Two days ago a man received a voicemail on his mobile phone
that caused him enormous distress. He wrote on Twitter: "I really need you all to listen to this voicemail I just got. I
am deactivating my cell phone service... I don't know why I was just sent
military code. The fuck do I look like Liam Neeson!?" The voicemail
features a robotic feminine voice, probably electronic, reading out a list of
letters and numbers in the English phonetic alphabet. This is a method of
communication when using voice radio that I myself had to learn at the hospital
because the porters were issued with walkie-talkies. Because voice radio is
lower quality than face-to-face conversation, words are used to signify letters
so spelling mistakes are more avoidable. Each letter of the alphabet is
represented by a word that begins with that letter: Alpha, Bravo, Charlie,
Delta... X-ray, Yankee, Zulu etc. The message transliterates as: "SDANGERSOSITISDIREFORYOUTOEVACUTEBECAUTIOUSTHEYARENTHUMAN042933964230SOSDANGERSOS."
When you skim that string of characters you may detect a number of words even
though there are no word spaces. In fact the string is a message in English
with some numbers. It reads thus: "S. Danger
SOS. It is dire for you to evacuate. Be cautious; they are not human. 042933964230
SOS danger SOS." The message was sent from a hidden number. SOS stands for "save our souls";
in the phonetic alphabet this is a cry for help. The S at the start could
indicate that the recording is on a continuous loop. The numbers are less
comprehensive than the words and are open to interpretation. Some commentators
think they might be GPS coordinates. If so then they designate a location on a remote
forested riverbank in Gabon ,
a West African nation on the Gulf of Guinea .
This is quite close to the island of Fernando
Poo (today called Bioko )
which is the centre of the fictional New World Order conspiracy in Robert Shea
and Robert Anton Wilson's epic novel The
Illuminatus! Trilogy. Some people have linked the numbers to the missing
MH-370 airliner. Source: https://www.someecards.com/news/news/this-guy-mysterious-voicemail-terrifying-military-codes/.
The man who received the voicemail calls himself
"Ty" on Twitter; his handle is: @strayedaway, see: https://twitter.com/strayedaway. (EDIT: This account has been deactivated, possibly by the user himself) He
is absolutely terrified by what has happened and states that he has even thrown
his mobile phone away. He believes he has been sent some secret military code
by mistake and fears attention from the government security services. He claims
that somebody photographed his house in the early hours of the morning just
before he received his voicemail. He has since been sent messages, presumably
on other media, in foreign languages; although these could be hoaxes by random people
who have heard about his predicament. He does not enjoy being made a centre of
attention for the UFO/paranormal/conspiracy theory movement and has even asked
people to stop sending him direct messages about this matter. What makes this
story credible for me is that I have followed "Ty" on Twitter and had
a look through many more of his Tweets. His account is primarily one of leftist
satirical comedy (Yes, such a thing exists!). He describes himself as: "I've
got no two cents, no sense at all!... LGBTQ humour". He sounds like what
is usually called these days a "social justice warrior" or
"Antifa". I think he's American and a staunch liberal. There are lots
of anti-Trump epithets on his feed. The thing is, belief in UFO/para/con
subjects is virtually non-existent among people with those political leanings.
He is definitely not the type of person to make up the story he has told. I
have no doubt that the voicemail he received is real and his fear is not
feigned. So what is the voicemail? Ty may well have been sent a clandestine government
intelligence message by mistake, perhaps intended for an undercover spy or a hidden
room in a foreign embassy. Before advanced modern communications these messages
were conveyed on analogue radio channels and were known as "numbers
stations". They could be picked up by a home radio set and were very similar
in content to Ty's voicemail. They were often quite creepy and a few are still
broadcasting, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0F984w4vLQ.
I remember finding one myself when I was a child. It simply repeated the
letters "RYO" over and over again in Morse code. So what does Ty's
voicemail mean? Leave aside the numbers; they could mean anything. The content
of its words is alarming. It is an alert of danger and a call for assistance
involving a hazard from something that is not human; but it might be mistaken
for human by the recipient, hence the appeal for caution. This presumably refers
to an intelligent entity; something extraterrestrial? It is impossible to know
without more information. This is a breaking news story so there might be some
more updates.
And: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2016/09/creep-clowns-return.html.
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