@MQniverse - Miss Qniverse✨
If you really want the story behind the story on the Rad Lab, wartime science, and the elite networks behind classified research, look into one of the most influential men you've probably never heard of: Alfred Lee Loomis. The book Tuxedo Park centers around Loomis, a Wall Street tycoon turned experimental physicist who quietly operated one of the most advanced private labs in the world from behind the gates of Tuxedo Park, New York. I discovered the book because my sister used to live there, and I was always fascinated by how exclusive and elegant the place was. Tuxedo Park had this quiet intensity. It felt like the kind of place that held stories behind stone walls. I had no idea just how right I was until I read about Loomis. Before there was an MIT Rad Lab, Loomis was already experimenting with radar and time measurement in his private lab. He brought in the most brilliant minds in physics, including Einstein, Fermi, Lawrence, Bohr, and Compton. He didn’t just fund their research. He worked beside them. He was also deeply connected. His cousin Henry Stimson served as Secretary of War under Taft, Hoover, Roosevelt, and Truman, placing Loomis in direct proximity to the highest levels of military and political power across four administrations. His radar research helped shape what became the MIT Radiation Lab under the leadership of Vannevar Bush, who also headed up the newly formed National Defense Research Committee (NDRC). That same network would later oversee the Manhattan Project. It was Ernest Lawrence who brought J. Robert Oppenheimer into the fold, and Loomis’s Tuxedo lab was one of the early crucibles of those wartime collaborations. But what stopped me in my tracks was a lesser-known experiment Loomis ran in the late 1920s, following a bizarre incident at a General Electric lab. Workers operating a six-meter shortwave radio setup suddenly fainted. They weren’t electrocuted. They were burning up with unexplained high fevers, and no one understood why. Doctors traced the cause to shortwave radio exposure. Loomis and Princeton chemist William Richards replicated the scenario and discovered something remarkable. The radio waves didn’t heat pure water, but they did heat saline. This suggested that the waves were interacting with the salt in the bloodstream. They developed a device that could induce artificial fever in a controlled way. At the time, malaria was still used to trigger immune responses in patients. Loomis’ method offered a safer, targeted alternative. Their findings were published and reported in major newspapers. The article I found in the Washington Times, dated 1928, confirmed it. The headline read: "Tests Presage Disease Cure By Radio." It described the GE incident and Loomis’ device, and noted that the Rockefeller Institute had taken over biological research on how shortwave frequencies affected the human body, even in the absence of heat. (See screenshots.) Reading that article reframed everything. Decades later, in 2020, while the world was locked indoors, 5G towers quietly appeared across cities and rural highways. Temperature checks were mandated at schools, hospitals, airports, and public buildings. People were told they had fevers and tested positive for COVID, even when they felt completely fine. Six feet of separation was arbitrarily declared “safe.” Masks were made mandatory. And the fear was relentless. Combine all those factors, and what emerged was a perfectly manufactured pandemic of perception. And once you understand that frequency can stimulate elevated temperatures, particularly through resonance with the salt in our bloodstream, it becomes harder to ignore the parallels. I’m not speculating. I’m connecting well-documented events from the past to striking similarities in our present. When I met @davidicke in London last October, I felt so compelled by what I had uncovered that I gave him a copy of Tuxedo Park. That’s what I’m handing him in the photo. So many of the names I’ve seen mentioned in his books over the years appear here in a much more personal light. The book reads like someone’s private diary, because it almost is. The author, Jennet Conant, is the granddaughter of James B. Conant, former president of Harvard and one of Loomis’ closest wartime collaborators. If you want to understand the kind of influence Loomis operated within, look no further than Tuxedo Park itself. It wasn’t just a gated neighborhood. It was a sanctuary for old-money power. The 400 Club, the Harrimans, high-level military brass, industrialists, and international financiers all moved through it. They weren’t just vacationing. They were planning, strategizing, and sharing access to knowledge that never made headlines. In the closing pages of the book, John G. Trump is mentioned briefly. He was an MIT physicist and uncle of Donald Trump, who was later tapped to review Nikola Tesla’s papers after Tesla’s death. It struck me how Tesla himself is barely mentioned at all, despite living in New York during the same era and working on technologies that overlapped with so much of what was happening behind the scenes. Sometimes, it’s the omissions that speak the loudest. The silences. The gaps. The things they choose not to say. Like Alfred Lee Loomis himself... the most influential man you’ve never heard of.
@MQniverse - Miss Qniverse✨
🚨 Owen Shroyer just revealed he’s OUT at InfoWars. Last Thursday he walked off mid-show in frustration with Alex but intended to return. Alex lied to the audience, calling it a “family emergency". He's said Owen’s too anti-Trump, told him he doesn’t need him & wished him luck.
@MQniverse - Miss Qniverse✨
Larry Ellison, chairman of Oracle, said today at Trump’s press conference that AI can detect cancer early and create a designer vaccine in 48 hours from a blood sample. Funny how he didn’t mention "mRNA"... Seems like a win-win for them: your blood, their AI. What could go wrong? https://t.co/Di2COZoDok
@MQniverse - Miss Qniverse✨
@WillingWitness Yes. I created this video about it a couple years ago. 🏛️👇🏼 https://t.co/qW1ngLq0pd