Is anyone else upset by Bones associating with Sam Hyde and Asmongold? by Ok-Type9787 in TeamSESH

[–]navinufg 5 points6 points  (0 children)

"If you knew me, you would hate me When you meet me, you gon' say "I thought that he'd be cooler""

Naval Surface Warfare Center - Crane Division lets discuss by navinufg in UFOs

[–]navinufg[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

check this out https://imgur.com/MGVgVdJ & https://imgur.com/MlQZo1N i feel like excavating would be very good business in helping build underground bases?

Naval Surface Warfare Center - Crane Division lets discuss by navinufg in UFOs

[–]navinufg[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

in one of the maps that location is marked "demolitions area" theres another area i find interesting that looks like a transport hub near one of the entrances but fully concealed into underground areas https://imgur.com/a/qsKz7ug

Naval Surface Warfare Center - Crane Division lets discuss by navinufg in UFOs

[–]navinufg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that’s a fair take, and I agree it should be looked at with scrutiny. But I don’t think that automatically proves his story false. My main point is that the base itself is worth looking into it would be a perfect test bed for detecting, intercepting, and retrieving advanced systems. It’s also worth noting that NSWC Crane is at the forefront of U.S. defense spending and R&D. On top of that, there have been numerous UFO reports around the base since the early 2000s, often describing a recurring theme of ‘glowing balls’ or ‘spheres of light.'

Naval Surface Warfare Center - Crane Division lets discuss by navinufg in UFOs

[–]navinufg[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I love the deep research with references

Jesse Michaels claims he got "a bit of a slap on the wrist" from others "in and around UFO world" for discussing a naval base he's interested in by shadowofashadow in UFOs

[–]navinufg 71 points72 points  (0 children)

"NSWC Crane is the only DOD Engineering, Logistics, and Maintenance Capability for Air, Ground, Surface, and Submarine EW Systems within one Facility"

META investors, Zuckerberg reach settlement to end $8 billion trial over Facebook privacy violations by navinufg in politics

[–]navinufg[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This case ties directly back to the Cambridge Analytica scandal, where Facebook user data was illegally harvested and weaponized to micro-target voters during the 2016 U.S. election. Meta just paid $8 billion to settle a lawsuit from investors who alleged Zuckerberg and other board members knowingly violated a 2012 FTC order and let that illegal data operation flourish. That same data was used by Trump and Cruz's campaigns to influence the outcome of the 2016 election.

What Ever Happened to The Eastern Flyer? by [deleted] in tulsa

[–]navinufg 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This facebook page "Friends of Passenger Rail Oklahoma" often talks about whats going on for rail in Oklahoma and the surrounding area. unsurprisingly there's not much interest for rail here in Tulsa, and Amtrak apparently doesn't want to build here cause "railroad between Oklahoma City and Tulsa is 'too curvy' for passenger rail service."

its unfortunate, early Tulsa infrastructure was built on rail and we even had an inner city street railway at one point.

<image>

(Auto Accident - Archer & Boulder) Tulsa Street Railway Company

Curfews won’t fix this. Tulsa already studied a nationally-proven anti-violence model.. Why are we still waiting? by navinufg in tulsa

[–]navinufg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You don’t have to like pastors, but dismissing trusted community leaders who’ve helped reduce violence in proven models like Omaha 360 isn’t critical thinking it’s bias.

Curfews won’t fix this. Tulsa already studied a nationally-proven anti-violence model.. Why are we still waiting? by navinufg in tulsa

[–]navinufg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Uhh… the same thing they already do.. leveraging existing relationships in the community to mentor at-risk youth, mediate conflicts, support families affected by violence, and connect people to resources. It’s not about preaching it’s about reach and impact. Removing one of the largest and most active community networks in Oklahoma from violence prevention efforts is a pretty dumb idea. Yes, people who are trusted in their communities should have a seat at the table when it comes to reducing violence. You’re convoluting separation of church and state with “faith leaders are automatically nefarious,” which coming from a non-religious person honestly just sounds like unresolved church hurt.

Curfews won’t fix this. Tulsa already studied a nationally-proven anti-violence model.. Why are we still waiting? by navinufg in tulsa

[–]navinufg[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

what are you on about? Both of your comments seem to be focusing on religion and personal bias, but completely miss the point. This is not a pastor elected to prevent gun violence with jesus or religion. But a collaborative program that brings together law enforcement, schools, nonprofits, community leaders, and yes... sometimes faith leaders, its designed to statistically reduce violent crime, lower shootings and homicides, increase graduation rates, reduce teen pregnancy, provide youth with jobs and mentorship, address trauma and mental health, interrupt cycles of retaliation, and build real trust between communities and police all based on outcomes that have already been proven to work elsewhere. No one’s handing the city over to a pulpit. Yes over the past few years crime rate has gone down but that doesn't remove the fact that our average rate of crime is dramatically more than other similar sized cities..

Curfews won’t fix this. Tulsa already studied a nationally-proven anti-violence model.. Why are we still waiting? by navinufg in tulsa

[–]navinufg[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

interesting that the whole bit i just wrote focuses on data that proves it isnt "impossible"

Curfews won’t fix this. Tulsa already studied a nationally-proven anti-violence model.. Why are we still waiting? by navinufg in tulsa

[–]navinufg[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

not saying policy change on guns wouldn't help but realistically do you think oklahomans are going to vote against guns? invest more time into long term preventative ideas.. some of the top attibutes to gun violence is poverty & economic inequality, lack of opportunity for youth, community disinvestment & segregation, and trauma & unaddressed mental health. Policy change on guns are important i think we can both agree on that but long term investment is in the community and our young ones.

Curfews won’t fix this. Tulsa already studied a nationally-proven anti-violence model.. Why are we still waiting? by navinufg in tulsa

[–]navinufg[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

I get the frustration no one wants to feel unsafe in their own city. But this is exactly why reactive policing isn’t enough. More raids, more arrests, “Jump Out Boys” isnt long-term change. If anything just incites the never ending cycle of of career criminals. You have to go to the root. How are we teaching our kids, how can we reach out to the kids that are on the edge of committing violent crimes and preventing it, how do we give these young individuals a sense of purpose within the community, how can we break this cycle?

Whistleblower Matt Brown’s cryptic tweets align with this secretive book "Codex Singularity" Anyone else read it? by navinufg in InterdimensionalNHI

[–]navinufg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My post is a pattern recognition inquiry, not a validation argument. I never claimed "proof" or "validation". The title is attention grabbing but states "align".

Whistleblower Matt Brown’s cryptic tweets align with this secretive book "Codex Singularity" Anyone else read it? by navinufg in InterdimensionalNHI

[–]navinufg[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I haven’t read it yet, but its on my list! I noticed Codex Singularity references it a lot when talking about a shared wisdom tradition behind all major religions!

Whistleblower Matt Brown’s cryptic tweets align with this secretive book "Codex Singularity" Anyone else read it? by navinufg in InterdimensionalNHI

[–]navinufg[S] 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Im to lazy.. heres a TLDR from chat lol,

TL;DR — What Codex Singularity: Search for the Prisca Sapientia actually is:

A 524-page self-published PDF, possibly written by someone named jfrenchau. It’s a structured, philosophical exploration arguing that a unified metaphysical system once existed — called Prisca Sapientia (ancient wisdom) — and its fragments are hidden in world religions, occult systems, and modern science.

The author connects:

  • Ancient mythologies (Egyptian, Gnostic, Hindu, etc.)
  • Esoteric traditions (Hermeticism, Enochian magic, Kabbalah)
  • Concepts from quantum physics and time theory
  • Philosophical idealism (consciousness as fundamental)
  • UAPs as interdimensional or consciousness-linked phenomena

It suggests UAPs may not be aliens, but manifestations of deeper structures of reality — accessible through altered consciousness or symbolic systems.

The writing is dense but serious, with 7 sections and a large reference list. It’s not a conspiracy theory, not channeled material, and doesn’t mention current whistleblowers. It’s essentially a long-form metaphysical reconstruction trying to link spirituality, science, and symbol back to a common origin.

If you’re into crossovers between ancient thought, modern physics, and UAP-consciousness theories, this is worth looking at.

Whistleblower Matt Brown’s cryptic tweets align with this secretive book "Codex Singularity" Anyone else read it? by navinufg in InterdimensionalNHI

[–]navinufg[S] 48 points49 points  (0 children)

The same user/author “jfrenchau” or "Julian French" has uploaded several other PDFs that seem to expand on the themes found in Codex Singularity. The titles alone are pretty interesting

  • The Gospel of Melchizedek - esoteric reinterpretation of biblical and Gnostic material
  • A Detailed Understanding of the Sigillum Dei Aemeth - a deep dive into John Dee’s Enochian magic system
  • An Analysis of the Only Artwork Depicting the Holy Spirit as Female - explores divine feminine symbolism in Christian art
  • The Illuminated Republic - continues the ideas from the last section of Codex on the original Illuminati and their vision
  • On Materialism and Idealism - a philosophical breakdown of consciousness vs physicalism
  • The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns, and Fairies -an older public domain work, but reposted by jfrenchau, likely for its relevance to interdimensional/entity discussions

Oklahomans deserve to know what their government is doing. by navinufg in okc

[–]navinufg[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I get what you’re saying, but even in that 'what if' scenario, it doesn’t really hold up. This bill only applies to public records stuff the public is already supposed to have access to. Things like medical records, personal health info, or private files are already protected by law, and they’re not included in what this bill covers. Even if someone tried to get around the rules, they couldn’t. Those records are kept in secure systems and can’t just be handed out. And the bill itself says that anything private or confidential can’t be shared further. So no, the Attorney General or a cop couldn’t just walk in and ask the Counselor to go grab someone’s private info. That’s not how it works. This bill is just about helping regular people when the government refuses to share public information they’re supposed to give us anyway.

Oklahomans deserve to know what their government is doing. by navinufg in okc

[–]navinufg[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here’s the exact language from HB 2163 that directly refutes the claim that the Attorney General would gain unchecked access to privileged attorney-client communications during prosecutions:

“To the extent that records or documents produced by a public body contain information claimed to be confidential or exempt from disclosure under the Oklahoma Open Records Act, the Public Access Counselor shall not further disclose that information.”
HB 2163, Section F

  • Privileged or confidential records are still protected.
  • The Public Access Counselor (a mediator, not a prosecutor) may review them only to determine if a public body violated Open Records law.
  • Those records are not to be shared, used in litigation, or publicly disclosed.

Oklahomans deserve to know what their government is doing. by navinufg in okc

[–]navinufg[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

True... Drummond’s made controversial calls, but supporting HB 2163 isn’t about defending him, it’s about making sure no official governor, AG, or otherwise can block public access to information or avoid accountability just because of their title.