You Can't Turn It Off: How San Diego Handed Control of Its Surveillance Network to a Private Company and Couldn't Get It Back
San Diego installed 3,200 "smart streetlights" as an energy project. Police used them 392 times before the public knew they were surveillance cameras — and when the city tried to shut them down, the vendor refused. The city paid $2.3 million a year for cameras it could not control.
The Chemical Gap: What's Hiding in Plain Sight on Your Grocery List
GRAS designations. Pre-market exemptions. Regulatory loopholes wide enough to drive a freight container through. A breakdown of which chemicals in your food supply were never actually tested.
Ghost Murmur: Real Science, Real Weapons, and a Very Suspicious Miracle
The CIA says it detected a heartbeat from 40 miles. The physics says that's impossible by 15 orders of magnitude. The real quantum sensing race is more consequential than either claim.
Wi-Fi, EMF & The Science We're Not Allowed to Discuss
Industry-funded studies. Government contracts. The curious pattern of researchers who change their conclusions after grant money arrives.
The System Wasn't Hacked. It Worked: Inside America's Largest License-Plate Surveillance Network
Flock's cloud wasn't breached. Its cameras streamed to the open internet. Its accounts were sold on Russian forums. Its network surveilled protesters, Romani families, and abortion patients. 30+ cities walked away. The system worked exactly as designed.
Chronic Disease & The Industries That Profit From It Staying Chronic
Cui bono. Who benefits when you stay sick? Follow the money from diagnosis to prescription to quarterly earnings.