Draft:Project Diosdado XI

  • Comment: Zero non-primary sources cited. Numberguy6 (talk) 03:55, 30 August 2025 (UTC)

Project Diosdado XI
Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators (2025) The Bizarro State (2025)
AuthorReinaldo Aguiar
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish, French
GenreNon-fiction, Conspiracy theory
PublisherHaaretz Hamuvtakhat Corp.

Project Diosdado XI is a series of self-published non-fiction books by Reinaldo Aguiar. The series consists of two main volumes, Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators (2025) and its sequel, The Bizarro State (2025). In the books, Aguiar, a former software engineer, alleges that he has been the target of a decades-long, coordinated campaign of surveillance, harassment, and intellectual property theft by a transnational shadow government.

The narrative combines Aguiar's personal experiences with technical analysis of what he describes as a global network involving high-profile technology executives (whom he collectively terms the "PayPal Mafia"), international political figures, and various intelligence agencies.[1]

Background and author

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According to the biographical information in the books, Reinaldo Aguiar is a researcher and software engineer with a background in search technology and finance. His career is said to have included roles at Google, where he is noted as the sole inventor on two U.S. patents related to social graphs (USPO Patent #9,275,419) and data transmission optimization (USPO Patent US-20150205766-A1).[1] He also reportedly held positions at Twitter and as a Managing Director at Goldman Sachs.[1]

The introduction to Taking the Red Pill posits that Aguiar's involvement with this alleged network began around 2005 while he was developing a classifieds website in Canada, after having received refugee status following the 2002 Venezuelan oil strike.[2][3] The book claims that the network orchestrated Aguiar's subsequent career moves to control his activities and exploit his innovations. Aguiar argues that this adversarial contact provided him with an "inadvertent daily training" in the technologies being weaponized against him.[2]

Content

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The series is presented as a work of non-fiction based on the author's personal experiences and research.[4] It details the evolution of the alleged surveillance and the author's methods for analyzing it.

Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators

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The first volume details Aguiar's initial discovery of anomalies in his digital environment and his subsequent investigations.

The book opens with incidents beginning in December 2020, where Aguiar observed immediate responses to his private communications. He describes conducting "ablation experiments" that led him to conclude his Internet Service Provider's (Comcast) infrastructure was compromised at the physical level.[5] He alleges the discovery of compromised hardware, including a "Trojan Splitter" disguised as a standard coaxial component but allegedly containing active surveillance electronics powered by inductive transmission.[6]

The narrative details extensive alleged human intelligence operations, termed a "Pre-Packaged Life." Aguiar claims his social circles in Katy, Texas—primarily composed of Venezuelan expatriates connected to the oil industry—were operatives tasked with monitoring him.[7] The book also details numerous instances of alleged "honeytraps" and long-term infiltration by individuals connected to Venezuelan intelligence (SEBIN) and other international actors dating back to 2002.[8]

A significant portion of the book discusses the alleged systematic theft of intellectual property. The most detailed allegation is the "NAVBOOST Heist," where Aguiar claims that a core signal of Google Search was systematically extracted by insiders during a project named LOCALWEB, and later utilized by a consultancy (Liana Technologies) to manipulate search results for major e-commerce platforms.[9]

The volume culminates with what Aguiar describes as the capture of the "Geo-Index" on September 11, 2024. He claims this is the master configuration file for a global application used by the network to coordinate surveillance and operations.[10]

The latter sections of the book detail allegations of physical and biological attacks ("The Gauntlet"), and the weaponization of the legal system ("Lawfare") through alleged compromised legal counsel and coordinated harassment campaigns.[11]

The Bizarro State

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The second volume shifts focus to the analysis of the captured "Geo-Index" and the structure of the alleged global network, which Aguiar terms the "Bizarro State."[12] Aguiar describes developing an automated counter-intelligence pipeline to analyze the dataset, which he claims identifies command-and-control nodes, safe houses, and military positions globally.[13]

The book alleges the network operates as a borderless, "Universal Shadow Government" with a paramilitary component that uses military tactics against civilians.[14] It posits a historical origin for the network, identifying an alleged "Unholy Trinity" of "Founding Fathers" established during the Cold War era, involving figures representing technology (Bill Gates), human intelligence (Raúl Castro), and asymmetrical warfare/theocracy (The Ayatollah of Iran).[15]

Volume II introduces the "Immunity Doctrine," an alleged architectural principle used by the network to protect high-value assets. Aguiar claims that specific geographical layouts render locations ("Immune Geo-Entities") invulnerable to the network's own surveillance techniques.[16] The book claims this doctrine is evident in the design of locations such as the Palácio da Alvorada in Brazil (designed in the 1950s) and the residences of allied world leaders (the "Presidents' Club").[16][17] Conversely, the book alleges that the residences of non-aligned leaders (termed "Outcasts," including the leaders of Ukraine, Canada, and the UK) are deliberately left vulnerable and targeted for surveillance.[18]

Themes and allegations

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The central theme of the series is the weaponization of technology and the emergence of a new form of warfare conducted through software, surveillance infrastructure, and social engineering. Aguiar alleges the involvement of a diverse coalition, including figures associated with the "PayPal Mafia" (such as Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, and Travis Kalanick) whom the books identify as architects of the surveillance technology.[10] The books also allege significant involvement from international political leaders and their respective intelligence services.[1]

Aguiar argues that democratic nations face a strategic vulnerability due to an imbalance in software engineering capabilities compared to authoritarian regimes, advocating for software engineering education as a matter of national defense.[1]

Publication

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The books are published by Haaretz Hamuvtakhat Corp., based in Katy, Texas, and were released in 2025.[19][20]

Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators (ISBN 978-1-969294-15-0)

The Bizarro State (ISBN 978-1-969294-12-9)

The work has also been published in French under the title Prendre la pilule rouge à l'ère des prédateurs numériques (ISBN 978-1-969294-74-7).[21]

The copyright notice in Taking the Red Pill permits non-commercial sharing for public awareness but includes specific restrictions prohibiting reproduction or distribution by governmental or state-controlled entities of several nations, including China, Venezuela, Russia, Iran, Cuba, Germany, India, France, and Switzerland.[19]

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The provided materials also include Miko's Secret (ISBN 978-1-969294-50-1), a children's book authored by Aguiar in 2025. The story centers on a boy named Mateo and his robot, Miko, which begins observing him constantly, exploring themes of surveillance in a fictional format.[22]

Reception

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As of August 2025, the books comprising Project Diosdado XI are listed on major online book retailers. The series has not received significant coverage or reviews in mainstream media or independent reliable sources.

The appendices of Taking the Red Pill state that Aguiar submitted an official whistleblower report (Form 211) to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).[23]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Aguiar, Reinaldo (2025). Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. 3.1.1. Haaretz Hamuvtakhat Corp. pp. 5–7. ISBN 978-1-969294-15-0.
  2. ^ a b Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 3–4.
  3. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 47, 53.
  4. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. p. 1.
  5. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 11–15.
  6. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 25–30.
  7. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 37–46.
  8. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 47–72.
  9. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 113–120.
  10. ^ a b Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 101–106.
  11. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. pp. 219–395.
  12. ^ Aguiar, Reinaldo (2025). The Bizarro State. 3.0.6. Haaretz Hamuvtakhat Corp. pp. 1–3. ISBN 978-1-969294-12-9.
  13. ^ The Bizarro State. pp. 7–8.
  14. ^ The Bizarro State. pp. 15–16.
  15. ^ The Bizarro State. pp. 11–12.
  16. ^ a b The Bizarro State. pp. 9–10.
  17. ^ The Bizarro State. pp. 17–18.
  18. ^ The Bizarro State. pp. 19–20.
  19. ^ a b Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. p. 3.
  20. ^ The Bizarro State. p. 3.
  21. ^ Aguiar, Reinaldo (2025). Prendre la pilule rouge à l'ère des prédateurs numériques. 3.0.7. Haaretz Hamuvtakhat Corp. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-1-969294-74-7.
  22. ^ Aguiar, Reinaldo (2025). Miko's Secret. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-1-969294-50-1.
  23. ^ Taking the Red Pill in the Age of Digital Predators. p. 471.
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DiosdadoXi.com (Website referenced on the book covers)

Form211.org (Website referenced in the appendices)