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Four Years of Lawfare and Black Ops: The Silence Ends Here
May 6th 2025 Sayer Ji, Founder
They came for my work, my name, and my family. But the wall they built to contain me is cracking–and light is pouring through
There comes a point when a person must speak. Not for effect. Not for defense. But to end the performance of silence.
I have reached that point.
What has happened to me, and my loved ones, over the past four years — and especially the last two — has been brutal, personal, and deliberate. This is not conjecture. This is not paranoia. This is the truth.
I was targeted through a coordinated, transatlantic campaign of lawfare and black operations–designed not to protect public health, but to punish and silence me for a single, unforgivable act: I spoke a medical truth that diverged from the approved narrative. I refused to surrender my right to bodily autonomy. And perhaps most threatening to those in power, I sounded the alarm about the risks of the mRNA injections before they were rolled out to the global population. I would not comply with a propaganda campaign that has since unraveled in the eyes of millions–and for that, I was marked.
I refused to comply with a propaganda campaign that has since proven hollow to millions, and I warned the public about the dangers of the mRNA jabs before they were widely deployed.
That alone was enough to provoke a weaponized response. And it wasn’t just directed at me–it targeted those I hold dearest.
Over the past four years, the economic assault they unleashed upon us–especially my loved ones–has been ruthless, calculated, and deeply personal. This isn’t speculation. It isn’t paranoia. It’s the truth.
One of the earliest signs of this orchestrated takedown was a targeted exposé against GreenMedInfo, published by the BBC and the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), a UK-based NGO with deep ties to transatlantic intelligence and censorship operations, including the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH). According to public records and the work of researcher Mike Benz, CCDH’s leadership includes figures like Simon Clark, a fellow of the Atlantic Council, whose board features no fewer than seven former CIA directors. These state-adjacent bodies, funded by both private and public interests, labeled my health platform as “far right,” in a brazen attempt to conflate holistic health advocacy with political extremism. Their article, which can read about here, was not an isolated attack. It was part of a broader campaign to socially, politically, and algorithmically erase my work and my advocacy around bodily sovereignty.
In fact, this pattern of defamation stretches back over a decade. In 2013, UNICEF published a now-infamous article falsely portraying GreenMedInfo and Mothering.com as public health threats for providing vaccine-related information–an early example of narrative enforcement masquerading as child protection.
Multinational law firms—whose identities, leadership, tactics, and complicity are now a matter of record–collaborated with government-adjacent agencies in both the UK and the US to wage an orchestrated campaign of defamation and suppression. These efforts, backed by millions of dollars in funding, included the enlistment of NATO Strategic Communications operatives to develop and deploy globally distributed “information weapons” targeting me and my former wife (see the defamation piece the Dis/Informed). Behind the scenes, they engaged in covert legal warfare: issuing threats of mass civil tort actions for wrongful death, executing clandestine legal maneuvers, and activating black operations aimed at the total annihilation of our reputations, livelihoods, and voices. This multifaceted assault was further enabled by a nexus of complicit NGOs, manufactured press narratives, battalions of mercenary lawyers, and private intelligence techniques more commonly associated with military conflict than civilian life.
This includes efforts to label me as one of the so-called “Disinformation Dozen” — a term propagated to vilify and dehumanize those whose views did not align with centralized messaging. It was not just inaccurate (the report, released on March 24, 2021, was later found to rely on statistics that were wrong by an astronomical factor of 1,300-fold, yet was never corrected or retracted, despite being cited tens of thousands of times); it was state-sponsored defamation.
These weaponized falsehoods were deliberately seeded into legal proceedings involving members of my family in the UK, designed to transfer an illusion of criminality onto them merely by virtue of their connection to me.
I wish I could say this was the stuff of B movies, and not the reality of my life — but it happened, is still happening, and this is only the beginning of what has come to light.
Now, with widespread vindication and an avalanche of new legal evidentiary disclosures over the past year, it is clear that many of us had our lawful rights violated here in the United States. Yet the originating energy behind this persecution — which began in the UK, through transnational alliances — has not yet released its grip.
A War on Conscience — But the Wall is Cracking
This is a war — quiet until now. A black ops war on consciousness. A war on sovereignty. A war against the innocent. Waged in silence, unbroken for four relentless years, through systems that deny, distort, and manipulate from the shadows, operating always under the cover of plausible deniability.
And to those who believed it would remain in the shadows–
That illusion is ending.
Because the wall – built from a mountain of false allegations – isn’t holding.
It’s cracking.
Despite every effort to erase me, I am still standing. Despite every attempt to ruin the lives of those I love, we are still here. And more than that: we are rising.
Let it be understood that what was done to me was personal. But it was never just about me.
The systems that sought to silence me are part of a much larger architecture–one that millions are now unmasking and naming for what it is. From forced silence to coerced compliance, we now understand how easily institutions can be turned against those who tell the truth.
But the tide has clearly turned.
The Executive Branch Is No Longer Silent
For the first time in years, we are witnessing a shift at the highest levels of governance. With a new administration that has signaled clear support for U.S. citizens facing politically motivated suppression, the climate is changing. The appointment and freedom-affirming actions of Tulsi Gabbard as US Director of National Intelligence, Kash Patel as FBI Director, J.D. Vance as Vice President, and Trump’s day 2 anti-Censorship laundering executive order, marks a decisive break from the Biden-Harris era. During that time, the Executive Branch openly colluded with censorship regimes, including foreign operations based in the UK whose infiltration into our government, and weaponization against citizens like myself, we are only now beginning to fully comprehend.
RFK Jr.’s grassroots-powered rise, despite being labeled alongside me on the so-called “Disinformation Dozen” hit list, and relentlessly targeted by many of the same intelligence-adjacent organizations, stands as a powerful signal that the tide is turning. His growing influence reveals that no amount of black operations, smear campaigns, or algorithmic suppression can ultimately stop the will of the people when truth is on their side. It marks not only a personal vindication, but the beginning of the global defeat of an agenda that has long sought to undermine health sovereignty, suppress dissent, and distort reality.
The silence that once enabled injustice is cracking. And what follows is not chaos — but restoration.
We the People now have champions within government who understand what has occurred, who see the damage that was done, and who have already begun the long-overdue process of correction.
This is not a partisan moment. It is a moral one.
A New Movement Has Begun
There is now a global movement of legal reform, not as a political gesture, but as a spiritual necessity. It is rising across the U.S., Britain, Europe, and beyond.
It is not only shaped by leaders or institutions–it is carried in the hearts of citizens, mothers, healers, builders, farmers, veterans, artists, and truth-tellers of every age.
It is built by those who have lost much but remembered even more.
It is supported by citizens, doctors, artists, families — people who remember what freedom feels like, even if it has been absent from their lives.
International, sovereignty- and values-led NGOs like the Global Wellness Forum, the National Health Federation, World Council for Health, and new legal coalitions are beginning to create the very systems that will replace what failed us. These are not think tanks. These are structures of spiritual and civic coherence.
And this is a message of restoration. It is an invitation for those who still carry the sword:
Lay it down.
The truth is coming out. The records and receipts are preserved. The documents exist. The people know. And what has been done in silence will soon be seen in the light.
You who have relentlessly persecuted me and those I hold dear now stand at a threshold. You can choose to step back, to meet this moment with honesty, humility, and grace. Or you can press forward on your path–and when the reckoning arrives, as it surely will, may you be prepared to face the full weight of what you have summoned.
For those who have endured lawfare, economic destruction, deplatforming, and social exile simply for speaking truth: you are not alone.
This message is for you, too.
You have endured. You have remembered. And now, you are part of the spiral that is dissolving the walls.
To my readers, allies, and unseen friends: I would not have made it without you.
We are not leaving.
We are not backing down.
We are the crack in the wall. And the light is coming through.
What Comes Next: The Six Weeks That Will Change Everything
The weeks ahead will not merely be significant–they will be defining.
We are nearing an inflection point where the years of long campaigning and suppression–and the networks that sustained it–will either quietly begin to unravel from within, or be met by an undeniable surge of public awakening.
In the United States, millions have begun to question the weaponization of the justice system–its use as a political tool, not a protector of rights. The unprecedented legal targeting of a former President has laid bare a system no longer anchored in equal protection, but in selective enforcement.
In the United Kingdom, the exposure of private prosecutions against over one thousand innocent subpostmasters–now acknowledged as one of the greatest legal scandals in modern British history–has shattered public trust.
What was once dismissed as conspiracy is now documentary.
But this is no longer just about what they tried to do.
This is about what we now choose to build.
The pressure is mounting. The reckoning is inevitable. What has been hidden–through contracts, through whispers, through intimidation–is now breaking into view. Not just in courtrooms and boardrooms, but in the hearts of those who will no longer be silent.
Why Home Prices Are Cratering in Florida
THE DAILY ECONOMY, April 28, 2025
Florida’s housing market has moved decisively from scorching-hot to increasingly fragile. After experiencing some of the nation’s steepest home price appreciation during the Pandemic Housing Boom, Florida is now leading on the way down — particularly in its condo sector. In 92 percent of tracked Florida metro areas, condo prices are falling, and two-thirds of its single-family marketsare posting year-over-year declines. While the national housing market remains resilient — with single-family prices up 2.8 percent and condo prices eking out a 0.4 percent gain — Florida is unmistakably in correction mode.
What explains this divergence? A perfect storm of economic, regulatory, and demographic shifts has upended the once-overheated supply-demand dynamics that propelled Florida real estate to record heights. From migration reversals and insurance shocks to tighter financing conditions and overbuilt inventory, Florida’s housing market is facing pressure on multiple fronts.
Post-Pandemic Migration Reversal
The extraordinary surge of migration into Florida during the pandemic was central to its housing boom. Between March 2020 and June 2022, home prices in the state soared 51 percent, compared to 41 percent nationally, fueled by an influx of remote workers and retirees fleeing higher-cost states. But that inflow has slowed sharply. Net domestic migration to Florida dropped to just 64,000 in 2024 — down more than 75 percent from the 314,000 peak in 2022.
That reversal has fundamentally weakened demand for housing of all sorts. Without the steady inflow of higher-income, out-of-state buyers, Florida’s housing markets are increasingly reliant on local purchasing power. And with wage growth failing to keep pace with rising costs of ownership — particularly for insurance and association fees — affordability constraints are biting hard.
Regulatory Fallout
The 2021 collapse of the Champlain Towers South in Surfside, which killed 98 people, has led to sweeping changes in Florida’s building safety regulations. These rules now mandate structural inspections and higher reserve funding for repairs, particularly in older condo buildings near the coast. While well-intentioned, the financial and logistical burdens have been severe. Homeowners associations have levied significant special assessments and hiked monthly dues — sometimes on an order of hundreds of dollars per month.
This regulatory shock has hit condos particularly hard, both by raising carrying costs and by chilling demand in older buildings seen as liabilities. As a result, Florida’s condo market has softened more acutely than its single-family segment. In Punta Gorda, condo prices have fallen 11.4 percent over the past year. In Tampa and North Port, declines are near or above 8 percent.
Hurricane Ian’s Lingering Effects
Natural disasters often have unpredictable consequences for housing markets, and Hurricane Ian was no exception. The 2022 storm caused nearly $115 billion in damage, flooding homes and destabilizing infrastructure in Southwest Florida communities like Cape Coral and Punta Gorda. The result has been a flood of damaged inventory entering the market alongside rising rebuilding costs, strained insurance capacity, and reduced buyer interest.
In these areas, the result is clear: year-over-year price drops of 5 to 7 percent for single-family homes, with even steeper losses in the condo segment. The shadow of future storm risk — and rising insurance costs — continues to depress valuations.
A Surge in New Supply
Unlike many urban markets constrained by zoning or geography, Florida boasts a relatively elastic housing supply. It’s a mixed blessing. During the boom, developers ramped up aggressively, particularly in exurban and suburban markets. Now, those homes are coming online just as demand wanes. New construction incentives — especially mortgage rate buydowns — have made builder homes more attractive relative to existing inventory, putting further pressure on resale values.
In fact, Florida is one of the few states where active listings now exceed pre-pandemic levels. While housing inventory remains tight nationally, Florida is seeing a relative glut — especially in areas where price appreciation outpaced fundamentals.
Punta Gorda, Florida is a clear example of a market where home prices outran true value, condo prices falling 11.4 percent and single-family home prices declining 7.3 percent year-over-year as of early 2025. This correction reflects how pandemic-era price surges, rising insurance costs, and new regulatory pressures have exposed underlying weaknesses in overheated Florida markets.
The Insurance Affordability Crisis
Perhaps no factor looms larger in Florida’s current housing woes than the state’s mounting home insurance crisis. While the median US premium has risen 33 percent over the past three years, Florida homeowners have faced significantly larger increases due to outsized hurricane exposure, rising replacement costs, and a volatile reinsurance market. In some parts of the state, annual premiums now exceed $10,000.
These spikes are exacerbating affordability issues. Homebuyers not only face elevated purchase prices (relative to pre-pandemic levels), but also steeper monthly carrying costs. Combined with higher HOA dues, mortgage rates still near two-decade highs, and broader inflationary pressures, the overall cost of owning a Florida home has become unsustainable for many prospective buyers.
Soft Landing, or a Harder Fall?
Florida’s housing correction is not (yet) a collapse, but it marks a clear inflection point. After years of rapid growth powered by unique pandemic-era tailwinds, the state now faces a reckoning. The market’s sensitivity to shifts in migration, insurance, and regulation — amplified by its highly cyclical nature — suggests that further downside is possible in vulnerable regions, particularly those with aging condo stock or recent storm damage.
While Miami and Orlando have so far bucked the broader trend — with modest price gains over the past year — these gains are narrowing, and headwinds are strengthening. Without another wave of inbound buyers or a meaningful retreat in borrowing and insurance costs, Florida’s real estate market may remain under pressure well into 2025.
In short, what went up fastest is now coming down hardest. For investors and policymakers alike, Florida’s unfolding housing correction offers a cautionary tale in boom-bust dynamics — and a reminder that fundamentals, not just momentum, ultimately anchor real estate markets.
Peter C. Earle, Ph.D, is a Senior Research Fellow who joined AIER in 2018. He holds a Ph.D in Economics from l’Universite d’Angers, an MA in Applied Economics from American University, an MBA (Finance), and a BS in Engineering from the United States Military Academy at West Point.