General Discussion, Thursday, March 26, 2026

Day FOUR HUNDRED THIRTY-ONE of Presidential recovery.

 

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25 Responses to General Discussion, Thursday, March 26, 2026

  1. WeeWeed's avatar WeeWeed says:

    Mornin’ kids! Our buddy T has errands this morning so we must serve ourselves!

    Liked by 3 people

  2. WeeWeed's avatar WeeWeed says:

    πŸ˜€

    Liked by 3 people

  3. czarina33's avatar czarina33 says:

    National Nougat Day – Made by whipping egg whites together and adding honey or sugar, roasted nuts, and sometimes candied fruit, some say nougat has been a sweet treat since ancient Rome. Enjoyed both as a candy all on its own or paired with chocolate or other flavorings.

    National Spinach Day

    Epilepsy Awareness Day – PurpleDay

    National Equal Pay Day

    Liked by 2 people

  4. auscitizenmom's avatar auscitizenmom says:

    Mornin’ All. It is sunny, with a perfectly clear blue sky right here and down in the 30’s, with a little breeze. Looks to be a nice day.

    Hope you all have a nice day, too.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. auscitizenmom's avatar auscitizenmom says:

    Liked by 2 people

  6. Stella's avatar Stella says:

    Very cool war story.

    Like

  7. Stella's avatar Stella says:

    Useful. How to make people actually listen to you. He opens with this, something I have said for years. I even had a big argument with my boss about it, because he wasn’t careful about written communication:

    His opening line hit like a truck: your success in life will be determined largely by your ability to speak, your ability to write, and the quality of your ideas in that order.

    Not your GPA. Not your pedigree. Not your IQ. How you speak is what separates people who get heard from people who get ignored.

    Like

  8. Stella's avatar Stella says:

    More about the missing scientists from X – ‘@Cortex_Zero
    (some repeat info).

    Anthony Chavez, 78, a retired longtime Los Alamos National Laboratory employee, disappeared from his Los Alamos home in May 2025. His car was still there. Inside, his wallet, keys, and cigarettes were left on the table. Detectives found no signs of a struggle, and cadaver dogs turned up nothing. He has never been found.

    Weeks later, Melissa Casias, a Los Alamos National Laboratory employee, vanished in Taos County. Her purse, wallet, cash, and both cell phones were found at home. Family told the Albuquerque Journal the phones had been factory-reset. Surveillance later captured her on foot along N.M. 518 with a backpack. Search efforts followed, including canine units, but the case remains unresolved. Her husband also worked at LANL.

    Then, in February 2026, retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland disappeared from his Albuquerque home. He left behind his phone, prescription glasses, and wearable devices. Investigators say his wallet, revolver, holster, and red backpack remain unaccounted for. Authorities canvassed more than 700 homes and searched with dogs, drones, and helicopters. Still, no confirmed sighting has established how he left or where he went.

    Standing alone, each case is disturbing. Taken together, they form a pattern that deserves serious scrutiny. In each case, critical personal effects were left behind. In each case, searches failed to produce answers. And in each case, the person at the center was tied not to random circumstances, but to the same broader New Mexico scientific and defense ecosystem: LANL, LANL, AFRL. That does not prove a common cause. But it absolutely makes the occupational overlap impossible to dismiss. It appears that a repeated signature is emerging across cases that authorities have not publicly linked.

    Three disappearances. One corridor. Empty rooms, abandoned essentials, negative searches, and no answers. At minimum, this is a pattern. At worst, it is a warning.

    Like

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