TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @MQniverse

Saved - December 13, 2025 at 8:16 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I explore Alfred Lee Loomis, the elusive force behind wartime science. Loomis ran a private, elite lab in Tuxedo Park, hosting Einstein, Fermi, Lawrence, Bohr, and Compton, guiding radar and early Manhattan ties. A 1928 saline fever experiment hinted that radio waves affect salt in blood, a thread I link to modern fears around 5G and pandemics. Loomis’s circle—power, secrecy, influence—shaped history, yet Tesla’s name is rarely spoken.

@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.

Saved - September 2, 2025 at 12:23 PM

@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.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Owen Schroyer announces he is done at Infowars, explaining a abrupt departure after conflict with Alex Jones. He walked off the War Room mid-show Thursday; there was no family emergency. He intended to return this week and meet with Alex to finish positively, even offering to stay on as a satellite, but Alex said, 'We don't need you.' Good luck. He recalls Wednesday's exclusive on the school shooting with Kyle Sarifen and says, 'we broke the big exclusive,' riding into the fire with Alex, aware of likely backlash. After Thursday, he canceled his three-hour show, walked off, and says he wanted to announce on Infowars with Alex but was refused; now he's leaving and doesn't know if he'll return. He calls Wednesday 'our last dance' and notes Infowars War Room's eight-year anniversary would have occurred this week; Infowars could be off air.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Alright, ladies and gentlemen. There you have it. We are live here. Owen Schroyer live episode one fifteen. Why I am done at Infowars. Now, there's a reason why I'm doing this tonight. There's a reason why I have to do this tonight, and I'm going to explain it all. Because that's what you deserve as my audience, as people who have financially supported me over the years. You have prayed for me as people that sent me letters when I was in prison, just all of it. I'm grateful for my audience. I consider myself extremely blessed. And quite frankly, I consider myself extremely blessed for my time at Infowars. And I'm sorry that it had to end so abruptly, if you want to say that, but about an hour ago, I got off the phone with Alex and that was it. That was it. So I owe it to you, I feel I owe it to you, the audience, to explain what went wrong and why I decided to leave, and how that went down. And just to be perfectly clear, this is not how I wanted it to be. I want to be perfectly clear about something, and I'll explain this in a little more detail. I did not want it to go this way. Okay? I tried everything. I tried everything so that it wouldn't go this way. But I am left with no choice but to come on here tonight and make the announcement. Just so you understand, and then I'll kind of give a little bit more detail, you may have noticed I've been taking a lot more time off. Specifically, you may have noticed how on Thursday, I walked off the show mid show. It was about an hour into the show. And just so you understand what happened, and if you watch the Infowars War Room, you've seen this before, so it's not like it's anything new, but Alex was disrupting the show, and he wanted me to cover something, and he wanted me to get a guest on. I'm in the middle of the show while it's going on, as you see so many times, and it just didn't go well. I kind of just reached my point of no return, and so I just walked off the studio. Now, will say it was a little upsetting to me that he went on and said that I had a family emergency. I did not have a family emergency, there was no family emergency. I didn't appreciate people reaching out to me thinking that something bad had happened, including my own parents. So there was no family emergency. I walked off the show. I've never done that before in my life, and that's not how I operate, that's not who I am, but I felt powerless in that moment, and the only power I had was just to walk off. Because I couldn't do another thing it was two or three weeks ago when I came back and did that comedy bit. I couldn't do another thing where I just say, Oh, go to rebroadcast. So no, I walked off the show on Thursday. Now, my intention was to go back this week, and I made that intention perfectly clear to Alex an hour ago. Now, I wanted to meet with Alex in the office tomorrow, and I told him that. I told him that last week after I left the studio, he texted me and I said, Alex, let's talk next week. I said, I don't want to talk about it now. I'm done for the week. Let's talk next week. We communicated a little over the weekend, and then today I said, Let's have a meeting tomorrow before your show, whenever you want, let's meet tomorrow before your show, and maybe we can talk this out, work it out. And he said, No, let's just talk now. And so he called me. Now, my intentions, and I told him this, I wanted to go in this week. I wanted to go in tomorrow, and I wanted to finish this week, and I wanted to finish positively at Infowars. And I even said if he wanted me to kind of stick around like a satellite to go down with the ship, I'd be willing to play some sort of a satellite role to go down with the ship and be a part of that and continue wearing the name on the front of the jersey for at least some semblance while it's still ongoing. And he didn't express any interest in that. And so he told me that he didn't need me and good luck, and that was that. That was that. So I wanted to make this announcement on Infowars. I wanted to make this announcement with Alex. That actually meant a lot to me. That's what I wanted. I wanted to leave in a very positive fashion. I wanted to announce it to the Infowars audience on the Infowars airwaves. I wanted Alex and the crew and everybody to be there, and I wanted to shake Alex's hand. I wanted to thank him for everything. I wanted to just go down memory lane of all the things that we've done, but he wasn't interested in that. And he said, Don't come in this week. So that was that. So now here I am announcing that it's done. I will not be on Infowars, I don't know if ever again. Won't be hosting the War Room this week, and, I don't really know what else there is to say about that other than it's not how I wanted it to be, but I was left with no choice. I was left with no choice. Now, I don't know how Alex wants to handle it. Honestly, I hope that he just doesn't talk about it at all. And people might view that as like a bad thing or a negative thing. I don't I don't think so. It's if he if he wants to just sever ties and just move on like that, I have no problem with it. So so I don't I don't, you know, I I hope he doesn't make a thing of it. I hope he's fine. He can bring in whoever he wants to host it or shut it down. I don't really care. You know, I I don't have anything negative to say about Alex. This is not what this is about. I have nothing but respect and appreciation for, for Alex and everything that we've done at Infowars. I'm not sure that was mutual, but doesn't really matter. But, you know, kind of kind of to give you the longer form situation, you probably noticed that I had not been hosting the War Room a lot this month. And Alex had been coming into my show and talking about how I'm negative and calling me a pessimist and all this other stuff, which is fine. You work for Alex, you're going get hit with it a lot. Alex is not easy to work for, and that's fine. That's okay. But, okay, he says I'm too negative, he says I'm a pessimist, whatever, I'm too anti Trump. So I just said, all right, you know what, I'll just take some time off, I'll just disappear, and if Alex thinks I'm too negative, then maybe he's right. Maybe he's right. Maybe I'm too negative now, maybe I'm too much of a pessimist now, maybe I'm too anti Trump now, whatever his issue was when he kept coming to the show telling me I'm too negative, saying I'm a pessimist on his show. I said, Okay, maybe he's right. I'll take some time off, I'll blow off some steam, I'll just get out of the ring for a week, and maybe I'll come back a little more positive. And maybe there was a level of reality to that, and I think I did come back more positive. But the same issues that I had started up immediately as soon as I came back. And it's not to say that I didn't have creative control over the Infowars War Room, but imagine it's like somebody staring over your back 20 fourseven. And so every single day that I came back, it was either a guest that I was told I had on at the last minute, or it was him coming into the studio, he wants me to cover this, he wants me to cover that, or I have to host his show for him because he's not in. So there was just there's nothing consistent for me. I couldn't do what I wanted to do, which I'll explain what I want to do in a second here. So whatever. So I'm going through it again last week, and then Wednesday last week happens. And this is this is really where I think I think for me it was like, if this is how it's gonna go, really what happened Wednesday and Thursday? So Wednesday was the school shooting, and we get the exclusive with Kyle Sarifen from his fed source at about nine or 10:00 in the morning. Now, we get this information, we have the images, we have the name, the crew has already archived all of the online content, the manifestos, the videos. So, I mean, we got it. We got it. Now, I was supposed to host the show, but obviously we get this exclusive, so Alex wanted to host the show. So I'm like, okay, well great, alright, so let's do this. So it's like, here we go, I'm riding with Alex again, folks. We're firing up the Millennium Falcon again. We're going into the Infowar, we're taking out a Death Star again. And I know that this is hard for people to understand from the outside looking in, and I don't say that from an arrogant standpoint. I'm just trying to explain to you what it's like here. So when he's coming on Wednesday, the Jones show that I'm hosting, and he's like, we've got the exclusive, we're going to break this, everyone knows we're going to get burned. Okay? I mean, I don't know about Kyle, he's still kind of relatively new to the media, but he's a fed, so he's a tough guy. He wears big boy pants. But everybody in Infowars knew, Oh, here's a school shooting. We've got the exclusive. We're going to destroy the cover up. Everyone knew we were going get burned. Everybody knew we were going to get burned for this. And I said, All right, Alex, I'm going into the fire again with you. Let's do it. So we did it. We did it. We broke the big exclusive. It's very likely that if it wasn't for us that day, you never heard about the trans shooter, you never saw the videos, the manifesto, or any of it. It's very likely that that's the case. But we knew, we knew we would get burned. We've been down this road before, especially on that issue. You're guaranteed you're getting burned. You're either getting sued or you're getting censored or you're getting the negative headlines. So, before the show is even over, there's multiple headlines printed up Owen Schroyer celebrates mass shooting, Owen Schroyer celebrates dead kids. I might get to that later on. Whatever, it's par for the course. So there we go. So I got burned. So I rode into the fire on Wednesday, we broke the big exclusive, I fired up, and I got in the co pilot seat of the Millennium Falcon with Alex Jones for one more ride, knowing I was going to get shot out of the sky, knowing I was going to get burned. But hey, all right, it's the info war. I said, all right, Alex, you want me? Let's go. Let's do it. And we did it. And we fucking did it. And then I get the negative headlines. Okay, fine. I anticipated that. And then the next day, I have to deal with the same stuff of him breaking into the show. Now he's on a speakerphone and he's asked the crew to bring him in. It's just a cluster. It's just a cluster bomb. So I had prepared a three hour show. I thought since we just did what we did the day before that I could do a three hour show and babysitter wouldn't be looking over my shoulder. I was wrong, it happened, and I just said, I'm out. I'm just done. So if you don't want me to do the show, you can do it. I think he ended up posting the rest of his show. I don't even know if I wanted to get any more details with that, but so that was it. So I walked off the show Thursday. I didn't appreciate him saying I had a family emergency because I didn't, so I had a lot of people freaking out and messaging me about that. There was no family emergency, was just a lie. So whatever, so okay, whatever, it happens, I've got a big ego, I'm a stubborn personality, so is he. It's Alex Jones. So, okay. So again, I just walk off. I don't make a big thing of it. I don't say anything negative. I don't say he made up the family emergency. I don't say anything because I wanted to do this right. So I said, Alex, I'm done this week. Let's just sit down and let's have a meeting on Tuesday next week. Let's just get this right. So I talked to him again today. Doesn't want to have the meeting tomorrow. I wanted to go into inforce, have the meeting. I intended on going into work. Instead, we have a conversation over the phone. I just kind of lay out my side of things. He lays out his side of things, and he says, I believe the exact quote was, Okay, we don't need you. Good luck. So he said, I'm not gonna stop you from leaving. I said, Alex, I wanna do it right. I wanna do it on your airwaves. I wanna come in this week. I wanna announce it. Like, I want it to all be positive. Like, I don't want this to turn into a negative thing. And he just said, nope, don't worry about it. Don't come in. Good luck. You know, you can do your own thing. So, okay. So that's how it went. Now, that's it as far as I'm concerned. So I'm not going to be going back in, I'm not going to be hosting the war room. He could have easily had me in to announce it on his show. I would have been happy. I would have been more than happy to do it. Again, that's what I wanted. It meant a lot to me, folks. I didn't want to be doing it this way. Anybody who's followed my career in media knows I don't do the drama stuff. I don't do the drama stuff. I don't do the hey, look over here at this personal beef. I don't do that stuff. I get along with everybody, but I've been left no choice. I had to do this tonight. So, again, just to be clear, I intended to go into InfoWars this week and finish out the week and make the announcement on Infowars with Alex. That meant a lot to me. But he told me he wasn't interested, he didn't want to do it, he said, We don't need you, so that's it. So, you know, as far as the future of me and Alex on air together, I don't know. I mean, I don't have any personal animosity towards Alex. We've had professional issues over the years, but you have to understand, Alex has been a big inspiration for me and he gave me my first big break in political media. I'll always be respectful and appreciative of that. And so that's why it meant a lot to me to do this on Infowars and to do this in a positive way and to shake his hand on the air and for him to say, Thank you, great work, and for me to say, Thank you, I appreciate everything, and to shake his hand and do it in front of the Infowars audience and crew and leave on a positive note. But he didn't want to do that. He said he didn't want to do that, so now I have to do this here tonight. Now, I have to say too, just so people might get a better understanding, you know, I feel like Wednesday was kind of our last dance. I feel like Wednesday was kind of our last dance, and if you've seen the documentary called The Last Dance about Michael Jordan and the ninety six Bulls or the Bulls franchise, the dynasty, you might get a better idea of what it's what it's like working for Alex Jones. And you can watch and you listen to people talk about how Michael Jordan is an asshole and Michael Jordan is hard to play for and nobody wants to play with him and he's a jerk and he's got the highest expectations and all this stuff. And it's just like, well, I like that. I mean, that's how Alex Jones is, folks. Alex Jones is hard to work for. He demands championships. He demands the best. Now, some people can deal with that, some people can't, but I feel like Wednesday was was our last dance. I feel like Wednesday was our last dance. We went out there. We fired up the Millennium Falcon. We got our final championship. We got our final big victory. We broke the big story. And then if you understand, just like in the documentary, everything kind of just blows up after that. So I don't know. I tried my best to go down with the ship in Infowars. That was also very meaningful to me, but that just became an impossibility because I don't even know what's really going on, quite frankly. I'm not sure anybody does. So I don't know, Infowars could be off air this week, Infowars could be off air next year. I have no idea. But I can no longer I'm at a point now in my life where I can no longer play that game of committing to go down with the ship because I got other issues. And I've been extremely loyal to Alex, overly loyal to Alex and Infowars, and I'm okay with that. You know, I was I was a corporate man. I was a network man, and I was proud to to to play for, as I view it, the Yankees, the best ever, Infowars. I was proud of that, and I still am. No regrets. But I couldn't I couldn't hold out any longer. I wanted this to be my last week on air, but Alex didn't want it. So that's why I'm here tonight, and I'll tell you what is coming up for the future as far as I'm concerned. But, you know, I've done the network news thing now. This week, actually, yeah, this week would have been the eight year anniversary of the Infowars War Room. It would have been eight years of me hosting the Infowars War Room. So we didn't we didn't make that, we didn't make that milestone, unfortunately, but that's okay. We almost got there.

@OwenShroyer1776 - Owen Shroyer

Why I Am Leaving Infowars https://t.co/7vnXGwmSrs

Saved - January 22, 2025 at 6:33 PM

@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

Video Transcript AI Summary
We're developing an exciting cancer vaccine using AI tools. Cancer tumors release fragments into the bloodstream, allowing for early detection through a simple blood test. AI can help identify the most threatening cancers from these tests. Once we gene sequence the tumor, we can create a personalized mRNA vaccine for the individual, which can be produced robotically in about 48 hours. This represents a significant advancement in early cancer detection and personalized treatment. Additionally, it's an honor to have respected individuals like Larry here, contributing to this important work, even though he typically doesn't engage in this field. Their presence highlights the significance of this initiative for the country.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Thank you, mister president. One of the most exciting things we're working on, you again, using the tools that's that that Sam and Masa are providing, is our is a cancer vaccine. It's very interesting. Early die it turns out I'll be quick. All of our cancers, cancer tumors, little fragments of those tumors float around in your blood. So you can do early cancer detection. If you can do using a you can do early cancer detection with a blood test. And using AI to look at the blood test, you can find the a the cancers that are actually seriously threatening the person. So we can again, cancer cancer diagnosis using AI has the promise of just being a simple blood test. Then beyond that, once we gene sequence, once we gene sequence that cancer tumor, you can then vaccinate the person, design a vaccine for every individual person to vaccinate them against that cancer. And you can make that vaccine, that mRNA vaccine, you can make that robotically, again, using AI in about 48 hours. So imagine early cancer detection, the development of a cancer vaccine for the for your particular cancer aimed at you, and have have that vaccine available in 48 hours. This is the promise of AI and the promise of the future. Speaker 1: Great. Thanks. Good. Great. Thank you, sir. President, do we have any other questions? Yeah. Just one second. I we'll finish up. But, you know, these are highly respected guys. I was shocked with Larry because I don't even think Larry does this stuff. You did a very good job for a guy that doesn't do it much. Right? But he's so respected and, the group and it's it's really an honor. But, for Larry to be here and do this is very unusual because he doesn't do this stuff. He doesn't need it. He does. And you don't need it, do you? You don't need it. But I I just, I think it's an honor to the, to the country. It's a great honor that this group these are the top people.
Saved - December 30, 2024 at 9:54 PM

@MQniverse - Miss Qniverse✨

@johnrockshomes Prey. https://t.co/MjRvEsbqUE

Saved - January 13, 2024 at 6:26 PM

@MQniverse - Miss Qniverse✨

@WillingWitness Yes. I created this video about it a couple years ago. 🏛️👇🏼 https://t.co/qW1ngLq0pd

Video Transcript AI Summary
Aldous Huxley and George Orwell, known for their books Brave New World and 1984, had foresight in predicting the future. Huxley was a member of the Fabian society, a secret society with a wolf in sheep's clothing logo. The society aimed to weaken the enemy before taking over. Huxley taught at Eton, where he introduced George Orwell to the society's global plan involving genetics, drugs, and mind control. Huxley's brother, Julian, was a promoter of Eugenics. Orwell dedicated his life to exposing this plan, coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the Fabian Society.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Ever wonder how Aldous Huxley and George Orwell had the prophetic foresight to write Brave New World and The Fabled 1984. Aldous Huxley was an inner circle member of the Fabian society. A significant strand of the secret society web with its Fitting logo, the wolf in sheep's clothing. Fabian comes from the Roman general Quintus Fabius Maximus Varicosis. He was known for wearing down his enemy over long periods of time and avoiding battles that were not certain. He and his troops would take over only when the enemy had been sufficiently weakened. If you had access to the inner core of the Fabian society, You would be privy to the projected agenda for enslavement. Aldous Huxley taught at Eton, the super exclusive college near Windsor Castle. His brother Julian was a keen promoter of Eugenics and was president of the British Eugenics Society. A boy named Eric Blair was one of Huxley's students. Later known as George Orwell, Huxley introduced Orwell to the society, giving him access to the global big brother plan manipulated by genetics, drugs and mind control. The Haxleys furthered the cause while Orwell worked till his dying day to expose it in the year that marked the 100th anniversary of the Fabian Society.
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