The child who saw too much

The Great Scan – Concord 2006 was just the beginning 
A child. A missing man. A gap in reality. A region full of unanswered questions. 
“Anyone who thinks children just imagine things like this has never seen the statistics.”  
(Source: Internal correspondence, Archive of Truth, #Doc84-X) 
In recent months, there have been increasing reports of children between the ages of nine and twelve seeing things that are supposedly not there. 
A girl in Chelmsford heard voices coming from the radio – which wasn't even turned on.

A boy in Acton claims that his reflection whispered something to him.

Two children in Lowell disappeared for several hours and still can't remember anything.

Sounds like modern urban legends?

We thought so too.

Until we looked at the data.

A striking cluster. And a pattern.

In an internal evaluation of early psychiatric interventions in Middlesex County, we discovered that

Since the beginning of 2024, there has been a steadily growing number of initial contacts in which children under the age of 13 report so-called “visual and auditory dissociations.”

Particularly striking:

The symptoms are similar – and occur with above-average frequency within a 50 km radius of Concord, MA.

Of course, this could all be coincidence. Or it could not be.

But then we found a second anomaly—in 2006.

At that time, there was only one known case that fit the pattern:

Steve F., eleven years old.

He reported that a man had dissolved right before his eyes—not figuratively, but physically.

A few days later, he was admitted to a clinic with a diagnosis of “psychotic episode.” The incident was never investigated. The family broke off contact with the public. The boy disappeared from all official records.

Only one entry remains in the statistics: Patient 47-N.

What is not public knowledge: The note “Patient 47-N” also appears in a medical research protocol of the “NeuroTech S2” initiative – an institution with proven links to the AIT group (unconfirmed).

In 2006, the NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) recorded a series of anomalies in the microwave spectrum over Concord.

The official records for this period? Gone.

The local station, which had planned to broadcast a special report on the weather situation on May 13, withdrew it spontaneously. Reason: “Technical problem.”

An internal memo leaked to us by a former employee of the Harvard Medical School library contains the following note:

“As of May 15, no further data collection in test sector C2 – test subject destabilized. Cause unclear. Discontinue observation.”

📊 Documented increase in “sensory phenomena” in children (2024–2025):

Reports in Middlesex County (MA):

- Visual disturbances: +160%

- Hearing voices: +120%

- “Phase jumps” (quoted): documented for the first time

What connects these cases? Who has access to the data?

We discovered a possible connection to a network of research institutions specializing in neural stimulus processing—one of which is located near Fitchburg. The organization: officially neutral. Unofficially, it has international connections—with access to data that shouldn't even exist and contacts in government projects. The name of the institution? Upon request: “Not approved for publication.”

But an internal report from 2007 – leaked anonymously – refers to a “prototype case with structural openness to external influence.”

The sentence that sticks with us:

“The mistake was not in the technology. It was in someone watching.”

And

> *“The first attempt was unstable. But revealing.”*

Who was test subject C2? And what was the test?

The official version: Steve F. was a child with mental health issues.

The unofficial theory: He was in the wrong place at the wrong time. And he saw something that was not meant for children's eyes – or for human eyes at all.

Our source speaks of a “mental scanning experiment” using directed radiation. The goal: to detect latent neural structures. Translated: mind control at the push of a button. Or as one insider put it: “Hearing thoughts before they are thought.”

And Steve wasn't the only one.

How did we find out about this?

Sometimes it's not what is said – but what is lost.

An orthodox clergyman in Concord mentioned in a private letter the confession of a child who “saw a being disappear.” The letter found its way, via a circuitous route, to an antiquarian bookshop in Vermont—one of those shops that exchange more information than books.

A former Boston Globe journalist came across a note there that she couldn't get out of her head. Three years later, she left the US – and has been supplying Die Wahrheit (TM) with what she calls “scraps of the lie” ever since.

 

⚠️ WARNING: How you might recognize the “big scan”

  • Children repeatedly describe the same scene – without ever having had contact with each other
  • Local interference (radio, Wi-Fi, smart devices react slowly or not at all)
  • “Spontaneous memory lapses” without traumatic context
  • Recurring dreams of circular symbols, lights, or “a voice in the wall”

 

“If you found Steve F. today and asked him, would he remember? Would he have the answers?”

 

📢 Appeal from the editors

You may consider this article absurd. Fabricated nonsense.

“Just another conspiracy theory.”

You are entitled to your opinion.

What you are not entitled to do is look away.

What if what Steve F. saw in 2006 was not an exception, but the beginning?

The truth will continue to be uncovered.

For Steve.

For the children.

For what they do not want us to see.


Kommentar hinzufügen

Kommentare

Es gibt noch keine Kommentare.