Veteran Journalist Covering Jeffrey Epstein Flees Directed Energy Weapons Attacks

A remarkable and deeply controversial claim is now circulating after a New York Post report highlighted the story of journalist Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez, who says she is leaving the United States after allegedly experiencing what she describes as “directed energy weapons” attacks connected to her reporting on Jeffrey Epstein and his New Mexico network. According to the article, Valdes-Rodriguez believes she suffered symptoms resembling what has often been referred to as “Havana syndrome,” a term tied to mysterious neurological incidents reported by diplomats, intelligence officers, and other government personnel.

For years, discussions surrounding directed energy weapons and Havana syndrome have largely been confined to the world of intelligence agencies, embassies, military operations, and classified national security conversations. Governments, particularly in the United States, have generally framed the issue as one affecting diplomats, CIA personnel, or other officials operating overseas. The public narrative has consistently suggested that these incidents are rare, specialized, and tied to geopolitical conflict. That framing has frustrated many so-called “targeted individuals,” ordinary civilians who have long argued that similar technologies or tactics can also be used domestically against non-governmental people.

Valdes-Rodriguez’s claims are now drawing attention precisely because she does not fit the traditional profile that officials have usually associated with these alleged attacks. She is not a diplomat stationed abroad. She is not an intelligence officer operating in a hostile foreign capital. She is a journalist and author who says her work investigating Epstein’s New Mexico connections placed her in dangerous territory. Whether people believe her claims or not, the significance lies in the fact that a mainstream media outlet is reporting on a civilian making allegations that resemble the same kinds of symptoms and experiences previously associated almost exclusively with government personnel.

That matters because targeted individuals have spent years arguing that the public conversation surrounding directed energy weapons has been artificially narrow. Many of them believe the government has dismissed or ignored civilians who report neurological symptoms, unexplained auditory phenomena, pressure sensations, sleep disruption, cognitive issues, or other unusual experiences. Critics have often labeled such claims as paranoia or conspiracy theories, particularly when they come from ordinary citizens without institutional backing. Yet when diplomats reported similar symptoms, the issue suddenly became a matter of congressional hearings, intelligence reviews, and national security investigations.

The contradiction has fueled enormous anger within targeted individual communities. Their argument has always been simple: if advanced technologies capable of affecting the human body exist at all, why would civilians automatically be excluded as possible targets? From their perspective, the government’s position has appeared inconsistent. On one hand, officials acknowledge mysterious neurological incidents affecting American personnel overseas. On the other hand, civilians making similar allegations are frequently dismissed outright before any serious inquiry occurs.

The Valdes-Rodriguez story is therefore being interpreted by some as a potential crack in that wall of skepticism. Again, none of this proves her allegations are true, nor does it independently verify the existence of a domestic directed energy campaign against civilians. But the mere fact that a journalist connected to high-profile Epstein reporting is publicly describing experiences she believes are linked to directed energy attacks gives new visibility to a conversation that has long existed on the fringes.

The Epstein angle also intensifies public intrigue because his network has remained the subject of endless speculation regarding intelligence ties, elite protection systems, blackmail operations, and institutional failures. Whenever someone connected to investigating Epstein makes alarming claims, those claims inevitably attract attention far beyond the usual audience interested in Havana syndrome debates. That combination — Epstein, intelligence speculation, and alleged directed energy attacks — creates a story that many people will view through the lens of secrecy and distrust toward powerful institutions.

Skeptics will naturally argue there is still no publicly verified evidence proving that civilians are being targeted with directed energy weapons inside the United States. They will point to psychological explanations, environmental factors, stress responses, or misinformation spreading online. Others, however, will argue that history shows governments often acknowledge controversial technologies only years after denying or minimizing them. To those people, the Valdes-Rodriguez story reinforces the belief that the official narrative surrounding Havana syndrome and related phenomena may be incomplete.

What cannot be denied is that the conversation itself is evolving. A topic once limited to intelligence briefings and diplomatic circles is increasingly spilling into mainstream media discussions involving journalists, activists, and private citizens. Whether one sees that as validation, speculation, or something in between, stories like this ensure that the debate over directed energy weapons and civilian targeting is unlikely to disappear anytime soon.

Who’s To Blame For The Measles Outbreak?

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An interesting segment on MSNOW’s All In with Chris Hayes took up the recent measles outbreaks appearing in several parts of the United States, and the thrust of the discussion left little room for ambiguity. Hayes framed the issue as one of clear responsibility, arguing that the resurgence of measles could be laid at the feet of HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. His guest, Dr. Peter Hotez, fully endorsed that view, tying the outbreaks directly to Kennedy’s long-standing skepticism toward vaccines and suggesting that his influence and policies had helped create the conditions for a public-health setback many believed had been settled decades ago.

After posting the segment on my X account, I was struck by the volume and intensity of the reaction. What stood out most was how sharply many viewers disagreed with Dr. Hotez’s conclusion that Kennedy alone was to blame. A significant share of the pushback came from Kennedy supporters and MAHA advocates, who argued that the segment ignored other plausible explanations for the spike in cases and instead defaulted to a neat but overly simplistic villain.

To their credit, the defenses offered were not frivolous. The most common argument centered on immigration, with critics pointing to the Biden administration’s border policies and asserting that millions of unvaccinated migrants entered the country over the past several years. In that telling, the rise in measles cases is less a consequence of Kennedy’s tenure at HHS and more the predictable outcome of population flows that public-health systems were unprepared to fully screen or vaccinate at scale. Whether one accepts the numbers often cited or not, the broader point they raised was that outbreaks do not occur in a vacuum and cannot be explained solely by the views of one cabinet secretary.

Others highlighted comparative data, noting that Canada—despite having a far smaller population—has reported higher measles case counts than the United States. That comparison, which does check out, was presented as evidence that blaming Kennedy exclusively does not withstand scrutiny. If a country with different leadership, a different health minister, and broadly pro-vaccine public policy is experiencing an even larger outbreak, then the causes are likely more complex than a single official’s ideology.

A third line of argument leaned heavily on lived experience. Many commenters recalled that measles was common when they were children, rarely fatal, and often treated as an inconvenient but unremarkable rite of passage that kept kids home from school for a week. From that perspective, they questioned whether measles should be treated as a dire public-health emergency at all, arguing that it is generally mild, rarely deadly, and even beneficial in building natural immunity. That view, while controversial and disputed by much of the medical community, remains deeply ingrained among a sizable portion of the public and cannot simply be dismissed as ignorance or bad faith.

Taken together, these reactions underscore a larger reality that the segment only partially captured. There is little dispute that a rise in measles cases is a legitimate concern and that public-health officials should take outbreaks seriously. It is also fair to scrutinize Secretary Kennedy’s anti-vaccine record and question how his rhetoric may shape public attitudes. But it is far less convincing to argue that the problem can be laid entirely at his feet. Immigration patterns, international trends, historical experience, and long-standing skepticism about vaccines all intersect here, complicating any attempt to assign singular blame. Reasonable people can agree the outbreak deserves attention while also recognizing that responsibility is more diffuse than the television debate suggested.