Tuesday, July 7, 2026

👀🌋 LAZY MAGIC. THE VOICES OF MOUNT SHASTA: CALLING HELL IN SEARCH OF PEACE

In June 2026, photographer Karrie Ann Snure encountered about 200 solar-powered speakers broadcasting sermons on a loop on the slopes of Mount Shasta, California. The private landowner had installed the devices as a spiritual project to radiate positive energy and prayers for peace, although the sound was described as chaotic and apocalyptic.


USA, CALIFORNIA. June 30, 2026. Photographer Karrie Ann Snure and her daughter Jordan were horseback riding near Mount Shasta, close to Highway 97 in Weed, California, when piercing sounds caught their attention.

They stepped off the trail, and a live video stream began recording at dusk that day (7:41 PM local time).

Guided by the noise, they searched for its source and discovered between 100 and 200 solar-powered Bluetooth speakers planted in the ground across the hillside.

Collectively, they produced a sound somewhere between static and a chaotic jumble of shouting and speech. Individually, the units played various messages with religious or spiritual themes.

While some isolated speakers played mantras, a large number of the units played a looped audio recording of a religious sermon focused on "salvation." 

However, the result of this mechanical "projection of peace and salvation" sounded more like the desperate cries of tormented souls echoing straight from hell.

SPECULATIONS

The video stirred up social media news circles, and the story made headlines in major media outlets.

Reflecting on the experience, Karrie Ann Snure considered the hypothesis that the speakers might be part of a Lemurian communication or monitoring system on the planet's surface.

MOUNT SHASTA


Mount Shasta is a place of strange tales — almost an "anomaly zone."

Local legend holds that beneath the volcano lies Telos, an underground city inhabited by Lemurian descendants—survivors of a mythical lost continent—who possess the technological capability for interdimensional travel and extraterrestrial communication.

According to Atlas Obscura, the site is also known for sightings of Sasquatch and UFOs, as well as for its significance in Native American sacred traditions.
[https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/lost-continent-lemuria].

The Mount Shasta region has attracted fringe belief systems since at least the 1930s, when Guy Ballard claimed to have met an Ascended Master named Saint Germain on the mountain and launched the "I AM" religious movement.

Curious visitors, UFO researchers, crystal healers, and various spiritual communities are active in the area. The region is home to several devotional communities that regard it as sacred territory.

SPIRITUAL INSTALLATION 👇 🤡
In a subsequent video, Karrie Ann Snure—after conducting her own investigation—discovered that the equipment was located on private property adjacent to California state land. 

No one came forward to explain the setup publicly, but the owner of the site where it was found met privately with Karrie Ann.

He explained that, ever since his first visit to Mount Shasta, he had felt a deep spiritual connection to the region. He had purchased the private lot and installed the equipment as a "personal project to radiate positive energy." 

His goal was to project continuous prayers for an end to war and for world peace directly out into the universe.

CALLING HELL IN SEARCH OF PEACE
What the women encountered was an irresponsible attempt to alter reality through a form of lazy magic—a technique of acting upon and interfering with reality using the vibrational force of sound waves.

The boxes broadcast spiritual messages and spoken intentions voiced by various people, creating a jumbled din of male and female voices speaking all at once.

This simultaneity — sermons of salvation mingled with ceaseless prayers, playing unsynchronized in hundreds of directions throughout the forest — produces a sound evocative of collective chaos, fraught with anguish and disorientation. It is a dangerous experiment that could yield the exact opposite of the intended effect: disturbances in the psychosphere.

SOURCES
A Woman Found 200 Speakers Screaming on Mount Shasta, and Nobody Knows Why
Ashley Fike. June 29, 2026
https://www.vice.com/en/article/a-woman-found-200-speakers-screaming-on-mount-shasta-and-nobody-knows-why/
Spooky discovery on mysterious Mount Shasta after horseback riders follow ‘apocalyptic’ sounds: ‘Summoning something’
Ben Cost. June 26, 2026,
https://nypost.com/2026/06/26/lifestyle/mount-shasta-horseback-riders-find-eerie-source-of-apocalyptic-soundtrack/
ORIGINAL POST
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=2408318623011646
The Frenzy About the Weirdest Continent That Never Existed
by Frank Jacobs. January 19, 2024
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/lost-continent-lemuria
There’s Something About Mount Shasta
by Laura Kiniry. September 4, 2020
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/mount-shasta-spirituality
https://www.sfchronicle.com/outdoors/article/mount-shasta-bluetooth-speakers-mystery-22325385.php