All Investigations
Every investigation in the archive, newest first. Fifty-three articles across ten categories - simulation theory, Mandela Effect, temporal anomalies, declassified programs, suppressed technology, and more.
The Double-Slit Experiment in 2026: Quantum Mechanics as the Simulation Compression Algorithm
Quantum mechanics has been the simulation hypothesis's most stubborn problem and its most powerful evidence since 1927. The double-slit experiment keeps getting more suggestive. The latest results from 2023-2025 make the compression algorithm argument harder to dismiss.
LONGEVITY NEXUSCellular Reprogramming in 2026: When the Simulation Started Returning Your Refund
Partial reprogramming reached human trials in 2024-2025. The same Yamanaka factors that earned a 2012 Nobel are now being tested as an anti-aging therapy. The implications for the death-as-design-parameter thesis are direct.
LONGEVITY NEXUSThe Ghost in the MRI: When AI Sees What Doctors Don’t
In 2023, Stanford radiologists published a paper that should have made national news. AI systems are detecting cancers in MRI scans that human doctors miss —” consistently, across institutions. The ghost in the machine is real, and it's saving lives.
SOCIAL MEDIA CONTROLThe Theranos Lie: When Innovation Becomes Performance Art
Elizabeth Holmes was 19 when she founded Theranos. She wore a black turtleneck. She deepened her voice. She convinced Silicon Valley she could run 70 tests from a single drop of blood. It was all a lie. Here's how she got away with it for so long.
TEMPORAL ANOMALYDéjà Vu: The Memory Leak in Your Brain
You walk into a room for the first time. You know what will happen next. D'j' vu feels like a glitch —” but it's actually your brain running a prediction algorithm it won't admit to. Here's the neuroscience behind the memory leak.
SIMULATION THEORYWhy We Dream: The Simulation’s Maintenance Window
You spend a third of your life doing it. Your brain is more active during it than when you're awake. You hallucinate entire worlds. Why we dream might be the simulation's most revealing maintenance routine —” and what your brain does when you're not watching.
THE WATCHERSThe Wow! Signal: 72 Seconds That Changed Everything
August 15, 1977. The Big Ear radio telescope detected a 72-second signal from deep space. It was 30 times louder than the background noise. Jerry Ehman wrote "Wow!" on the printout. We've never heard anything like it since.
ANCIENT SIMULATION CLUESThe Voynich Manuscript: The Book Nobody Can Read
In 1912, a Polish book dealer found a manuscript nobody could read. 240 pages of unknown script, plants that don't exist, and astronomical diagrams. 111 years later, AI still can't crack it. Here's why the Voynich Manuscript might be the most important book ever written.
SIMULATION THEORYThe Network That Runs When You Don’t: What the Default Mode Network Reveals
When your brain is doing nothing in particular, it is doing something specific: it is running a continuous, high-energy simulation of you. The Default Mode Network consumes 60-80 percent of the brain's resting energy simulating autobiographical memory, future projection, social inference. The simulation runs by default. The simulation can be suppressed by meditation. The simulation is what your brain is doing when you are doing nothing. The simulation is running.
GOVERNMENT — DECLASSIFIEDMKSEARCH: The Program Behind MKULTRA, Newly Declassified in 2023-2024
The public was told about MKULTRA. The public was not told that MKULTRA was approximately one-fifth of the documented MKSEARCH funding, an umbrella that ran 149 subprojects across 80 institutions for twenty-two years. The 2023-2024 CIA CREST release of 12,000 pages under the MKSEARCH search term is the largest single declassification of the umbrella's administrative record since 1977.
ANCIENT SIMULATION CLUESThe Geometry That Shouldn’t Be There: Pi, Phi, and the Architects Who Knew
The Great Pyramid's perimeter-to-height ratio is 6.2857, within four hundredths of a percent of 2 pi. Stonehenge's bluestones were transported 240 km by a Neolithic population. The Antikythera mechanism modeled eclipses with 19th-century-clock precision in 65 BCE. The conventional explanations are plausible. They each require that the population had access to knowledge the surviving evidence does not explain.
SIMULATION THEORYThe Card That Knew You Were Watching: Sixty Years of RNG Anomaly Research
For sixty years, random number generators in laboratories across the world have produced small, persistent, partial-replication-rate anomalies that correlate with conscious attention. Either consciousness has measurable physical effects, or the field has been producing consistent false positives for six decades.