Big Pharma and Big Medicine are bowling for dollars and making a killing in the process!

Happy Father’s Day, Dads!

Dr. John Reizer

There are more and more people taking GLP weight-loss drugs every day. This is not by random chance or some coincidental accident. Obesity and diabetes are serious diseases affecting millions of people realm-wide.

These disorders were intentionally created by Big Pharma years ago.  That’s right, Big Pharma companies set up the bowling pins long ago by creating widely prescribed medications that destroy pancreatic tissues and cells, leading to epidemic instances of diabetes and obesity in America.

Today, Big Medicine is throwing bowling balls down the alleys and knocking down those bowling pins, cashing in on the profits generated by GLP injectable pharmaceutical products.

Do you think these products are safe? If you do, you might want to rethink your answer. Remember,  Big Pharma is not anyone’s friend!

– Dr. John Reizer


The One-Hour Diner

Prologue

The police station was a well-lit building that stood out from most of the others. It had been designed and constructed over the last several years and featured a more modernist architectural style than the surrounding structures in the small Montana community.

They entered through the front entranceway and approached the reception area, announcing to the desk sergeant their intention to report information on a previously unsolved crime.

Renee Hudson sat beside Bryan Dawson on a hard, metallic chair. She hadn’t said much since they parked outside. Neither had he. They had been exhausted from everything that had transpired and were conserving their energy for what was to come.

The clock above the reception desk read 3:25 a.m.

Time had kept its promise; it was still moving right along.

Bryan, a handsome middle-aged man with a slender build and brown hair, exhaled slowly, his dark eyes drifting toward the glass partition separating them from the front desk. A tired-looking officer was rifling through some paperwork behind it, unaware of everything they had endured in the last hour.

Renee, an early-thirties brunette and easy on the eyes, shifted uneasily in her seat beside him.

“Once we start,” she whispered, “we don’t get to stop and change our minds.”

Bryan nodded. “I know that.”

She glanced at him, her expression serious. “I just want to say everything right.”

“There isn’t a right way,” he said gently. “There’s only the truth.”

Renee’s fingers flexed. “That’s what scares me.”

A door buzzed and opened somewhere down the hall. Footsteps approached them, and a plainclothes detective appeared in the hallway. He conferred with the desk sergeant briefly, muttered a few words to him, then glanced over at Bryan and Renee.

“Can I help you two?” he asked, his tone overly friendly.

Renee and Bryan stood up. “We need to report something important,” Bryan said. His voice sounded nervous and cautious. “It’s about a previously unsolved crime.”

The detective’s eyebrows raised slightly. “Okay,” he said. “Let’s step into an interview room.”

They followed the man down a narrow hallway, the walls lined with flyers for missing people.

The interview area was tiny, with a small table and four chairs. A small camera was mounted on a wall in the corner of the room.

The policeman gestured for them to sit, then closed the door. “I’m Detective Calloway,” he said, taking the seat across from them. “Take your time and start wherever you need to.”

Renee nodded.

Bryan glanced over at her, then nodded as well. “I’ll start,” he said.

He told the policeman everything that had happened as plainly as possible.

Detective Calloway didn’t interrupt. He took notes, his expression unreadable.

When Bryan finished, the silence was deafening.

Renee picked up the conversation without looking at Bryan and gave her accounts of everything.

After Renee finished, Detective Calloway set his pen down on the table. “Do you two understand the seriousness of what you’re telling me?”

“Yes,” Renee said.

“Yes,” Bryan added.

Calloway leaned back in his chair, studying them. “Why confess now?”

Bryan thought about the question for a few seconds before responding. “Because the guilt of keeping all this in over the past several years never left our sides,” he said.

Renee nodded. “We tried to bury it, but that didn’t work.”

Calloway exhaled through his nose. “There was a homicide connected to this case,” he said. “Your statements could reopen a lot of doors.”

“We know,” Bryan said.

Renee closed her eyes briefly. “We’re not asking for leniency.”

The detective watched them for a long moment, then stood up and walked over to where the camera was mounted on the wall. He reached up and turned on the device. A red light appeared on the front of the camera.

“Okay,” he said. “Then we’re going to do this the right way.”

Pre-order Now!

Releasing July 4th, 2026

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!

Visit johnreizer.net


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Pre-order on Amazon

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

Hundreds of thousands of misdiagnosed cancer cases occur annually because the diagnostic tests people trust are flawed!

Dr. John Reizer

I was lying in bed, and all of a sudden, I began thinking about all those health screening procedures that general medical practitioners want their patients to keep getting. You know the ones I’m talking about: the same ones you see advertised on television and movie platforms that want you to screen your body for cancer before it’s too late.

By the way, the published percentage rates for successful cancer eradication via traditional chemotherapy and radiation regimens are very misleading, to say the least, in my opinion. What Big Pharma defines as a successful treatment and recovery outcome for a particular cancer diagnosis is probably far removed from what you and I would believe is a happy outcome. If dying a few years removed from chemo and radiation is thought to be a statistically good outcome, then I guess traditional cancer eradication treatments would be the way to go.

We all know that Big Pharma and Big Medicine are continually fishing for fresh blood, new patients that they can sign up for the multi-billion dollar chemotherapy cash cow that slowly and methodically drains healthcare consumers’ finances before the victims physically expire from the poisons the cancer treatment industry infuses into their bodies.

The drugs they label and call modern cancer treatments are brutal enough for the people who actually have cancer, but think about for a few moments how terrible it all is for the hundreds of thousands of patients being poisoned by chemotheraputics that don’t have the big “C”; the ones who were misdiagnosed by false positive diagnostic tests?

In my view, medical “sayence” isn’t as “sayintific” as the “sayentists” want us all to believe. And let me write one other thing about this misdiagnosis subject. If the cancer treaters are publicly admitting that hundreds of thousands of cancer diagnostic errors are occurring annually, I believe it’s a safe bet to assume that the numbers and percentages are much, much higher than currently being reported.

We, healthcare consumers, regularly watch and depend on mainstream news platforms for unbiased reporting about cancer and other chronic inflammatory diseases, the same news companies that are paid by drug corporations countless dollars annually to promote and advertise prescription drugs and other pharmacological products. Do we honestly believe it’s possible to get unbiased health reporting and news from these sources?

If all of this weren’t so terribly sad and the absolute truth, it would be comical, but no one’s laughing except for Big Pharma all the way to the bank!


Disclaimer

Any health information that has been written on this website is not intended to replace a professional relationship between a patient and a health care specialist, nor is it intended as medical advice. Readers are encouraged to make health care decisions based upon their own independent research!


The One-Hour Diner

Prologue

The police station was a well-lit building that stood out from most of the others. It had been designed and constructed over the last several years and featured a more modernist architectural style than the surrounding structures in the small Montana community.

They entered through the front entranceway and approached the reception area, announcing to the desk sergeant their intention to report information on a previously unsolved crime.

Renee Hudson sat beside Bryan Dawson on a hard, metallic chair. She hadn’t said much since they parked outside. Neither had he. They had been exhausted from everything that had transpired and were conserving their energy for what was to come.

The clock above the reception desk read 3:25 a.m.

Time had kept its promise; it was still moving right along.

Bryan, a handsome middle-aged man with a slender build and brown hair, exhaled slowly, his dark eyes drifting toward the glass partition separating them from the front desk. A tired-looking officer was rifling through some paperwork behind it, unaware of everything they had endured in the last hour.

Renee, an early-thirties brunette and easy on the eyes, shifted uneasily in her seat beside him.

“Once we start,” she whispered, “we don’t get to stop and change our minds.”

Bryan nodded. “I know that.”

She glanced at him, her expression serious. “I just want to say everything right.”

“There isn’t a right way,” he said gently. “There’s only the truth.”

Renee’s fingers flexed. “That’s what scares me.”

A door buzzed and opened somewhere down the hall. Footsteps approached them, and a plainclothes detective appeared in the hallway. He conferred with the desk sergeant briefly, muttered a few words to him, then glanced over at Bryan and Renee.

“Can I help you two?” he asked, his tone overly friendly.

Renee and Bryan stood up. “We need to report something important,” Bryan said. His voice sounded nervous and cautious. “It’s about a previously unsolved crime.”

The detective’s eyebrows raised slightly. “Okay,” he said. “Let’s step into an interview room.”

They followed the man down a narrow hallway, the walls lined with flyers for missing people.

The interview area was tiny, with a small table and four chairs. A small camera was mounted on a wall in the corner of the room.

The policeman gestured for them to sit, then closed the door. “I’m Detective Calloway,” he said, taking the seat across from them. “Take your time and start wherever you need to.”

Renee nodded.

Bryan glanced over at her, then nodded as well. “I’ll start,” he said.

He told the policeman everything that had happened as plainly as possible.

Detective Calloway didn’t interrupt. He took notes, his expression unreadable.

When Bryan finished, the silence was deafening.

Renee picked up the conversation without looking at Bryan and gave her accounts of everything.

After Renee finished, Detective Calloway set his pen down on the table. “Do you two understand the seriousness of what you’re telling me?”

“Yes,” Renee said.

“Yes,” Bryan added.

Calloway leaned back in his chair, studying them. “Why confess now?”

Bryan thought about the question for a few seconds before responding. “Because the guilt of keeping all this in over the past several years never left our sides,” he said.

Renee nodded. “We tried to bury it, but that didn’t work.”

Calloway exhaled through his nose. “There was a homicide connected to this case,” he said. “Your statements could reopen a lot of doors.”

“We know,” Bryan said.

Renee closed her eyes briefly. “We’re not asking for leniency.”

The detective watched them for a long moment, then stood up and walked over to where the camera was mounted on the wall. He reached up and turned on the device. A red light appeared on the front of the camera.

“Okay,” he said. “Then we’re going to do this the right way.”

Pre-order Now!

Releasing July 4th, 2026

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!

Visit johnreizer.net


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Pre-order on Amazon

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

What’s the correct religion?

Click on the image above to watch the video


The One-Hour Diner

Prologue

The police station was a well-lit building that stood out from most of the others. It had been designed and constructed over the last several years and featured a more modernist architectural style than the surrounding structures in the small Montana community.

They entered through the front entranceway and approached the reception area, announcing to the desk sergeant their intention to report information on a previously unsolved crime.

Renee Hudson sat beside Bryan Dawson on a hard, metallic chair. She hadn’t said much since they parked outside. Neither had he. They had been exhausted from everything that had transpired and were conserving their energy for what was to come.

The clock above the reception desk read 3:25 a.m.

Time had kept its promise; it was still moving right along.

Bryan, a handsome middle-aged man with a slender build and brown hair, exhaled slowly, his dark eyes drifting toward the glass partition separating them from the front desk. A tired-looking officer was rifling through some paperwork behind it, unaware of everything they had endured in the last hour.

Renee, an early-thirties brunette and easy on the eyes, shifted uneasily in her seat beside him.

“Once we start,” she whispered, “we don’t get to stop and change our minds.”

Bryan nodded. “I know that.”

She glanced at him, her expression serious. “I just want to say everything right.”

“There isn’t a right way,” he said gently. “There’s only the truth.”

Renee’s fingers flexed. “That’s what scares me.”

A door buzzed and opened somewhere down the hall. Footsteps approached them, and a plainclothes detective appeared in the hallway. He conferred with the desk sergeant briefly, muttered a few words to him, then glanced over at Bryan and Renee.

“Can I help you two?” he asked, his tone overly friendly.

Renee and Bryan stood up. “We need to report something important,” Bryan said. His voice sounded nervous and cautious. “It’s about a previously unsolved crime.”

The detective’s eyebrows raised slightly. “Okay,” he said. “Let’s step into an interview room.”

They followed the man down a narrow hallway, the walls lined with flyers for missing people.

The interview area was tiny, with a small table and four chairs. A small camera was mounted on a wall in the corner of the room.

The policeman gestured for them to sit, then closed the door. “I’m Detective Calloway,” he said, taking the seat across from them. “Take your time and start wherever you need to.”

Renee nodded.

Bryan glanced over at her, then nodded as well. “I’ll start,” he said.

He told the policeman everything that had happened as plainly as possible.

Detective Calloway didn’t interrupt. He took notes, his expression unreadable.

When Bryan finished, the silence was deafening.

Renee picked up the conversation without looking at Bryan and gave her accounts of everything.

After Renee finished, Detective Calloway set his pen down on the table. “Do you two understand the seriousness of what you’re telling me?”

“Yes,” Renee said.

“Yes,” Bryan added.

Calloway leaned back in his chair, studying them. “Why confess now?”

Bryan thought about the question for a few seconds before responding. “Because the guilt of keeping all this in over the past several years never left our sides,” he said.

Renee nodded. “We tried to bury it, but that didn’t work.”

Calloway exhaled through his nose. “There was a homicide connected to this case,” he said. “Your statements could reopen a lot of doors.”

“We know,” Bryan said.

Renee closed her eyes briefly. “We’re not asking for leniency.”

The detective watched them for a long moment, then stood up and walked over to where the camera was mounted on the wall. He reached up and turned on the device. A red light appeared on the front of the camera.

“Okay,” he said. “Then we’re going to do this the right way.”

Pre-order Now!

Releasing July 4th, 2026

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!

Visit johnreizer.net


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

It was never about the enriched uranium because nuclear weapons don’t exist!


The day they told the POTUS

The Fiction of John Reizer

The President of the United States sat at the head of the conference table inside the White House Situation Room. Around him were his closest advisors, military leaders, intelligence officials, and cabinet members.

Nobody was speaking.

The POTUS looked around the room.

“What is this emergency meeting about?” he asked.

The National Security Advisor looked up nervously and cleared his throat. “Mr. President, what you’re about to hear will sound impossible.”

The POTUS leaned back in his chair and smiled. “Try me.”

The Secretary of Defense pushed a folder across the table.

The POTUS opened it and slowly began rifling through the pile of papers.

Inside were documents, photographs, and reports dating back more than seventy years.

The smile on his face gradually shifted into a frown.

“I don’t understand.”

The Secretary of Defense looked uncomfortable. “It’s all a lie.”

“What is all a lie?” The POTUS asked.

“The nuclear arsenal of the United States.”

The room fell silent.

The POTUS laughed. “Very funny.”

Nobody laughed with him.

His frown disappeared. He was expressionless.

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs spoke next. “We have spent the last eighteen months verifying the information in the file.

The Commander in Chief’s jaw dropped.

“And?”

“And, quite simply, Sir, nuclear weapons do not exist.”

The president blinked his eyes several times.

“What the hell are you talking about?”

The Chairman took a deep breath and then forcefully exhaled.  “There are no nuclear missiles, warheads, or hydrogen bombs. Not here or anywhere else.”

The POTUS looked around the room. “You expect me to believe this horseshit?”

“The evidence says exactly that, Sir.”

The POTUS stood up from his chair.  “Then what the hell exploded in all those tests?”

The Director of National Intelligence answered. “Large conventional explosions that were carefully staged and coordinated with special effects. There were many falsified reports.”

The POTUS felt his stomach become rigid. “You’re telling me the entire Cold War was fake?”

“Not entirely,” the director said. “The rivalry and fear were real, but the weapons themselves were not.”

The president sat back down. “Why in God’s name would we do this?”

The room grew silent as no one answered immediately. Finally, an elderly advisor spoke. The man had worked in government for almost fifty years.

“Because the hoax worked,” he blurted the words aloud.

The POTUS looked at him.

The elderly advisor continued. “The world had just witnessed two world wars, and we were desperate to prevent a third one.”

The man folded his hands and looked the president square in the eyes. “So our leaders at the time created the ultimate weapon; an imaginary weapon so terrible that nobody would dare risk global war.”

“A hoax,” the POTUS said.

“Yes, a hoax.”

The POTUS rubbed his forehead forcefully with his fingers. “This is nuts!”

The elderly advisor nodded in agreement. “Perhaps, but consider the result. For decades, nations avoided direct conflict because everyone believed civilization could end in a few minutes.”

The president looked at the folder in front of him. “Do other nuclear countries know about this?”

“Some do, some don’t.”

The president’s eyes widened. “Some?”

“Yes,” the advisor replied. “The truth about the nukes was passed selectively from one administration to another. Sometimes, the information was kept secret intentionally, and some leaders to this day genuinely believe the weapons are real.”

The president shook his head in disbelief.  “If this gets out…”

“That is our concern,” the  Secretary of State interrupted.

The POTUS looked out at the screens covering the walls, displaying maps of the world.

For seventy years, humanity had lived under the shadow of something that did not exist.

“So what happens now?” The president asked.

The advisor smiled. “Nothing has to change, Mr. President. Some things in life are best left alone. Perhaps the world really is a safer place with nuclear weapons in it, or at least the idea that nuclear weapons are in it!”


The One-Hour Diner

Prologue

The police station was a well-lit building that stood out from most of the others. It had been designed and constructed over the last several years and featured a more modernist architectural style than the surrounding structures in the small Montana community.

They entered through the front entranceway and approached the reception area, announcing to the desk sergeant their intention to report information on a previously unsolved crime.

Renee Hudson sat beside Bryan Dawson on a hard, metallic chair. She hadn’t said much since they parked outside. Neither had he. They had been exhausted from everything that had transpired and were conserving their energy for what was to come.

The clock above the reception desk read 3:25 a.m.

Time had kept its promise; it was still moving right along.

Bryan, a handsome middle-aged man with a slender build and brown hair, exhaled slowly, his dark eyes drifting toward the glass partition separating them from the front desk. A tired-looking officer was rifling through some paperwork behind it, unaware of everything they had endured in the last hour.

Renee, an early-thirties brunette and easy on the eyes, shifted uneasily in her seat beside him.

“Once we start,” she whispered, “we don’t get to stop and change our minds.”

Bryan nodded. “I know that.”

She glanced at him, her expression serious. “I just want to say everything right.”

“There isn’t a right way,” he said gently. “There’s only the truth.”

Renee’s fingers flexed. “That’s what scares me.”

A door buzzed and opened somewhere down the hall. Footsteps approached them, and a plainclothes detective appeared in the hallway. He conferred with the desk sergeant briefly, muttered a few words to him, then glanced over at Bryan and Renee.

“Can I help you two?” he asked, his tone overly friendly.

Renee and Bryan stood up. “We need to report something important,” Bryan said. His voice sounded nervous and cautious. “It’s about a previously unsolved crime.”

The detective’s eyebrows raised slightly. “Okay,” he said. “Let’s step into an interview room.”

They followed the man down a narrow hallway, the walls lined with flyers for missing people.

The interview area was tiny, with a small table and four chairs. A small camera was mounted on a wall in the corner of the room.

The policeman gestured for them to sit, then closed the door. “I’m Detective Calloway,” he said, taking the seat across from them. “Take your time and start wherever you need to.”

Renee nodded.

Bryan glanced over at her, then nodded as well. “I’ll start,” he said.

He told the policeman everything that had happened as plainly as possible.

Detective Calloway didn’t interrupt. He took notes, his expression unreadable.

When Bryan finished, the silence was deafening.

Renee picked up the conversation without looking at Bryan and gave her accounts of everything.

After Renee finished, Detective Calloway set his pen down on the table. “Do you two understand the seriousness of what you’re telling me?”

“Yes,” Renee said.

“Yes,” Bryan added.

Calloway leaned back in his chair, studying them. “Why confess now?”

Bryan thought about the question for a few seconds before responding. “Because the guilt of keeping all this in over the past several years never left our sides,” he said.

Renee nodded. “We tried to bury it, but that didn’t work.”

Calloway exhaled through his nose. “There was a homicide connected to this case,” he said. “Your statements could reopen a lot of doors.”

“We know,” Bryan said.

Renee closed her eyes briefly. “We’re not asking for leniency.”

The detective watched them for a long moment, then stood up and walked over to where the camera was mounted on the wall. He reached up and turned on the device. A red light appeared on the front of the camera.

“Okay,” he said. “Then we’re going to do this the right way.”

Pre-order Now!

Releasing July 4th, 2026

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!

Visit johnreizer.net


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

The One-Hour Diner

Prologue

The police station was a well-lit building that stood out from most of the others. It had been designed and constructed over the last several years and featured a more modernist architectural style than the surrounding structures in the small Montana community.

They entered through the front entranceway and approached the reception area, announcing to the desk sergeant their intention to report information on a previously unsolved crime.

Renee Hudson sat beside Bryan Dawson on a hard, metallic chair. She hadn’t said much since they parked outside. Neither had he. They had been exhausted from everything that had transpired and were conserving their energy for what was to come.

The clock above the reception desk read 3:25 a.m.

Time had kept its promise; it was still moving right along.

Bryan, a handsome middle-aged man with a slender build and brown hair, exhaled slowly, his dark eyes drifting toward the glass partition separating them from the front desk. A tired-looking officer was rifling through some paperwork behind it, unaware of everything they had endured in the last hour.

Renee, an early-thirties brunette and easy on the eyes, shifted uneasily in her seat beside him.

“Once we start,” she whispered, “we don’t get to stop and change our minds.”

Bryan nodded. “I know that.”

She glanced at him, her expression serious. “I just want to say everything right.”

“There isn’t a right way,” he said gently. “There’s only the truth.”

Renee’s fingers flexed. “That’s what scares me.”

A door buzzed and opened somewhere down the hall. Footsteps approached them, and a plainclothes detective appeared in the hallway. He conferred with the desk sergeant briefly, muttered a few words to him, then glanced over at Bryan and Renee.

“Can I help you two?” he asked, his tone overly friendly.

Renee and Bryan stood up. “We need to report something important,” Bryan said. His voice sounded nervous and cautious. “It’s about a previously unsolved crime.”

The detective’s eyebrows raised slightly. “Okay,” he said. “Let’s step into an interview room.”

They followed the man down a narrow hallway, the walls lined with flyers for missing people.

The interview area was tiny, with a small table and four chairs. A small camera was mounted on a wall in the corner of the room.

The policeman gestured for them to sit, then closed the door. “I’m Detective Calloway,” he said, taking the seat across from them. “Take your time and start wherever you need to.”

Renee nodded.

Bryan glanced over at her, then nodded as well. “I’ll start,” he said.

He told the policeman everything that had happened as plainly as possible.

Detective Calloway didn’t interrupt. He took notes, his expression unreadable.

When Bryan finished, the silence was deafening.

Renee picked up the conversation without looking at Bryan and gave her accounts of everything.

After Renee finished, Detective Calloway set his pen down on the table. “Do you two understand the seriousness of what you’re telling me?”

“Yes,” Renee said.

“Yes,” Bryan added.

Calloway leaned back in his chair, studying them. “Why confess now?”

Bryan thought about the question for a few seconds before responding. “Because the guilt of keeping all this in over the past several years never left our sides,” he said.

Renee nodded. “We tried to bury it, but that didn’t work.”

Calloway exhaled through his nose. “There was a homicide connected to this case,” he said. “Your statements could reopen a lot of doors.”

“We know,” Bryan said.

Renee closed her eyes briefly. “We’re not asking for leniency.”

The detective watched them for a long moment, then stood up and walked over to where the camera was mounted on the wall. He reached up and turned on the device. A red light appeared on the front of the camera.

“Okay,” he said. “Then we’re going to do this the right way.”

Pre-order Now!

Releasing July 4th, 2026

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!

Visit johnreizer.net


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

Holograms – A Novella

Holograms

Quantum physicist Dr. Jennifer Ross discovers holographic aliens aren’t invading Earth but rewriting reality itself as the laws of physics unravel and humanity faces extinction.

Read the author interview here!

Get the book now!

Prologue – The LHC – February 2025

Deep beneath the French-Swiss border, inside the heart of the Large Hadron Collider, the intricate superconducting magnets of the massive complex began to activate as a crew of technicians monitored several large banks of computer consoles. Instruments sensed the environment and recorded pertinent data, and, for the most part, everything looked normal.

Dr. Henry Dharma sat in a seat near the central control monitor, his hands behind his head, watching the data streams come across the screen. On the surface, Dharma appeared calm, but his outward appearance didn’t tell the whole truth about the tension he was feeling in anticipation of what was happening before his very eyes.

Tonight’s experimental run wasn’t a standard one, for sure. It wasn’t approved, and it wasn’t supposed to happen this evening, nor at any other time.

“Facility stability confirmed,” an engineer called out. “We’re ready to introduce phases one and two.”

Dharma nodded. “Initiate Phase Three.”

A few heads turned around. Phase Three wasn’t on the schedule, but no one questioned Henry Dharma. His reputation was solid, and the leaders in quantum mechanics saw him as a brilliant prospect. If he said there was a reason for initiating a phase three run, everyone assumed he had already calculated the risks.

If only they knew the truth.

The collider came to life as electricity flowed through the massive ring, the vibrations so subtle they could almost be mistaken for the adjustment of a chair’s seatback. On the computer screens, particle pathways were depicted as being in their customary, anticipated tight spirals.

“Dr. Dharma,” said his colleague, Dr. Michelle Sims, “These numbers you’re inputting, you’re pushing the collision frequency beyond the safe tolerance threshold.”

“I know,” he said softly. “That’s the point.”

Michelle frowned. “The point?”

Dharma leaned over the console and typed in the numbers he had memorized months ago, a sequence of figures no one else knew existed. It was something authored during a preliminary experiment he’d participated in several years prior. An experiment that was classified, buried, and officially condemned.

The screen flashed: BACKDOOR GATE INITIATED.

Michelle’s voice rang out. “Henry, what the hell are you doing?”

“Looking,” he whispered back.

And then the first of several alarms began to scream throughout the complex.

A violent spike appeared in the data stream, showing values that should have been impossible to reach. The collider’s sensors registered a fluctuation in the spacetime construct itself. A distortion or tear in the Matrix was occurring.

The lights dimmed in the control room, and the engineers looked at one another as the floor began to shake underneath their feet.

“Shut it down!” Michelle yelled. Her heartbeat increased. She took a step toward the glass observation window. A white light appeared and quickly widened, expanding into something resembling a slit.

Through that tiny opening, darkness looked back, and in that darkness were eyes, hundreds of them, watching her and observing the others in attendance from another place foreign to the one where they were experiencing reality.

The room fell completely silent. No one breathed.

The eyes weren’t human. They weren’t anything born of this universe. They shifted back and forth, curiously looking and observing what lay before them.

The slit widened a bit.

Michelle stumbled backward. “Dear God, they’re looking at us,” she said.

Dharma whispered. “No, they’ve always been looking, Michelle, but now they can see.”

The slit in the Matrix suddenly closed and disappeared. The lights in the complex returned to full strength as the collider’s vibration began to lessen. The technicians had shut down the operation. Soon, the alarms that had been active in the control room were silent.

Michelle stared at Henry, horrified. “You opened something you shouldn’t have, maybe something you can’t close.”

Henry didn’t look at her. Instead, he looked straight ahead through the safety glass that separated the technicians and scientists from the collider’s machinery, where the tear in the Matrix had formed and then vanished from sight seconds ago.

“Not something,” he said. “Someone!” Henry removed the unauthorized code from the controller’s memory banks and forced the system into hibernation mode. The evidence of the event was completely erased. The witnesses attending the experiment hadn’t yet realized the damage they had unleashed.

But Michelle Sims knew they had opened a gate, and on the other side, someone was watching and had taken notice of humanity!

Get the book now!


Releasing July 4th, 2026

Pre-order Now!

Visit johnreizer.net

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

Take the NoFakeNews reader comprehension quiz

Instructions: Select the best answer for each question.

1. According to NoFakeNews.net, what is one of the primary goals of the website?

A. To promote mainstream news reporting
B. To examine alternative explanations for world events and history
C. To provide stock market advice
D. To review television programs


2. What subject is frequently discussed on the website?

A. Professional sports statistics
B. Real estate investing
C. Old-World research and alternative history
D. Celebrity gossip


3. What does the site suggest about mainstream media?

A. It always reports complete and accurate information.
B. It sometimes promotes narratives that deserve further scrutiny.
C. It should receive more government funding.
D. It focuses too much on weather reports.


4. What is the title of one of the books promoted on the website?

A. The Lost Empire
B. The Hidden Timeline
C. The Matrix Reloaded Yet Again
D. Beyond the Stars


5. According to articles on the site, what industry is often criticized?

A. Automobile manufacturing
B. Pharmaceutical companies
C. Construction companies
D. Retail stores


6. What feature film is promoted throughout the website?

A. The Forgotten World
B. Target List
C. Hidden Empire
D. Final Disclosure


7. What does the site encourage readers to do?

A. Accept all information without question
B. Ignore historical records
C. Conduct their own research and investigation
D. Avoid learning about alternative viewpoints


8. According to the website’s perspective, many accepted beliefs about history and reality should be:

A. Protected from criticism
B. Questioned and reexamined
C. Forgotten completely
D. Replaced by government publications


Answers

  1. B
  2. C
  3. B
  4. C
  5. B
  6. B
  7. C
  8. B

Scoring

7–8 Correct: Independent Researcher

5–6 Correct: Curious Investigator

3–4 Correct: Casual Reader

0–2 Correct: Time to read a few more articles!


Releasing July 4th, 2026

Pre-order Now!

Visit johnreizer.net

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

They’ve lied about our timeline, civilization’s truthful history, and who built the plethora of Old-World Buildings throughout the realm

Who really built this thing?

Click on the image above to watch the video

Are you tired of being repeatedly lied to about our historical past?

Don’t Ignore the Truth Any Longer!

LEARN MORE HERE!

“Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book has been rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street and building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And that process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right.”

– George Orwell -1984 Novel

Officialdom Doesn’t Make Sense!

The Cologne Cathedral

Years built: 600

  • 1248–1560
  • 1842–1880
  • 1950s–present (restoration)

Steep gables, blind tracery, unifying series of spires, flying buttresses, stone sculptures…

According to official records, the construction of the Cologne Cathedral began in the year 1248. The project’s progress was stopped in 1560. Construction resumed once again 282 years later, in 1842, and the building was finally finished in 1880.

They want us to believe that no modern-day technologies existed when this mega-structure was erected. No power tools, trains, or cranes had been invented during the period, yet amazingly, this cathedral was successfully constructed out of stone!

I don’t care what Wikipedia or the Cologne Cathedral website has written about this incredible building – our civilization did not build it! I don’t believe we could make it today with modern equipment, at least not with the same quality of craftsmanship exhibited in the current structure.

The Cologne Cathedral was built by a technologically advanced civilization that has, for some unexplained reason, been erased from our recorded history.

The controlling powers have falsified our historical narratives and timelines, making our current understanding of where we came from and, more importantly, where we are headed, impossible to comprehend. Stop believing the lies and start thinking critically about the officialdom we are presented with across all subjects that make up the fabric of our perceived reality!

Dr. Reizer


Releasing July 4th, 2026

Pre-order Now!

Visit johnreizer.net

About the Book

Over sixty minutes in an isolated roadside diner in rural Montana, two strangers are forced to confront suppressed and traumatic memories, discovering that time, guilt, and truth are far more dangerous than the authorities awaiting them.

Click here to read the author interview!


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!

George and the Infinite Closet (Fiction)

By John Reizer

George Wesley lived alone in a small one-bedroom apartment. His biggest problem in life wasn’t money or work; it was a lack of functional storage space.

Every closet in his tiny apartment was packed. Boxes sat in corners, and winter clothes filled plastic bins under the bed. The living space felt smaller and smaller every day.

One evening, while scrolling through online ads, George saw something that caught his attention.

THE INFINITE CLOSET

The advertisement showed what appeared to be a plain wooden closet.

“Store unlimited clothing, tools, furniture, collectibles, and more and never run out of space again.”

George laughed, shaking his head in doubt. “Sure,” he said.

But curiosity eventually got the better of old George. He had read through dozens of five-star customer reviews, and every one of them claimed the same thing: the closet worked as described.

After thinking about it for several days, George finally ordered one.

A week later, a large box arrived at his apartment. Inside were wooden panels, metal brackets, a small wrench, and a simple instruction sheet.

The entire thing took George less than an hour to assemble. When it was completed, the Infinite Closet stood six feet tall and looked completely ordinary.

George opened the door and peered inside into total darkness.

The interior of the closet seemed to stretch much deeper than he had anticipated.

George tossed an old shoe inside, and to his surprise, it disappeared. Then he threw in a box of books. They, too, disappeared. Next, a chair, a desk, and a mirror. All of the items were gone!

Within a couple of hours, George had emptied half his apartment into The Infinite Closet. The damn thing never filled up. No matter how much junk he placed into the six-foot space, there was always plenty more room.

The advertisement had been telling the truth. Over the next few weeks, George became obsessed with the closet.

He stored everything imaginable inside:
Old clothes, holiday decorations, broken electronics, a bicycle, and even an entire sofa.

The closet accepted it all with plenty of room to spare.

Finally, one Saturday morning, George noticed something odd. A slight breeze was coming from inside the closet space. That discovery made no sense to George because the structure had no air vents.

Curiously, George stepped inside and noticed that the floor felt sturdy beneath his feet.

George took a few steps, and then a few more. Behind him, the apartment doorway looked strangely far away.

George hesitated momentarily, then reached back and pulled the closet door shut.

Everything went black, and for just a few moments he experienced weightlessness.

The sensation didn’t last long. Then George noticed light in front of him. He eventually came upon another door, which he slowly opened.

George wasn’t in his apartment anymore.
He stepped outside and noticed that the sky was dark green and, even stranger, the sun was purple.

There were also peculiar-looking mountains lurking in the distance.

Four moons were suspended in the sky overhead.

George stood there in total disbelief. “What the hell?” he said, scratching his head.

Behind him stood The Infinite Closet.

But it now sat in the middle of a field covered in strange-looking grass.

Out of nowhere, a creature walked past him. It looked somewhat human, except it had four arms and eyes.

The creature stopped and looked at George, smiling. “You’re a new traveler, aren’t you?” it asked.

George nearly fell over. “You can speak English?”

The creature shrugged its shoulders. “Not really.”

George shook his head, confused.
“What do you mean, not really?”

“The closet translates,” the creature explained, pointing toward the wooden structure.

George slowly looked back at the closet.

The creature continued. “Every world has these kinds of closets.”

“What do you mean every world?” George asked.

The creature laughed. “You’re standing in one of billions of worlds.”

George’s stomach suddenly felt funny.

“Billions?” he asked.

The creature nodded. “The closet doesn’t store objects.”

“It doesn’t?”

“No.”

“What does it do?”

The creature pointed upward toward the strange sky. “It stores realities.”

George stood there absolutely speechless at this point.

The creature explained more. “Long ago, someone discovered a way to fold dimensions together. The Infinite Closet was the result. Every item placed inside became connected to another reality. The more things a person stored, the more dimensions the closet connected to. Eventually, the owner gains access to all of them.”

George suddenly remembered all the junk he had shoved inside the closet over the past month.

He’d tossed hundreds of objects into the closet space, which meant he created hundreds of connections to hundreds of worlds.

“You mean I can visit them?” George asked.

The creature smiled. “You already are.”

George looked around. For the first time in his life, his tiny apartment seemed very far away. “So what happens now?” George asked.

The creature looked out toward the horizon. “Well, that’s completely up to you.”

George glanced back at the closet door. Home was only one step away, yet beyond this strange-looking world were probably countless more worlds, each featuring entire civilizations of new lifeforms and endless possibilities.

George smiled. For as long as he could remember, he had worried tirelessly about finding more storage space. Now he had found something much bigger.

George stepped forward, and the closet door quietly closed behind him once again. George began exploring infinity.

The next morning, while having his breakfast back in his apartment, George read another advertisement online:

THE INFINITE CLOSET II
“Now shipping to billions of new realities.”


John Reizer is a medically disabled and retired chiropractor, author of science fiction thrillers, and the co-screenwriter of the movie Target List, which was released worldwide in 2023 by Mad Wife Productions.


Releasing July 4th, 2026

Pre-order Now!

Visit johnreizer.net

A man and a woman, complete strangers to one another, receive the same cryptic text message: Be at the Crossroads Diner at the intersection of highways 9 and 11. Come alone at 2:17 a.m. and don’t be late!

Drawn there by grief and curiosity, they arrive at a lonely roadside establishment where the coffee is hot, the lights are inviting, and the clock above the counter is frozen at 2:17.

It never, ever moves!

Seated across from each other in booth number 5, they wait for someone or something to show,  but no one comes. Instead, memories begin to reveal themselves through the diner’s windows, revealing their part in a terrible tragedy 3 years earlier, a murder!

Every attempt to leave the diner ends the same way: a reset; in an instant, they are seated back in the booth again. The same song plays on the jukebox, the same half-empty sugar dispenser sits on the tabletop, and the same unchanging time of day refuses to move forward.

Trapped in a place that may not actually exist, they are forced to confront a terrifying possibility: they were both there that fateful morning and played an integral role in something neither of them chose to remember, and what they’ve told themselves for the past three years is a lie.

The diner will not release them until they learn the truth of what happened in those critical minutes, and how their presence that morning was tied to a murder that was never solved.

Is the diner real or a creation of two people’s tortured souls, a construct born from guilt and trauma, built by two fractured minds desperate to unbury the truthful past?

Time has stopped!

The truth has not!

Welcome to the One-Hour Diner.


Coming to DirecTV soon!

Watch It For Free!

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Click on the Image to Watch the Movie


Truth Engines

Pre-order Available at Select Retailers

What if fiction reveals the truths modern society refuses to face?

Truth Engines is a bold collection of science fiction shorts that acknowledges the hidden realities currently affecting humanity. Blending imagination with clever storytelling, these writings explore a wide range of important subjects currently impacting all human beings.

Releasing September 1st, 2026

Pre-order Now

Science fiction has traditionally been a way for writers to discuss difficult ideas safely. It has allowed authors to examine dangerous possibilities before they become reality. Sometimes fiction entertains us, sometimes it warns us, and sometimes it says the necessary things that otherwise couldn’t be said.

These stories are not meant to preach or claim absolute answers. They are meant to encourage thought. They will hopefully inspire readers to ask questions about power, truth, freedom, artificial intelligence, corruption, media influence, medical ethics, surveillance, and the future direction of humanity itself.

Some readers may see these stories as pure fiction. Others may recognize pieces of the modern world hidden inside them. That choice belongs to you, the reader.

The goal of my writing is twofold: to entertain while also encouraging people to think more deeply about the systems shaping human life behind the scenes.

Whether these stories inspire agreement, debate, curiosity, or discomfort, I hope they stay with you long after the final page.

Sometimes fiction is not an escape from reality, but rather the only way to talk about it.

–John Reizer


Beta Reviews

It’s an amazing read! The stories in Truth Engines were born and live in the spaces between the 88 black-and-white notes on a piano keyboard. If you’re a fan of The Twilight Zone, you’ll really love this book!

A Beta Reader

Truth Engines is an incredible reading experience!

A Beta Reader


The Big Pharma Conspiracy Movie

Inventing a cancer cure was their first mistake!

Critical Reviews

“Rachel Alig is terrific as Donna while Justin Ray as Clyde also manages to impress. Combining witty commentary with a constant threat to life, script writers Palo and Reizer develop a narrative that is funny and charming while ensuring that none of the thrill and danger is lost in the process.”

– INDIE WRAP MAGAZINE

“Drama, thrills, comedy and so much more: Directors Andrew Arguello and MJ Palo’s Target List has all the fixings of a great movie. Combining a fantastic cast with the witty writing of MJ Palo and John Reizer, whichever way you flip this film, it lands on its feet with feline agility.”

– INDY REVIEWS

“The script by Palo with John Reizer, for the most part, rides that perfect balance between its more dramatic moments and perfectly placed moments of humor that never distract. While they’re probably not going to get invited to any big pharma conventions anytime soon, Reizer and Palo have a point, and they make it beautifully.”

“Target List is a great view for anyone who wants a compelling and suspenseful flick with a message that matters.”

– RICHARD PROPES – THE INDEPENDENT CRITIC


Gareth Icke – Derby, England

“Target List had me on the edge of my seat throughout. Not the least because of its believability!

GARETH ICKE – DIRECTOR OF THE DAVID ICKE WEBSITE

Click on the image below to visit the website!