Posted to The Clark List – 22 days post-disappearance
Let me guess—you’ve already rolled your eyes.
“The Bermuda Triangle? Really, Benji? That’s been debunked a hundred times.”
Yeah. And that’s exactly what they want you to think.
Let’s talk about what “debunked” actually means. Because when a mystery becomes a punchline, it stops being investigated. The phrase “mass hysteria” becomes a broom that sweeps decades of anomalies under the rug.
But what if I told you the Bermuda Triangle isn’t just real—it’s deliberately active?
A Pattern of Disappearances (and Reappearances)
You know the greatest hits: Flight 19, the USS Cyclops, the Carroll A. Deering. But the government’s records don’t match the civilian logs. Cross-reference early FAA and US Navy dispatches from 1947–1953 and you’ll notice entire entries—whole squadrons—have vanished not just from the sky, but from the paper trail.
And here’s the kicker: at least seven of those disappearances match event signatures that didn’t exist until the 1970s. That’s right—EM spikes, ion storms, phased radar shadows. Technology that hadn’t even been developed yet.
So how do you explain 1948 aircraft vanishing in a way that wouldn’t be scientifically observable until 25 years later?
Unless someone already had that tech.
Or worse—someone from the future did.
Project Atlas and the Triangle “Corridor”
Remember Project Atlas? The black site funded by NeoBio Pharmaceuticals and at least two intelligence subcontractors? I’ve since confirmed that one of its field test zones in the late ’70s was a seafloor installation located just north of Puerto Rico’s Mona Passage.
The name in the papers?
Corridor 9C.
Described as a “natural anomaly conducive to long-range resonance experiments,” it was classified under NOAA jurisdiction but staffed by private contractors. Corridor 9C was supposedly shut down after a major incident in 1982—though no records of that “incident” exist anywhere outside whistleblower testimony.
What we do have is a memo sent from a top Atlas field scientist that reads:
“They don’t come back the same, if they come back at all.”
That memo was dated six days after a cargo plane with zero storm activity on radar vanished from real-time tracking and reappeared on Cuban airspace scanners... three hours before it left Miami.
You read that right.
The Montauk Connection
You thought the Montauk Chair was just a conspiracy theory, right? A psychic amplifier built in the ’80s to explore time displacement?
Well, here’s a fun fact: one of the early prototype components—a spatial harmonics chamber—was built using materials extracted from Corridor 9C. In other words, the triangle wasn’t a phenomenon they were trying to explain.
It was a power source they were trying to replicate.
That’s why the Bermuda Triangle isn’t just a place. It’s a testbed. A calibration zone. A naturally occurring wormhole… with training wheels.
So Why Don’t People Disappear There Anymore?
Because they don’t need the Triangle now.
Because they’ve perfected it.
The disappearances didn’t stop. They relocated.
You ever hear of the Alaskan Triangle?
The Bass Strait in Australia?
The Devil’s Sea near Japan?
Same patterns.
Same ion signatures.
Same silence from the authorities.
And the Bermuda site? It’s still there—underwater, sealed off, and marked on naval maps as a “communications blackout zone.” No civilian drones allowed. No fishing rights granted. Nothing to see here, folks.
Except maybe the edge of the next war.
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