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Sunday, January 11, 2026

Exaggerated?"Read a Venezuelan Guard's 'Chilling' Account About the Delta Force Raid That Nabbed Maduro"

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2026/01/11/read-a-venezuelan-guards-chilling-account-about-the-delta-force-raid-that-nabbed-maduro-n2669283 



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" it wasn't just the weapons., they launched something—I don't know how to describe it... it was like a very intense sound wave. Suddenly I felt like my head was exploding 🤯 inside. We all started bleeding from the nose. Some were vomiting blood. 
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2026/01/11/read-a-venezuelan-guards-chilling-account-about-the-delta-force-raid-that-nabbed-maduro-n2669283


"For there is nothing hidden that will not be disclosed" — Luke 8:17


AI GENERATED 
Short answer: yes, there are real technologies that could plausibly cause intense head pressure, disorientation, pain, nausea, and even nosebleeds, but the way it's described in that account is likely exaggerated or misinterpreted.

High-intensity acoustic devices do exist. Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRADs) can produce focused sound that causes severe discomfort, vertigo, panic, and loss of coordination. At close range or in confined spaces, intense acoustic pressure can contribute to headaches and, in rare cases, nosebleeds, especially if people already have fragile capillaries or high blood pressure. Directed energy or microwave systems, sometimes discussed in relation to "Havana Syndrome," can cause sensations of head pressure, dizziness, ringing, nausea, and cognitive disruption without visible injury. These effects are real and documented, though still debated in mechanism.

What strains credibility is the dramatic portrayal: mass vomiting of blood, instant incapacitation of hundreds, and catastrophic internal sensations described uniformly. Real effects vary widely by distance, exposure time, environment, and individual physiology. Panic, shock, blast overpressure from explosives, or concussive effects from nearby detonations can also feel like an invisible weapon and be remembered that way afterward.

So something disruptive and non-lethal is plausible. The near-mythical presentation is not.

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