I think their planned circadia vector will be the multi-vaxed drones out in the streets screaming all day and night and disrupting the ability of the non-vaxed to sleep. Fortunately, they will all die from myocarditis or turbo-cancer before it achieves the intended effect.
Gwah! I've been trying to find a very relevant link to a much older site that predates all of the cicada stuff by 15+ yrs.
It was a sort of archive site that hosted images of scanned letters, adverts, and emails relating to cipher and logic puzzle mystique from a variety of institutions that were seemingly recruiting puzzles. The context ranged from academia, intel agencies, secret societies, and more than one LARP in the mix.
Was a really interesting site. They had image scans dating back to the 80s. I want to say the guy that created the site was an editor for a university newspaper that happened to stumble upon the various puzzles and ciphers being used as paid adverts for the newspaper and all of the normally available information was private... so he created a clunky mid 90s image hosting site for everything submitted to the paper as well as users forwarding him adjacent material and data.
If anyone knows what Im referring to, has a link, or wants to dig: The site was named something along the lines of MYSTERYMAYHEM and the thumbnail for the site looked something like the Quaker Oats Oatmeal guy but old Victorian style woodblock print/pressing art.
(WARNING! My security software is flagging the site.)
The archive site you're describing is the May Day Mystery archive (maydaymystery.org / maydaymystery.org/mayday), created by Bryan Hance.
It perfectly matches your details:It hosts scanned images of cryptic full-page advertisements (plus related letters, emails, packages, and "corrective" notices) that have run in the Arizona Daily Wildcat (University of Arizona's student newspaper) every May 1 since 1981 (with some earlier 1980s examples). These ads are elaborate ciphers, logic puzzles, mathematical encodings, historical references, multilingual messages, maps, symbols, and artwork—exactly the kind of "cipher and logic puzzles" you mentioned.
Bryan Hance (a UA student who worked on the newspaper's online edition in the mid-1990s) stumbled upon the ads while at the paper. The information about who placed them and why was otherwise private/obscure (they're paid ads from an anonymous/reclusive individual or group, often linked to a lawyer named Robert Truman Hungerford acting as intermediary for "The Orphanage" or similar). He spent time digging through back issues/microfiche, compiled everything, and launched the site around 1997 as a straightforward, clunky late-90s-style personal web archive of image scans and text transcriptions.
It also includes user-submitted/forwarded adjacent material (Hance received 100+ emails, couriers, packages, and calls from solvers, theorists, and even the puzzle creators themselves, some of which he posted).
The name "May Day Mystery" is very close to the "MYSTERYMAYHEM" phrasing you recalled (likely a memory blend of "May Day" + "mystery" elements). The site has been referenced in articles, Reddit discussions, YouTube videos, and puzzle communities for years as the central hub for these scans and analysis.
There's also a modern community wiki that organizes the same material: https://maydaymystery.com/ (or the older Wikidot mirror).
If the direct links have changed or some images are mirrored elsewhere (the site is old-school and low-maintenance), a quick Wayback Machine search on maydaymystery.org will pull up the full historical image gallery. This is the exact resource you were thinking of—no other site matches the combination of university newspaper cipher ads, 1980s+ scans, editor/archivist backstory, and mid-90s image-hosting vibe. Enjoy diving back in!
It's a neat site to deep dive down. Predates Q, Cicada, et al.
There's some off topic and adjacent cipher and conspiracy stuff (e.g. Toynbee tiles puzzles) but one thing can be taken from delineating all of the old archived scans is that institutions of all types have been using cipher/puzzle/psyops to both recruit and confuse individuals for at least 40 yrs.
Also segways with the inception of the GATE/GT public school program, which is also a data collection recruitment tool.
If it's true that Gates and ilk were first concocting the convid bullshit in 2009 ( as per the files ) that would be 17 years - certainly means something.
Spellings matter...
Q: What's a "Circada"?
A: A Cicada with an R.
B: A Locust by another misspelled name.
C: A rhythm for those who live day by day.
u/#ummwhat
R is inserted to blame rebublicans
I think their planned circadia vector will be the multi-vaxed drones out in the streets screaming all day and night and disrupting the ability of the non-vaxed to sleep. Fortunately, they will all die from myocarditis or turbo-cancer before it achieves the intended effect.
OH no!! Should I wear a mask and stay home? Please let there be some sort of vaccine that I can take! Will there be free donuts if I do?
Get two yardsticks and tape them together so you can stay six feet away from other people.
What a ridiculous comment. You’ll need to overlap the yardstick to make it rigid. That’s going to put you at like 66” at best. You’re doomed.
Oh no! You're right! Shoot, I need to use THREE yardsticks. It'll be more than six feet, but that will add a safety margin.
Glad you understood the sarcasm in my comment. I almost deleted, then realized we’re not that sensitive here.
Shitposters unite!
I will also shame other people for not adhering to store mask policy! 2 weeks to crush this!
2026 - 17 = 2009
Obummer’s inauguration 🤷♂️
*Usurpation
Tough audience. Yeesh.
I think this is an astute observation. The Cicada 3301 thing was a big deal and still unexplained.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/81/Cicada3301%27s_First_Message.jpg/250px-Cicada3301%27s_First_Message.jpg
In other words, "Kept in a lab awaiting release around election time."
It doesn't get more commy than that (not commie!}
Dims: Why do we care if bugs get sick?
Cicada huh? This is a clown show movie.
Gwah! I've been trying to find a very relevant link to a much older site that predates all of the cicada stuff by 15+ yrs.
It was a sort of archive site that hosted images of scanned letters, adverts, and emails relating to cipher and logic puzzle mystique from a variety of institutions that were seemingly recruiting puzzles. The context ranged from academia, intel agencies, secret societies, and more than one LARP in the mix.
Was a really interesting site. They had image scans dating back to the 80s. I want to say the guy that created the site was an editor for a university newspaper that happened to stumble upon the various puzzles and ciphers being used as paid adverts for the newspaper and all of the normally available information was private... so he created a clunky mid 90s image hosting site for everything submitted to the paper as well as users forwarding him adjacent material and data.
If anyone knows what Im referring to, has a link, or wants to dig: The site was named something along the lines of MYSTERYMAYHEM and the thumbnail for the site looked something like the Quaker Oats Oatmeal guy but old Victorian style woodblock print/pressing art.
I ran this past Grok. Is this it:
(WARNING! My security software is flagging the site.)
The archive site you're describing is the May Day Mystery archive (maydaymystery.org / maydaymystery.org/mayday), created by Bryan Hance.
It perfectly matches your details:It hosts scanned images of cryptic full-page advertisements (plus related letters, emails, packages, and "corrective" notices) that have run in the Arizona Daily Wildcat (University of Arizona's student newspaper) every May 1 since 1981 (with some earlier 1980s examples). These ads are elaborate ciphers, logic puzzles, mathematical encodings, historical references, multilingual messages, maps, symbols, and artwork—exactly the kind of "cipher and logic puzzles" you mentioned.
Bryan Hance (a UA student who worked on the newspaper's online edition in the mid-1990s) stumbled upon the ads while at the paper. The information about who placed them and why was otherwise private/obscure (they're paid ads from an anonymous/reclusive individual or group, often linked to a lawyer named Robert Truman Hungerford acting as intermediary for "The Orphanage" or similar). He spent time digging through back issues/microfiche, compiled everything, and launched the site around 1997 as a straightforward, clunky late-90s-style personal web archive of image scans and text transcriptions.
It also includes user-submitted/forwarded adjacent material (Hance received 100+ emails, couriers, packages, and calls from solvers, theorists, and even the puzzle creators themselves, some of which he posted).
The name "May Day Mystery" is very close to the "MYSTERYMAYHEM" phrasing you recalled (likely a memory blend of "May Day" + "mystery" elements). The site has been referenced in articles, Reddit discussions, YouTube videos, and puzzle communities for years as the central hub for these scans and analysis.
Main original archive (still referenced and partially active with the classic scans/texts): http://www.maydaymystery.org/mayday/ (or directly to the mystery page: http://www.maydaymystery.org/mayday/mystery.html)
There's also a modern community wiki that organizes the same material: https://maydaymystery.com/ (or the older Wikidot mirror).
If the direct links have changed or some images are mirrored elsewhere (the site is old-school and low-maintenance), a quick Wayback Machine search on maydaymystery.org will pull up the full historical image gallery. This is the exact resource you were thinking of—no other site matches the combination of university newspaper cipher ads, 1980s+ scans, editor/archivist backstory, and mid-90s image-hosting vibe. Enjoy diving back in!
u/LoneWulf that's it! Kek... i spent an hour scrolling yandex and never thought to use AI. Derp! Thank you fren!
Click here: Hyperlink to the archive
It's a neat site to deep dive down. Predates Q, Cicada, et al.
There's some off topic and adjacent cipher and conspiracy stuff (e.g. Toynbee tiles puzzles) but one thing can be taken from delineating all of the old archived scans is that institutions of all types have been using cipher/puzzle/psyops to both recruit and confuse individuals for at least 40 yrs.
Also segways with the inception of the GATE/GT public school program, which is also a data collection recruitment tool.
It figures… they are getting ready to release yet another bioweapon, I guess.
If it's true that Gates and ilk were first concocting the convid bullshit in 2009 ( as per the files ) that would be 17 years - certainly means something.
Circumcision Covid variant, you say?!