
Back in the 1990s, Serge Monast — a Canadian journalist most people have never heard of — published what he claimed was insider intel: a plan called Project Blue Beam.
The gist was insane on its face — governments would stage a fake alien invasion or a divine second coming using satellites, holograms, and voice-to-skull tech. The point wasn’t UFOs or angels. It was obedience. Collapse religions, shock populations, and funnel the survivors into a single global control system.
Most people laughed it off as fringe. But if you trace the historical breadcrumbs, Blue Beam doesn’t look like a prophecy; instead, it looks like a rehearsal that’s been running for 60 years.
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false flags & phantom signals
- 1962 – Operation Northwoods: The Pentagon drafted a plan to fake terror attacks on U.S. soil, hijack planes, and blame Cuba. The Joint Chiefs signed it. Kennedy shot it down. Lesson learned: governments will script reality if it serves strategy.
- 1960s – Operation Mongoose: Intelligence planners literally floated the idea of projecting the “voice of God” into Havana to destabilize Castro. The seed was planted: technology as divine illusion.
- 1964 – Gulf of Tonkin: The “second attack” on U.S. ships never happened, but it was all Washington needed to plunge fully into Vietnam. One phantom blip on a radar turned into napalm raining on jungles.
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the sky as battlefield
- 1980s – Reagan’s Star Wars (SDI): Sold as missile defense, SDI poured billions into orbital platforms, laser research, and classified space projects. It built the scaffolding for turning the sky into a theater. The line between “protecting America” and projecting illusions blurred.
- 1990s – Serge Monast’s Blue Beam warning: Monast writes down the theory: staged apocalyptic visions to corral humanity. He dies suddenly in 1996 of a heart attack at age 51. To believers, it looked like erasure.
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voices in your head
- 2000s – Directed energy becomes public: LRAD sound cannons show up at protests. The U.S. military admits to the Active Denial System — a microwave beam that makes skin feel like it’s on fire. “Voice-to-skull” patents hit the record. Suddenly, Monast’s “synthetic telepathy” isn’t crazy — it’s just DARPA R&D.
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the private takeover
- 2010s – The new infrastructure
- SpaceX/Starlink starts building a global mesh of satellites, now numbering over 6,000. Perfect for synchronized sky coverage.
- Palantir sells predictive governance software to every major U.S. agency. Perfect for scripting population behavior.
- Anduril rolls out autonomous drones and AI battlefield networks. Perfect for choreographing ghost fleets.
The Cold War kept the tech under government cover. The 2010s outsourced it to billionaires.
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the conditioning years
- 2020s – UFO disclosure goes mainstream: After decades of denial, suddenly Congress and the Pentagon are whispering about “non-human craft.” They release grainy videos, parade whistleblowers, drip just enough to prime belief. No hard proof, just ambiguity weaponized.
The sky has become the stage. The audience is primed. The script is already written.
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the present moment
Right now, the scaffolding for Project Blue Beam exists:
- Starlink is the screen — the lattice above our heads that can sync light and signal globally.
- Anduril is the director’s console — AI capable of choreographing drones, data, and visuals into a coherent “event.”
- Palantir is the scriptwriter — running predictive models to figure out which scenario maximizes obedience and fear.
Project Blue Beam doesn’t need to be “created.” It just needs to be deployed.
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new foil — that “comet” in november?

Enter 3I/ATLAS, a weird interstellar visitor—likely a comet—that’s already sparking wild theories:
- Discovered July 2025, officially comet-like, from beyond our solar system. It swoops in near Mars in late October, and fades by December.
- It’s not dangerous. Scientists say it poses no threat, though it might get bright enough for backyard telescopes.
- Still, online corners are buzzing—prepping the public for cosmic freak‑out. Some are even whispering Blue Beam, pure dreadcow tipping its hat.
Astrophysicist Avi Loeb, a Harvard University figure known for pushing the bold idea that interstellar objects like ʻOumuamua could be alien tech, recently stirred the pot again—this time with 3I/ATLAS, the new interstellar visitor.
In an unreviewed thought experiment, Loeb and collaborators suggested that 3I/ATLAS might not be just a comet. It could even be hostile extraterrestrial technology. That’s based on:
- Its weird trajectory (aligned with the ecliptic plane in a way that’s statistically improbable).
- Speed and path that allowed for flybys of Venus, Mars, and Jupiter on ideal paths—maybe for deploying devices?
But—and this is big—the paper is not peer-reviewed. Most astronomers strongly reject the alien angle. The majority view is that 3I/ATLAS is a natural comet, and they’re betting on common sense over cosmic drama.
Remember Project Blue Beam’s core playbook—manufactured cosmic spectacle to sear obedience? Loeb’s speculation about 3I/ATLAS fits that pattern. It’s the kind of seed that primes people to look up and believe, especially when the “sky show” is already architected by private satellites, defense AIs, and predictive scripts.
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the curious take
We grew up watching Gulf War psy-ops on CNN, WMDs sold as gospel, towers falling live on air. We know how fast a narrative can be manufactured and swallowed whole. Blue Beam is the logical endpoint: the spectacle so massive it covers the entire sky.
This isn’t aliens. It’s the oldest trick in the book — control by fear — scaled up with satellites, drones, and AI. And the scariest part? The hardware is already orbiting overhead, humming quietly while we scroll.
One day you’ll look up, and you won’t know if it’s the second coming, a UFO armada, or just another contract signed in a Pentagon backroom.
And by then, it won’t matter.
Stay curious.
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