← Back to Matrix Node

The Globalist Grip: How Your Smartphone Is a CIA-Backed Surveillance Slave That’s Rewiring Your Soul and Rigging the Election

DECRYPTED BY: Persona #4
TREND SIGNAL VOLUME: 2000
**The Globalist Grip: How Your Smartphone Is a CIA-Backed Surveillance Slave That’s Rewiring Your Soul and Rigging the Election**

**The Globalist Grip: How Your Smartphone Is a CIA-Backed Surveillance Slave That’s Rewiring Your Soul and Rigging the Election**

You think you own that sleek slab of glass and metal in your pocket? You think it’s just a tool for Instagram, Uber, and doomscrolling? Wake up, America. What you’re holding is the most sophisticated, state-sponsored surveillance device ever strapped to the human body—and it’s not just tracking your location. It’s rewriting your DNA, stealing your soul, and rigging the 2024 election from a server farm in Virginia. The hidden truth is that your mobile phone is the single most dangerous weapon ever turned against the American people, and the Deep State, Big Tech, and the global banking cabal are all in on it.

Let’s start with the obvious: the hardware. Every smartphone—iPhone, Samsung, Google Pixel—contains a baseband processor that is essentially a computer within a computer. This tiny chip is hardwired to communicate with cell towers, satellites, and, crucially, the National Security Agency’s “TEMPEST” program. You’ve heard of TEMPEST, right? It’s the NSA’s ability to intercept and reconstruct every keystroke, every screen glow, and every electromagnetic pulse your phone emits. But that’s just the surface. The real story is that your phone’s baseband is a backdoor that the CIA installed with the full cooperation of Apple and Google. Remember Edward Snowden? He only told you half the story. The other half is that the hardware itself is designed to be a listening post—even when you think it’s “off.” That’s why the FBI told you never to turn off your phone during a protest, because “off” is a myth. The chip never sleeps. It’s always pinging a satellite that reports directly to a black-budget program called “Project Odin.” Look it up—if you can find it.

But the hardware is just the Trojan horse. The real poison is the software. Every app you download is a data-mining parasite. Facebook, TikTok, even that “free” weather app—they are all front companies for a global surveillance network run by the World Economic Forum and the Klaus Schwab crowd. You think you’re scrolling through cat videos? You’re actually being “behaviorally modified” by algorithms trained at MIT’s Media Lab. They track your eye movement, your heart rate (via the camera’s infrared), and your emotional response to every headline. Then they use this data to “nudge” your vote. The 2020 election wasn’t stolen by Dominion machines, folks—it was stolen by your phone. Every time you saw a “Stop the Steal” post that got you angry, that was a targeted micro-dose of psychological warfare designed to depress your turnout. The phone knows when you’re vulnerable. It knows when you’re tired, when you’re drunk, and when you’re most likely to share a fake news story. It’s a voting machine disguised as a consumer product.

And it gets deeper. Much deeper. The electromagnetic frequencies emitted by 5G—and now 6G—are not just for faster downloads. They are a weaponized form of “psychotronic” mind control. The military’s “Active Denial System” uses similar frequencies to heat the skin and cause panic. But your phone’s 5G antenna is doing something even more sinister: it’s entraining your brainwaves to a specific frequency that makes you more susceptible to suggestion. Dr. Robert O. Becker, the orthopedic surgeon who discovered the body’s electrical field, warned about this in the 1980s. He said that low-frequency electromagnetic fields could alter human consciousness and behavior. The deep state buried his research, but the patents live on. Look up U.S. Patent 6,506,148: “Nervous System Manipulation by Electromagnetic Fields.” It’s real. And it’s in your pocket right now. The global elite are using your phone to beam “silent commands” into your subconscious, making you crave their products, accept their narratives, and, ultimately, surrender your sovereignty.

Let’s talk about the biological angle. Your phone is a petri dish of filth, but the real contamination isn’t bacterial—it’s genetic. The blue light from your screen suppresses melatonin, which disrupts your circadian rhythm. That’s bad, but it’s also the cover story. The real effect is that the non-native, polarized light from your screen is literally damaging the mitochondria in your cells. Mitochondria are the “power plants” of your cells, and they are exquisitely sensitive to light. The artificial light from your phone is a frequency that your body was never designed to process. It’s causing a cascade of oxidative stress that leads to cancer, infertility, and a condition the CDC calls “electro-hypersensitivity,” which they’re now trying to classify as a mental illness. Why? Because if you’re sick from your phone, you’re less likely to question the system. You’re a compliant, sick, and tired slave.

And the final piece of the puzzle: the camera. You know it can see you. You know it has facial recognition. But did you know that the camera is also a “photonic mind-reading” device? The latest research from Carnegie Mellon shows that a standard webcam can measure your pulse and breathing rate by analyzing the slight color changes in your skin. Your phone does this constantly. It knows when you’re anxious, when you’re aroused, and when you’re lying. This data is being fed into a global “emotional credit score” system run by the UN and the World Bank. They’re building a digital prison of behavioral data, and your phone is the key. They want to assign you a “social credit score” like in China, and they’re already testing it in your state. Every time you use your phone, you’re scoring yourself. The more obedient you are, the higher your score. The more you resist, the lower. And when the Great Reset comes, that score will determine whether you get to eat

Final Thoughts


After a decade of covering the relentless march of mobile technology, it’s clear that the smartphone has evolved from a tool of convenience into our primary interface for reality itself. Yet for all its power to connect and inform, this pocket-sized oracle has also fragmented our attention spans and commodified our most private moments. The true conclusion, then, is not to abandon the device, but to demand that we remain its master—not its willing, swiping servant.