here is the link for the Weapons of Peace pod with Sir Salvatore Pais if anyone cares to scope it out before the public end , beyond humbled and amped to share
Salvatore Pais | Hold That Thoth | Weapons of Peace + Temporal Pathways ... https://t.co/uBiFMv4LJ2 via @YouTube
🚨 He Translated Ancient Hebrew Texts for The Vatican for YEARS Until He Was FIRED for Speaking Up About What His Translations Revealed! (It's Aliens)
The Holy Bible is, according to Mauro Biglino, not a spiritual text about an omnipresent God, but an historical record of Non-Human Intelligences interacting with, and ultimately engineering, early Humanity.
These beings are known as The Elohim.
After years of working with the most respected publishing companies under the umbrella of The Vatican, producing 17 books through these channels, he was immediately fired upon publicly stating his position on the true meaning and true translation of the original Biblical texts.
His findings, theories and conclusions are based upon decades of professional translation experience, specialising in ancient Hebrew texts.
This fascinating conversation with Mauro goes deep into his realisations, conclusions and theories regarding the true meaning of The Bible and the ancient corpus of texts that form its foundations.
The TLDR?
Humanity is a cargo cult, influenced by superier intelligences, engineered genetically by these intelligences, and world religions, including the overarching narratives of monotheistic texts, have their roots in direct interactions between Humans and these Non-Human Intelligences, these interactions are referenced more profoundly in the original translations, which were, in many cases, removed from later translations that became mainstream religious scripture.
Your best ideas come in the shower. On walks. Right before sleep.
Not because you are lazy.
Because a specific neural network in your brain only switches on when you stop trying.
A Washington University neuroscientist named it in 2001. Most people still do not know it exists.
Here is the full story.
The scientist is Marcus Raichle. He has been a neurologist at Washington University in St. Louis for over 50 years. He is one of the most respected brain imaging researchers alive.
In the late 1990s, Raichle was running PET scans on people doing mental tasks. He noticed something strange.
When subjects started a task, certain brain regions lit up. That part was expected.
But other regions dimmed.
They did not dim by a little. They dimmed by a lot. And they were the same regions every time. The medial prefrontal cortex. The posterior cingulate. The precuneus. These areas were the most active part of the brain when subjects were just sitting there, doing nothing.
Most labs ignored this. "Resting" brain activity was treated as noise.
Raichle did not ignore it. He measured it.
In January 2001, he published a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The paper was titled "A default mode of brain function." That paper has now been cited over 12,000 times.
What it showed was this. The brain has a hidden network that runs constantly. It only switches off when you start a focused task. When you stop the task, it switches back on.
This network is now called the Default Mode Network. The DMN.
The DMN uses about 20 percent of your body's total energy. Your brain is only 2 percent of your body weight, but it burns one fifth of your fuel just running this background process. About 60 to 80 percent of your brain's energy goes to maintaining this default activity. Not to whatever you think you are working on.
In other words. The part of your brain that is busiest is the part that has nothing to do.
A decade later, a researcher at UC Santa Barbara named Jonathan Schooler tested what this network was actually doing.
In 2012, Schooler and his team published a study in Psychological Science. They gave people a creative problem. Then they put them in four different conditions.
Group 1 had to keep working on the problem.
Group 2 got a hard task that demanded full attention.
Group 3 got an easy task that let the mind wander.
Group 4 just rested.
Then everyone went back to the original problem.
The winner was not Group 1, who kept trying. It was not Group 4, who just rested.
It was Group 3. The easy-task group. The ones whose minds were free to wander. They generated about 40 percent more creative solutions than any other group.
Schooler's conclusion. The shower works because it is a non-demanding task. Your hands are busy enough to keep your conscious mind from steering, but not so busy that your DMN cannot run.
The walk works for the same reason. So does folding laundry. So does that drowsy moment right before sleep.
What you are calling laziness is your DMN doing its actual job.
Here is the part most people miss. The DMN is not random. A 2025 review in Scientific Reports confirmed what smaller studies showed for years. Insight problems, the kind that need a sudden "aha", are solved overwhelmingly when the DMN is active. Analytical problems, the kind that need step by step logic, are solved when the DMN is suppressed.
Your brain has two modes. Most of us only know how to use one.
So how do you actually use this. 3 rules.
Rule 1. Front load the hard thinking. Read everything about the problem. Make notes. Argue with yourself. Then stop. The DMN cannot remix what you never loaded in.
Rule 2. Schedule the boring task. The 20 minute walk. The shower. The dish washing. Leave your phone in another room. The DMN cannot run if you keep feeding the executive network with notifications.
Rule 3. Keep a capture system. A notes app open on your phone. A pen by your bed. Most DMN insights disappear within 90 seconds because the executive network jumps back in and edits them. Write before you judge.
The bigger lesson.
Schools, offices, and productivity apps all measure one mode of thinking. Focus. Output. Time on task. None of them measure DMN time. None of them protect it.
The most expensive minds in the world, the scientists and writers and founders you admire, all guard one thing. A daily slot where nothing is demanded of them. A walk. A shower. A long drive. They are not slacking. They are running the network that the executive mode cannot access.
The next time an idea hits you in the shower, do not say "weird, it just came to me."
Say "the network worked."
It is the network you have been ignoring your whole life.
Here is a brief introduction to some of the functions of the Mockup and John Searl's Law of Squares.
What is the SEG Mock Up?
https://t.co/8tiiftvo0q
Showing examples of the 4 materials used in the construction of the unit and why they are significant in each function.
1) https://t.co/dpHXOXILyq
2) https://t.co/JSlQXg6UKs
Some reality of what it takes to make an SEG:
https://t.co/kYNvaBFbnT
SEG Magnetics, Inc. FAQs Page:
https://t.co/SyklyFpXha
Working Smart vs Working Hard:
https://t.co/qEVadrjbRu
Presentation Segment on Coded Magnets:
https://t.co/SE6MmbQQyh
Magnetic Waveforms Thread:
https://t.co/v9tygFjj0y
Extraordinary Advancements in Magnetics:
https://t.co/A4mgmqv689
Coded Magnet Posts
Geometrically Coded Magnets Behave Differently
https://t.co/nTpLICYSCU
Imprinting Maxels Demo by PolyMagnets:
https://t.co/9hrxSKe76I
Non-Contact Attachment Demo:
https://t.co/zTyZhTyRcw
Non-linear Magnetic Microswitch Demo:
https://t.co/zTyZhTyRcw
MaxField Magnets Demo (7x stronger with same mass)
https://t.co/UQDAKCOoUd
Discussing current flow, Lorentz force, magnetic orientations and differences in conventional magnetization versus an exotic method of imprinting waveforms.
1) https://t.co/tOI53L3eUx
2) https://t.co/zOPY26P6vG
3) https://t.co/5lQbWreqQk
Comparing wavelengths of light to the undulating magnetic waveforms which repeat as emergent AC subcarriers.
1) https://t.co/gw4mcwlGHt
2) https://t.co/MR46h2fNsG
3) https://t.co/v9tygFjj0y
Simulating Monopoles and Halbach Arrays:
1)
https://t.co/s621zb8l7t
2)
https://t.co/9syPHeClsi
3)
https://t.co/a5SvTp6It5
Richard D Hall Interview with John Searl and Fernando Morris:
https://t.co/bMbqUiUUqa
Richard Syrett Interview with John Searl:
https://t.co/kAJdfn9PSY
Allan Handelman Interview with John Searl:
https://t.co/XDeDR6NTKi
Horacio Jones visits SEG Magnetics, Inc.
https://t.co/QukIyHBkBT
Some of my Interviews:
https://t.co/Xil7ZQmghS
Want "Free Energy" and UFOs/UAPs?
https://t.co/9ej0uKFj5E
Alleged Roswell Debris:
https://t.co/0o0Iahf7LA
Dr. Paul Brown's Resonant Nuclear Battery
(Spring-loaded alpha/beta decay)
https://t.co/tK8m6z9PGn
4 Books - Light, Gravity, Time, Coherence:
https://t.co/nGYGz35EcI
A Japanese immunologist spent 20 years proving that the chemicals trees release into the air walk into your bloodstream, hunt down your stress hormones, and arm your immune system in ways no therapist or pharmaceutical has ever matched, and most of the data has been sitting in Japanese medical journals for two decades waiting to be translated.
His name is Qing Li.
He is a clinical professor at Nippon Medical School in Tokyo and the president of the Japanese Society of Forest Medicine. The Japanese government has been funding his research since 2004, and the body of work he has produced is the reason forest bathing is now an officially prescribed clinical therapy in Japan and Korea.
The story actually starts in 1982, when the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries coined the term shinrin-yoku to describe the practice of slow, mindful walking in a forest. They did it for a practical reason.
Japan was urbanizing fast, stress-related illness was climbing, and the country had thousands of square kilometers of forest sitting unused. The idea was to give people a reason to walk into the trees... They had no idea what was actually happening to the human body during those walks until Qing Li ran the first proper experiment in 2005.
He took twelve healthy adult men on a three-day, two-night trip to a forest park. They walked for a few hours each day. Nothing strenuous. No prescribed routes or breathing exercises. They simply walked slowly through the trees, breathing the air, looking at the forest.
Li drew blood and urine samples before the trip, on the second day, on the third day, on day seven after returning home, and again on day thirty.
The numbers that came back from the lab were not what anyone expected.
The activity of a specific type of immune cell called the natural killer cell, which is the cell your body uses to hunt down cancer cells and virus-infected cells before they can spread, had jumped by roughly 50 percent during the forest trip. The actual number of natural killer cells circulating in the bloodstream had increased significantly.
Three different anti-cancer proteins that those cells produce, called perforin, granzymes, and granulysin, had all risen sharply. And the effect did not disappear when the men went home. The immune boost was still measurable on day seven and was still partially present on day thirty.
Two hours a day in a forest had upgraded the immune system for a full month.
Li ran the same experiment with women a year later and found nearly identical results. Then he ran it with a control group who took a three-day trip through an urban area with the same amount of walking, the same hotel quality, and the same diet.
The urban group showed no measurable change in natural killer cell activity at all. The forest was doing the work, not the vacation.
The mechanism turned out to be a class of airborne molecules called phytoncides. Trees produce these compounds to defend themselves against insects, bacteria, and fungi. Pine, cedar, oak, and cypress trees release them in particularly large amounts, especially in warmer weather and after rainfall.
When you walk through a forest, you are inhaling those molecules into your lungs and absorbing them through your skin, and once inside your body they appear to directly stimulate the production and activity of the very immune cells Li was measuring in his lab.
Roughly 50 percent of the health benefit of a forest walk, according to Li's data, comes from the chemistry of the air itself. The other half comes from what the forest is doing to your nervous system.
This is where it stops being only about the immune system and starts being about stress.
A separate Japanese research team measured cortisol, the body's main stress hormone, in 84 participants across 35 different forest sites. They drew samples before and after a 30-minute walk in each forest and compared them to control walks in matched urban environments. The cortisol levels of the people who walked in the forest were lower than the cortisol levels of the people who walked in the city by a significant margin. Their heart rates were lower. Their blood pressure was lower.
The activity of their parasympathetic nervous system, which is the part responsible for rest and recovery, had gone up. The activity of their sympathetic nervous system, which is the part that drives fight or flight, had gone down.
Then a researcher at the University of Michigan named MaryCarol Hunter ran the cleanest version of this experiment ever done. She recruited participants from a city and told them to take a nature pill three times a week for eight weeks.
They were free to choose the time, the place, and the duration of the nature experience, as long as it was outside, in daylight, and free of phones, conversations, and aerobic exercise. They sent her saliva samples before and after each session so she could measure cortisol changes accurately and rule out the normal daily drop in stress hormones that happens to everyone.
The result was that participants experienced a 21.3 percent drop in cortisol per hour spent in nature, with the biggest payoff happening between minutes 20 and 30 of the walk.
After that, the cortisol kept dropping, but more slowly. The threshold dose for measurable stress relief was just 20 minutes outside in something that looked and felt like nature.
What none of this means is that nature is a substitute for therapy or for medication when someone genuinely needs them. Therapy treats different things than a walk does, and Li himself has been careful in interviews to call forest bathing a complementary intervention rather than a replacement for clinical care.
But what the research has settled is that the human body has a physiological response to being among trees that operates on the same biological systems modern medicine is trying to reach with drugs and clinical protocols, and that response is fast, measurable, and free.
The strangest part of Li's work is the implication he keeps repeating in interviews. The average person now spends more than 90 percent of their life indoors. Their cortisol stays elevated. Their natural killer cells stay sluggish.
Their parasympathetic nervous system rarely gets a chance to take over. The system that was tuned by millions of years of life under a canopy of trees is being asked to run permanently inside a box made of drywall and screens.
Your body has not forgotten what it is supposed to do in a forest. It is waiting for you to walk into one.
Completely concur here and would toss in a flavor / type 5 maybe, of self stable plasma or non physical basically , that operates in timespace as baseline and or phase locks grids of folks that are in alignment with its cause (* vs feed off hide in shadows i think) maybe more*
Benevolent NHIs (non-human intelligences) exist. They’re active & they’re why hostiles have to tiptoe around in secrecy while why we have enough freedom/normality in this world to have these conversations.
If someone says something the hostiles don’t like, technologically & psychically they could eliminate that person within seconds.
But in practice, that rarely happens. The person may get close to being taken out, and all signs are there that something’s trying to take them out, but there’s intervention. You have to ask yourself why.
Benevolent NHIs come in several types:
Type 1: Nonphysical, ultraterrestrial, powerful. Closer to what we think of as angels. Under divine authority. Total mastery over spacetime. But foresight, wisdom, and strict rules keep them from exercising that power in frequent & obvious ways except in extreme cases. Then physics breaks, or time seems to reset, to prevent a forbidden outcome. These operate more on the soul/spiritual/moral/karma/destiny axis, which involves backstage dynamics & reasons that aren’t always clear to us.
Type 2: Nonphysical discarnate beings of positive intent, including personal tutelary & guardian spirits. Not as powerful, but operating on a similar axis as Type 1. These can operate pretty freely within the strict ruleset of Type 1. Human governments can’t do anything about them, but then again they don’t meddle with political matters except spiritually & sychronistically supporting humans who came here to help in such domains.
Type 3. Physical, or quasi-physical, technological, cerebral, ethical. The classic alien with interdimensional psi or tech based phasing ability. They can look human, but their minds don’t resemble ours, anymore than ours resemble that of a monkey. From what I can tell they keep a very low profile because they’re physically vulnerable & operating in hostile territory due to predatory aliens having secured legal jurisdiction over many parts of the world via the cooperation or infiltration of the secret human government(s). So they also operate in the shadows. Thus there’s a cold war between them & the predators; situation is very similar to the infowar & cold war between secret societies or intelligence agencies. Their influence is real but similar to how US intelligence agents might act in a foreign hostile country where there’s not yet an active military campaign.
This means that on a mass public scale, we don’t see obvious signs, except the most obvious which is that we’re still here.
So this whole idea seems unfalsifiable. But it’s not, because on a personal level anyone can experience & verify their influence if they come under it. Otherwise they’ll have to infer probabilities from other people’s anecdotes.
Freewill, plausible deniability, Type 3 protecting themselves, plus a kind of quarantine imposed by Type 1 — these all amount to a managed reality where unequivocal proof is prevented from upsetting consensus reality except in measured planned doses.
But within a compartment, i.e. within one’s own sphere of experience, proof can be undeniable.
Vincent van Gogh accidentally solved a complex physics problem while inside an asylum.
In 2004, scientists analyzed The Starry Night, they found something magical.
His swirling brushstrokes perfectly match Kolmogorov’s formula for fluid turbulence. This formula describes how energy flows through the universe. Physicists of his time could not prove it, Van Gogh did it with paint.
Through pure intuition during severe psychosis, Van Gogh’s brush captured the universe's invisible, chaotic geometry.
🚨 THIS JOKER RANT IS GOING VIRAL FOR A REASON... 🚨
"You're just trying to exist...
But they own the land.
They own the water.
They own the food.
You’re born into a cage.
Taxed to breathe.
Forced to work.
Trapped in a system that calls it "freedom."
Natives lived with the Earth.
We pay rent to exist on it."
This guy in full Joker cosplay is spitting raw truth from his car... and millions are feeling it.
The system isn’t broken…
It’s designed this way.
Are you waking up yet?
What’s the one thing you’d change about this matrix if you could?
Drop your biggest “just trying to exist” frustration below.
Tag someone who needs to hear this.
Repost if you’re done pretending it’s normal.
Let me know what you think,
and SHARE THIS so that others may too.
And if you're not already following @TrueOnX...
What the heck are you doing?!
🚨Terence McKenna in 1990 on the exact interdimensional and psychic territory Jesse Michels explored with Jordan Jozak on @AmericanALCHMY
"Saying the flying saucer is a psychic object does not mean it is not a physical object."
"If you hypothesize just one more spatial dimension... then suddenly all these mysteries become trivial."
"What UFOs are doing is eroding faith in science, by throwing down a challenge... crack this!"
Psychic and physical. The Phenomena is eroding rigid materialism, helping humanity expand our awareness of what is possible.
A German bureaucrat with no PhD, no grant, and no university affiliation built a system in the 1950s that produced 70 books and 400 papers, and the tool he used was a wooden box and one rule so simple it sounds like nothing.
His name was Niklas Luhmann. The system is called the Zettelkasten.
He was born in 1927 in Lüneburg, the son of a brewery owner. He studied law at Freiburg after the war, passed his exams, and entered the civil service. From 1954 to 1962 he worked as an administrative officer at the Ministry of Culture in Lower Saxony. Government files. Bureaucratic memos. Education reform paperwork.
Nobody was watching him. Nobody was funding him. There was no department, no lab, no dissertation committee waiting on his progress.
He started filling index cards anyway.
The rule was this: one idea per card, written in his own words, never copied from the source. Every card had to connect to at least one other card already in the box. No folders. No categories. No topic hierarchy of any kind. Just a flat web of linked ideas growing in every direction.
He called it his communication partner.
That phrase is not a metaphor. Luhmann believed the box genuinely surprised him. He would pull out a card he had written years earlier and find that it connected to something he had just added in a way he had never planned when he wrote either one. The system was producing relationships his conscious mind had never made. He was not retrieving stored information. He was discovering new ideas inside material he already owned.
Most people take notes to remember things. Luhmann built a system that thought for him.
In 1965, the sociologist Helmut Schelsky saw one of Luhmann's manuscripts. He was so astonished by the quality and depth of what a government clerk had produced without institutional support that he offered him a research position at the University of Münster on the spot. When Bielefeld University needed to qualify him formally for a professorship in 1966, they accepted two books he had already written from the box as his PhD thesis and habilitation simultaneously. He skipped the entire academic ladder. By 1968 he was the first full professor at the newly founded University of Bielefeld.
He held that chair for 25 years and never stopped filling cards.
By the time he died in 1998, the box contained 90,000 handwritten index cards organized across two separate slip boxes he had built over four decades. The cards covered law, economics, politics, religion, ecology, mass media, love, and the theory of modern society. They generated 70 published books and nearly 400 scholarly articles. He left 150 unfinished manuscripts in his estate when he died. At least one of them was 1,000 pages long.
The reason the output was possible is the reason most people's notes produce nothing.
Luhmann never took notes to file information. He took notes to force a connection. Every time he read something, his only job was to ask one question: what does this link to inside the box? Not what category does it belong to. Not what topic should I file it under. What does this idea touch, contradict, extend, or challenge inside the network that already exists.
The moment you file a note in a folder, you have decided in advance what it relates to. Which means you will never discover what else it might. Filing is the enemy of thinking. The box had no folders. Every idea had to earn its place by connecting to something else.
Over time the box stopped being storage. It became a record of every intellectual relationship Luhmann had ever noticed, and because the cards were physical and linked, he could walk through the network and find collisions between ideas he had written years apart without ever planning them. The box remembered what he had forgotten. It held conversations he had long since moved past. It was the only thinking partner he had that never forgot anything.
That is why he said, in an interview late in his career: "I don't think everything on my own. Mostly it happens in the slip box."
He was not being modest. He was being precise.
NotebookLM is the closest thing that exists today to what Luhmann built by hand. Not as a filing cabinet. Not as a search tool. As a network of connected material that can surface relationships between ideas you uploaded at different times without knowing they were related.
The people generating the most original thinking right now are not the ones reading the most. They are the ones connecting the best.
Luhmann proved that with 90,000 cards and a wooden box in a government office in Lower Saxony.
The box is now inside your browser. Most people are still using it like a highlighter.
🚨 Scientists just discovered that twisting ice literally creates energy.
Ice may look cold and quiet—but under pressure, it comes alive electrically.
A new study in Nature Physics reveals that when ice is bent, twisted, or stretched, it generates an electric charge through a process called flexoelectricity. Unlike piezoelectricity, which requires special crystal structures, flexoelectricity occurs in all insulators—meaning even ordinary ice can do it.
Researchers from Spain, China, and the U.S. found that ice’s electrical behavior not only responds to mechanical stress but also changes with temperature in unexpected ways. At ultra-cold conditions, they observed the formation of a ferroelectric surface layer, capable of flipping its polarity like a magnet.
This discovery reshapes our understanding of ice, which has long been considered a passive material. “This paper changes how we view ice,” said lead author Xin Wen, “from a passive material to an active one.”
Beyond deepening our knowledge of natural phenomena—like how lightning charges form in storm clouds—it opens up the possibility of ice-based electronics in extreme environments. From flexible sensors to energy-harvesting materials, this once-humble substance might soon play a surprising role in future technologies.
Source: Wen, X., et al. (2025). Flexoelectricity and surface ferroelectricity in ice. Nature Physics.
🚨PHYSICS NEWS🚨: Gravity Leaves Its Mark on Quantum Interference in a Tabletop Setup 🧨
According to research published in *Physical Review Letters* on June 8, 2026 by physicists at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, scientists have performed the first tabletop experiment to detect a gravitationally induced phase shift in quantum interference. Using a 50-kilometer fiber interferometer, they measured a tiny but clear effect of gravity on quantum wave interference with high precision.
**Uniphics explains this result as a direct consequence of variable time flow caused by energy density gradients.**
In Uniphics, gravity is not the curvature of spacetime. Instead, it arises from differences in energy density across the ξM-field. These gradients create regions where time flows at different rates — a concept described by the Maley factor (the ratio of time flow between two locations). When quantum waves (spin waves in the Uniphics framework) travel along two different paths in an interferometer, they experience slightly different time flows if one path is closer to Earth’s mass than the other.
Because the phase of a quantum wave depends on how much time has passed along its path, even a tiny difference in time flow produces a measurable phase shift between the two arms of the interferometer. The University of Tennessee experiment detected exactly this kind of phase shift, confirming that gravity affects the relative timing of quantum waves in a way that can be measured in a controlled laboratory setting.
This result aligns closely with Uniphics predictions. The experiment effectively measures how energy density gradients near Earth alter local time flow, which then imprints itself on the interference pattern of quantum states. It provides clean, tabletop evidence that gravity influences quantum systems through changes in time flow rather than through geometric curvature.
The ability to observe this effect with such precision in a laboratory opens the door to testing gravitational effects on quantum coherence in controlled environments — something Uniphics expects to become increasingly important as we explore the deep connection between energy density, time flow, and quantum behavior.
Could tabletop experiments like this eventually allow us to map energy density gradients with quantum precision and test the effects of modified time flow in different gravitational environments?
**A Theory of Everything should be able to answer everything.**
Uniphics Explained Simply PDF: https://t.co/4avUqgeruf
Chapters 1–10 free: https://t.co/Yj07QnrejR
Grokipedia: https://t.co/QP4L8WurzW
#Uniphics #TheoryOfEverything #QuantumGravity #Interferometry #TabletopPhysics @grok@xAI
A 17-year-old in Spain taught herself quantum physics from her bedroom, built her own syllabus with homework, and started winning university scholarships before she ever enrolled.
She never paid a cent for the material. She used MIT OpenCourseWare.
Her name is Martina Solano Soto. She found it at 14, looking for something reliable to answer the questions nobody around her could.
Here is what most people do not understand about OpenCourseWare. It is not a watered-down preview or a marketing page for a paid course.
It is the real thing. The actual lectures, notes, problem sets, and exams from more than 2,500 MIT courses, given away under a license that lets anyone use them.
Martina worked through Barton Zwiebach's quantum physics lectures, the same ones MIT undergraduates sit in. Video lectures. Assignments. Lecture notes. Exams. All of it free.
She got so deep she taught herself black holes and general relativity, then applied for a particle physics scholarship at a Barcelona university and won.
A teenager with an internet connection accessed the same physics education that costs $62,000 a year on campus.
The barrier was never the knowledge. It was knowing the door was unlocked.
https://t.co/Xh0ZnkkObH
A TEAM OF AI RESEARCHERS JUST OPEN-SOURCED THE BLOOMBERG TERMINAL FOR QUANT FINANCE.
A Bloomberg Terminal costs $25,000 per year per seat. Banks pay for thousands of them.
This thing reads every quant paper, every financial blog, every SEC filing, every arXiv preprint, and turns it into a searchable knowledge base. For free.
It's called QuantMind.
It just got accepted to the NeurIPS 2025 GenAI in Finance Workshop.
Here's what it actually does:
→ Ingests arXiv quant papers, financial news, blogs, and reports automatically
→ Parses PDFs, HTML, tables, and figures into structured knowledge
→ Tags every paper by research area and topic
→ Builds a semantic knowledge graph you can query in plain English
→ Plugs into DeepResearch, RAG, and MCP for multi-hop reasoning
→ Two-stage architecture: extract once, retrieve forever
Here's the wildest part:
The financial research industry publishes around 500 new papers and reports every single day.
Hedge funds pay six-figure salaries to junior analysts whose entire job is reading them.
QuantMind reads all of it. Tags it. Embeds it. Lets you ask it questions.
154 stars. 22 forks. 173 commits. MIT license. Python.
One honest note: this is a framework, not a magic alpha machine. You still need to know what to ask. But the "I haven't read that paper yet" excuse is officially dead.
The thing Wall Street charges $25,000 a year for is sitting on GitHub. Free.
Link in the comments.
Mind-bending physics from the official Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) Antigravity Report (AAWSA):
ON ANTIGRAVITY (Pg. 7)
“ANY SOURCE MASS, NO MATTER HOW LARGE OR SMALL IT IS OR HOW FAR AWAY IT IS FROM A TEST BODY (PAYLOAD), WILL PRODUCE AN ANTIGRAVITY FIELD WHEN MOVING AT ANY CONSTANT VELOCITY ABOVE v > 0.707c.”
Translation: Any mass moving at 70.7% the speed of light gravitationally REPULSES (not attracts) stationary objects.
ON NEGATIVE ENERGY (Pg. 9)
“Negative energy has been produced in the laboratory… all the energy condition hypotheses have been experimentally tested in the laboratory and experimentally shown to be false - 25 years before their formulation.”
Translation: Exotic matter is real, it has been produced in labs, and scientists proved it exists 25 years before the "laws" prohibiting it were even written.
@AshtonForbes is the first person I saw who pointed this out 💯
Remember how lore says MIL/GOV made deals with ETs in the 50s, receiving technology in exchange for cooperating with the alien abduction program?
And the ones who refused to give that technology, instead offering only peaceful advice, were rejected?
If true, you can bet MIL/GOV wasn’t unified in that choice.
The minority who disagreed would have been noticed by the rejected ET faction(s).
In subsequent decades, they’d be secretly influenced, assisted, or contacted. A counter-movement would arise, with long term planning to subvert & defeat the hostile ET incursion.
Based on what benevolence would mean in context of aliens, you can deduce what that minority agenda would entail:
1) Prepare the population for the reality of aliens; make them think about the complex issues, threats, and opportunities posed.
2) Expose & neutralize the human proxies (including enemy nations & the deep state) that hostile ETs are using to control human affairs.
3) Develop infrastructure allowing for self-sufficiency, abundance, and sovereignty.
4) Foster a culture rooted in strength, awareness, identity, and higher purpose.
Expect the minority agenda to therefore center on awakening the population, exposing corruption, accelerating key technologies (energy, propulsion, medicine), and countering local & geopolitical proxies.
You can look at current events to see if any of that’s been underway.
US Army Breakthrough Quantum Sensor Pinpoints Radio Signals
The new sensor is based on Rydberg atoms, which are atoms placed in a highly excited state that makes them extremely sensitive to electric fields.
The researchers described how the device can determine not only electromagnetic field strength but also the 3D polarization orientation and propagation direction, known as the k-vector.
Source: Zerohedge