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Follow the proof. Question everything.
 

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Was MKULTRA a desperate experiment born of Cold War panic…or evidence that institutions will quietly test the limits of human control when they believe no one is watching?

Why do so many of the most cited Bermuda Triangle incidents rely on incomplete records or secondhand accounts?

I’ve spent the last week reviewing primary documentation tied to the so-called “Bermuda Triangle”—shipping logs, aviation reports, Coast Guard summaries. Not the retellings. Not the documentaries. The source material.

What emerges is not a pattern of disappearance, but a pattern of narrative drift.

Take Flight 19. Five Navy training planes that vanished in 1945. The popular version tells of experienced pilots, clear skies, and inexplicable disorientation. The original reports suggest something more grounded: a trainee leader, navigational confusion, worsening weather, and fuel exhaustion. The mystery is not that they vanished—it’s that the story hardened into something cleaner, stranger, more cinematic.

The USS Cyclops is often cited as the Triangle’s most compelling case. A massive cargo ship gone without a distress call. But even here, the documentation is thin. Overloaded cargo. Possible structural weakness. No confirmed last position. The absence of data becomes a canvas.

And that is the throughline.

The Bermuda Triangle is not defined by what we know—but by what we don’t. Missing coordinates. Unverified weather conditions. Incomplete transmissions. Over decades, these gaps have been filled not with evidence, but with assumption.

There are environmental factors worth noting. The Sargasso Sea is known for sudden storms and unusual currents. Methane hydrate eruptions—rare but plausible—have been theorized to disrupt buoyancy. Magnetic variation in the region can affect compasses if not properly accounted for.

None of this is supernatural. But none of it is entirely dismissible either.

What concerns me is how quickly uncertainty becomes mythology. Once a place is labeled anomalous, every incident within it is reinterpreted through that lens.

The Bermuda Triangle may not be a location of unusual events. It may be a location where ordinary events are recorded poorly—and remembered differently.

And that, in its own way, is more interesting.

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A Sense of Dread is an independent investigative blog exploring the space where classified history, unexplained phenomena, and institutional secrecy intersect.

 

Written under a pseudonym by a former government analyst, the site examines declassified programs, alleged covert operations, anomalous events, UFO reports, psychological experimentation, and locations long rumored to sit at the edge of official reality.

 

Each post blends document analysis, historical context, leaked fragments, and philosophical inquiry—less sensationalism, more pattern recognition.

 

Accompanied by an AI-generated video podcast to preserve anonymity, the project invites readers to examine inconsistencies in the public record and decide for themselves what is coincidence, what is oversight, and what may be something else entirely.

 

This is not a site that claims to have all the answers.It is a place that asks better questions.

© 2025 by MEANSTREET PRODUCTIONS, INC.

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