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What publications or transcripts exist of Sabrina Wallace's talks on biofields?
Executive summary
Coverage shows multiple online publications, podcasts, transcripts and republished PDFs of Sabrina Wallace’s talks on the “biofield,” with material hosted on platforms such as Spotify (a 15‑minute podcast), Substack, Scribd, Patreon and several fringe or advocacy sites that republish or summarize her videos and documents (see examples on Spotify, Substack, Scribd and Patreon) [1] [2] [3] [4]. Many items are summaries or reposts rather than primary, peer‑reviewed publications; available sources do not mention any mainstream journal publications authored by Wallace (not found in current reporting).
1. Where her talks and transcripts appear: a patchwork across platforms
Wallace’s material appears as short podcast episodes (example: a 15‑minute Spotify episode titled “Personal Area Networks & The Human Biofield”) and as republished transcripts and long‑form Substack posts that extract or comment on her video series and talks [1] [2]. In addition, several sites host PDFs and Scribd uploads that present transcriptions or notes of her talks—labeled as “Denial Done,” “Notes,” and an intro class PDF—that circulate among communities focused on biofield and anti‑surveillance themes [3] [5] [6].
2. Collections and curated lists: aggregated repositories and reposts
A number of aggregators and niche blogs have compiled many of Wallace’s videos and documents into single pages or lists—for example, a page claiming “88 Sabrina Wallace videos w/ references, notes, comments” and other curated posts that summarize her claims about Wireless Body Area Networks and the Global Information Grid [7]. These compilations function as secondary repositories rather than original publishers; they republish video links, summaries and Wallace’s referenced “white papers” as interpreted by those sites [7].
3. Paid or membership platforms hosting her materials
Patreon posts and Substack commentary repackage Wallace’s content for audiences that follow complementary researchers (a Patreon post referencing Wallace’s biofield material and Substack posts that reproduce or comment on her series are examples) [4] [8]. These platforms often mix Wallace’s primary material with commentary and editorial framing that advances a specific interpretive lens, so readers should note the distinction between Wallace’s original words and the commentator’s summaries [4] [8].
4. Themes and framing in the available items
Across these items Wallace frames the “biofield” as an anatomical, electromagnetic body system that can be read, tethered and exploited by technologies (terms used include Wireless Body Area Network, biosensors, Global Information Grid). The sources show she links Pentagon/IEEE research, telecommunications projects (e.g., Hexa‑X) and military tech to a broader claim that individual biofields are being integrated into sensor networks [2] [8] [7]. These themes appear consistently in republished transcripts, blog summaries and her podcast appearances [2] [1] [7].
5. Quality and provenance: mainstream vs. fringe outlets
Most of the indexed items are hosted on niche or alternative media platforms (forbiddennews, connecting‑frequencies, gangstalkingmindcontrolcults, Substack excerpts) or in user‑uploaded document libraries (Scribd), rather than in established scientific journals or major mainstream outlets [8] [9] [7] [3]. A purported “intro class” PDF is available as a downloadable PDF [5]. Available sources do not mention peer‑reviewed scientific publications by Wallace; they mainly show talks, PDFs and interviews circulated in sympathetic communities (not found in current reporting; p2_s1).
6. Transcripts, PDFs and derivative summaries to consult
Concrete items you can consult from the provided results include: a Spotify episode titled “Sabrina Wallace on Personal Area Networks & The Human Biofield” (15 minutes) [1]; a three‑part transcript republished on Substack titled “Sabrina Wallace & Netcentric Warfare - Transcript III” [2]; Scribd uploads of a document called “Denial Done English” and other “Notes” PDFs that claim to transcribe or summarize her talks [3] [6]; and multiple aggregated pages that list many of her videos and references [7] [9].
7. Disagreements, signaling and agendas to watch for
The sources republishing Wallace’s work come from communities skeptical of mainstream science and institutions; they often blend technical citations with conspiratorial framing (claims of “tethered to the Cloud,” “Skynet,” or “mass‑genocide” appear in commentary) [8] [7]. These outlets have clear advocacy agendas—promoting distrust of telecoms, defense research and public health actors—which affects how Wallace’s material is presented and amplified [8] [9]. Readers should distinguish Wallace’s own statements from the editorialized conclusions of host sites.
8. Practical next steps if you want primary sources
Start with the Spotify episode [1] and the Substack transcript republish (dated November 17, 2023 content) to hear or read Wallace in her own voice and then cross‑check PDFs on Scribd and the downloadable “Psinergy Intro Class” PDF to compare versions [1] [2] [3] [5]. If you seek peer‑reviewed corroboration of the biological claims, available sources do not cite mainstream journal articles authored by Wallace—look for independent scientific literature on biofield research to evaluate the technical assertions (not found in current reporting; p2_s1).
Limitations: this summary relies solely on the provided search results and those sources are mostly alternative media, transcripts and reposts—mainstream journal publications by Sabrina Wallace were not found among these results (not found in current reporting).