The Underground Report: Cooper, Schneider, and the Forty-Year War to Keep It Hidden

From “The Underground Report” — The Architecture of the Void Project | May 2026
Between 1989 and 1996, two men — working independently, from different professional backgrounds, with different access points into the same infrastructure — told the American public that the United States government had built a network of deep underground military bases funded by money that Congress could not trace, connected by a high-speed transit system that no civilian had been told existed, and operated under classification levels that placed them beyond the reach of democratic oversight.
One was a Naval Intelligence briefing officer who read the classified documents describing the network. The other was a geological engineer who physically built it. They named the same facilities. They described the same funding mechanisms. They described the same transit system. They both said they would be killed for talking. They were both right.
Bill Cooper — The Intelligence Officer
Cooper served in the United States Navy from 1965 to 1975 with Top Secret clearance. He stated that during his assignment, he read classified documents detailing a covert government structure operating outside constitutional authority — what he called “the secret government.” He reported over seventy-five deep underground military bases across the United States, connected by a subterranean high-speed transit system.
On June 28, 2001, Cooper broadcast a warning: “Something terrible is going to happen in this country. And whatever is going to happen, they’re going to blame on Osama bin Laden.” Seventy-five days later, two planes struck the World Trade Center. On November 5, 2001, Apache County sheriff’s deputies killed Cooper on his property. He was fifty-eight.
Phil Schneider — The Engineer
Schneider reported 131 active deep underground military bases in the United States as of 1995, with approximately 1,477 worldwide. He described tunnel boring machines that used high-energy impact lasers to cut through rock at seven miles per day, leaving an obsidian-like vitrified surface that simultaneously served as the foundation for magnetic levitation rails. The tunnels connected bases through maglev trains traveling at Mach 2 to Mach 2.8.
On January 17, 1996, Schneider was found dead in his apartment. A rubber catheter tube was wrapped around his neck and knotted. His fingerprints were not on the tubing. His missing fingers and documented disabilities made self-strangulation physically implausible. Every piece of physical evidence he had displayed at his lectures was missing. He was forty-eight.
Two witnesses. Two bodies. One network. The infrastructure they described is still down there. And nobody has been held accountable for what it contains.
Transhumane Genocide: The Underground Report — available soon.