**CLASSIFIED PULSE — NH-7 // OFFLINE DISTRIBUTION**

CLASSIFIED PULSE — NH-7 // OFFLINE DISTRIBUTION

DEW DROP – Omaha, under cloak.

Sources deep within the Geico actuarial division have confirmed that the Oracle’s personal vault is no longer just for treasuries. Berkshire Hathaway has quietly, very quietly, liquidated a significant portion of its long-held Coca-Cola position—not for cash, but for land.

We’re hearing whispers out of the Nebraska Sandhills: BRK has acquired, through shell LLCs registered in Wyoming and Delaware, a contiguous block of over 400,000 acres straddling the Ogallala Aquifer. The paperwork lists the purchase price as “agricultural support,” but the aerial reconnaissance tells a different story.

There isn’t a single tractor blade being touched out there. The only activity? A single, non-descript hangar under construction.

The whisper network says it’s a “seed bank” facility—but not for corn. This is rare earth mineral processing, my friends. Deep extraction. The kind of yield that makes insurance premiums look like pocket change. Chairman and his right hand are betting the next currency war will be fought over what sits in the ground, not what prints on paper.

The official story is “portfolio diversification.” The off-the-record story? They’re building an ark for the American lithium supply chain, far from any prying eyes in the Shenandoah.

You didn’t hear this from me. Watch the dirt. The dirt is the new gold.