DISCLOSURE, DISTRACTION, AND THE END OF THE INTERNET [DCP Omnibus]
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About this listen
Not with headlines screaming in red ink.
But with calm language, official tones, and stories printed as if they’ve always belonged there. This omnibus episode weaves together three threads that feel separate on the surface but hum with the same frequency underneath. First, a moment that should have stopped the world. A mainstream newspaper quietly acknowledges what was once dismissed as fantasy. No leak. No whistleblower. Just a paragraph, sitting politely on the page. Disclosure delivered without urgency. Without shock. Without resistance. We ask why it feels less like revelation and more like rehearsal. Then, we travel back to Brazil. January 1996. Varginha. Something falls from the sky and vanishes into ridicule. Thirty years later, the laughter stops. Doctors. Soldiers. Fighter pilots. Scientists. A neurosurgeon claims he examined a living non-human entity. A pilot reports a damaged cigar-shaped craft. Whispers of a U.S. military cargo plane retrieving “unknown cargo.” Missing footage. Intimidation. Men who knew too much. This no longer feels like an accident. It feels like timing. Finally, the lens pulls wider. From internet outrage cycles and dopamine economics to cult-like influencers, fractured tribes, and a culture that can no longer sit still. We spiral from a modern controversy into a deeper unease: that something in humanity quietly broke around the late 1990s. That reality itself feels thinner. Optional. Replaceable. Filtered. From AI and VR to Neuralink and the slow death of real-world connection, we ask whether this chaos is organic… or engineered. Are we evolving?
Or being nudged?
And if the strangest truths are now delivered without emotion, what does that say about the audience they’re being delivered to? No tidy answers.
No safe conclusions.
Just three stories, pressed together, until the cracks line up.
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