In this episode of the No Pill Podcast, we delve into the mysterious phenomenon of the persistent fog that has been affecting various parts of the United States and beyond. Broadcasting from Piedmont, Oklahoma, I share my personal experiences with the unusual weather patterns, including the fog's impact on local transportation and the peculiar residue it leaves behind. This episode explores the widespread reports of symptoms associated with the fog, such as loss of appetite, sleep disturbances, and respiratory issues, and questions whether these could be linked to vitamin D deficiency or something more sinister.
We examine historical precedents of biological experiments, such as Operation Sea Spray, and discuss the potential for current technological advancements like smart dust and nanotechnology to be influencing these occurrences. Clips from various sources, including a woman from Oregon and insights from Ryan Christian of Last American Vagabond, provide a broader perspective on the possible explanations for the fog and its effects.
Throughout the episode, we consider the implications of these phenomena, from the potential for government experimentation to the broader impact on public health and safety. We also touch on the skepticism surrounding the capabilities of nanotechnology and the importance of maintaining a healthy lifestyle amidst these uncertainties. Join us as we navigate through the fog of information and speculation to uncover the truth behind this artificial illness.
Hello, everybody. Welcome to episode two of the No Pill Podcast, Artificial Illness. Podcasting to you from Piedmont, Oklahoma. It is quite chilly, February of 2025. I hope everyone's doing well out there whenever you're listening to this. Tonight, we're talking about something which, depending on when you're listening, maybe about a month old, maybe current, maybe, you know, you're looking back years from now thinking, man, people actually worried about the fog. So let's talk about the fog. This goes back to the very end of 2024, and then kinda off and on, you know, kinda peaked early in 2025.
People talking about it online, went away for a while, kinda came back recently. And just personally, kind of the first session of it, was around Christmas time. We went to to the Northwest to visit relatives, and when we left, it was all foggy in Oklahoma City. And I it was noteworthy because that was probably the third or fourth time it had been foggy in Oklahoma City since I moved here, here, three years ago. Then after returning, you know, foggy and rain in the Northwest, but that's not too unusual. Came back. It's been foggy to the point where, the airport's been closed down multiple times in in January and February. So pretty unusual.
Kinda seems like, you know, I don't know. I guess, you know, unusual weather happens in Oklahoma. The other kind of occurrence that made me wanna dig into this a little more, just driving around the state for my job, driving through the fog, there was an accumulation on my windshield. So the wipers successfully cleaned it off, but there was a white chalky, you know, milky substance that stuck to my windows, which, you know, it doesn't happen with normal fog. So, I've never smelled a chemical smell. I've smelled, kind of a smoky smell, but I'm assuming that was just fog mixed with smoke.
But there is kinda all all sorts of different reports, reports out of Florida, videos with stuff that look like snow, as we're saying, those the fog. Just, you know, kinda weird stuff. So I've got a couple clips that I'm I'm playing for different reasons. I'll play a clip from a gal in Oregon first, and she's just kinda going through the comment section, which, you know, you you got no reason to believe or disbelieve the comment section there, but trying to crowdsource kinda what is going on. So this is from, I believe, a couple weeks ago now. I'm coming to you on February 12.
[00:04:16] Oregon Woman:
Okay. So I have been going through the comment section, trying to catch up on all the comments about the fog and the symptoms. And here are the states, the majority of the states that were in the comments that are saying that they have fog and symptoms that are accompanied. And then I will go through the symptoms. So the states that so far that I have seen commenting the most are Oregon, Minnesota, Texas, Saint Louis, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Vermont, New Hampshire, Washington, Arizona, Idaho, Illinois, Maine, Georgia, Massachusetts, Louisiana, Wisconsin.
The UK has actually been common in Kansas, England, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Mississippi, Arkansas, Cali, North, Carolina, Ohio, Michigan, Colorado, Utah, Nebraska, and there was more than that. But this does appear to be coast to coast fog. Fog is normal this time of year. I had about one in every hundred comments on here was just mean or them calling us stupid or saying this is normal. Yeah. Fog is normal. I've lived in Oregon my whole life. I am a born and raised Oregonian. I'm used to seeing fog. I am not used to seeing fog for months on end with like an hour break during the day, and that's it. I've been having to double up on my vitamin d. So this is not normal fog. And if you're not experiencing the symptoms that I'm about to list off, consider yourself very lucky. If If you don't know what we're talking about, consider yourself very lucky. And be an adult and just keep scrolling. Okay? But here are the symptoms that, so far everybody's talking about. We're having a loss of appetite with a lot of people losing weight unexplained.
Can't sleep at night. You feel really tired throughout the day because you're not sleeping at night, but all night you're just tossing and turning, having weird dreams. There's a really bad dry cough, but also congestion, which is weird because I've been congested, but I have a really dry cough. So it's it's very interesting. Extremely irritable. Some people are experiencing anemic problems. People are experiencing gut problems, stomach aches, diarrhea, nausea. I had some people commenting that they have jaw pain or headaches or both.
There's just so many symptoms that are coming along, and the only thing that we all have in common from coast to coast is the fog.
[00:06:33] Andrew Hoffman:
Alright. So we definitely had the fog in Oklahoma. I can vouch for that. And there's definitely yeah. It was kind of a pretty wide range of symptoms. Although quite a few can be attributed to vitamin d deficiency, that was kind of common thread there, which makes sense with with constant fog. Here in Oklahoma, they've been blaming the flu, saying we've got the worst flu rates in the country. You know, those reliable PCR tests saying, like, thirty eight percent of people that think they have the flu and get tested actually have the flu, which kinda makes you wonder what the other sixty two percent of people have.
But, anyway, we'll we'll just call it the flu. There's was kind of a stomach bug variation of that. It was to the point where, for several days, my special needs daughter who goes to a public school district, they just shut the whole school district down for several days. They shut Oklahoma City schools down as well. They shut Ardmore schools down. School districts all over the state closed because of illness. They couldn't keep enough teachers or even substitute teachers in classrooms to keep school going. Kind of an interesting situation. I can't remember anything like that when I was growing up or anywhere, basically, anytime other than than COVID.
I've talked to people who, you know, they they noticed they're trying to hype up the bird flu thing. Maybe this is related. I'm trying to make people sick somehow and then blame it on something else, try to get another pandemic going. It's certainly possible. There's some some other theories online, and this this clip kinda drove me crazy even though I'm not blaming the originator, the Gebba Homestead gal, because I think she's got some good stuff. This was, like, re clipped and then posted, and there's there's never any sources. There's, like, pictures in the background of something. You don't know what it is. So I would like to thank Eric in the Revelations Radio News Telegram channel, for getting me some actual source documents. So those will be in the show notes.
And, by the way, show notes. Find those on my substack, the critiquing eugenics substack. So, we'll put the show notes there, and then, you know, in a way, I'm I'm putting out substacks as well. So, like, you know, substacks and pod podcasts there. So let's go ahead and play this, short
[00:09:11] Gubba Homestead:
but somewhat annoying clip here. But the strange fog is back, and it does not seem like your typical fog. In fact, a private lab recently tested the fog and found that it was loaded with serratia marcescens, a type of bacteria. Coincidence? Maybe. Except in the nineteen fifties, the navy conducted biological warfare experiments off the coast of San Francisco where they released, can you guess it, serratiemarcescens and other bacteria into the air to see how it spread in populated areas. The lawyer released army documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act describing in 1950 tests, which a bacteria cloud sprayed from a ship off the Golden Gate wafted inland to cover the entire Bay Area. And what are the side effects of exposure to this bacteria? Respiratory infections, which were suspiciously common after being exposed to the fog, pneumonia, gastrointestinal issues, just to name a few. And do you think experiments on citizens really stopped fifty years ago.
Okay?
[00:10:21] Andrew Hoffman:
Alright. A couple things about that clip. The description of serratia mars marsessens as causing the same things that people are experiencing. Bit of a stretch. If you look up serratusia infection, the kind of the number one issues, there's, like, urinary tract infections and it doesn't doesn't match up real well with respiratory illness. So that's one issue. But the operation sea spray was was really a thing. You can look that up. They sprayed from ship into San Francisco, which does have a lot of fog and, not just serratia marcescens, but Bacillus globigii bacteria was another one, which is black. Serratia marcescens, If there's a lot of it, it appears pink, which obviously there's there's not enough of it in the fog to appear pink. I haven't heard anybody claiming they see pink fog. There could be something there, but Eric found the actual fog experiment.
And it's the guy, if he, you know, describes who he is, he owns a lab, he's somewhat anonymous, and they collect a few samples and have them shipped to him, and they disappear for about twelve hours. And then they the, UPS located them, got them to him, and they appear untampered with. But he did wanna emphasize, hey. You know? I don't know where these were for twelve hours. They do run the test, test negative for just about everything they tested for except for a little bit of serration mark sessions. So the description of it being loaded with it I mean, could this have just been a Florida thing? And if you tested the fog other parts of the country, you would not have found that.
Very possible. There's there's a lot of mold in Florida, so it's possible there was some contamination or or other issues there. Also possible they were were spraying it, but it was sprayed in that part of Florida and not elsewhere. And there's just kind of a social contagion of, like, yeah. Yeah. Look. There's fog, and and maybe there wasn't stuff going on in in other people's fog. So all of that, definitely a possibility. You can look at all of some stuff in the show notes. Congressional testimony that was also provided by by Eric, going back to operation c sea spray.
People did die that was now blamed on on that experiment. You know, if they're doing that in 1950, it's not too big of a stretch to say, maybe they're doing something now. Maybe that was a parting gift from, Fauci's cronies or intelligence services or or something else. PubMed article, serration infections from military experiments to Current Practice. That'll be in the show notes as well. Serratia marcescens, in particular, Serratia marcescens are a significant human pathogens. Serratia marcescens has a long and interesting taxonomic medical experimentation, military experimentation, and human clinical infection history.
So, you know, there's some stuff there. There were also some comments on that same video saying, like, hey. It's not you know, you're looking in the wrong place. You need to be looking at smart dust and nanotechnology. That's what's really going on with this. It's not a not a bacteria thing. It is a technological thing, and that sent me down another rabbit hole. Article from 02/2001 put out by or pound in the Kurzweil. That's Ray Kurzweil of formerly of of Google there with the futurist, always pushing the singularity and all that garbage. So utility fog, the stuff that dreams are made of. This is way back 02/2001, JSTORES HALL.
Nanotech pioneer JSTORES HALL's original concept, the utility fog, consists of a swarm of nanobots or foglets that can take the shape of virtually anything and change shape on the fly. Here he discusses the technical details and feasibility of this nano concept, and that was originally published way back in 1993 republished in 02/2001. Nanotechnology is based on the concept of tiny self replicating robots. The utility fog is a very simple extension of the idea. Suppose instead of building the object you wanted atom by atom, the tiny robots link their arms together to form a solid mass in the shape of the object you want. Then when you get tired of that avant garde coffee table, the robots could simply shift around a little, and you'd have an elegant queen and piece instead.
So we are supposed to be getting nanobot utility fog furniture, and instead, we we get a lousy, you know, sickness fog. That's kinda kinda lame there. Yeah. You can read the rest of that if if you're interested. The way it is with most technology, you've got the the promise, like, look at, you know, flying cars, robot made. This is gonna be wonderful, and and in reality, what you get is far, far lesser and different than what was promised. So I started down this the Smart Dust track. And once again, there's there's a lot of annoying stuff out there, but there was some very interesting stuff from an old friend of Revelations Radio News, Ryan Christian of Last American Vagabond. So I've got some some clips of a recent interview he did did with Allison Morrow, and, also, they reference to an interview they had done about a year ago, and I've got more clips from from that as well. Before I get into that though, since the episode title is AI, you know, artificial illness, This is just an example. If you if you search smart dust, here's an explainer from a YouTube channel, you know, technology place where no one fax checks any of this stuff. It just spewed out on online.
It's just the automated voice reading from something, and, see if you can catch some of the the issues with this presentation. So we'll we'll start with this, and then we'll get into the real information, with Ryan from Last American Bag of Money. Thank you.
[00:17:21] Unknown:
So what is Smart Dust? It is a system of many tiny microelectromechanical systems such as sensors, that can detect light, temperature, vibration, magnetism, chemicals, and other stimuli. In 1965, Gordon Moore, the founder of Intel, predicted that the number of components that could fit on a single chip could double every two years. Working principle of smart dust. Smart dust motes are run by microcontrollers and timers are used to run these sensors. Step Step two, process the data with what amounts to an onboard computer system. Step three, store the data in memory.
And the fact is, 82% of efficiency is executed in the working process of Smart Dust. It is used in agriculture for monitoring crop requirements, essential equipment in industries, helps in accessing activities in remote areas during war, etc. The approximate size of a smart dust is five millimeters cube. Since they are so small, they are difficult to detect which involves privacy concerns.
[00:18:47] Ryan Cristian:
But, this will be rectified and smart dust will create a revolution in future. K. Twenty years ago, that mu chip was the size of one of these smart dust so these are technological I mean, think of them like a robot, but that's an archaic term. But he'll get into it. They're able to do two way communicate. They use your body's energy. These things can literally, as he says, scatter them like dust. Use wind currents to blow around and spy on you or relay information. Or getting into the what we'll end with today, some really terrifying kind of neuroscience directions it's going into.
[00:19:17] Unknown:
This is this powder sized chip, and that's a salt crystal. So this is a small thing. It's something called the Mu chip from Hitachi. It's the smallest commercially available RFID system in the world, and can be pulse powered by radio waves. It doesn't require a battery. You can literally scatter this stuff like dust or embed this into a sheet of paper.
[00:19:39] Ryan Cristian:
And you know what the really interesting thing about And that's the oldest way to discuss this, kind of the state department's, you know, psych spy aspect of it where a lot and I'll play Julian Assange talking about this a while ago, talking about that exact idea of, like, putting these in paint and painting houses, putting it in the walls. Like, they've evolved to where we're literally talking about just ambient stuff in the air. Right? My point is I'm worried about if we're at a point now where this has become like a ubiquitous reality, and we don't even know that. Until finally that rug is pulled, and they go, well, we're here now. Sort of like the glyphosate that's everywhere, the dioxins that are poisoning us all around the world or, you know, all these things that we kind of becoming aware of are ubiquitous, but they just don't acknowledge it yet. That's where I think this might be. This technology is. This was commercially released ten years ago. The inevitability of Smart Dust. So what is Smart Dust? Well, Smart Dust, of course, isn't a new concept. It's the originated with DARPA back in the nineties. Mhmm. And it's general purpose computing, sensors,
[00:20:31] Unknown:
wireless network networking all bundled up into millimeter scale sensor modes drifting in the air currents, flex of computing power settling on your skin, ingested, monitoring you inside and out. That's crazy. If you don't think that's possible, this is the Michigan MicroMote.
[00:20:51] Ryan Cristian:
No. I don't think that's somebody's skin or might be a penny. I'm not sure. It's be it's, you know, super super it's about the size the other one he's talking about as he about to tell you. This is the Michigan MicroMote.
[00:21:00] Unknown:
It's a cubic millimeter in size, and in deference to the speaker before, yes it runs an ARM processor. It's a tiny computer, and it features data processing, data storage, wireless comms, and it's probably as close to the true smart dust vision from the early DARPA days as we've come so far. They're designed to harvest energy from the environment around them and to communicate via mesh network.
[00:21:24] Ryan Cristian:
And that that's what I worry about. Like, the mesh network dynamic, that's something I think they were trying to accomplish with what will happen with the COVID injections. Now a lot of this is theoretical, my own opinions. Right? I'm probably being clear about that. But I'm everything we're showing you is factual information, but I I believe that's how a lot of this interconnects. Going back to the screen share. So, you know, ultimately, that's There we go. Now here's Julian Assange, and this was this was, in 2018, he was talking about this. And this is just what he decide decides to call this, and it's it's the same conversation.
[00:21:51] Julian Assange:
Cover that you can make that much of it make that much of a difference. And increasingly increasingly, it's less. And in terms of the Internet of Things, there's research prototypes now, which I assume, but are you being used by, intelligence agencies of very small electronic circuits, that you can just put in paper or put in paint around them on the walls, that are powered by the GSM stations, and they they operate as the GSM radio wave passes through them. It gives them enough power for a very small amount of time to do things. So, obviously, that tendency is going to continue. Mhmm. It's not the like, the Internet of things. It's, like, it's, if you like, intelligent evil dust, scattered everywhere, like like confetti in everything.
[00:22:42] Ryan Cristian:
So Intelligent evil dust sprouted like confetti in everything. Right? And so realize even in 02/2018 when he's having this conversation, he's referring to something that is the common knowledge about it, but realizing in MakerCon or the the conversation there or the government's own documentation, it shows that that's well be I think they're well beyond that. Like, even then, showing you a ten year old tech that could white mesh communicate, use your own body's energy. So it doesn't require the radio waves he was discussing, but that is one element of this. And, obviously, you get into different levels of of computation or ability, and you might need to have different levels of influence. But, nonetheless, that was what was capable all the way back then. And so this is just this terrifying reality. I think one of the funniest contrast between those two clips
[00:23:23] Andrew Hoffman:
is that Ryan is always kinda second guessing himself, and he he can tell when he's, you know, he wants to emphasize when he's speculating or not sure of the exact specifics. Meanwhile, the AI voice just confidently asserts that this, smart dust is five millimeters cubed, which would which, is about a thousand, possibly a million times larger than smart dust. But, you know, that AI voice, you know, you just came It's micrometers, millimeters. Millimeters is used way more often. We'll go with that. Right? So the probability large language model.
And then I've got a couple more clips from, what they reference from a year ago where this was before the fog or anything like that. This was, Ryan talking about
[00:24:21] Ryan Cristian:
smart dust, nanotech, all this stuff back then. That's where we get into the things of Charles Lieber's work. Even going back to 02/2011, Charles Lieber is a Harvard at the still arguably the leading nanotechnology expert in the world who was the guy who was arrested in the beginning of COVID nineteen for working with China research and making money from China, also arrested alongside foreign nationals that were shuttling biological material on their sock from Beth Israel Hospital to China. The point is he was accused of tree treason. It's a different story, but nothing ever happened in regard to him. It was very confusing and weird, and I think there was more collaboration there. The point is he, in 02/2011, worked on what he called the virus size transistor.
It's exactly what it sounds like. It is a transistor, which again is the better word than robot, but it's nanotechnology that is the size of a virus. And he are and he what he did in this case was used a fatty lipid layer, which is where this technology comes from in COVID nineteen, and I'll give you more connections there, to bring this into a cell. And so and he argues that when you get down to this level, technological things act like biology. And so it's almost impossible to tell the difference. And my point's always been, how do we not how do we know that that in and of itself did not become something that we're dealing with today? Right? But that's an abstract theory. The point is these things are very real. And my concern about this oh, and then to describe it a little bit further, these little things you're looking at, each one of these individual things are like a think of it like a computer chip. Right? It runs on your body's own power. It's heat, it's motion, it's energy. And then using things, which we can get into if you'd like, it gets abstract with things like magnetogenetics, optogenetics, radiogenic. They they're able to influence and manipulate these things. Two way communication, relaying of internal biosurveillance.
This is the kind of stuff that really does give me nightmares, and it's very real. And it's very actual like, it's in real time being used in some cases. My question is how do we how do we should be asking whether this is something that has already been deployed in the in the the the world or in a nation, but it's kind of the same difference when it's a smart dust deploying concept. I went back in my recent show all the way back to the early two thousands with a group called Dust Networks, where they were literally talking about the future, and it's a government overlap connected kind of group that's changed ownership multiple times and saying in '2 in early two thousands that this was the future of smart cities, of smart grids, exactly where they tell you they're pushing us into now. And the argument was using this smart dust all the way back then to track cargo and different things, which proves that there was some level of real world application. And they were taught he shows it in the video talking about smart dust, that they were gonna use this to make sure they could effectively monitor and track and and make the world better for you and your smart grids. And so my point is simply, I believe this stuff is already being utilized. And what does that mean is a whole another conversation, and how that might overlap with COVID nineteen is a whole another conversation as well. But one last point, Robert Langer, who was a person who was chief in the creation of a lot of this work that overlaps with the internal biosurveillance, is the cofounder of Moderna.
This man was the cofounder of Moderna, which made some of these COVID nineteen shots, which utilized the lipid nanoparticle technology. We don't even grasp what this will look like. The idea like, okay. There's a guy named I think it's Giordano. He's a a guy who worked with NATO, the Pentagon, the military in general. He's a expert in neuroscience and neuroweapons. He talks about this and has been talking about it for years. He put out something in 2020 talking about this exact point that right now, they are aggressively leaning into trying to figure out how to do this. And what he's talking about is utilizing what we're discussing, neuro particulates, nanotechnology, in order to be able to not just do what we discussed and surveil, but literally and then we'll get into this next since it's becoming more obvious in this conversation, control how you feel, what you think about things, and literally even actually how you will move throughout your day. They're way past this point. Like, if we're is and this gets into the whole World Economic Forum discussions they're having. What you just said is a discussion that they put forward about using internal, like, the I forget the video's name, but they're talking about the women at work where they're tracking their mental thoughts and what they're doing, and then they're able to discern that people have broke the law. So they it's terrifying. This is a presentation of the World Economic Forum. Right? So it's very real that this is something that's being discussed.
My point, though, is that if we're, again, at the World Economic Forum and other presentations, if they're literally talking about the and currently being able to use your Wi Fi router in your house to be able to three d map what they're looking at to, like, a specific degree, that's now. We don't need video cameras anymore. Wi Fi is around the world. So my point is we need to start recognizing that they have progressed to a level, and we're stuck back in the stone age where we what in the mental state, the way we perceive what's actually going on. We need to start understanding that they're geoengineering, that they're using nanotechnology, that it has likely been deployed around the world. And the point is for me is there's a level of informed consent that's obviously paramount right there. Like, we can talk about helping people all day long, but the only way you're gonna effectively do that is if, first of all, they can find out how this can you be utilized on a global scale. And that's why they talk about the smart dust and and smart grids. But when do I get to say no to that? Because, look, you can't put this stuff in the atmosphere without us and being able to breathe this in.
[00:29:42] Andrew Hoffman:
Back in episode one, I talked about how I really didn't think the mRNA technology either is going to work, obviously, but, it literally can't work. They've not they've not solved the toxicity problem, and I don't think they they've solved the effectiveness problem. Even if you could tolerate enough stuff being pumped into you, they haven't proven that it prevents illness, it cures illness, you know, cures cancer, prevents COVID. None of that is is proven at all. In fact, quite the opposite. So if they can't do that, I really think the whole gain of function story related to COVID was kind of a red herring.
Keeps the paradigm of, you know, these evil viruses that can cause pandemics. It keeps that intact, makes these spending billions of dollars on this type of research seem like something that, well, maybe it's not a good idea, but we probably should because, you know, maybe the evil Russians are doing it or maybe make something good out of it. So I really think that's that's bogus as well. As far as the whole technology, nanobot making your, you know, injecting the graphene oxide into you, which can get hit with the five g and and cause this all the James Georgiano stuff, I'm pretty skeptical on that too, but I do think they can poison us. So I think that's at some level, it's not about whatever way they're selling it internally or weapons systems or or what they believe they'll be able to accomplish.
It's just a bunch of poison, whether it's getting sprayed via chemtrails from airplanes or sprayed in fog or, you know, dispersed, through a needle or through our food supply or through a water. It's all poisoning the the terrain, poisoning our bodies. Look at it and look at all of us getting getting sick, what have you. If that's the response to the poisoning, it's our body's way of of purging all that stuff. You know, whether you're throwing up or got a runny nose or whatever, it's your body trying to get that stuff out of it. And our body's ability to to heal is dependent on being able to to deal with the whatever load of poison we're we're dumping in there or getting dumped onto us. So I don't have all this stuff figured out. Like I said, I'm pretty skeptical on what they can do other than just just kinda dump poison on us one way or the other. Because of that, I I would say I I don't recommend being too too afraid of any of this stuff.
But what I do recommend is maybe eat some, grass fed beef, some organic vegetables, maybe get some exercise, try to find some clean air somewhere. Definitely still chemtrails here in Oklahoma. I've I've seen other people saying, hey. You know, USAID is is taken down, and now the kid there's no chemtrails. I'd say, well, I I wish USAID had been in charge of the chemtrails in Oklahoma because they're still going strong here. But, anyway, I wish everyone well. Look forward to talking to you soon. Thank you for listening all the way to the end, and just remember, it's okay to be an anti vaxxer.
Introduction and Episode Overview
The Mysterious Fog Phenomenon
Crowdsourcing Fog Experiences
Health Impacts and School Closures
Historical Context of Biological Experiments
Smart Dust and Nanotechnology
Speculations on Smart Dust Applications
Skepticism and Health Recommendations