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  • 🌊 Are Gravity Weapons Real?

🌊 Are Gravity Weapons Real?

Plus: What the "Cybertruck" bomber wrote in his manifesto

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On New Year’s Day, a Tesla Cybertruck exploded outside Trump Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada. Dead inside – by a self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities say – was Matthew Livelsberger, a 37-year-old Army Green Beret.

While Livelsberger was reportedly burnt beyond recognition, police said they retrieved notes from his phone that read, “This was not a terrorist attack, it was a wake up call.”

“Americans only pay attention to spectacles and violence
What better way to get my point across than a stunt with fireworks and explosives?”

But what was Livelsberger’s point?

Information has since come out in patches.

He was home in Colorado on leave from Germany when he reportedly got in a fight with his wife, who had accused him of cheating on her, sources told the New York Post. He then rented a Cybertruck, texted an ex, and drove to Las Vegas. On New Year’s Day, his vehicle exploded, causing seven injuries but no fatalities. His uncle subsequently told The Independent that Livelsberger was “100 per cent loving the country
He loved Trump, and he was always a very, very patriotic soldier, a patriotic American.”

Two days later, Sam Shoeman – an Army veteran who runs a veteran-focused Instagram page with 50,000 followers – went on ex-Navy Seal Shawn Ryan’s podcast. On the show – which has 6M+ subscribers – Shoeman read an email he had received on December 31.

“In case I do not make it to my decision point or on to the Mexico border I am sending this now. Please do not release this until 1JAN and keep my identity private until then,” it began.

“What we have been seeing with ‘drones’ is the operational use of gravitic propulsion systems powered aircraft by most recently China in the east coast, but throughout history, the US. Only we and China have this capability.”

“China has been launching them from the Atlantic from submarines for years, but this activity recently has picked up...because of the speed and stealth of these unmanned AC, they are the most dangerous threat to national security that has ever existed. They basically have an unlimited payload capacity and can park it over the WH [White House] if they wanted. It's checkmate.”

“USG needs to give the history of this, how we are employing it and weaponizing it, how China is employing them and what the way forward is
China is poised to attack anywhere in the east coast.” 

“I've been followed for over a week now from likely homeland or FBI, and they are looking to move on me and are unlikely going to let me cross into Mexico, but won't because they know i am armed and I have a massive VBIED [vehicle-based improved explosive device – car bomb].”

A day later, the Cybertruck exploded.

Livelsberger’s mental state remains a subject of speculation: Many who knew him were reportedly shocked by the bombing and suicide, while others close to him said he was mentally unwell and had changed mental illness-related medication within days of the event.

We won’t speculate over that, but we became interested in one term used in his email: “Gravitic propulsion systems.”

What did that mean? Are they real? Are they dangerous? 

That is the subject of today’s newsletter. 

The rest of this investigation is only for paid subscribers. You can become one – and fund our journalism – by starting a two-week free trial. Once you do, you can access all of our articles here!

Editor’s Note

Tons of feedback to Tuesday’s article, with a lot of love shown to Don, the “hillbilly” we profiled. If you missed that article, you can find it here. From your feedback, we realized that while we had sought to tell a story about a unique American culture, we ended up telling the age-old tale of why you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover.

Thank you for all of your feedback. Rest assured, even if we don’t respond, we read and appreciate every piece of mail we get.

See you in a few days.

–Max and Max

RocaNews co-founders