What do you all think about cases involving missing or deceased scientists? I have come across several stories where researchers, sometimes working in sensitive or high stakes fields, either disappeared or died under unclear circumstances, and it raises a lot of questions for me. Do you think these are mostly coincidences and personal situations, or could there sometimes be bigger forces at play such as political or industrial interests?
I am really curious how you see this. Are these cases usually explainable, or do you think some of them remain genuinely suspicious?
Busy_Pea_1853 on
Domestic “Three Body Problem”
Kevin_or on
If Fox News is reporting on it….theres likely a reason. Distraction tactics. People in charge of whatever shit is actually going on are trying to focus people’s attention elsewhere
Quintus_Germanicus on
Perhaps some of these scientists were recruited for a secret project and we are not being told because it falls under “national security”. That would be one possibility. We would need to investigate the fields in which these scientists specialise.
Or perhaps these scientists were eliminated because they know things that fall under “national security”.
Either way, the disappearance of these scientists is cause for concern. Something is not right.
Bn1999 on
This segment from The Will Cain Show discusses cases involving missing and deceased scientists, highlighting patterns and raising questions about potential underlying causes.
R2robot on
I think it is coincidence until there is evidence that says otherwise. My previous comment:
Apparently shot by the same guy that was the suspect for the shootings at Brown University, who then killed himself.
Doesn’t seem to be any connections to me.
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People die and go missing every day. If you filter or focus just on scientists, then that’s what you’re going to see.
> Approximately 600,000 people are reported missing in the U.S. every year. While this number is high, the vast majority of cases are resolved quickly, often within 48 hours. **However, tens of thousands of cases can remain active at any given time, with roughly 4,400 unidentified bodies recovered annually**.
6 Comments
What do you all think about cases involving missing or deceased scientists? I have come across several stories where researchers, sometimes working in sensitive or high stakes fields, either disappeared or died under unclear circumstances, and it raises a lot of questions for me. Do you think these are mostly coincidences and personal situations, or could there sometimes be bigger forces at play such as political or industrial interests?
I am really curious how you see this. Are these cases usually explainable, or do you think some of them remain genuinely suspicious?
Domestic “Three Body Problem”
If Fox News is reporting on it….theres likely a reason. Distraction tactics. People in charge of whatever shit is actually going on are trying to focus people’s attention elsewhere
Perhaps some of these scientists were recruited for a secret project and we are not being told because it falls under “national security”. That would be one possibility. We would need to investigate the fields in which these scientists specialise.
Or perhaps these scientists were eliminated because they know things that fall under “national security”.
Either way, the disappearance of these scientists is cause for concern. Something is not right.
This segment from The Will Cain Show discusses cases involving missing and deceased scientists, highlighting patterns and raising questions about potential underlying causes.
I think it is coincidence until there is evidence that says otherwise. My previous comment:
> Dr. Carl Grillmair
https://abc7.com/post/man-charged-killing-caltech-astrophysicist-carl-grillmair-llano-carjacking-own-relative-burglarizing-home/18626990/
Suspect arrested and charged.
> Dr. Manuel Loureiro
https://www.cbsnews.com/boston/news/mit-professor-nuno-loureiro-murder-new-reports/
Apparently shot by the same guy that was the suspect for the shootings at Brown University, who then killed himself.
Doesn’t seem to be any connections to me.
—-
People die and go missing every day. If you filter or focus just on scientists, then that’s what you’re going to see.
> Approximately 600,000 people are reported missing in the U.S. every year. While this number is high, the vast majority of cases are resolved quickly, often within 48 hours. **However, tens of thousands of cases can remain active at any given time, with roughly 4,400 unidentified bodies recovered annually**.
Just picked doctor at random and searched: https://i.imgur.com/ArgTl1u.png