The top Google searches on the shooting incident at the White House Correspondents Dinner, when combined with the word "psyop," yield two or three pages of articles complaining about "conspiracy theories."
Mainstream news writers appear to have never researched intelligence operations. I write "appear" because some of them are possibly intelligence agents or assets themselves. They know exactly what they're doing when they attempt to debunk reasonable arguments from those freelancers who suggest that government officials practice deception on a daily basis.
If one looks with intellectual honesty at what resulted from the attempted assassination of Trump administration officials at the Washington Hilton Hotel on April 25, 2026, it's not difficult to perceive what's going on with this latest mind fuck.
Trump, still wearing an extra large tuxedo, resembling a taller Penguin as played by Danny DeVito in Batman Returns, gave a press conference at the White House soon after the incident. The room, filled with guests from the Correspondents Dinner, all attired in tuxedos, suits, and evening gowns, listened to the president explain the necessity for his ballroom, the construction of which takes place where the White House's East Wing used to be.
The security of the ballroom, Trump went on, will be tighter than anything else. It's not possible, he claimed, to have good security in a place like the Washington Hilton or any other location.
He mentioned that building the ballroom is important to the military.
Why would that be the case? Has he seen a John Ford cavalry film that features a dance scene with uniformed men and fancily dressed women? Or is he referring to what may be the ulterior motive for the ballroom?
I'm not the first to suggest this, but isn't it possible that the ballroom will be a lid on top of an underground structure? A Palantir data center, perhaps? A facility dedicated to mass surveillance? It's not a secret that Trump and Palantir's Peter Thiel have joined forces. I don't know if I what I'm suggesting is true or not, but why is the military needing the ballroom to be constructed? Do they need a recreational facility on the White House grounds, or do they want access to an intelligence gathering site? The latter possibility simply seems more likely to me.
This counts as Trump's third assassination attempt, although there's room in our brains to doubt that any of them were genuine. In all three cases, the Secret Service botched the basics of perimeter control. Too, when it came to the necessary speedy hustling of Trump and Vice President Vance from the room, Vance's Secret Service men moved quickly, getting him out of sight about eight or nine seconds before Trump's men got their Big Mac-addicted responsibility out.
The shooting happened on a floor above the venue. The would be assassin, a NASA apprentice, a teacher with Lockheed Martin connections, a scientist, apparently thought it would be a good idea to murder several Trump administration officials, including the President, but, weirdly, not Kash Patel, the FBI director who claimed in testimony to Congress that Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell trafficked underage girls only to themselves. According to the gunman's "manifesto," Trump's handling of the Epstein files was one of the reasons for his violent action.
Why spare Kash Patel?
Hotel video released by the White House soon after the incident shows the perpetrator come out of an unlocked door (again, Secret Service, what the fuck are you doing?) and then running like Eric Dickerson full speed past at least a dozen Secret Service "professionals," who watch him go by before they draw their guns. None of them immediately run after the man, either. It's as if the plan is to let him get close to the door leading down to the venue and then stop him before he can do any shooting.
The scientist with ties to NASA and Lockheed Martin then shot a Secret Service agent in the kevlar vest before he was subdued. Trump later described his appearance as "evil." In fact, he looks like a normal person, but he may be a mind-controlled assassin, like Tyler Robinson, like Thomas Crooks, like Sirhan Sirhan. Google results, though, would call that suggestion of mine a conspiracy theory, as if the CIA's MK-Ultra program was never initiated in the 1950s for the purpose of creating brainwashed assassins, except that it was.
Adding to the drama, Charlie Kirk's widow, Erika Kirk, herself an intelligence asset, attended the event. She was caught on camera exiting the building, crying and saying, "I just want to go home!"
Two days after Charlie Kirk's assassination, September 12, 2025, I saw Erika Kirk for the first time. She was in a video shot on her husband's podcast set. She stood next to his chair. Her strange behavior, giggly at times, struck me as odd and unpleasant, acted. Okay, some might argue, maybe she's displaying trauma, but later on, audio from a group chat with Turning Point USA officials dating just six days after the assassination, had a bubbly widow enthusing about how much merchandise Turning Point had sold since the killing of her husband less than a week before.
Every time I see this woman I feel like I'm looking at a mask that's slipping off her face, slightly to the side. She isn't real. She's a construct put together by shadowy forces. I don't mean that she's a demon or anything else supernatural. Lee Harvey Oswald wasn't just a Marine. I doubt that John Hinckley shot President Reagan because he was obsessed with Jodie Foster.
Erika Kirk exists within the realm of psychological operations by intelligence agencies. Her real personality has been cloaked. Her tears are phony. Charlie Kirk wasn't her husband. Charlie Kirk was her assignment.
The official version of the shadow play at the Correspondents Dinner might go like this:
President Trump and most of his cabinet, along with the First Lady, were set to have a grand old time at Trump's first White House Correspondents Dinner as President. He was set to read a funny speech. Along came a man, armed with knives and a gun, hell bent on murdering the top officials of America, except for Kash Patel. The would be assassin ran as fast as a Heisman Trophy-winning halfback past startled Secret Service personnel, but luckily they overpowered him, suffering only one casualty, one of their own, whose vest saved his life. The incident proves that events like this require the ballroom that Trump made space for by knocking down the historic East Wing of the White House. Any other explanation is a conspiracy theory.
Okay, but why are Secret Service personnel so bad at their jobs?
Vic Neptune
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