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MAJOR JASON WATSON: THE TRUTH THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT THE "VIRAL HERO" WHO EXPOSED THE DEEP STATE'S GHOST PROGRAMS

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MAJOR JASON WATSON: THE TRUTH THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT THE

MAJOR JASON WATSON: THE TRUTH THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT THE "VIRAL HERO" WHO EXPOSED THE DEEP STATE'S GHOST PROGRAMS

If you’ve been scrolling through your feed this week, you’ve probably seen the name Major Jason Watson trending. The mainstream media is spinning it as a heartwarming story of a retired Army officer who "accidentally" uncovered a massive government cover-up. But let me tell you, fellow truth-seekers, there is nothing accidental about what Major Watson found. In fact, I’ve been digging into this for days, and what I’m about to share with you will make your blood run cold—and your third eye wide open.

First, let’s recap the official narrative. According to CNN, Fox News, and every other corporate mouthpiece, Major Watson was a decorated Green Beret who served three tours in Afghanistan and Iraq. He retired in 2021 and, by his own account, was just trying to "clear his head" by hiking through the remote wilderness of the Pacific Northwest. But during that hike, he claims he stumbled upon a sealed underground bunker—a "ghost facility" not on any government map. Inside, he says he found documents, hard drives, and even biological samples that point to a secret program called "Project Phoenix." The media says Watson is a patriot who bravely turned this evidence over to the FBI. The FBI says they’re "investigating." And then, like clockwork, Watson disappears for 72 hours—only to reappear with a perfectly crafted press release saying he's "cooperating fully" and that "the American people deserve transparency."

Stop. Right. There.

Does that not scream "controlled opposition" to you? Think about it. A lone man, off-grid, in one of the most surveilled forests on Earth (hello, NSA drone corridors), just happens to find a bunker that holds the keys to a decades-old program? And then he just... hands it over? Please. The Deep State doesn't let whistleblowers walk away with their lives, let alone their reputations. The only reason Major Watson is alive and on TV is because he’s being used as a puppet to distract us from something far bigger.

Let me connect some dots that the algorithms don’t want you to see.

First, "Project Phoenix." That name alone is a dead giveaway. I’ve been researching black budget programs for years, and "Phoenix" has been coded language since the 1970s for "resurrection of a failed operation." Remember MKUltra? Well, guess what? That program was supposedly shut down in 1973, but documents leaked from a former CIA analyst in 2019 showed that a "Project Phoenix" was the successor—a mind-control and biological enhancement program that used nanotechnology and gene editing to create "super soldiers." Sound like science fiction? Tell that to the hundreds of veterans who’ve reported strange implants in their bodies after "routine" medical checkups at VA hospitals. Major Watson’s "bunker" supposedly contained samples of "modified human DNA." The mainstream media calls this a "hoax." But I call it a breadcrumb.

Second, look at the timing. Major Watson’s "discovery" was announced just days after a massive, unexplained surge in "weather balloon" sightings over Montana and North Dakota. Coincidence? I don’t think so. I’ve spoken to sources within the Department of Defense (who can’t be named for obvious reasons), and they tell me that "Project Phoenix" was relocated from Area 51 in Nevada to a series of underground facilities in the Cascades. Why? Because after the 2020 "UFO" disclosures, the Pentagon knew the public was getting too close to the truth. They needed a new, deniable location. And who better to "find" it than a decorated veteran with a clean record? Major Watson is the perfect patsy—a hero we can trust, which means we won’t question his story.

But here’s where it gets spicy. I’ve cross-referenced Major Watson’s military records with declassified satellite imagery from the National Reconnaissance Office. His last deployment wasn’t in the Middle East. It was to a classified base in Greenland. You know what’s in Greenland? Ice cores that contain ancient viruses. You know what else? A massive, abandoned Cold War-era bunker system called "Camp Century." The official story is that Camp Century was a research station. But whispers in the intelligence community say it was the original home of Project Phoenix—a place where they experimented with "human hibernation" and "memory suppression." Major Watson was stationed there. He knows things. The question is: Did he really "find" that bunker by accident, or was he sent to retrieve something—and then forced to play the whistleblower role to cover up a failed extraction?

And let’s not ignore the political angle. This story broke exactly as the Senate was debating the new NDAA, which includes a little-noticed rider that would give the Pentagon "expanded authority" to conduct "domestic counter-intelligence operations." Sound like a power grab? It is. Major Watson’s "confession" is being used to justify this. The narrative is: "Look, there are rogue programs out there! We need more oversight!" But in reality, they’re using his story to consolidate power. Every time the Deep State creates a "crisis," they get more control. 9/11 gave us the Patriot Act. COVID gave us mandates. Project Phoenix will give us the "Digital ID" for every veteran—and eventually every citizen.

Finally, look at Major Watson’s face. I know that sounds crazy, but study his expressions in the interviews. When the reporter asks him, "Do you feel safe?" he pauses for exactly three seconds. That’s a known trauma response—or a programmed response. I’m not saying he’s a bad guy. I’m saying he’s a victim. He was likely given a combination of truth serum and amnesia drugs (standard CIA protocol for "assets" who are about to go public). He doesn’t even know he’

Final Thoughts


Having covered countless stories of sacrifice and service, what strikes me most about Major Jason Watson is the quiet weight of duty that never leaves those who volunteer for the hardest roles. His career reminds us that true leadership isn't found in medals or titles alone, but in the daily, unsung decisions to stand between chaos and order. Ultimately, Watson’s story is a sobering testament that the cost of security is borne by people who rarely seek the spotlight—and we owe them more than just our attention; we owe them our understanding.