached
Using the website haveibeenpwned.com, I discovered that my email was part of a data breach.
But emails are not the only vulnerable data. Your phone number can also be compromised, sold, or flagged as spam—and there are tools to help track this.
How to Check If Your Phone Number Is Compromised
TruecallerI – See if your number is marked as spam by others.
BeenVerified – Deep lookup reports including breaches and public data (paid).
Spokeo – Traces your number’s digital footprint and associations.
PhoneValidator.com – Validates if your number is active, VOIP, or flagged.
Google’s Spam Protection – A False Sense of Security?
When I attempted to activate Google Messages’ spam protection, I found it was already on. Yet the Rakuten scam still reached me.
> “Spam protection is already on. Google detects real-time spam and harmful content like scams and phishing attempts.”
This exposes a dangerous flaw: Google’s spam detection depends on previously flagged data. If a scammer’s number is new or mimics known brands like Rakuten, it may bypass filters.
Meanwhile, Google plays both sides—claiming to protect us while enabling data sharing across its massive ad ecosystem, apps, and partner APIs.
T-Mobile’s Complicity?
T-Mobile has experienced multiple breaches. Though they deny selling user data, third-party affiliates and data brokers often have access to customer information.
> “We do not sell your number,” they claim.
But what about the data brokers they do business with?
Twitter/X’s Role in Breach Culture
Twitter (X Corp) holds sensitive data—photos, emails, phone numbers. Twice in 2023, over 600 million accounts were exposed in a breach.
This massive leak raises serious questions about negligence and user privacy, especially when 2FA-linked phone numbers were among the data stolen.
> Was it carelessness? Or something worse?
Where to Report and Seek Protection
If your data has been compromised, report it here:
FTC (Federal Trade Commission): reportfraud.ftc.gov
FCC (Federal Communications Commission): consumercomplaints.fcc.gov
IdentityTheft.gov: Resources and recovery plans
Your State Attorney General’s Office: Most have online forms
Your carrier: Forward scam texts to 7726 (SPAM)
Rewiring Trump: Neuralink, Free Will, and the Illusion of Power
By Akashma News – Preview Edition

What if the most powerful leader in the free world wasn’t entirely in control of his own mind?
“Rewiring Trump” is a provocative speculative investigation that explores the possibility that President Donald Trump’s radical behavioral shifts may not have been purely political—but neurological. Blending science fiction with real-world neurotechnology, this piece examines the evolution of brain-machine interfaces like Neuralink, and asks what would happen if such tools were used not to heal, but to manipulate.
From the horrors of MK-Ultra and secret CIA mind control programs, to the quiet power of behavioral nudging via wireless implants, the essay builds a chilling scenario: could Trump—once a dominant, unfiltered voice—have been neurologically silenced?
Through historical precedent, emerging patents, and visible shifts in Trump’s demeanor, the piece invites readers into a thought experiment about autonomy, technology, and the future of leadership in a world of neural warfare.
> “He doesn’t stop being Trump. He just stops feeling like Trump.”
Imagine for a moment that Donald Trump, the controversial titan of American politics, the master of unpredictability, the breaker of conventions—was not fully in control of his own mind. His shifting stances, bizarre reversals, and sudden ideological U-turns have puzzled supporters and critics alike. What if these weren’t merely the antics of a populist showman, but the side effects of a deeper, hidden manipulation? What if a device—implanted discreetly, wirelessly connected, and capable of reading and writing neural activity—was silently influencing his decisions?
Neural Reality
Hold onto your seats—I’m about to take you into the unfathomable: the mysterious realm of neural interference with reality. Imagine a neural connection, precisely rewired to interface seamlessly with machines, yet losing the delicate silver thread linking consciousness to the real world.
Investigative Speculation
Where fact meets foresight. This genre explores emerging technologies, geopolitical shifts, and hidden histories through a speculative lens—blending investigative rigor with imaginative insight to reveal what is, and what could become, the future of your mind without your consent.
In this unprecedented era of technological advancement, only the creators behind sophisticated coding fully grasp what’s on the other side—a simulated virtual reality so convincing that its illusion of authenticity is indistinguishable from reality itself.
How could you know if your mind were wirelessly connected to a digital matrix, silently navigating dimensions you never consciously entered?
This is not merely speculation—it’s a call for vigilance in the age of invisible influence.
This preview is only a glimpse of the full essay, which spans the ethical, legal, and geopolitical stakes of a future where thoughts can be edited, emotions muted, and power hijacked—one signal at a time.

Coming soon on Kindle and PDF.
Full essay includes expanded sections on Neuralink patents, the Church Committee, Gaza contradictions, Oval Office behavioral analysis, and a call for global neuro-rights.
Protected: Rewiring Trump: Neuralink, Free Will, and the Illusion of Power
Built to Exploit: The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and the Architecture of Surveillance Capitalism
By Akashma News
A journalist instinct is to follow the money. Behind every policy, every piece of legislation, and every public justification of “job creation” or “modernization” lies a paper trail of influence, lobbying, and institutional gain. The 1999 Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) is not just a financial deregulation bill. It is a blueprint for legalized data exploitation, designed not to protect consumers, but to enable powerful actors in finance, law, and technology to erode privacy under the guise of innovation.
A Brief Note on the Glass-Steagall Act
Before diving into the GLBA, it’s important to understand what it replaced. The Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 was enacted in the wake of the Great Depression to curb reckless banking behavior. It established a firewall between commercial banks (which hold your deposits) and investment banks (which take financial risks in markets). This separation protected consumers from speculative losses and systemic risk.
For decades, Glass-Steagall kept the financial system relatively stable. But by the 1980s and 90s, pressure mounted from Wall Street to deregulate. Financial giants wanted to combine services, trade riskier assets, and access more consumer data—all in the name of “efficiency.”
GLBA would be the crowbar that finally pried the firewall open.
Chapter One: A Bill Born of Lobbying
On its surface, the GLBA repealed parts of the Glass-Steagall Act, allowing banks, insurance companies, and investment firms to merge. But peel back that surface, and you’ll find a law crafted in boardrooms, pushed by lobbyists, and polished by elite law firms.
The bill was sponsored by Senator Phil Gramm (R-TX), Representative Jim Leach (R-IA), and Representative Thomas Bliley (R-VA). Its passage paved the way for mergers like Citicorp and Travelers Group, which had already defied Glass-Steagall by merging a year earlier, knowing the law would catch up.
Following the GLBA’s passage, Senator Gramm took a lucrative position as Vice Chairman at UBS Investment Bank, a direct beneficiary of the law he helped draft. The revolving door wasn’t symbolic—it was functional.
Chapter Two: Law Firms and Lobbyists
Major law firms such as Venable LLP, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP, and Holland & Knight played vital roles in crafting language and lobbying legislators. Their influence extended beyond bill writing—they represented financial institutions who stood to gain billions.
Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs lobbied heavily. So did the American Bankers Association and the Financial Services Roundtable. The prize? The legal ability to aggregate consumer data across services.
Chapter Three: The Illusion of Choice
GLBA’s privacy protections were packaged in Title V, a weak set of guidelines requiring financial institutions to notify customers of data sharing—and allow them to opt out. But the burden is on the consumer, and most never fully understand what they are opting into.
Let’s break this down.
“Nonpublic personal information” sounds technical, but here’s what it really means:
It’s everything a bank or financial company knows about you that isn’t publicly available. That includes your Social Security number, your income, your credit card balances, your mortgage details, what you buy, when you buy it, and where you spend your money.
It’s the digital fingerprint of your financial life.
Under GLBA, banks and their “affiliates” (which often means dozens of partner companies and third-party marketers) can legally share and profit from this data—unless you tell them not to. But most people don’t know they even have that option. The opt-out notices are buried in fine print or written in legalese.
The result? Your private financial behavior becomes part of a massive database, traded and analyzed like a commodity. And this is all legal—because GLBA made it so.
The Constitution is supposed to protect us from this kind of intrusion. The Fourth Amendment was written to safeguard our privacy from government overreach. But what happens when the government outsources surveillance to private corporations? When the law becomes the mechanism for exploitation?
Then we are no longer protected citizens. We are data sources.
Senator Paul Wellstone (D-MN) and Senator Richard Shelby (R-AL) raised privacy concerns. Advocacy groups like EPIC and Public Citizen warned the bill prioritized corporate power over constitutional rights. They were right.
Chapter Four: The Rise of Data Capitalism
The GLBA helped usher in a new business model: surveillance capitalism. With legal cover, financial institutions began collecting, selling, and analyzing behavioral and financial data. This economy flourished with the help of tech giants and their tools.

Enter Peter Thiel. In 2003, Thiel co-founded Palantir Technologies, a data analytics firm that marketed itself as a tool for counterterrorism and security. But the story starts earlier—with the quiet establishment of In-Q-Tel.
In-Q-Tel, originally launched in 1999—the same year the GLBA passed—is the CIA’s venture capital arm. Its mission: to identify and invest in private tech companies developing tools for national security and intelligence. That includes data analytics, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and surveillance tech.
Acting as a bridge between Silicon Valley and the intelligence community, In-Q-Tel accelerates the commercialization of technologies that would otherwise take years to be adopted by government agencies. By investing in early-stage startups, the agency ensures these tools align with intelligence priorities from the ground up.
It’s not a stretch to say that Palantir, which received early government contracts and whose architecture resembles core In-Q-Tel investment priorities, is a kind of public-facing evolution—or even a rebranding—of In-Q-Tel’s deeper ambitions. The surveillance state didn’t just grow—it was engineered and privatized.
Banks like JPMorgan used Palantir to spy on internal threats. But Palantir wasn’t alone. Israeli firm NSO Group, known for its Pegasus spyware, is suspected of having U.S.-based contracts and informal influence within federal surveillance strategy. Though publicly denied, internal tech sourcing from foreign firms is not uncommon in post-9/11 America.
Minority Report Wasn’t Fiction, It Was a Warning
In 2002, the film Minority Report, starring Tom Cruise, imagined a future where people were arrested not for what they had done—but for what they might do. The state used advanced technology to predict crimes before they happened, stripping individuals of their rights in the name of public safety.
That future is now. Predictive policing is real. It uses algorithms, historical crime data, and social profiling to forecast who might commit a crime—or even who might be a “threat.” It has already been deployed in cities across the U.S. and abroad.
Palantir is one of the companies enabling it. The connection between GLBA, surveillance tech, and predictive policing isn’t cinematic paranoia. It’s a roadmap that was drawn in legislation, funded by public money, and sold as innovation.
Minority Report warned us. We didn’t listen.
Chapter Five: The Infrastructure of Control
GLBA’s repeal of Glass-Steagall was not just about profit—it laid the legal groundwork for data pipelines that now span banks, credit bureaus, tech platforms (Venmo, Zelle, PayPal), and federal agencies. With FinCEN and the Patriot Act as co-conspirators, every transaction became a data point.
The result? A legally compliant surveillance state—outsourced to private corporations.
Chapter Six: Legal, But Not Right
Edward Snowden said it best: “What is right is not always what is legal.” GLBA was legal. But its effects—on privacy, democracy, and human autonomy—are deeply wrong.
Today, our financial footprints are monitored, mined, and monetized. Not for national security. Not for economic health. But for institutional dominance. This isn’t oversight. It’s exploitation.
Final Notes: The Fight Isn’t Over
We name this system for what it is: institutional corruption enabled by the revolving door, driven by profit, and shielded by law. As journalists and citizens, we must continue to track the networks, question the narratives, and expose the architecture.
Because the next bill will already be in motion before the public even hears its name.
Sources & References
Congressional Record on the GLBA (1999)
OpenSecrets Lobbying Profiles (1998)
Palantir company reports, Forbes, Business Insider, Government Contracts
EPIC archives on GLBA privacy concerns (2004)
Church Committee and In-Q-Tel background
Public statements by Senator Richard Shelby (2015)
Reports on NSO Group and international surveillance contracts
*2023)
Snowden interviews and public lectures
Minority Report (2002), directed by Steven Spielberg
In-Q-Tel official mission summary and public records
Op-Ed: “Legal But Not Right — How Washington Sold Your Privacy to Wall Street”
By Akashma News
In 1999, Congress passed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), hailed as a milestone in modernizing the American financial system. What it truly did was dismantle the last protections separating your private financial life from corporate surveillance — and it did so with bipartisan ease.
Behind the bill were not just lawmakers, but law firms, lobbyists, and banking giants like Citigroup and JPMorgan, who lobbied relentlessly to strip away decades-old barriers. Once the law passed, many of its political architects — like Senator Phil Gramm — stepped through the revolving door straight into the arms of the very institutions they deregulated.
The GLBA normalized something unthinkable: the legal sharing and monetization of your personal financial data. Buried in its language is an “opt-out” clause that lets banks legally profit from your information unless you explicitly say no — and most people don’t even know it’s happening.
We’ve been told it’s about “efficiency” and “job creation,” but that’s the illusion. What it really created was a digital gold rush — a financial surveillance state where your every transaction feeds into a system designed for control, not convenience.
It’s time we name it, trace it, and challenge it.

The Imposition of the Techno-Elite and the Disregard of an American President
by Akashma News
Originally published April 02, 2025
Updated May 23, 2025 6:22 pm PT
In a moment of historic technological acceleration, we find ourselves standing at the threshold of a political transformation few fully recognize. The rise of artificial intelligence, once a tool for innovation, is now becoming the mechanism by which elite technocrats are reshaping the very structure of democratic governance. Leading this charge is Elon Musk—a figure who has subtly, yet effectively, positioned himself as more than just a tech mogul. Through AI-driven influence and psychological manipulation, Musk‘s digital persona and network of parody accounts have flooded online discourse, branding him a modern-day hero while veiling a deeper strategic maneuver: the quiet dismantling of traditional democratic norms.
Curtis Yarvin, known by his pseudonym Mencius Moldbug, laid the intellectual foundation for this movement through the philosophy of the Dark Enlightenment. He argues that democracy is obsolete, and that governance should be handed over to CEOs—technocratic kings who operate governments like corporations. Musk’s rise appears to be the real-world embodiment of this vision. His DOGE AI—a network of influence, data analysis, and control mechanisms—operates like a federal agency without oversight. In doing so, Musk has effectively created a parallel power structure that renders the American presidency symbolic, relegating figures like Donald Trump to the role of the “illusionary strongman”—a puppet with the power of a pen, but none of the script.
This perspective was sharpened by a compelling LinkedIn post from Jon Sneider, whose TED Talk on the concept of “Black Enlightenment” explores the merging of the Dark Enlightenment philosophy with MAGA populism. Sneider points to the strategic alignment of figures like Peter Thiel, JD Vance, and Musk in reshaping American politics through AI, media, and psychological warfare.
Months before the 2024 elections, Musk was already seeding public consciousness through parody accounts portraying him as Iron Man, Captain America, and other mythologized figures. One such account, @elonmuskADO, was created in January 2024 and quickly amassed over 424,000 followers. Its 100,000+ posts functioned not as satire but as strategic distractions and brand amplification. Another account, @elonmuskAOC, garnered 1.6 million followers and was similarly used to shape Musk’s public image through calculated distraction and self-advertising. In an era where online presence shapes public opinion, Musk was scripting a new mythology for himself—one where he is savior, innovator, and shadow statesman.
Meanwhile, real-world crises have continued to escalate: the threat of a global war, two ongoing genocides, surging food prices, rising unemployment, rampant homelessness, and widespread violence. As these issues intensify, Musk’s meme-laden mythos offers citizens dopamine hits of distraction while consolidating unprecedented control.
Beyond social media influence and AI dominance, Musk is rapidly building an empire of technological infrastructure that spans the earth and the stars. Through companies like X, Grok AI, Tesla, Neuralink, SpaceX, and The Boring Company, Musk is not just innovating—he is positioning himself at the center of multiple critical systems. Tesla’s grid of EV chargers is expanding into a de facto national energy network. Tesla Solar brings control over decentralized power generation. Grok AI provides real-time analysis and influence over public discourse. Neuralink taps directly into the human brain, potentially redefining autonomy and consent.
SpaceX claims to deliver cargo into space, but the specifics of “what” and “why” remain largely classified. The weight of tens of thousands of tons launched into orbit raises chilling questions: are these satellites for communication, surveillance, or something more sinister? Starlink blankets the skies with internet access—but also functions as a surveillance-ready mesh of data collectors, or potentially even a sky-bound army of autonomous observers. The Boring Company is tunneling beneath cities, ostensibly for transit innovation—but what else lies beneath? Why must cave explorers obtain permits? What is down there that must be regulated so tightly?

Illustration by:
Akashma in collaboration with ChatGPT (AI-generated visual concept depicting a dystopian technocratic regime).
Peter Thiel and the Libertarian Blueprint for Technocratic Rule
Peter Thiel, the billionaire investor and co-founder of PayPal, has also significantly influenced the ideological landscape that enables technocratic dominance. In his 2009 essay, “The Education of a Libertarian”, Thiel famously declared:
> “I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.”
This stark assertion reveals Thiel’s deep skepticism toward democratic governance, aligning closely with the core tenets of the Dark Enlightenment. Thiel envisions a future where liberty can only flourish outside traditional state structures—through innovations like autonomous zones, seasteads, and digital jurisdictions. His ventures, from supporting the Seasteading Institute to backing figures like JD Vance, reflect a calculated effort to circumvent democratic systems and install elite-led governance models.
While Thiel has never explicitly claimed allegiance to the Dark Enlightenment, his investments and public philosophy clearly intersect with its goals: a society optimized by technological elites, not elected representatives.
What we are witnessing echoes the prophetic warnings of Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, where a technocratic elite maintains order not through violence but through engineered consent and psychological control. Huxley feared that pleasure, distraction, and information overload could suppress dissent more effectively than any boot on the neck. Musk’s empire of X, Neuralink, Grok, and AI-powered platforms suggests the beginning of such a dystopia—one in which resistance is not outlawed, but unfollowed. For further insight, see this interview where Huxley warns of technocratic manipulation.
Similarly, George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm remain chillingly relevant. In 1984, truth is malleable, language is weaponized, and power is sustained through perpetual surveillance. With Musk’s involvement in satellite systems like Starlink and AI surveillance infrastructure, this vision moves closer to reality. In Animal Farm, the promise of egalitarianism is betrayed by those who claim power “for the people.” Today, populist slogans mask the ascendancy of corporate overlords.
This is not merely a transformation—it is a takeover. AI is a tool, yes, but also a weapon. In the hands of visionary elites without accountability, it becomes a mechanism of domination. The public must awaken to the signs: the meme heroics, the symbolic presidents, the executive orders crafted by algorithms, and the vanishing role of human governance.
We must question the mythology, challenge the distractions, and reassert our agency in shaping a future where technology empowers humanity—not replaces it.
Meme Crowns and Neural Thrones

Image circulated via Elon Musk fan accounts, stylized as ‘Emperor Kekius Maximus’—a Romanesque meme blending irony, ego, and technocratic symbolism.
Meme Crowns and Neural Thrones
One of the most potent forms of psychological warfare in the rise of technocratic dominance is memetic glorification. Case in point: the viral image of Elon Musk depicted in full Roman armor, captioned “Emperor Kekius Maximus.”
This image isn’t just satire—it’s weaponized myth-making. It draws from ancient archetypes and meme culture simultaneously. Roman imperial regalia signals conquest, dominance, divine entitlement. “Kekius” nods to the alt-right’s ironic religiosity rooted in internet troll culture. And “Maximus”? It seals the symbolism: Musk as supreme ruler.
In this frame, Musk is no longer a CEO—he’s cast as an emperor of the postmodern empire. This is digital ego-mythology: combining ironic memes with authoritarian iconography to cultivate loyalty disguised as humor.
These memes are not organic. They are engineered signals, creating emotional resonance with disenfranchised audiences, especially younger demographics fluent in meme language. It fosters identification, loyalty, and complicity—turning Musk into both tech messiah and rebel king, even as he consolidates more control than most heads of state.
The myth is persuasive because the man wields real power: AI infrastructure, energy systems, space access, and neural experimentation. The crown may be virtual, but the throne is increasingly literal.
@AkashmaNews
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References:
Aldous Huxley – Britannica
George Orwell – The Orwell Foundation
Brave New World – SparkNotes
1984 – SparkNotes
Curtis Yarvin – Wikipedia
Dark Enlightenment
European Center for Populism Studies (ECPS):
The Education of a Libertarian, by Peter Thiel (2009)
What we must understand about the Dark Enlightenment Movement
The Tesla Illusion: How Elon Musk Rebranded a Visionary’s Name to Sell Us a Dream We Already Owned
By Akashma News

Elon Musk may be the poster child of modern innovation, but his electric car empire stands on a borrowed legacy. The name “Tesla” evokes images of genius, invention, and the possibility of boundless energy. Yet the man behind today’s billion-dollar electric vehicle company is not Nikola Tesla—the Serbian-American inventor who dreamed of free energy for all—but a tech mogul who commodified that dream.
What Musk sells under the Tesla banner is not the fulfillment of Tesla’s vision but the rebranded, paywalled version of it, funded largely by public subsidies and monopolized by utility companies.
Nikola Tesla’s Electric Car: Myth, Mystery, or Suppressed Innovation?
The stories surrounding Nikola Tesla’s electric car sound like science fiction—or conspiracy theory. According to third-party accounts, particularly those of Arthur Matthews (a claimed assistant to Tesla) and Peter Savo (allegedly Tesla’s nephew), Tesla designed and drove an electric vehicle in the 1930s powered not by conventional batteries but by wireless energy drawn from the atmosphere—a natural extension of his work on radio transmission and wireless power.
Tesla never used the term “cosmic energy” as some folklore suggests; his ambition was to use the Earth’s natural resonances and electromagnetic field to wirelessly transmit power—a field he pioneered through inventions like the Tesla coil and the Wardenclyffe Tower project.
While no blueprints of the vehicle exist, the fact remains: Tesla repeatedly demonstrated a capacity to build what he envisioned, often without drafts—creating and testing inventions entirely from the models formed in his mind. He was a refugee, a genius inventor, and a man whose ideas challenged monopolies and changed the world. After his death, the U.S. government seized his papers under the Office of Alien Property, keeping many documents classified for decades.
The Founders Before Musk
Tesla Motors was founded in 2003 by Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning, two Silicon Valley engineers who were inspired by Nikola Tesla’s vision and chose to name the company in his honor. Eberhard, the original CEO, imagined a sleek, high-performance electric vehicle that would shatter the myth that EVs were slow and boring. Tarpenning brought the technical and financial backbone to the startup.
Their choice of the name “Tesla” was not just branding—it was homage. They aimed to revive Tesla’s principles of electrification, innovation, and disruption.
Elon Musk’s Entry and Rebranding of the Vision
Elon Musk joined Tesla Motors in 2004 as the lead investor in the company’s Series A funding round. He didn’t name the company. He didn’t invent the first Tesla Roadster. But he did bring capital, media magnetism, and governmental influence—ultimately shaping Tesla into a global brand.
While Musk’s role in scaling the company is undeniable, his leadership transformed Tesla from a tribute to a titan. Over time, Eberhard and Tarpenning left, and Musk became the uncontested face of the company. In a 2009 legal dispute, Eberhard sued Musk for defamation and misrepresenting himself as a founder. The case was settled with both acknowledged as co-founders, but the foundational contributions of Eberhard and Tarpenning remain largely overshadowed.
Tesla Motors uses the name “Tesla” as a symbol, not as a source of real technological lineage.
It’s branding, not homage.
Musk’s Tesla is corporate, closed-source, and profit-driven. Although his “open source 2014 announcement,” is nothing but a strategic PR move that: Helps Tesla frame itself as a climate-focused collaborator.
“While Tesla Motors pledged not to enforce its electric vehicle patents in 2014, this move falls short of a true open-source model. The company retains ownership of its intellectual property, defines the vague boundaries of ‘good faith’ usage, and has not released technical documentation. In practice, Tesla remains a proprietary, top-down corporation—not the open collaborative Tesla might have envisioned.”
Nikola Tesla’s vision was anti-monopoly, anti-greed, and pro-humanity.
If Nikola Tesla were alive today, he might be amazed at EV progress—but deeply disappointed that his name is now tied to the monetization of energy, not its liberation.
While Tesla’s early models used a variation of Tesla’s motor, current models use permanent magnet motors that owe more to modern material science than to Tesla’s original inventions. Still, Musk kept the name—knowing that “Tesla” carries cultural, scientific, and even mythical weight.
Musk leveraged that legacy to build a global EV empire—heavily funded by American taxpayers. By 2022, Tesla Inc. had received over $2.8 billion in direct subsidies and nearly $4.9 billion in indirect support through energy credits and federal programs.
Yet today, we, the taxpayers, see little return. Charging costs have tripled, solar credits have plummeted, and our utility bills have soared. Elon Musk’s company—named after a man who wanted to give energy away—sells it back to us under premium subscription models.
The Greenwashed Reality
Tesla’s electric vehicles may have zero tailpipe emissions, but the system that powers them is anything but free or clean. The electricity comes from an aging grid burdened with utility monopolies, rising costs, and state-level clean energy mandates that often mask financial exploitation with feel-good rhetoric.
Even worse, policies like California’s NEM 3.0—heavily influenced by utility lobbyists—cripple independent solar users, making it harder for everyday people to generate their own power. Nikola Tesla would have called this theft. And perhaps, so should we.
Nikola Tesla’s Legacy: Inventor of the Electrical Age
Inventor of the AC Induction Motor (US381968A)
Pioneer of wireless power transmission
Builder of the Tesla Coil
Developer of the radio-controlled boat (1898)
Visionary who imagined a world of free, accessible energy
Tesla died poor, alone, and largely erased by the very system he tried to liberate humanity from. His materials were seized by the U.S. government, his death beam research scrutinized, and his reputation buried under Edison’s corporate legacy.
Elon Musk’s Legacy: Borrowed Brilliance for Billionaire Ambition
Let’s give credit where it’s due: Musk helped revive interest in electric vehicles, disrupted the auto industry, and introduced ambitious tech like self-driving and reusable rockets. But let’s not confuse branding with origin.
Musk’s Tesla is a closed-source, for-profit machine built on government subsidies, consumer lock-in, and a narrative that capitalized on one of history’s most exploited geniuses.
The wealthiest man in the world owes his image to a man who died penniless.
Conclusion: A Legacy Used, A Dream Deferred
Tesla, the man, dreamed of a world where energy flowed freely—without bills, without war, without profit. Musk, the mogul, used that dream to build an empire.
We don’t need to villainize Elon Musk to speak the truth: his success was funded by us, the public, and his company rides on a name that deserves more than marketing.
It’s time we ask for more than promises. It’s time we demand the return on our investment—not just in dollars, but in ideals.
Sources and References:
US Patent US381968A – AC Induction Motor
Brooklyn Eagle, July 10, 1932 – Tesla’s Quote on Wireless Power
Tesla Inc. Government Subsidies – Good Jobs First
CPUC NEM 3.0 Decision D.22-12-056
PBS.org – U.S. Government Seizure of Tesla’s Papers
The Equity Myth: How NEM 3.0 Punishes Solar Homeowners in the Name of Fairness
by Akashma News
California regulators claim that Net Energy Metering 3.0 (NEM 3.0) is a step toward equity in the state’s energy landscape. They argue that paying homeowners less for the solar energy they export to the grid helps protect low-income ratepayers who can’t afford to install panels. But behind this narrative lies a policy crafted under pressure from corporate utility giants, shaped by powerful lobbying, and quietly rubber-stamped by an appointed commission whose political connections run deep.
Under NEM 2.0, solar homeowners received credits of 20 to 30 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) for the electricity they sent to the grid—roughly equal to what they paid for energy drawn from it. NEM 3.0 slashed that rate to just 3 to 5 cents per kWh for new customers, claiming the change corrects an unfair “cost shift.”
The cost shift argument suggests that solar users were underpaying for grid maintenance and public programs, offloading those expenses onto non-solar customers. While that sounds fair in theory, the reality tells a different story.
Utilities now buy surplus solar power for pennies, only to resell it to neighbors at 30 to 40 cents per kWh. The difference goes straight into corporate profits. Meanwhile, the homeowners who invested thousands in solar technology—often encouraged by state and federal subsidies—get shortchanged.
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) was empowered to reform net metering under Assembly Bill 327 (AB 327), passed in 2013. That legislation gave regulators broad authority to reshape solar compensation structures—authority that utilities lobbied hard to influence, ultimately leading to the adoption of NEM 3.0.
Follow the Money: Lobbying and Political Influence
Behind NEM 3.0 are California’s energy titans: Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E), Southern California Edison (SCE), and San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E). These companies have long lobbied to weaken net metering policies, claiming financial harm while reporting increasing profits. Their strategy paid off
According to data compiled by the Solar Rights Alliance and Food & Water Watch, California’s utility industry has spent over $202 million on political campaigns since 2000. Of that, $11.3 million went to sitting legislators, and $2.5 million to Governor Gavin Newsom’s campaigns alone. Newsom, in turn, appointed every member of the current CPUC.
These same companies invested another $147 million in lobbying efforts, targeting legislation and regulatory decisions. Sempra Energy (parent company of SDG&E) donated $31,200 to Newsom, while PG&E and Edison International (SCE’s parent company) contributed hundreds of thousands more. These financial ties have raised serious questions about impartiality within the CPUC.
The Vote That Changed California’s Energy Landscape
On December 15, 2022, the CPUC unanimously approved NEM 3.0 under Decision D.22-12-056. The five commissioners—Alice Reynolds (President), Genevieve Shiroma, Clifford Rechtschaffen, John Reynolds, and Darcie L. Houck—voted in favor of reducing solar compensation rates for new customers.
Though commissioners themselves are not elected and do not receive direct campaign contributions, their appointments are inherently political. Governor Newsom’s financial ties to utilities cast a shadow over the commission’s decisions, especially when those decisions disproportionately benefit corporate interests at the expense of California homeowners.
Troubling Patterns and Whistleblower Warnings
The CPUC has a troubling history of close ties with the utility industry. In 2014, leaked emails revealed that PG&E executives had engaged in inappropriate communications with CPUC officials to sway regulatory outcomes (NBC Bay Area).
In 2020, former CPUC Executive Director Alice Stebbins alleged she was fired after exposing $200 million in uncollected fees from utilities. Stebbins claimed her dismissal was politically motivated and retaliatory, reinforcing the perception that CPUC oversight is compromised (ProPublica).
The False Promise of Equity
Proponents of NEM 3.0 say it promotes equity by eliminating cost burdens on non-solar customers. But what equity is achieved when public subsidies fund private solar systems, only for utilities to seize the value of that energy at below-market rates? What fairness is there when utilities export our surplus electricity to neighboring states at wholesale prices, while Californians pay premium rates at home?
If regulators truly cared about equity, they would have expanded access to solar for renters, low-income families, and community cooperatives. Instead, NEM 3.0 slams the door on future adopters, particularly those without the means to afford expensive battery storage systems.
Conclusion: A System Rigged Against the People
This isn’t about equity. It’s about control and profit. NEM 3.0 ensures utilities remain the central power brokers in California’s energy future. It undercuts local energy independence, disincentivizes clean energy adoption, and breaks trust with the very public that paid for the green transition.
Until California dismantles the cozy relationships between regulators and utility giants, and restores fair value for solar energy, we will continue to pay a premium for our own sunshine—while the real dividends go straight to corporate shareholders.
CALIFORNIA’S SOLAR SCANDAL: THE SUN IS FREE, BUT MONOPOLY UTILITIES MAKE US PAY
By Akashma News
SACRAMENTO — California has become a national leader in solar power, boasting the largest number of rooftop solar installations in the United States. With endless sunlight and billions in taxpayer subsidies, one might expect the state’s energy costs to be low and accessible. Instead, Californians are facing skyrocketing electric bills, while utility giants reap profits from policies shaped by powerful lobbyists and a complicit state legislature.
Despite producing more electricity than the state can consume during peak solar hours, consumers are still paying among the highest rates in the nation. At the core of this contradiction lies a tale of broken promises, policy manipulation, and a green energy revolution hijacked by corporate interests.
Sunlight Subsidized by Taxpayers, Monetized by Utilities
Over the past two decades, both federal and state governments have invested heavily in making solar energy viable. Programs like the federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) and California’s Solar Initiative (CSI) funneled billions into the development and installation of solar technology. The Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP) even paid residents to install battery systems.
But while taxpayers funded the transition, they were never guaranteed access to the benefits. Instead, the electricity generated by the sun — a limitless and free resource — became a product bought and sold by utility monopolies.
Net Energy Metering 3.0: A Gift to Utilities
In April 2023, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) implemented Net Energy Metering 3.0 (NEM 3), slashing the compensation new solar customers receive for selling excess solar energy back to the grid. Under previous versions, customers earned between 20 and 30 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh). Under NEM 3, new adopters now receive just 3 to 5 cents.
However, existing customers who installed solar panels under earlier NEM agreements remain “grandfathered in” and continue receiving the higher compensation rates, at least for the duration of their original contract period.
Consumer advocates and independent energy experts argue that NEM 3 is a calculated move by the utilities to undercut solar adopters and preserve profits. “This is nothing short of legalized theft,” said a renewable energy consultant who requested anonymity. “Taxpayers built the system, but utilities own the profits.”
The utility companies claim that reduced net metering rates help protect low-income ratepayers and maintain grid reliability. But the reality paints a different picture. Investor-owned utilities like Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E), Southern California Edison, and San Diego Gas & Electric have reported rising revenues while residential electricity rates have soared.
The Lobbyists Behind the Curtain
Documents obtained through the California Secretary of State’s lobbying disclosure system show that utility companies spent millions lobbying legislators in the years leading up to NEM 3’s approval. These corporations funneled money into campaign donations, PR campaigns, and pressure groups to promote their version of a “fair” energy market.
State lawmakers, many of whom received significant contributions from energy sector PACs, largely fell in line. The result: legislation that gutted one of the most successful solar adoption programs in the country.
“The politicians in Sacramento sold us out,” said Sarah Ramirez, a homeowner in Riverside who installed solar panels in 2020. “We were promised energy independence and lower bills. Now I’m locked into a system where I sell my energy for pennies and buy it back at a premium.”
The Green Mirage: EV Costs and Energy Exports
The push for electric vehicles (EVs) has only added insult to injury. In 2019, it cost around $7 to charge an EV for 270 miles. Today, thanks to rising electricity prices, that same charge can cost upwards of $20 at public charging stations.
Meanwhile, surplus electricity produced during peak hours is sold to neighboring states at discounted wholesale rates. California residents, who helped fund the solar infrastructure, are essentially subsidizing cheap energy for other states while paying some of the highest rates in the U.S.
Who Owns the Sun?
California’s energy paradox begs a fundamental question: Who owns the sun? If the public funded solar infrastructure and the sun shines freely, why are residents paying monopoly prices for power?
The answer lies in policy manipulation and a regulatory framework that prioritizes investor returns over public benefit. Until lawmakers confront the influence of utility lobbyists and restore fair compensation to solar producers, Californians will continue to bear the burden of a broken system.
As sunlight continues to flood the Golden State, the question remains: How long will we let corporate monopolies bottle and sell our sunshine back to us at a premium?

Photo of Ilhan Omar in Mugshot Circulates on Social Media
By Akashma News
March 30, 2025

A photo depicting Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) in a mugshot has gone viral on social media, sparking widespread discussion and speculation. The image, shared by a user on X (formerly Twitter), includes the caption, “Is this real? Ilhan Omar, daughter of terrorists,” along with the mugshot-style photo of Omar.
The origins of the image remain unclear, and no official sources have confirmed its validity. The claim in the tweet that Omar is the “daughter of terrorists” is unsubstantiated and appears to be part of a broader pattern of misinformation targeting the congresswoman.
Ilhan Omar’s father, Nur Omar Mohamed, was a teacher and a key figure in her upbringing. Omar, a Somali-American refugee, has often spoken about her family’s journey to the United States and the challenges they faced. Her father’s role in her education and values has been a recurring theme in her public statements.
Rep. Omar, a prominent progressive voice in Congress, has not publicly addressed the photo or the claims in the tweet as of this writing. Her office has been contacted for comment.
The viral nature of the post highlights the rapid spread of unverified content on social media and the potential for misinformation to influence public discourse. Experts urge users to verify the credibility of such images and claims before sharing them.
As the photo and accompanying claims continue to circulate, it serves as a reminder of the challenges posed by digital misinformation and the importance of critical media literacy.
Ilhan Omar, a U.S. Representative for Minnesota’s 5th congressional district, has been the subject of various rumors and controversies. Here are the facts based on credible and unbiased sources:
1. Marriage Allegations (Rumor: Married Her Brother)
Fact: There have been allegations that Ilhan Omar married her brother, Ahmed Nur Said Elmi, for immigration purposes. These claims have been widely circulated but remain unproven.
Investigation: In 2019, the Minnesota Campaign Finance Board investigated Omar for alleged campaign finance violations related to her divorce and marriage records. The board found that she had inadvertently used campaign funds for personal expenses but did not find evidence to support the marriage allegations.
Omar’s Response: Omar has denied the allegations, calling them “baseless and absurd.” She has stated that her marriage to Elmi was legitimate and that they divorced in 2017.
Credible Sources: Fact-checking organizations like PolitiFact and Snopes have found no credible evidence to support the claim that Omar married her brother.
2. Arrest Rumors (Rumor: Arrested 23 Times)
Fact: There is no credible evidence to support the claim that Ilhan Omar has been arrested 23 times. This rumor appears to be a fabrication.
Omar’s Background: Omar has been involved in activism and politics, but there are no records of her being arrested multiple times. She has been a vocal advocate for progressive policies and has faced criticism from some quarters, but the arrest claims are unsubstantiated.
Credible Sources: Major news outlets and fact-checking organizations have found no evidence to support this rumor. The Associated Press and Reuters have not reported any such arrests.
3. Background and Political Career
Early Life: Ilhan Omar was born in Somalia in 1982 and fled the country with her family during the civil war. She spent four years in a refugee camp in Kenya before immigrating to the United States in 1995.
Political Career: Omar was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 2016, becoming the first Somali-American legislator in the United States. In 2018, she was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, making her one of the first two Muslim women to serve in Congress.
Policy Positions: Omar is a member of the Democratic Party and is known for her progressive stances on issues such as healthcare, immigration, and foreign policy. She is also a member of “The Squad,” a group of progressive Democratic congresswomen.
4. Controversies
Comments on Israel: Omar has faced criticism for her comments on Israel and the influence of pro-Israel lobbying groups in U.S. politics. Some of her remarks have been criticized as antisemitic, though Omar has stated that she is criticizing the Israeli government’s policies, not the Jewish people.
Ethics Investigations: As mentioned earlier, Omar has faced ethics investigations, including the one by the Minnesota Campaign Finance Board, but no significant wrongdoing has been proven.
Conclusion
While Ilhan Omar has been the subject of various rumors and controversies, credible sources have found no evidence to support the claims that she married her brother or was arrested 23 times. These allegations appear to be part of a broader pattern of misinformation targeting her. For accurate information, it is best to rely on reputable news organizations and fact-checking sites.
The Real Killers: Hunger, Dirty Water, and the Philanthropy Profit Game
By Akashma News
In 2023, 4.8 million children under five died—13,100 daily—according to UNICEF. Nearly half, 2.2 million, succumbed because their bodies, ravaged by hunger, couldn’t fight off infections. Meanwhile, 2.2 billion people drank unsafe water, and 3.6 billion lacked basic toilets, unleashing a waterborne death toll of 2-2.5 million yearly—1.5 million from diarrhea alone, including 525,000 kids (WHO, 2023). These are the monsters stalking humanity: starvation and shit-filled rivers, not just the viruses philanthropists love to jab away. Yet, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance—bankrolled by the U.S., the Gates Foundation, and Big Pharma—warns that a $300 million U.S. funding cut will kill 1.2 million over five years by skipping 75 million vaccines. The math’s slick, but it’s a scare tactic masking a deeper rot: profit over people.
Vaccines: A Profitable Half-Measure
Gavi’s CEO, Sania Nishtar, told Fortune in February 2025 that losing $300 million yearly means 240,000 deaths annually—$1,250 per life saved. Measles (144,000 of that toll), malaria (36,000), HIV (28,800), COVID-19 (60,000), and polio (19,200) dominate their models. But these numbers assume vaccines work like magic across starving, dehydrated bodies. They don’t. Measles shots drop from 95% efficacy to 60% in malnourished kids (2019 Frontiers in Immunology). Malaria’s RTS,S falls from 35% to 25% (WHO, 2021). Rotavirus, a diarrhea fighter, dips from 70% to 50% (2016 Vaccine). Adjust for 40% of kids and 20% of adults in Gavi’s 75 million being malnourished—20 million kids, 5 million adults—and effective vaccinations shrink to 61 million. Deaths? Maybe 864,000 over five years, not 1.2 million—28% less.Worse, hunger and dirty water claim lives vaccines can’t touch. Of Gavi’s 240,000 yearly deaths, 40% (96,000) overlap with hunger’s 9 million annual toll (2.2 million kids, 5.9 million adults, Global Nutrition Report, 2021) or diarrhea’s 1.5 million—kids too weak to survive, jabbed or not. Net impact: 172,800 lives at $1,736 per life. Gavi’s 1.2 million is a donor-friendly mirage, ignoring the real killers.
Nutrition and Water: The Ignored Lifelines
What if that $300 million fed the starving instead? UNICEF’s 3.1 million annual child hunger deaths could halve with $4 billion—1.55 million lives. Scale it: $300 million saves 232,500 at $1,290 per life—cheaper and broader than Gavi’s adjusted haul. In Somalia, where 40-60% of kids are malnourished and 1 doctor serves 10,000 (UNICEF), a full belly boosts immunity more than a shaky measles shot. Or take water: $300 million in wells and latrines could save 300,000-500,000 yearly (UN Water, 2023)—$600-$1,000 per life—crushing Gavi’s numbers while slashing diarrhea’s 1.5 million toll.
These aren’t hypotheticals. A 2020 Lancet study valued Gavi at 1.5 million lives saved over years—impressive, until you see hunger’s 3.1 million kids yearly dwarf it. Waterborne deaths—cholera (95,000), typhoid (135,000), dysentery (165,000 kids)—add a 2-2.5 million body count Gavi barely touches. Rotavirus shots help, but without clean water, kids keep dying. The fix is obvious: feed them, hydrate them, stop the shit-flow. So why doesn’t Gavi pivot?
Philanthropy’s Profit Engine
Gavi’s a machine built by power, not compassion. The Gates Foundation’s $750 million kickoff in 2000, alongside Pfizer and GSK’s board seats, steers it toward pharma profits—$21-per-child subsidies (MSF, 2015) for vaccines like GSK’s $100 rotavirus dose, not wells at $50 a pop. Donors—U.S. ($1.5 billion pledged through 2030), UK, Norway—love measurable shots over messy sanitation projects. Trump’s $1 billion aid cut (AP News, March 2025) threatens Gavi’s $300 million slice, cueing Nishtar’s 1.2 million death cry—a perfect scare to lock in grants, never mind the malnutrition-water overlap gutting its math.
This isn’t aid; it’s a business. Gavi’s 1.1 billion kids vaccinated (Gavi.org, 2025) is real, but its politics—donor-heavy, industry-tied—shun the Alma-Ata dream of health as a social fight. Africa begs for local manufacturing (post-COVAX snubs), yet Gavi sticks to Big Pharma’s supply chains. Why? Profit trumps humanity. Gates’ “results-driven” ethos—critiqued in 2014 PMC—picks tech over people, vaccines over villages.
Humanity First
Imagine redirecting $300 million to Somalia’s starving, waterless kids—232,500 fed, 300,000 hydrated, millions spared dysentery’s agony. Compare that to Gavi’s 172,800 adjusted lives, tethered to pharma’s bottom line. The choice is stark: humanity demands nutrition and clean water—cheap, systemic, life-saving—over a profit-soaked needle. Philanthropists peddling 1.2 million deaths as a funding plea aren’t saviors; they’re salesmen. The real monsters—hunger, dirty water—don’t care about their pitch. Neither should we.

History, Justice, and the Unfinished Struggle: Investigating Israel’s Crimes and the Palestinian Dispossession
By Akashma News
Introduction: The Line Between Truth and Accusation
In the modern age of journalism, reporting on Israeli policies in the occupied Palestinian territories often comes with a dangerous label: anti-Semitism. The accusation is frequently used to silence critics, whether they are journalists, human rights organizations, or even Jewish scholars who question Israeli state actions. But is exposing war crimes, settler violence, and military oppression truly an act of prejudice against Jewish people, or is it a necessary pursuit of truth and accountability?
Beyond this, a more fundamental question remains: Has history provided justice to the Palestinian people, who have faced decades of displacement, occupation, and systemic oppression? The answers lie in a century-long pattern of colonial ambition, international complicity, and an unwavering Palestinian resistance against historical injustice.
The Settler Question: Criticism or Hate Speech?
The Israeli government and pro-Zionist organizations often frame criticism of Israel as anti-Semitic. In 2016, the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) adopted a controversial definition of anti-Semitism that includes “claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.” This definition has since been weaponized to silence activists, scholars, and even Jewish critics who oppose Israel’s apartheid policies.
However, major human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and B’Tselem (an Israeli NGO), have all independently concluded that Israel is committing crimes of apartheid. These reports document how Israel’s government enforces segregation, land seizures, and military oppression against Palestinians. If leading global watchdogs can make these claims without being anti-Semitic, why is the same standard not applied to journalists and activists?
Settler Violence and State Backing
One of the most egregious aspects of Israeli policy is the state-backed expansion of illegal settlements. The Fourth Geneva Convention explicitly prohibits an occupying power from transferring its population into occupied territory, making all Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem illegal under international law.
Yet, as of 2024, over 700,000 Israeli settlers live in these illegal enclaves. Reports from the United Nations, Al-Haq, and Breaking the Silence (a group of former Israeli soldiers) document systematic violence against Palestinians by settlers, often with the protection—or direct assistance—of the Israeli military.
This violence includes:
Forcible land seizures and home demolitions.
Arson attacks, such as the 2015 firebombing in Duma that killed an 18-month-old Palestinian baby and his parents.
Live fire against Palestinian civilians, frequently ignored or excused by Israeli courts.
Labeling these documented crimes as “anti-Semitic propaganda” serves only to shield perpetrators from accountability. As investigative journalists, our duty is to report the truth, not cater to political narratives that suppress it.
Historical Dispossession: The “Jewish Dream” and Palestinian Reality
From Balfour to the Nakba: How Palestine Was Stolen
The roots of Palestinian dispossession date back to 1917, when British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour issued the Balfour Declaration, promising British support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. This declaration was made without consulting the 95% majority Palestinian population, who suddenly found their fate being decided by a foreign power and a Zionist movement led by figures like Lord Rothschild and Chaim Weizmann.
When the British Mandate took control of Palestine in 1920, Zionist paramilitary groups—the Haganah, Irgun, and Lehi (Stern Gang)—began violently seizing Palestinian land. These groups conducted terrorist operations, including bombings and assassinations, against both Palestinians and the British.
By 1947, despite Jews owning only 6% of the land, the United Nations partition plan allocated 55% of Palestine to the Jewish population, fueling Palestinian resistance. The response from Zionist militias was ruthless:
The Nakba (1948): Ethnic Cleansing and Massacres
During the war following the unilateral declaration of Israel’s statehood in May 1948, Zionist militias executed a calculated campaign of ethnic cleansing. Israeli historian Ilan Pappé, in his book The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, documents how 750,000 Palestinians were forcibly expelled, and over 500 villages were destroyed in a deliberate effort to erase Palestinian presence.
Massacres such as Deir Yassin (April 9, 1948), where over 100 Palestinian men, women, and children were slaughtered, served as psychological warfare to drive out more Palestinians. Survivors recall scenes of rape, executions, and mutilations—horrors reminiscent of other colonial genocides.
By the time the war ended, Israel controlled 78% of historic Palestine, far beyond the UN’s partition allotment. The remaining 22%—the West Bank and Gaza Strip—came under Jordanian and Egyptian control, only to be occupied by Israel in 1967.
The 1967 War and Ongoing Occupation
Following Israel’s victory in the Six-Day War (1967), it occupied the remaining Palestinian territories. Since then, Israel has implemented a military regime over millions of Palestinians, depriving them of basic human rights. The occupation continues to this day, with:
2.2 million Gazans living under a near-total blockade, described by the UN as an “open-air prison.”
Over 500 military checkpoints in the West Bank restricting Palestinian movement.
Apartheid laws that grant Israeli settlers full rights while denying them to native Palestinians.
Has History Delivered Justice?
Despite numerous UN resolutions condemning Israeli actions, little has changed. The U.S. veto power at the UN Security Council ensures Israel remains shielded from international law.
Meanwhile, Palestinians remain stateless, refugees in their own homeland or scattered across the world. No reparations, no right of return, and no accountability have been offered to the victims of Zionist colonization.
Even attempts to hold Israel legally accountable have been crushed. In 2021, the International Criminal Court (ICC) opened an investigation into Israeli war crimes, but faced severe pushback from Western governments. In contrast, these same nations demand justice for Ukraine against Russia, exposing the double standard in international law.
The Fight for Justice Continues
Despite Israel’s military and political power, the Palestinian resistance—both armed and non-violent—continues. Movements such as:
Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS), which pressures companies and institutions to cut ties with Israeli apartheid.
Legal challenges at the ICC and UN bodies.
Grassroots resistance in occupied territories, where Palestinians fight back against home demolitions, settler violence, and military oppression.
Conclusion: A Call for Unbiased Journalism
To expose Israel’s crimes is not to be anti-Semitic—it is to uphold the principles of journalism and human rights. The real issue is not religious identity, but settler colonialism, military occupation, and ethnic cleansing.
History has failed Palestine, but the future remains unwritten. Journalists, historians, and activists must continue to document, expose, and challenge the forces that seek to erase the Palestinian people. The world ignored the Nakba in 1948. Will it ignore the ongoing Nakba today?
About the Author: Marivel Guzman
Marivel Guzman is an investigative journalist and photographer with a fervent dedication to uncovering the truth and advocating for social justice. She earned her Bachelor of Arts from California State University, Sacramento, where she honed her skills in journalism and developed a passion for storytelling.
Throughout her career, Guzman has contributed to various reputable publications, including Lariat News, Orange Coast Report, and The State Hornet. Her work delves into complex socio-political issues, aiming to shed light on underreported stories and marginalized communities. She is also the founder of Akashma Online News, a platform she has used since 2007 to research, analyze, and document pressing global issues.
In addition to her journalistic endeavors, Guzman has served as a proof editor for the Baluchistan Red Crescent quarterly magazine and volunteers as a photographer for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), capturing the resilience and struggles of displaced populations.
Guzman’s commitment to social activism extends beyond traditional journalism. She maintains a political blog where she explores pressing global issues and engages readers in thoughtful discourse. Her poetry, reflecting themes of solitude, resilience, and hope, has been featured in Akashma Online News, offering readers a glimpse into her introspective and creative perspective.
Her dedication to investigative reporting is further enriched by her extensive worldwide travels, which have provided her with profound cultural insights and a global perspective on issues of human rights, colonialism, and justice. These experiences deeply inform her writing, allowing her to engage with diverse narratives and historical contexts.
Currently based in Orange County, California, Guzman continues to leverage her investigative skills and passion for storytelling to inform, inspire, and provoke thought among her audience. Her unwavering dedication to truth and justice remains at the core of her work, as she strives to amplify the voices of those who are often unheard.
“The Vaccine Profit Paradox: How Bill Gates’ Philanthropy Fuels Personal Gain”
By Akashma News

Bill Gates – The central figure, whose dual roles in philanthropy and investment drive the narrative.
Vaccine Funding – The linchpin of the story, spotlighting the Trump administration’s cuts to Gavi and global health programs.
Gavi – The Vaccine Alliance, a key player in Gates’ nonprofit ecosystem, now at risk from U.S. policy shifts.
Philanthropy – The public face of Gates’ work, questioned for its overlap with personal profit motives.
Investment – Gates’ personal financial gains through Cascade, tied to pharma giants like Pfizer and BioNTech.
RFK Jr. – Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whose vaccine insights and HHS role may influence Trump’s decisions against Gates’ interests.
Global Health – The broader stakes, where funding cuts could lead to vaccines supplies to poor countries.
Introduction
In a world where global health teeters on the edge, Bill Gates stands at a crossroads of altruism and profit. On March 26, 2025, the Trump administration slashes U.S. funding for vaccine programs in poor countries—ending $300 million annually to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance—shaking the foundation of Gates’ global health empire. The New York Times uncovered a 281-page USAID spreadsheet detailing cuts to $76 billion in foreign aid, a decision some link to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s influence as Trump’s HHS Secretary, given his critiques of vaccine policy. Gates, whose Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has funneled over $4 billion into Gavi, warns he can’t bridge the gap alone, yet his personal wealth—bolstered by investments in vaccine giants like Pfizer and BioNTech—paints a contrasting picture. This investigation reveals how Gates’ nonprofit ecosystem drives a machine that, intentionally or not, fattens his bank account, posing the question: is this philanthropy, or a calculated play for self-interest?
The Dual Empire Unveiled
The Gates Foundation’s role in global health is colossal, shaping vaccine markets through Gavi since its $750 million founding pledge in 1999. Gates himself touted a 20-to-1 return on his $10 billion health investment in a 2019 CNBC interview at Davos, claiming it yielded $200 billion in economic benefits. “It’s been $100 billion overall that the world’s put in, our foundation is a bit more than $10 billion,” he said, framing it as a societal win. But behind the nonprofit facade, Gates’ personal investment vehicle, Cascade Investment LLC, has reaped millions from pharma stocks tied to the same ecosystem. His $55 million stake in BioNTech in 2019 ballooned to $550 million by 2021 as COVID-19 vaccines rolled out, a tenfold profit he cashed in on before critiquing mRNA shots’ flaws in 2023. This duality—nonprofit influence amplifying for-profit gains—defines the Gates paradox.
The Trump Cut and RFK Jr.’s Shadow
Trump’s March 2025 decision to axe Gavi funding jolts Gates’ model. The U.S., Gavi’s third-largest donor, could spark a global retreat—European nations like the UK ($2 billion in 2020) might waver. RFK Jr., now HHS Secretary, brings a critical lens to vaccine policy. In a 2023 Joe Rogan interview, he argued, “We’re giving kids too many vaccines—by 18 months, starting day one, with aluminum, mercury, and toxins that can affect brain development.” He’s questioned mandates, not vaccines themselves, suggesting diseases like measles offer stronger immunity than waning shots and can be treated medically. In 2020, Kennedy accused Gates on X of “profiting off pandemics,” a charge echoing in his 2021 book, The Real Anthony Fauci, where he cast Gates as a profiteer in global health. Now, as HHS Secretary, RFK Jr.’s influence is tangible—Trump’s three-hour Mar-a-Lago chat with Gates in late 2024 (Wall Street Journal, January 2025) may have tilted toward Kennedy’s views, especially after his Senate confirmation softened his tone but not his skepticism.
The Foundation’s Market Machine
The Gates Foundation doesn’t just fund vaccines—it shapes the market. Gavi’s $30 billion since 2000, 80% from governments, secures bulk deals with manufacturers like Pfizer, where Gates has held personal stakes via Cascade. In 2009, Pfizer joined Gavi’s Advance Market Commitment, a Gates-backed initiative to supply vaccines to the poorest nations. The Foundation’s $1.6 billion pledge at the 2020 Global Vaccine Summit, plus $150 million for COVAX, exemplifies this leverage. “We’re not doing the work ourselves,” Gates told ABC News in December 2020, emphasizing partnerships. Yet, these deals boost pharma profits—Pfizer’s $26 billion in 2021 vaccine sales dwarfed its $3 billion R&D cost, per WIRED—while Gates’ investments ride the wave.
Personal Profit, Public Good?
Gates’ personal gains are stark. Cascade’s Pfizer holdings grew during the COVID-19 boom, and his BioNTech exit in 2021 netted a massive return. Forbes pegged his net worth at $137 billion in 2021, up from $98 billion in 2019—pharma profits a key driver. The Foundation’s $40 million CureVac stake in 2020, reported by The Nation, soared 400% after its IPO, though it’s unclear if Gates cashed out. Critics on X since 2020 have dubbed this “philanthropy with a profit motive,” a sentiment echoed by James Love of Knowledge Ecology International: “He was the first mover and the most influential mover,” he told Politico in 2022. Gates counters this in a 2025 New Yorker interview, saying, “I give billions to save millions,” inverting RFK Jr.’s attack.
The Global Health Fallout
Trump’s cuts shrink Gavi’s reach, spotlighting a deeper flaw in Gates’ vaccine obsession. UNICEF reports that in 2023, 4.8 million children under five died—13,100 daily—with nearly half, about 2.2 million, linked to undernutrition’s toll on immunity. Gavi’s CEO, Sania Nishtar, warned Fortune in February 2025 that losing $300 million yearly from the U.S. could mean 75 million fewer vaccinations, projecting 1.2 million more deaths over five years. But these models assume vaccines alone save lives, ignoring treatable diseases like measles (128,000 deaths in 2021, WHO) in places like Somalia, with 1 doctor per 10,000 people (UNICEF). Starvation, not just disease, is the killer—malnutrition drives 45% of under-five deaths (UNICEF), weakening kids against infections. Why not feed them instead? A 2020 Lancet study valued Gavi’s impact at 1.5 million lives saved, but $4 billion in food aid could cut hunger’s 3.1 million annual child deaths (UNICEF), sidelining Gates’ pharma profits for a real fix.
The RFK Jr. Wildcard
RFK Jr.’s HHS role could reshape the game. In a 2021 Children’s Health Defense podcast, he said, “Vaccine makers don’t do long-term, double-blind placebo studies—vaccinated versus unvaccinated—to spot side effects worse than the disease.” He’s slammed the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act for shielding manufacturers from liability, arguing on X in 2022, “They’re not responsible for deaths or harm.” Scientific American noted on March 18, 2025, NIH staff scrubbed mRNA from grants under pressure—a nod to Kennedy’s sway. Gates told NPR in February 2025, “I don’t think he’ll do anything precipitous,” betting on dialogue, but RFK Jr.’s focus on accountability could stall Gates’ mRNA legacy.
The Philanthropist’s Dilemma
Gates’ model thrives on a potent synergy: Foundation funds de-risk vaccine development, governments amplify scale, and his investments profit. His 2019 Davos claim of a $200 billion return—touted as a 20-to-1 economic impact, per Copenhagen Consensus—wasn’t cash in his pocket, but the optics sting. “He’s elevated the pharmaceutical industry,” James Love told Politico in 2022, pointing to Gates’ push to lock Oxford’s vaccine with AstraZeneca over an open license, backed by his $384 million via CEPI (Bloomberg). This clout underscores a critique: his system privatizes gains—Pfizer’s billions—while socializing risks through taxpayers’ R&D subsidies.
Where Next for Gates?
With Gavi reeling, Gates faces a fork. He could double down on private funding—his $15 billion endowment boost in 2021 shows he can—or shift Cascade’s focus. Health tech, like mRNA beyond vaccines, or climate ventures could replace pharma bets. “We’ll look to the U.S. commitment to maintain generosity,” he told NPR in February 2025, eyeing Gavi’s spring fundraising. But RFK Jr.’s shadow and Trump’s cuts may force a retreat from global health dominance, testing Gates’ adaptability.
The Bigger Picture
This isn’t just about Gates—it’s about who controls global health. His Foundation’s $1.75 billion COVID response by 2020, per ABC News, dwarfed many nations’ efforts. Yet, transparency lags—SEC filings hint at pharma ties, but details are murky. “There’s a flaw in global health,” a German official told Politico in 2022, “these philanthropists are needed, but some things don’t work.” Gates’ dual role—savior and profiteer—sparks debate: is he a visionary leveraging wealth for good, or a monopolist extending Microsoft’s playbook to humanity’s survival?
Conclusion
As Trump’s cuts land and RFK Jr. critiques, Gates’ vaccine empire wavers. His Foundation’s billions have fueled Gavi’s global reach, but personal profits from the same system blur charity and self-interest. Gavi claims 19 million lives saved, yet no conclusive, independent study—comparing vaccinated versus unvaccinated populations over decades—backs this boast; it’s a model, not a fact. Meanwhile, UNICEF’s 2023 data reveals 4.8 million under-five deaths, with 2.2 million tied to malnutrition—a root cause vaccines sidestep. Nutrition, not needles, could fortify immunity naturally, slashing hunger’s 3.1 million annual toll (UNICEF) without padding pharma coffers. The world watches: will Gates adapt, or will his paradox collapse? “This will be seared in this generation’s memory,” he told ABC News in 2020. Five years on, it’s his legacy—noble, flawed, or both—that’s etched into ours, with nutrition begging the louder question: why vaccinate when we could nourish?
Gates, CNBC, January 23, 2019.Gates, ABC News, December 2020.Gates, NPR, February 2025.Gates, Reuters, March 18, 2025.Gates, New Yorker, 2025.RFK Jr., Joe Rogan interview, 2023.RFK Jr., Children’s Health Defense podcast, 2021.RFK Jr., X post, 2020 & 2022.James Love, Politico, 2022.German official, Politico, 2022.







