The Night They Shot At The Sky

1,440 rounds. Zero hits. Something was above Los Angeles — and it wasn't Japanese.

On the night of February 25, 1942, the entire city of Los Angeles opened fire on the sky. Anti-aircraft batteries expended nearly 1,500 rounds at something hovering above the city — something that searchlights tracked, thousands witnessed, and morning newspapers reported before the official narrative turned a citywide barrage into a case of war nerves. When a newly formed investigation team opens the archived duty logs from Battery D of the 37th Coast Artillery, they find not fog-of-war confusion but targeting data: speed, altitude, bearing — and the handwritten observation of a gunnery sergeant who knew exactly what he was shooting at and knew he wasn't hitting it.

The Instruction in the Blood

Human chromosome 2 was fused. Not by evolution. By someone who knew what they were building.

In the laboratories of the Wellcome Trust Centre at Oxford, a geneticist reveals the evidence she's been prevented from publishing: human chromosome 2 bears the unmistakable signature of deliberate fusion, and within the fused region, a 650-base-pair sequence that functions as a biological antenna — tuned to a frequency that the investigation has encountered in stone and crystal and ancient text. The Sumerians had a word for it. They called us lú-lú: the mixed ones. The engineered ones.