Close Menu
GeekBlog

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    India leads the way on Google’s Nano Banana with a local creative twist

    September 18, 2025

    Meta Connect 2025: the 6 biggest announcements

    September 18, 2025

    Meta’s New Wraparound Smart Glasses Are the Most Oakley Oakleys You Can Buy

    September 18, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
    GeekBlog
    • Home
    • Mobile
    • Reviews
    • Tech News
    • Deals & Offers
    • Gadgets
      • How-To Guides
    • Laptops & PCs
      • AI & Software
    • Blog
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    GeekBlog
    Home»Tech News»One Vigilante, 22 Cell Towers, and a World of Conspiracies
    Tech News

    One Vigilante, 22 Cell Towers, and a World of Conspiracies

    Michael ComaousBy Michael ComaousSeptember 16, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
    One Vigilante, 22 Cell Towers, and a World of Conspiracies
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    As dawn spread over San Antonio on September 9, 2021, almond-colored smoke began to fill the sky above the city’s Far West Side. The plumes were whorling off the top of a 132-foot-tall cell tower that overshadows an office park just north of SeaWorld. At a hotel a mile away, a paramedic snapped a photo of the spectacle and posted it to the r/sanantonio subreddit. “Cell tower on fire around 1604 and Culebra,” he wrote.

    In typical Reddit fashion, the comments section piled up with corny jokes. “Blazing 5G speeds,” quipped one user.

    “I hope no one inhales those fumes, the Covid transmission via 5G will be a lot more potent that way,” wrote another, in a swipe at the conspiracy theorists who claim that radiation from 5G towers caused the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The wisecracks went on: “Can you hear me now?”

    “Free hotspot!”

    “Great, some hero trying to save us from 5G.”

    That self-styled hero was actually lurking in the comments. As he followed the thread on his phone, Sean Aaron Smith delighted in the sheer volume of attention the tower fire was receiving, even if most of it dripped with sarcasm. A lean, tattooed—and until recently, entirely apolitical—27-year-old, Smith had come to view 5G as the linchpin of a globalist plot to zombify humanity. To resist that supposed scheme, he’d spent the past five months setting Texas cell towers ablaze.

    Smith’s crude and quixotic campaign against 5G was precisely the sort of security threat that was fast becoming one of the US government’s top concerns in 2021. Just two weeks after Smith’s fire popped up on Reddit, then FBI director Christopher Wray discussed the latest trends in political violence in a speech marking the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. “Today, the greatest terrorist threat we face here in the US is from what are, in effect, lone actors,” he said, describing these people as moving “quickly from radicalization to action, often using easily obtainable weapons against soft targets.” And an increasing number of these individuals, Wray stressed, were turning violent after marinating in bizarre conspiracy theories.

    In the years since Wray first delivered that warning, political violence in the US has continued to evolve much as he foresaw. Numerous recent attacks have been launched by people whose media diets have conditioned them to believe that government oppressors, permissive liberals, or shadowy cabals must be stopped at all costs. “This conspiracy stuff, it’s not coming from HitlerLover4Chan88 on Twitter anymore,” says Jonathan Lewis, a research fellow at George Washington University’s Program on Extremism. “It’s coming from a blue check, a gold check, a verified account—someone who, for a lot of people, has legitimacy.” He adds that some of those paranoid influencers are even operating in the halls of power. “You’ve got Groypers running Department of Homeland Security Twitter accounts,” Lewis says. “You’re getting legislative bills being passed about climate modification.”

    It all started when a videoclip from episode 1,308 of The Joe Rogan Experience popped up in Smith’s Instagram feed.

    Once convinced that violence is the only moral choice, lone actors are routinely carrying out hit-and-run attacks against pieces of the nation’s technological infrastructure, which remain lightly guarded despite their vast importance. The types of sites being targeted are as varied as the causes that motivate their attackers. In 2022, for example, someone shot up two electrical substations in North Carolina, in a possible far-right effort to disrupt a drag show. Two years later, a Tennessee man was arrested for allegedly plotting to use drones to bomb Nashville’s power grid in hopes of hastening a race war. This past July, a member of a militia group that trafficked in weather-manipulation conspiracy theories allegedly smashed up an Oklahoma radar station. And saboteurs with unknown motives have also been severing fiber-optic cables in both California and Missouri since the early summer. (Gauging the true number of infrastructure attacks has become more difficult since the DHS shuttered its Terrorism and Targeted Violence database in March.)

    But Smith—who planned and executed his arsons by himself—appears to have been more prolific than any of these other extremists. The blaze north of SeaWorld was the seventh he’d set in 2021; in the seven months that followed, he would burn another 15. I spent the past year talking to Smith at length about the origin and details of his anti-5G crusade. I did so in the hope of learning how and why some desperate souls are being lured into destroying the guts of modern life.

    Cell Conspiracies Towers Vigilante World
    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleRFK Jr. adds more anti-vaccine members to CDC vaccine advisory panel
    Next Article Sony reveals that physical software only accounted for 3% of PlayStation sales in the last year, only further fuelling the fire that the PS6 will continue the embrace of digital gaming
    Michael Comaous
    • Website

    Related Posts

    5 Mins Read

    India leads the way on Google’s Nano Banana with a local creative twist

    5 Mins Read

    Meta Connect 2025: the 6 biggest announcements

    3 Mins Read

    Meta’s New Wraparound Smart Glasses Are the Most Oakley Oakleys You Can Buy

    1 Min Read

    Meta Connect 2025 Live: New Ray-Bans Gen 2, Oakley Vanguards, Quest VR

    11 Mins Read

    Meta Connect 2025 live updates: Ray-Ban Display, Oakley Vanguard smart glasses, more

    3 Mins Read

    Asus, Beelink, and HP lead the charge as Ryzen AI Max+ 395 reshapes laptops and desktops in unexpected ways

    Top Posts

    8BitDo Pro 3 review: better specs, more customization, minor faults

    August 8, 202529 Views

    What founders need to know before choosing their exit at Disrupt 2025

    August 8, 202516 Views

    Grok rolls out AI video creator for X with bonus “spicy” mode

    August 7, 202514 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    8BitDo Pro 3 review: better specs, more customization, minor faults

    August 8, 202529 Views

    What founders need to know before choosing their exit at Disrupt 2025

    August 8, 202516 Views

    Grok rolls out AI video creator for X with bonus “spicy” mode

    August 7, 202514 Views
    Our Picks

    India leads the way on Google’s Nano Banana with a local creative twist

    September 18, 2025

    Meta Connect 2025: the 6 biggest announcements

    September 18, 2025

    Meta’s New Wraparound Smart Glasses Are the Most Oakley Oakleys You Can Buy

    September 18, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Threads
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2025 geekblog. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.