posted ago by Primate98 ago by Primate98 +2 / -0

TL;DR: We find a high concentration of Salem Witches and related events clustered in the area of Lincoln County, New Mexico. We will string these pearls together and you can try to figure out what may be going on there. Perhaps you will decide it is all mere happenstance.

We’ve previously discussed the notion of the “Strongholds” of the Salem Witches. For example, I bet you can come up with a number of suspicious people and events from the Denver, Colorado area, and I’ve written up a lot of them. We discussed another Stronghold more in-depth:

The DB Cooper Skyhoax: anomalous evidence, the Puget Sound Stronghold, a magic trick, and the Salem Witch Trials (conspiracies.win 6/6/2025)

Before we dive in, let’s orient to the map. Some of the distances may seem long by standards you’re used to, but we’re talking about a huge region of dry, mostly empty desert Southwest. But it’s not just that, it’s about proximity to where the Salem Witches actually operate.

You see, the ultra-secret Manhattan Project was based at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, about 120 miles NNW of Corona (of crashed saucer fame), which is at the top edge of Lincoln County. Not that close. The first site we’ll talk about, involving global politicians and pedophiles and cannibals and God knows what else is about 65 miles NNW of Corona. Much closer to the action. (BTW, that site is dead on a straight line between LANL and Corona.)

All the other sites we’ll talk about are clustered right around Lincoln County, south and southeast of Albuquerque. That’s evidently where the action really is. As of the 2020 census, the total population of the county was a little over 20k, and 150 years ago it was under 2k. It doesn’t strike as the kind of place that Elites would want to take over.

Except maybe They do, because that first site, somewhere in the vicinity of Stanley, New Mexico, is Zorro Ranch. Pretty topical, eh? I’ve never written them up myself, but the Stanleys have come up numerous times in Miles Mathis’ work. However, it was neither Jeffrey Epstein nor the Stanleys that brought me here, it was my post on Jesse James:

NBC’s “Timeless”, Jesse James, The Lone Ranger, The Hanging Judge, and the Salem Witches (conspiracies.win 2/16/2026)

The connection to Jesse James is tenuous, but then again following up on tenuous connections lays—to my way of thinking—at the heart of this kind of research. Technically, it wasn’t Jesse himself but Robert Ford (outlaw) (1861-1892), the guy that Brad Pitt would have us believe shot James down like a coward. Okay, not exactly him either, but you will read in Ford’s “Later years”:

According to legend, Ford had a shooting contest with Jose Chavez y Chavez, a comrade-in-arms of Billy the Kid's during the Lincoln County War. Ford lost the contest and left town.

That’s a Salem Witch two-fer!

Billy the Kid was the cousin of two Mormon OGs that overthrew Joseph Smith and the LDS, which should tell you one was fake and the other controlled from way back (plus the Parkers appear!) (conspiracies.win 11/12/2024)

Lincoln County War (1878): An iconic event of the Wild West. You can believe whatever history about it you like, but I think by now you may be hesitant to take the word of any history book on any subject. It was fictionalized in several feature films, a novel, and a TV series but, as I have pointed out, “fictionalization” is how they actually write history in the minds of most. Billy the Kid was a major player in the War, and Wikipedia puts his photo right up top. We just saw he was himself a Salem Witch and very connected to other big doings.

And speaking of big doings, much research and analysis and bullshit orbits around this old classic, and a number of hits come out of it:

Broomstick Crash at Roswell: A shocking number of people involved in the “Incident” have the same last name as people involved in the Salem Witch Trials (conspiracies.win 12/6/2024)

  • Roswell UFO Incident. Roswell is just outside the eastern edge of Lincoln Country. Corona, where the disc supposedly crashed, is right at the northern edge (you know, on your way to Zorro Ranch).

  • Col. William Blanchard: Completely aside from the phony flying saucer, the family of the base commander had been in the area for, presumably, decades. See:

General William H. Blanchard: phony nukes, phony witches, and the (false) Dawn of the Flying Saucer Age (conspiracies.win 12/4/2024)

  • 509th Composite Group (1944-46) and 509th Bombardment Group, Very Heavy (1946-52): This USAAC/USAF unit would have been the most highly sensitive military formation of its time. After WW2, it just so happens that they were based in Roswell and commanded by Colonel Blanchard. Oh really?

Prior to that, they had participated in the Manhattan Project, the phony atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the phony atomic tests of Operation Crossroads at Bikini Atoll. Yes, I said phony atomic bombs and I meant it. (To be clear, it looks like a few years into the tests they finally developed real ones.)

Do you know what time we are told the Enola Gay of the 509th began its phony bombing run on Hiroshima? 9:11am. Hilarious! The phony nukes of the Manhattan Project lead us to:

  • Trinity Site: Do you know where that mystical, mythical first bomb went off (allegedly)? About five miles west of the edge of Lincoln County, part of which extends about halfway across the White Sands Proving Ground. For more, please see:

The Nuclear Hoax (Miles Mathis 1/24/2016 16-page PDF)

  • William Sterling Parsons (1901-1953): “Atomic Admiral” Deak Parsons was instrumental in the whole fake atomic bomb program and a relative of Jack Parsons. We atomically blew him up here:

Captain Deak Parsons, the triggerman for the (fake) atomic bombing of Hiroshima and involved in all the other atomic fakery, was related to Jack Parsons and all the other historical fakery (conspiracies.win 10/7/2024)

You’ll note that disinformation agent Mathis does not mention Parsons a single time in his sixteen page paper on Trinity. For a guy that’s supposedly all about names and genealogy, does it never occur to him that Deak and Jack—operating around the same time—might be related? As I’ve said, shitty research is disinfo.

As to Deak, I find it exceedingly suspicious that when he was eight years old, long before atom bombs and flying saucers became popular, his family moved to ultra-tiny Fort Sumner, New Mexico, with a population probably under 800 at the time. Why did they choose Fort Sumner? I want to know the answer just like you do.

Fort Sumner is in De Baca County, about 35 miles ENE of the corner of Lincoln. Being an extremely rural area, Parsons had to go to Roswell to take his US Naval Academy exam, so you see how these places are closer to each other than one would think from the bare distance numbers.

An intermission featuring more aliens: Ever hear the one where Eisenhower met with aliens at a military base? I’ve made the claim before that all the major Golden Age UFO incidents and Ufologists were Salem Witch ops and personnel. How about this one? We include it here because it supposedly took place in February 1954 at Holloman Air Force Base. Lincoln County is about 40 miles north straight up Route 54.

Oddly, there’s no Wikipedia page for this incident, or even an informal name. I’ll refer to it as the “Eisenhower Treaty”, because the story goes that the Elites received advanced tech and the aliens got to eat and/or probe some of us. Or whatever. The whole narrative is apparently of very recent vintage, coming originally from this article:

President Eisenhower had three secret meetings with aliens, former Pentagon consultant claims (Daily Mail 2/15/2012)

Believe it if you like, but what I noticed right up top is that the “Pentagon consultant” was Ufologist Timothy Good, and the article was written by Anthony Bond. This little intermezzo wrote itself. Back to the heavy research….

It turns out there’s another story very similar to Deak’s concerning a dubious family move early in childhood. I backed into all this, BTW. You see, I had a years-old note that I should check out a book called Real Magic (2018) by Dean Radin (b1952). I noticed he was Chief Scientist at the Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS), which had been founded by astroNOT Edgar Mitchell (1930-2016). I have yet to write it up, but the Salem Witches were behind the birth of parapsychology (and psychology itself) back in the late 1800’s. Deafening alarm bells.

Let me ease you into it by declaring that the Apollo Program (1961-1972) was phony. Surprise! You won’t believe how tame that will seem after you’ve read through the following material, which is weird and convoluted even by my standards.

We are to believe Edgar walked on the Moon during the Apollo 14 mission (1/31-2/9/2971). I do not believe that, but I do believe Wikipedia when it tells us that as a child during the Great Depression, his family moved to Artesia, New Mexico, about 35 miles from the southeast corner of Lincoln.

Frankly, I don’t believe we’re being told the truth about why they moved. The population was 2,427 in 1930. Even now the place is desperately poor, with the per capita income just under $14k. Does it sound like the kind of place you’d take a young family during the Depression looking for job opportunities and support? I don’t think so either.

Now we start to get weird. His mother was born Ollidean Margaret Arnold. Hold on a minute! Artesia is about 40 miles south of Roswell. Every time you bring up Roswell as being the first UFO incident of the modern age, some jackhole will correct you with, “Well ackshually, just ten days before that…..” Well, we already ackshuallied them:

The Puget Sound Flap: Or, How the boring Kenneth Arnold UFO sighting blows up in your face in terms of Salem Witches (conspiracies.win 5/1/2025)

That same name, and in another of Their Strongholds—just a strange coincidence? Well, we also ackshually just got through blowing up the famous traitor of that same name:

NBC’s “Timeless”, Benedict Arnold, the Salem Witches, and more Parkers (conspiracies.win 2/4/2026)

Now, you’ll have to examine that post closely to see the intricate case where I come up with a guy named David Rittenhouse Porter (1788-1867). We recently blew up another secret Witch, intended to replace the already-dead-and-now-simulated Gavin Newsom:

Katie Porter is the 2026 Salem Witch candidate for Maximum Leader of the Formerly Great State of California (conspiracies.win 10/16/2025)

In that post, I pointed out that Porter clerked for Judge Richard Sheppard Arnold (1936-2004). Ohhhhh, c’mon! That’s weird, right? Sure, but what’s weirder is that the Commander of the aforementioned Apollo 14 was astroNOT Alan Shepard. Whaaaaat?!

If you’re going to quibble about that extra “p”, be aware that wiki says Alan was descended from passengers on the Mayflower, specifically the Warrens. I’ve never written them up but they were huge in the American Revolution. I also refer you to Mary Warren (Salem witch trials). Grant me that extra “p” as drift in spelling after four centuries, would you?

To sew up this post, we’ll thread a needle back through it. First, remember Fort Sumner, the hometown of Deak Parsons? I wonder if he’s ever been to the Billy The Kid Museum? Billy was shot down in Fort Sumner and is buried in the military cemetery there. Strange for a murderous outlaw who was never in the army, but that’s the least suspicious thing about him.

Second, remember Artesia, the hometown of Edgar Mitchell? Wikipedia tells us, “It is home to one of the two Strangite meeting places in the world.” WTH are “Strangites”, you ask? Well, remember how Billy the Kid was closely connected to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints? This is who the Strangites are:

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints—usually distinguished with a parenthetical (Strangite)—is one of the several organizations that claim to be the legitimate continuation of the church founded by Joseph Smith on April 6, 1830…. It had approximately 300 members in 1998.

And this microscopic splinter cell ends up in this miniscule town? Really? Interestingly, if you consult that page on the Strangites, you’ll find (1) it is quite long and detailed, and (2) it does not mention Artesia. Actually, it mentions New Mexico itself only once, related to yet another splinter cell of the LDS.

I think that ties it all up in a huge strange knot of what we are told is history. Untangle it as you will. Thank you for your attention to this matter!