Systemic Error Podcast
When Power Becomes Invisible, the Target Becomes “Unstable” The Claim Is Not the Story Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez says she was targeted with “direct energy weapon attacks” after reporting on Jeffrey Epstein, and that the alleged attacks have left her “permanently injured.” The source gives one thing clearly: an allegation, not evidence. That distinction matters. The political story is not that a claim was made. It is that a journalist is describing a world in which harm can be imagined, real, or opportunistically blurred until accountability gets lost in the fog. Who Actually Holds Power The person with the least power here is the one describing pain. The people with actual institutional power are whoever controls surveillance, coercion, weapons, security apparatuses, and the ability to define what counts as credible. The source points to that imbalance directly: it mentions law-enforcement use of direct-energy technology and a White House-promoted claim about a “sonic weapon” attack on Venezuela. That is the real frame. Not whether one person feels harmed, but how state power normalizes the language of invisible force. The Misdirection Problem The article’s weak point is that it lets the allegation hover without anchoring it in proof, while the surrounding context hands the reader a ready-made atmosphere of menace. That is fertile ground for misdirection. It invites the audience to focus on the perceived fragility of the target, or on whether the claim sounds strange, instead of asking the harder question: who benefits when fear, secrecy, and technical mystification make abuse harder to trace? Valdes-Rodriguez says such weapons are “perfect to silence journalists and dissenters by making them seem bonkers.” That line is not evidence, but it does name a familiar political tactic. If power cannot deny harm, it can bury it under ridicule, confusion, and medicalized doubt. Epstein as an Engine of Secrecy The Epstein reference is doing political work too. Her reporting has centered on his New Mexico compound, including claims that it may have been used to surveil two U.S. nuclear weapons labs, and on missing American scientists. That is not a gossip arc. It is an account of elite secrecy touching national-security terrain. Once the story moves into that territory, the plausible actors are not random individuals with grievances. They are institutions and networks accustomed to operating behind procedural opacity. That does not prove the allegation. It does explain why the allegation lands inside a broader pattern of intimidation around sensitive reporting. Fear Is a Governing Style The source also slips in a revealing detail: Valdes-Rodriguez says there are “engineers” willing to design these systems and “operators” willing to use them. That is the anatomy of modern coercion. Not one villain, but a chain of technical labor, bureaucratic cover, and deniability. The cruelty is not only in the weapon, if there is one. It is in the structure that lets harm be converted into uncertainty, then uncertainty into inaction. The Larger Pattern This story is about more than one journalist’s allegation. It shows how power works when it wants to be ungraspable: make the weapon invisible, make the target sound implausible, and let the public argue over tone while the question of responsibility disappears. Whether the claim is ultimately substantiated or not, the political meaning is already clear. Systems that can surveil, discredit, and confuse do not need theatrical repression. They only need enough opacity to make abuse look like a personal crisis. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit paulstsmith.substack.com [https://paulstsmith.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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