>
His grandparents had heart disease.
At 11, Laurent Simons decided he wanted to fight aging.
Something is off about this cruise ship in the Atlantic with the Hantavirus outbreak
Are Chemtrails Real or Just a Conspiracy Theory? | Make This Make Sense
A multi-terrain robot from China is going viral, not because of raw speed or power...
The World's Biggest Fusion Reactor Just Hit A Milestone
Wow. Researchers just built an AI that can control your body...
Google Chrome silently installs a 4 GB AI model on your device without consent
The $5 Battery That Never Dies - Edison Buried This 100 Years Ago
That is not a real fish. IT'S A ROBOT.
Scientists Unveil Hemp Alternative to Plastic That Can Withstand Boiling Water...
A Robot Economy: Who Gets Rich, Who Gets Left Behind
Is Surveillance Pricing Ripping You Off? How to Stop Your Data from Being Used Against You
Robot Dives 1.5 Miles, Maps French Shipwreck With 86,000 Images And Recovers Artifacts

Over the past several years, a quiet pattern has emerged that deserves far more attention than it has received. It began in July 2023 with the death of Michael David Hicks, a research scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who worked on the DART Project and Deep Space 1. His cause of death was never publicly released. The following July, JPL principal researcher Frank Maiwald died in Los Angeles at 61. Again, no cause of death was disclosed then in June 2025, JPL aerospace engineer Monica Jacinto Reza vanished in the Angeles National Forest. She was hiking with a companion, thirty feet ahead, when she smiled, waved, and simply ceased to exist. She has never been found. That same month, Melissa Casias, an administrative staffer with security clearance at Los Alamos National Laboratory, disappeared while walking along a New Mexico roadside, her phone factory-reset and left behind. In December 2025, MIT's Dr. Nuno Loureiro, director of the Plasma Science and Fusion Center and one of the world's foremost fusion physicists, was shot to death at his home near Boston. In February 2026, Caltech astrophysicist Carl Grillmair was shot on his front porch by a stranger with no apparent motive. Finally, the case that cracked the story open: retired Air Force Major General William Neil McCasland, former commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, the facility long rumored in intelligence circles to house recovered Roswell materials, walked out of his Albuquerque home on February 27, 2026, leaving his phone, prescription glasses, and wearable devices behind. He has not been seen since. The full documented list of cases can be reviewed here. At least eleven individuals connected to classified nuclear, aerospace, and advanced propulsion research are now dead or missing. The White House has confirmed a formal investigation. The FBI is spearheading the effort. The House Oversight Committee has demanded briefings from the FBI, the Department of Energy, NASA, and the Department of Defense. President Trump himself called it "pretty serious stuff." These are not fringe allegations. This is the federal government confirming, on the record, that something is very wrong.