World
Kayla Carman
August 31, 2025
© Photo: Public domain

If Project Blue Beam is genuine, it would be the most audacious psy-op in human history.

Join us on TelegramTwitter, and VK.

Contact us: info@strategic-culture.su

“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.” — George Orwell, 1984

Orwell understood the essence of control, but his vision almost seems quaint compared to what’s been described as Project Blue Beam. In Orwell’s nightmare you simply ignore reality; in Blue Beam they seize it, hijack your senses, and replace what you see, hear, and even think with their own fabricated truth. Imagine being force-fed hallucinations not from a bad mushroom trip but from satellites, holograms and electromagnetic frequencies until the difference between your own mind and their programming dissolves entirely. That is the sinister promise of Blue Beam.

The warning first emerged in 1994 thanks to Serge Monast, a Quebecois investigative journalist who insisted that NASA and the United Nations were working hand in glove to execute a four-part psy-op to dissolve religion, dissolve borders, dissolve families and dissolve free thought. In its place, a New World Order would rise—centralised, technocratic, and very smug about its clever trickery. Monast wasn’t alone in his suspicion either. Dr Carol Rosin, who worked directly under Nazi rocket scientist turned head of NASA, Wernher von Braun, testified that von Braun himself had warned her of the script decades earlier. According to him, the military-industrial complex always needed an enemy: first the Russians, then terrorists, then asteroids, and finally the ultimate stage trick, a staged alien invasion. If that sounds like science fiction, remember this came directly from the lips of the man who helped build America’s space programme.

And why would they do it? Because fear is the currency of control. George H. W. Bush let the mask slip with his 1991 “New World Order” speech, painting a vision of a globe united under a single authority. Today his intellectual grandchildren at the World Economic Forum don’t even bother whispering. They want religion flattened into irrelevance, nationalism mocked into extinction, family bonds frayed, and individuality reduced to whatever crumbs the algorithm spits out between TikTok videos. Look at the obsession with transgenderism, blurring the lines of reality and shaping the culture to become fully on board with transhumanism. For these architects, fear is the lever, and Blue Beam is the machinery.

The plan unfolds in four acts. First, earthquakes. Not the natural kind, but engineered tremors strategically placed to reveal “discoveries” that rewrite religious history. The Dead Sea Scrolls rattled some theologians; imagine what conveniently unearthed tablets could do if a few million people were already primed to doubt. Induced seismicity already exists thanks to fracking and mining, and researchers tinker with sound-wave manipulation of the earth’s crust. Step one isn’t to bury faith under rubble but to crack it open just enough for doubt to seep in. Religion has always been the thorn in the side of the establishment that demands only they are worshipped. Discoveries that could unlock the key to ancient wisdom and technologies that may possibly help us all vibrate higher as a species are veiled in secrecy and closed for public scrutiny. The decision to stop excavating Gobekli Tepi and the global treaties surrounding Antarctica and mysterious eyewitness accounts from that region suggest that the elites have knowledge regarding the collective consciousness and accessing higher intelligence they don’t wish the rest of us to know.

Step two is the spectacle. A global light show straight out of a Marvel movie, only instead of Iron Man, it’s Jesus, Muhammad, Krishna and Buddha floating above cities like celestial billboards before merging together into a single cosmic being. This deity, naturally, declares all scripture has been misinterpreted, all religions are outdated, and a new universal faith must be born. Far-fetched? China already startled millions with its mysterious “floating city in the sky” phenomenon. Concertgoers cheered at a holographic Tupac. The military is always thirty to fifty years ahead of the consumer toys we get to play with. If civilians can be fooled by CGI whales breaching over basketball courts, how convincing do you think DARPA’s secret holograms look by now?

Step three is when the lights get switched from your eyes to your brain. Synthetic telepathy through electromagnetic waves, convincing every believer that their god is whispering directly to them. This is where MK Ultra graduates to 5G on steroids. The CIA once spiked unwitting citizens with LSD; today we’ve got Neuralink drilling chips into skulls, transcranial magnetic stimulation altering moods, and electroconvulsive devices sold to boost performance. Even claims about vaccinated people emitting Bluetooth signals suddenly sound less like madness and more like a proof of concept. Once they own the channel between your ears, resistance is futile.

And finally, the crescendo: an alien invasion. Holographic saucers over major cities, peppered with a few experimental craft and some directed-energy fireworks for realism. Governments panic, missiles are launched, maybe even nukes fly—and then the UN steps in, announcing the whole thing was a misunderstanding. Humanity, chastened and terrified, gladly surrenders its sovereignty for the promise of planetary protection. If that seems ludicrous, look back at Operation Northwoods in 1962, when the Pentagon actually drafted plans to fake terrorist attacks on Americans to justify a war with Cuba, and we will leave discussion of 9/11 for another day. Kennedy shot down the Northwoods plot, then he himself was shot down, but the paperwork still exists today. Blue Beam is just another false flag with special effects. And if you need a pop culture reference, the plot of The Watchmen revolves around a fake alien invasion staged to unite mankind. Sometimes fiction isn’t escapism; it’s predictive programming.

Pieces of the rehearsal are already visible. The pandemic trained billions to submit under fear and accept digital passes as the price of freedom. Central banks salivate over programmable currencies. The mainstream media, once lambasting the cranks that talked of UFOs, now covers them like weather reports, without an explanation nor apology for their monumental 180. Unidentified craft “approaching Earth” pop up in headlines with suspicious regularity. The drip-drip of fear primes the stage.

Which brings us back to Serge Monast. He warned the world in 1994, and by 1996 his children were seized by the state, and he was dead of a sudden heart attack the day after being jailed for “spreading misinformation”. No prior health issues, no warning, just gone at fifty-one. A whistle blown, a whistle silenced. How many times have we seen that story repeat? From inconvenient scientists to political dissidents, whistleblowers have a peculiar habit of developing terminal cases of coincidence.

If Project Blue Beam is genuine, it would be the most audacious psy-op in human history: Orwell’s 1984 rebooted by Hollywood with Pentagon funding and a Davos afterparty. But here’s the beautiful part: they only succeed if enough of us fall for it. Awareness is the antidote. The more people recognise the script, the harder it is to stage the play. When a holographic space Jesus hovers over your skyline, you laugh, you point, and you tweet, “Nice try, NASA.” When mainstream news dangles fear like catnip, you swat it away instead of swallowing it. Faith and family are stronger than fear and fakery, and ridicule is kryptonite to authoritarian magicians.

So if the day comes when an Antichrist laser show fills the heavens and politicians tremble on cue, remember: it isn’t revelation; it’s just really expensive cosplay. The trick only works if you clap along. And the more of us who refuse, the sooner the curtain falls. Let’s remind the elites who are watching The Watchmen.

Project Blue Beam: Who’s watching the watchmen? The Apocalypse in 4K

If Project Blue Beam is genuine, it would be the most audacious psy-op in human history.

Join us on TelegramTwitter, and VK.

Contact us: info@strategic-culture.su

“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.” — George Orwell, 1984

Orwell understood the essence of control, but his vision almost seems quaint compared to what’s been described as Project Blue Beam. In Orwell’s nightmare you simply ignore reality; in Blue Beam they seize it, hijack your senses, and replace what you see, hear, and even think with their own fabricated truth. Imagine being force-fed hallucinations not from a bad mushroom trip but from satellites, holograms and electromagnetic frequencies until the difference between your own mind and their programming dissolves entirely. That is the sinister promise of Blue Beam.

The warning first emerged in 1994 thanks to Serge Monast, a Quebecois investigative journalist who insisted that NASA and the United Nations were working hand in glove to execute a four-part psy-op to dissolve religion, dissolve borders, dissolve families and dissolve free thought. In its place, a New World Order would rise—centralised, technocratic, and very smug about its clever trickery. Monast wasn’t alone in his suspicion either. Dr Carol Rosin, who worked directly under Nazi rocket scientist turned head of NASA, Wernher von Braun, testified that von Braun himself had warned her of the script decades earlier. According to him, the military-industrial complex always needed an enemy: first the Russians, then terrorists, then asteroids, and finally the ultimate stage trick, a staged alien invasion. If that sounds like science fiction, remember this came directly from the lips of the man who helped build America’s space programme.

And why would they do it? Because fear is the currency of control. George H. W. Bush let the mask slip with his 1991 “New World Order” speech, painting a vision of a globe united under a single authority. Today his intellectual grandchildren at the World Economic Forum don’t even bother whispering. They want religion flattened into irrelevance, nationalism mocked into extinction, family bonds frayed, and individuality reduced to whatever crumbs the algorithm spits out between TikTok videos. Look at the obsession with transgenderism, blurring the lines of reality and shaping the culture to become fully on board with transhumanism. For these architects, fear is the lever, and Blue Beam is the machinery.

The plan unfolds in four acts. First, earthquakes. Not the natural kind, but engineered tremors strategically placed to reveal “discoveries” that rewrite religious history. The Dead Sea Scrolls rattled some theologians; imagine what conveniently unearthed tablets could do if a few million people were already primed to doubt. Induced seismicity already exists thanks to fracking and mining, and researchers tinker with sound-wave manipulation of the earth’s crust. Step one isn’t to bury faith under rubble but to crack it open just enough for doubt to seep in. Religion has always been the thorn in the side of the establishment that demands only they are worshipped. Discoveries that could unlock the key to ancient wisdom and technologies that may possibly help us all vibrate higher as a species are veiled in secrecy and closed for public scrutiny. The decision to stop excavating Gobekli Tepi and the global treaties surrounding Antarctica and mysterious eyewitness accounts from that region suggest that the elites have knowledge regarding the collective consciousness and accessing higher intelligence they don’t wish the rest of us to know.

Step two is the spectacle. A global light show straight out of a Marvel movie, only instead of Iron Man, it’s Jesus, Muhammad, Krishna and Buddha floating above cities like celestial billboards before merging together into a single cosmic being. This deity, naturally, declares all scripture has been misinterpreted, all religions are outdated, and a new universal faith must be born. Far-fetched? China already startled millions with its mysterious “floating city in the sky” phenomenon. Concertgoers cheered at a holographic Tupac. The military is always thirty to fifty years ahead of the consumer toys we get to play with. If civilians can be fooled by CGI whales breaching over basketball courts, how convincing do you think DARPA’s secret holograms look by now?

Step three is when the lights get switched from your eyes to your brain. Synthetic telepathy through electromagnetic waves, convincing every believer that their god is whispering directly to them. This is where MK Ultra graduates to 5G on steroids. The CIA once spiked unwitting citizens with LSD; today we’ve got Neuralink drilling chips into skulls, transcranial magnetic stimulation altering moods, and electroconvulsive devices sold to boost performance. Even claims about vaccinated people emitting Bluetooth signals suddenly sound less like madness and more like a proof of concept. Once they own the channel between your ears, resistance is futile.

And finally, the crescendo: an alien invasion. Holographic saucers over major cities, peppered with a few experimental craft and some directed-energy fireworks for realism. Governments panic, missiles are launched, maybe even nukes fly—and then the UN steps in, announcing the whole thing was a misunderstanding. Humanity, chastened and terrified, gladly surrenders its sovereignty for the promise of planetary protection. If that seems ludicrous, look back at Operation Northwoods in 1962, when the Pentagon actually drafted plans to fake terrorist attacks on Americans to justify a war with Cuba, and we will leave discussion of 9/11 for another day. Kennedy shot down the Northwoods plot, then he himself was shot down, but the paperwork still exists today. Blue Beam is just another false flag with special effects. And if you need a pop culture reference, the plot of The Watchmen revolves around a fake alien invasion staged to unite mankind. Sometimes fiction isn’t escapism; it’s predictive programming.

Pieces of the rehearsal are already visible. The pandemic trained billions to submit under fear and accept digital passes as the price of freedom. Central banks salivate over programmable currencies. The mainstream media, once lambasting the cranks that talked of UFOs, now covers them like weather reports, without an explanation nor apology for their monumental 180. Unidentified craft “approaching Earth” pop up in headlines with suspicious regularity. The drip-drip of fear primes the stage.

Which brings us back to Serge Monast. He warned the world in 1994, and by 1996 his children were seized by the state, and he was dead of a sudden heart attack the day after being jailed for “spreading misinformation”. No prior health issues, no warning, just gone at fifty-one. A whistle blown, a whistle silenced. How many times have we seen that story repeat? From inconvenient scientists to political dissidents, whistleblowers have a peculiar habit of developing terminal cases of coincidence.

If Project Blue Beam is genuine, it would be the most audacious psy-op in human history: Orwell’s 1984 rebooted by Hollywood with Pentagon funding and a Davos afterparty. But here’s the beautiful part: they only succeed if enough of us fall for it. Awareness is the antidote. The more people recognise the script, the harder it is to stage the play. When a holographic space Jesus hovers over your skyline, you laugh, you point, and you tweet, “Nice try, NASA.” When mainstream news dangles fear like catnip, you swat it away instead of swallowing it. Faith and family are stronger than fear and fakery, and ridicule is kryptonite to authoritarian magicians.

So if the day comes when an Antichrist laser show fills the heavens and politicians tremble on cue, remember: it isn’t revelation; it’s just really expensive cosplay. The trick only works if you clap along. And the more of us who refuse, the sooner the curtain falls. Let’s remind the elites who are watching The Watchmen.

If Project Blue Beam is genuine, it would be the most audacious psy-op in human history.

Join us on TelegramTwitter, and VK.

Contact us: info@strategic-culture.su

“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.” — George Orwell, 1984

Orwell understood the essence of control, but his vision almost seems quaint compared to what’s been described as Project Blue Beam. In Orwell’s nightmare you simply ignore reality; in Blue Beam they seize it, hijack your senses, and replace what you see, hear, and even think with their own fabricated truth. Imagine being force-fed hallucinations not from a bad mushroom trip but from satellites, holograms and electromagnetic frequencies until the difference between your own mind and their programming dissolves entirely. That is the sinister promise of Blue Beam.

The warning first emerged in 1994 thanks to Serge Monast, a Quebecois investigative journalist who insisted that NASA and the United Nations were working hand in glove to execute a four-part psy-op to dissolve religion, dissolve borders, dissolve families and dissolve free thought. In its place, a New World Order would rise—centralised, technocratic, and very smug about its clever trickery. Monast wasn’t alone in his suspicion either. Dr Carol Rosin, who worked directly under Nazi rocket scientist turned head of NASA, Wernher von Braun, testified that von Braun himself had warned her of the script decades earlier. According to him, the military-industrial complex always needed an enemy: first the Russians, then terrorists, then asteroids, and finally the ultimate stage trick, a staged alien invasion. If that sounds like science fiction, remember this came directly from the lips of the man who helped build America’s space programme.

And why would they do it? Because fear is the currency of control. George H. W. Bush let the mask slip with his 1991 “New World Order” speech, painting a vision of a globe united under a single authority. Today his intellectual grandchildren at the World Economic Forum don’t even bother whispering. They want religion flattened into irrelevance, nationalism mocked into extinction, family bonds frayed, and individuality reduced to whatever crumbs the algorithm spits out between TikTok videos. Look at the obsession with transgenderism, blurring the lines of reality and shaping the culture to become fully on board with transhumanism. For these architects, fear is the lever, and Blue Beam is the machinery.

The plan unfolds in four acts. First, earthquakes. Not the natural kind, but engineered tremors strategically placed to reveal “discoveries” that rewrite religious history. The Dead Sea Scrolls rattled some theologians; imagine what conveniently unearthed tablets could do if a few million people were already primed to doubt. Induced seismicity already exists thanks to fracking and mining, and researchers tinker with sound-wave manipulation of the earth’s crust. Step one isn’t to bury faith under rubble but to crack it open just enough for doubt to seep in. Religion has always been the thorn in the side of the establishment that demands only they are worshipped. Discoveries that could unlock the key to ancient wisdom and technologies that may possibly help us all vibrate higher as a species are veiled in secrecy and closed for public scrutiny. The decision to stop excavating Gobekli Tepi and the global treaties surrounding Antarctica and mysterious eyewitness accounts from that region suggest that the elites have knowledge regarding the collective consciousness and accessing higher intelligence they don’t wish the rest of us to know.

Step two is the spectacle. A global light show straight out of a Marvel movie, only instead of Iron Man, it’s Jesus, Muhammad, Krishna and Buddha floating above cities like celestial billboards before merging together into a single cosmic being. This deity, naturally, declares all scripture has been misinterpreted, all religions are outdated, and a new universal faith must be born. Far-fetched? China already startled millions with its mysterious “floating city in the sky” phenomenon. Concertgoers cheered at a holographic Tupac. The military is always thirty to fifty years ahead of the consumer toys we get to play with. If civilians can be fooled by CGI whales breaching over basketball courts, how convincing do you think DARPA’s secret holograms look by now?

Step three is when the lights get switched from your eyes to your brain. Synthetic telepathy through electromagnetic waves, convincing every believer that their god is whispering directly to them. This is where MK Ultra graduates to 5G on steroids. The CIA once spiked unwitting citizens with LSD; today we’ve got Neuralink drilling chips into skulls, transcranial magnetic stimulation altering moods, and electroconvulsive devices sold to boost performance. Even claims about vaccinated people emitting Bluetooth signals suddenly sound less like madness and more like a proof of concept. Once they own the channel between your ears, resistance is futile.

And finally, the crescendo: an alien invasion. Holographic saucers over major cities, peppered with a few experimental craft and some directed-energy fireworks for realism. Governments panic, missiles are launched, maybe even nukes fly—and then the UN steps in, announcing the whole thing was a misunderstanding. Humanity, chastened and terrified, gladly surrenders its sovereignty for the promise of planetary protection. If that seems ludicrous, look back at Operation Northwoods in 1962, when the Pentagon actually drafted plans to fake terrorist attacks on Americans to justify a war with Cuba, and we will leave discussion of 9/11 for another day. Kennedy shot down the Northwoods plot, then he himself was shot down, but the paperwork still exists today. Blue Beam is just another false flag with special effects. And if you need a pop culture reference, the plot of The Watchmen revolves around a fake alien invasion staged to unite mankind. Sometimes fiction isn’t escapism; it’s predictive programming.

Pieces of the rehearsal are already visible. The pandemic trained billions to submit under fear and accept digital passes as the price of freedom. Central banks salivate over programmable currencies. The mainstream media, once lambasting the cranks that talked of UFOs, now covers them like weather reports, without an explanation nor apology for their monumental 180. Unidentified craft “approaching Earth” pop up in headlines with suspicious regularity. The drip-drip of fear primes the stage.

Which brings us back to Serge Monast. He warned the world in 1994, and by 1996 his children were seized by the state, and he was dead of a sudden heart attack the day after being jailed for “spreading misinformation”. No prior health issues, no warning, just gone at fifty-one. A whistle blown, a whistle silenced. How many times have we seen that story repeat? From inconvenient scientists to political dissidents, whistleblowers have a peculiar habit of developing terminal cases of coincidence.

If Project Blue Beam is genuine, it would be the most audacious psy-op in human history: Orwell’s 1984 rebooted by Hollywood with Pentagon funding and a Davos afterparty. But here’s the beautiful part: they only succeed if enough of us fall for it. Awareness is the antidote. The more people recognise the script, the harder it is to stage the play. When a holographic space Jesus hovers over your skyline, you laugh, you point, and you tweet, “Nice try, NASA.” When mainstream news dangles fear like catnip, you swat it away instead of swallowing it. Faith and family are stronger than fear and fakery, and ridicule is kryptonite to authoritarian magicians.

So if the day comes when an Antichrist laser show fills the heavens and politicians tremble on cue, remember: it isn’t revelation; it’s just really expensive cosplay. The trick only works if you clap along. And the more of us who refuse, the sooner the curtain falls. Let’s remind the elites who are watching The Watchmen.

The views of individual contributors do not necessarily represent those of the Strategic Culture Foundation.

See also

See also

The views of individual contributors do not necessarily represent those of the Strategic Culture Foundation.