My Third Novel's Conclusion, My Heartbreak

My heart begins to break when I think about completing this particular book -- because this narrative has sustained me like no other story I've known. It's both more personal and more universal than my other works. But beyond memory and archetype, it's a cri-de-coeur about needing to become the person one is destined to be. And in the writing, I have met my own life's work, my own fated journey -- having the sense all the while that the pages are suffused with a resonance, an energy, an electrified field that defies explanation. Writers hope and pray to be overtaken by a work in this way -- to be conscripted into passionate service of a profound story. To experience it even once in a lifetime seems a great privilege. I still have several months before this novel is complete, and this constitutes my reprieve. Because I'm not ready for the beauty to end.




Thursday, March 19, 2026

Addressal of the FBI's "Hawaii Hilton" and Its Corollaries in the Continental United States

1.  The FBI has apparently been involved in the construction of an underground facility in Hawaii, mostly unused as of this time, intended to incarcerate women in the future, with a view toward sexual exploitation.  Is this your understanding of the situation?

Answer:  Yes, it is.  This is a facility that incorporates advanced construction, including tsunami seals, reportedly.  It has been carefully planned and built with the long term in mind.

2.  What sort of women would be incarcerated there?

Answer:  Women attractive to local and federal law enforcement and security personnel.  This is truly the qualifier.  The planning of this facility has no relationship to some spate of incipient crimes about to be committed by gangs of attractive and lawless women in Hawaii.

To the contrary, this detention center is intended to facilitate wrongful imprisonment and exploitation of perfectly honorable people.

3.  How large is the facility?

Answer:  Large enough to accommodate well over one hundred detainees, reportedly.

4.  And were these women to be returned to their lives after their detention and presumed harm?

Answer:  Decidedly not.  No.  

5.  What was the plan regarding the fate of these intended prisoners?

Answer:  Those women would not have survived their detention.

6.  Would their family members have known what had become of them?  Would anyone have known that they had been incarcerated?

Answer:  No, there would have been no communication allowed with family members or legal representation on the basis of a "national security risk."  In other words, they all would have been accused of espionage or terrorism, thus allowing the FBI to deprive them of their civil rights in their entirety.

7.  Would these women have been foreign nationals exclusively?

Answer:  No.  While foreign nationals would have been at increased risk, Americans would have been snatched from their daily lives only to find themselves trapped in this location as well.

8.  You have said that there are other facilities in the United States that mirror the one in Hawaii.  Do you have any idea where they might be located?

Answer:  There is reportedly one in Southern California, one in Texas, and one in Florida.  I cannot comment on other locations, given that these have not been disclosed to me.

9.  What is it about these facilities that discloses their purpose?  How can we tell that they were intended for women in particular, and how can we tell that the planning involved sexual exploitation of detainees?

Answer:  There are reportedly hotel-like bedrooms in addition to traditional cells.  There are reportedly bidets.  The structures are generally underground, which is to say concealed from public view, awareness and monitoring.  So, the intent is fairly obvious in the architecture alone.

10.  How were the women to be incarcerated?  Is this known to you?

Answer:  It's clear that foreign nationals could simply be picked up at any time by plain clothes law enforcement.  

American women could be the victims of false allegations of human trafficking, incriminating cell phone content, suspicious purse or beach bag contents, falsified communications, the placement of unknown items in their hotel rooms by corrupt law enforcement, or simply false witness statements. 

In Communist and Fascist nations, this is known as denunciation.  And this dynamic has been well-described by Solzhenitsyn and others.

11.  Who has overseen the construction of these facilities?

Answer:  The FBI has directly managed this planning and construction over time on the basis of "national security preparedness."

12.  Are members of the U.S. Congress aware of this construction?

Answer:  They are now.   Prior to this time, only a handful of Congressmen have been informed.

13.  What about the U.S. Department of Justice?

Answer:  The U.S. DOJ as a whole has not had access to this information, no.

14.  What about the Executive Branch?

Answer:  This is a question for the President and his staff, certainly.

15.  What are your thoughts about this circumstance, please?

Answer:  First, I will observe that we have seen these patterns before in other places around the world.  Abductions of women and girls have been documented in Ukraine (https://khpg.org/en/1608814818), Nigeria, Haiti, Afghanistan, and other areas, with minority women at increased risk, certainly.  https://www.forbes.com/sites/ewelinaochab/2022/05/16/abducted-and-enslaved-minority-women-and-girls-let-down-by-governments-globally/

Alongside this, there have been reports of violence against women incarcerated within the United States, so we know this has been a systemic problem for our nation once a woman's formal freedom is taken from her.  

At this time, we are seeing increasing detentions through federal law enforcement authorities.

So, the existence of facilities intended for sexual exploitation of women signals long term planning by the FBI with regard to increasing predation toward women and girls within the United States over time.

16.  What are the necessary steps at this juncture?

Answer:  Congress should subpoena information regarding how many of these facilities exist and where they are located.  The sites should be directly assessed and evaluated.  All documentation regarding the planning and construction of these centers should be aggregated.

 The public should be made aware of the FBI's conduct regarding this matter, along with that of any other agencies and affiliates who played a central role in the dedication of taxpayer funds toward the intended victimization of women and girls.  

The sites, obviously, should be decommissioned, and there needs to be a full accounting of this matter before the American electorate.

17.  What other guidance can you provide regarding this astonishing development?

Answer:  I will express that I am grateful this issue came to my attention and that I was able to raise the alarm promptly.

Our nation is under significant pressure due to environmental and geopolitical concerns at this time, and realistically, those stressors are likely to worsen.

Despite this, and perhaps even because of it, we must ensure that women and girls are not exploited, diminished, defamed, and rendered vulnerable to abduction, abuse, wrongful arrest, and isolation by the FBI and its affiliates.

Our nation's capacity to lead through the challenges that are imminent is dependent partly on our insistence that women and girls not be rendered victims of federal agencies that are increasingly seeking to exert power and control in a totalitarian manner.

Rather, women, alongside those men who defend their human rights, are necessary in ensuring that our defense of the sovereignty of the United States will succeed.

If we preferentially sacrifice women's human rights to the exigencies of the moment, we are also sacrificing children's human rights in the process.  And the intended demeaning and diminishment of women and children as an institutional prerogative is decidedly not in the national interest.

It is only in adequately respecting and honoring our mothers, our sisters, our daughters and our wives -- alongside the men who know that women's human rights are not secondary --  that the United States can assert its rightful claim to the sovereignty of the American people and the nation as a whole.

The mission and objectives of the FBI simply do not include torture, sexual violence, and systemic predation toward the vulnerable.

Our worthy nation must reject those aggressions as inimical to our sovereign future.

I now ask for the help of the U.S. Congress in rigorously addressing the risks the FBI has wrongfully created for our women and girls, and correspondingly, our nation as a whole.

18.  Thank you for speaking with us this afternoon.

Answer:  You are most welcome.

Lane MacWilliams



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