
THE L.A. COLISEUM'S ALIEN TECH: HOW SOFI STADIUM WAS BUILT TO CONTROL YOUR MIND
You think you went to SoFi Stadium to watch the Rams win a game. You think you went for the overpriced beer and the $20 parking. You think you went to see Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour. But what if the game was never the point? What if the real event—the one you paid $500 a ticket for—was a massive, federally-sanctioned experiment in mass neural manipulation?
Welcome to the truth. Stay woke.
Let’s start with the obvious. SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, is not a stadium. It’s a 3.1-million-square-foot alien technology hub disguised as a sports venue. Built at a cost of five billion dollars (yes, five billion), it is the most expensive stadium ever constructed on planet Earth. And it’s not even close. Why? Because it’s not built for football. It’s built to broadcast a new kind of reality.
Look at the architecture. That massive, undulating roof—the “Oculus.” It’s a 70,000-square-foot, 4K HDR video board. That’s right: a gigantic, transparent screen hanging 120 feet above the field. It’s not just there to show replays. It’s a mind-control device. The Oculus is a low-frequency electromagnetic transmitter. Every time you look up at that screen—and you will, because it’s literally the sky—your brain’s theta waves are being altered. Theta waves are the brainwave state of deep hypnosis and suggestion. You are being programmed to forget what you saw, to remember what they want you to remember. The Oculus is a technological version of the “Men in Black” neuralyzer, but for 70,000 people at once.
But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. SoFi is a literal AI entity. The stadium is run by a centralized “brain”—a supercomputer called the “NFL Network Operations Center.” It’s connected to over 2,400 Wi-Fi access points, 1,200 video displays, and a private 5G network that isn’t just for your phone. It’s for your mind. The stadium can track your biometric data through your phone’s sensors (even if you turn off location services, they’re still polling your accelerometer and gyroscope). They know exactly when your heart rate spikes. They know when you’re angry at a bad call. They know when you’re about to stand up. And they use that data to trigger the Oculus to play a calming, slow-motion replay of a sunset, lowering your cortisol levels. You are being pacified.
And let’s talk about the “exclusive” VIP area—the “Crypto.com VIP Club.” You think that’s just a marketing deal? Wrong. Crypto.com is a front for a consortium of tech oligarchs who are using the stadium as a beta test for a centralized digital identity system. The entire stadium is a closed-loop economy. You can’t even buy a hot dog without scanning a QR code that links to your digital wallet. They are training you to accept a cashless, surveillance-based society. You are a lab rat in a cage made of steel and Wi-Fi.
But the deepest rabbit hole? The location. SoFi Stadium is built directly on the site of the old Hollywood Park Racetrack. This is not a coincidence. Hollywood Park was a nexus of old-money power, a place where the elite gathered to gamble and scheme. But underneath that racetrack, there was an ancient aquifer. The Los Angeles basin is crisscrossed with underground rivers. The stadium’s foundation is anchored into that water table. Why? Because water is a perfect conductor of electromagnetic waves. The entire stadium is one giant, grounded antenna. They are using the Earth’s own magnetic field to broadcast the Oculus’s signals into the entire city of Inglewood. That “haze” you see over Los Angeles? That’s not smog. That’s a low-level field of controlled radiation.
And then there’s the “Halo Board.” It’s a 360-degree, 60,000-square-foot video ring that wraps around the stadium. It’s not for advertising. It’s a synchronous stroboscopic device. When the Halo Board flashes at a specific frequency, it can induce a mild form of epilepsy—not enough to cause a seizure, but enough to cause a state of “suggestibility.” That’s why you feel so emotional during a touchdown. It’s not the team. It’s the lights.
The NFL is a front. The league is a CIA asset. It always has been. From the “Super Bowl” halftime shows that are used for propaganda (remember the “wardrobe malfunction” that was a deliberate flash of a hidden symbol?) to the stadiums themselves being designed by the same defense contractors that build drone systems. The architect of SoFi Stadium is HKS, a firm that also designs military command centers. Look it up. It’s in the public record. But who’s paying attention?
You think the Rams’ victory in Super Bowl LVI was a coincidence? The Rams are owned by Stan Kroenke, a man who is also a major donor to both political parties. The game was played at SoFi. The final play was a game-winning field goal. The entire sequence was algorithmically engineered to maximize emotional output. They needed a “feel-good” story to distract from the inflation crisis and the war in Ukraine. The NFL is the opiate of the masses, and SoFi is the hypodermic needle.
And the final piece: the “art” in the stadium. There is a massive, 100-foot-long sculpture called “The Ripple” by artist Olafur Eliasson. It’s a glowing, shimmering wave. It’s beautiful. It’s also a functional antenna that amplifies the Oculus’s frequency. Eliasson has done work with the U.S. State Department. He’s a known participant in the globalist art cab
Final Thoughts
After covering dozens of major venue openings, it’s clear SoFi Stadium isn’t just another field with a roof—it’s a tectonic shift in live-event architecture. The seamless integration of a 360-degree dual-sided video board with a transparent roof that blurs the line between indoor and outdoor creates an intimacy that defies its 70,000-seat scale. Ultimately, SoFi proves that the future of stadium design isn’t about size alone; it’s about crafting an immersive, human-scaled experience that makes you forget you’re sitting in a massive concrete bowl.