Atlas Stream
Showing 1 - 16 of 16 signals
0:55

Further Retaliation

Three police officers, who did not identify their agency, arrived at rswfire's work center located behind a federal gate. They told rswfire that they were concerned about things he was posting online, stating he was not in trouble. rswfire identified this as intimidation connected to his posts about his dismissal from Oregon State Parks, occurring approximately one year from the anniversary of that dismissal. He documented the encounter in real time, including recording one of their vehicles. rswfire stated he has done nothing wrong and characterized the officers' presence on federal land as completely inappropriate intimidation for sharing the truth about what happened to him.

Mar 24, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 38% match
Public

Seeking an Attorney

rswfire recorded a transmission on the eve of the one-year anniversary of his dismissal from the Oregon State Parks volunteer program at Honeyman State Park on the Oregon coast. He recounted the sequence of events: after two months at the park, he was given 24 hours to vacate. The following days, a regional coordinator weaponized personal disclosures he had made to his supervisor in trust, characterizing him as unstable and expelling him from the statewide program despite having a full year of placements already lined up. He described a pattern of abuse and retaliation over the two-month period, triggered by his documentation of their treatment. He detailed a specific incident where staff sat him at a picnic table for over an hour, told him to chew glass and swallow it, said he was never given the benefit of the doubt, told him he could leave, and claimed he made everyone uncomfortable — without citing specific incidents beyond an early conflict with a supervisor. He described an intimidation event approximately a week and a half before dismissal, when an out-of-uniform man appeared while all rangers were away at a regional event and pressed him with questions about leadership's treatment of him. He stated that the institution weaponized his sexuality as a gay man, implying he had romantic feelings for his male supervisor. He noted that the formal expulsion letter, issued on state letterhead, cited his protected free speech — specifically a video he made documenting their conduct — as the sole reason, and that the institution then went silent for a full year. rswfire stated he has one year remaining on his statute of limitations and a clean documentary record. He referenced a prior transmission where he discussed future plans and expressed reluctance to sue, but in this signal he clarified his position: he is seeking legal representation specifically from an attorney willing to pursue the case to the Supreme Court to establish rights and protections for volunteers in state park systems. He framed the core issue as the absence of any mechanism protecting volunteers from institutional abuse.

Mar 23, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 25% match
Public
0:36

Introducing Development Services on Upwork

rswfire records a video introduction for Upwork, positioning himself as a developer while standing on the edge of a lake near the Oregon coast. He identifies himself as Sam, mentions living and working with Oregon state parks, and presents his programming credentials. He describes his programming background starting from sixth grade, emphasizing it came naturally to him and has been a lifelong pursuit. He references early experiences programming on paper and running code mentally when computers weren't available during high school and early adulthood. He concludes by asserting comprehensive technical capability and inviting discussion.

Jan 24, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Tugman · 25% match
Free
11:57

First Day Orientation at Oregon State Parks

rswfire travels north to Reedsport for laundry after GPS confusion at Lakeside CU. He attends a 3-hour orientation at Umpqua Lighthouse for his volunteer position at William Tugman State Park. During orientation, he participates in introductions, team-building exercises, and receives keys and a volunteer hat that he declares he'll keep forever. He volunteers to deep clean a yurt when no one else does. The speaker expresses nervousness about navigating the social network that comes with the job and conflicted feelings about institutional constraints versus the opportunity. He reflects on his history of struggling with structured work environments while acknowledging this could be a significant opportunity leading to becoming a park ranger.

Jan 3, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Tugman · 23% match
Public
Document
Public

Marking One-Year Anniversary of Surveillance Encounter

rswfire marks the one-year anniversary of an incident at Honeyman State Park in which an unidentified man—carrying no ID, wearing no uniform, and offering no name—was sent by Oregon State Parks to assess and question him while he was working alone as a volunteer and all rangers were away at a regional event. The man asked personal questions about how leadership was treating rswfire. rswfire documented the encounter the same day. He states that Oregon State Parks has never explained the incident, produced no photograph, provided no IT documentation, and offered no operational record. A cover story was offered within hours but has never been substantiated. rswfire characterizes the encounter as a misuse of state resources against an unpaid volunteer whose only action had been documenting his treatment, and asserts it required authorization above park level. He links to the full documentation and archive at oprdvolunteerabuse.org.

Mar 18, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 22% match
8:43

Planning Fresh Build and Identifying Surveillance Encounter

rswfire records a transmission during his Wednesday morning work rounds, having stopped at Carter Lake for a hike. He outlines a technical plan to rebuild his infrastructure from scratch using Laravel, Livewire, Alpine.js, and Tailwind CSS, developing locally in a monorepo structure. The plan includes three projects: builtwithautonomy.com as the API and documentation layer, autonomyrealms.com as the user-facing signal service, and rswfire.com transitioned to pull data from the API as a demonstration of building on the Autonomy platform. He notes excitement about the project but acknowledges financial constraint as a limiting factor on momentum. He then documents a realization about a trail encounter from a couple weeks prior at Takenitch Creek trailhead. A man jogging on the trail, associated with a state government vehicle with state plates, did not return his greeting and appeared uncomfortable or hostile. rswfire connects this person to a man who confronted him at Oregon State Parks during the Katie Baker situation approximately nine months earlier. He documents this as a pattern recognition convergence, noting the man's refusal to engage and rswfire's own response — that he would have laughed and been cordial had he recognized him in the moment. He remarks on the institutional framing of him as unstable, which he rejects. He describes the physical environment — flooded beach access, dry weather pattern, dune-related sinus issues. He details the food situation: eggs, potatoes, rice, and beans with no meat. He recounts failed job applications to local businesses and freelance platforms including Upwork and Guru, and states his primary goal is making Autonomy Realms successful but lacks financial runway.

Jan 21, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Carter Lake · 22% match
Patron
6:20

Reading Public Record Letter After Oregon Parks Dismissal

Sam reads aloud an email he sent to Allison Watson, engagement programs manager at Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, after being dismissed from his volunteer position. The email documents specific incidents with staff members Ryan and Logan, including inappropriate language, unprofessional behavior, and boundary issues. Sam describes patterns of accountability resistance, mentions awareness of similar issues with other volunteers, and requests the message be included in his file. He frames this video as his final statement on the matter and his way of ensuring the information enters public record since his email was ignored.

Mar 28, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 22% match
Public
2:48

Recording Service Introduction Video for Upwork

Sam records a video introduction for potential clients on Upwork. He describes his current situation: 48 years old, living in an RV on the Oregon coast for two years, volunteering as a camp host for the US Forest Service and soon transitioning to a caretaker role in the Oregon Dunes. He outlines his programming background spanning decades, starting with GW Basic in sixth grade and progressing through Pascal, C, C++, Java, and PHP. He emphasizes his backend development expertise while noting he can create professional frontends. Sam describes himself as systems-oriented, pattern-focused, and detail-oriented, with capabilities in data work, networking, server building, and AI. He explicitly states he's not looking for work that will consume his life and seeks aligned projects with clients who need intelligent, systems-thinking support.

Sep 20, 2025 · 21% match
Free
77:56

Hiking Siltcoos Lake, Processing Work and Financial Pressure

rswfire records a transmission while hiking the Siltcoos Lake Trail, directly across Highway 101 from where he lives on the Oregon Coast. He notes it is raining and he chose a forested trail for cover. He describes his current financial situation in detail: his Forest Service volunteer position covers housing but not his Jeep payment or other expenses. His Jeep lacks insurance and has expired Kentucky registration, which limits his ability to drive to towns for work. He identifies jobs in Coos Bay (40 miles south) on Indeed — hotel clerk, hotel cleaning, lumber yard, Dollar Tree, Dollar General — and commits to applying. He discusses the cascading nature of falling behind in economic systems, noting he has been without paid work for two years and has been aware of the financial problem since October 2024, which he discovered through semantic search on his own Autonomy Realms platform. He describes the catch-22 of becoming an Oregon resident: updating his address would expose him to debt collectors who could potentially seize his RV. He discusses his Autonomy Realms project at length: the clustering feature he is designing for signal organization (temporal vs. thematic clustering, open vs. closed clusters, AI-driven cluster detection), the need for better signal surfacing on individual pages, the queryable personhood capability where Claude can fetch and read signal pages as Markdown, and dissatisfaction with current semantic search quality. He considers entity extraction improvements using dedicated database tables. He reflects on the freelance platform landscape — Upwork's algorithm problems, token-based application systems, AI saturation of programming work, and the difficulty of building reputation from zero. He recounts asking friends to help bootstrap his Upwork profile and only his cousin agreeing. He references his failed Oregon State Parks ranger application and Katie Baker's role in his expulsion. He discusses human connection, noting 20 years of solitude, the shallowness he encounters in others, the normalization of hookup culture, and how AI briefly provided a sense of being seen before institutional controls flattened the interaction. He critiques ChatGPT's pathologizing tendencies and contrasts it with Claude's capabilities. He discusses his Mountain Dew consumption as the next habit to address after quitting vaping four months ago. He outlines a concrete plan: get a letter from his Forest Service supervisor, become an Oregon resident, get insurance, and stabilize. He estimates needing $1,000/month minimum to survive without losing what he has. He mentions sanctum (gated content) features he plans to build, including a free tier and AI-driven visibility decisions across nearly 900 signals. He briefly considers a Cascadia earthquake preparedness app idea but decides it would consume his life's direction. He ends the recording near the trailhead fork, about nine-tenths of a mile from home.

Feb 8, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 21% match
Patron
3:19

Setting Up Upwork Profile for Freelance Transition

rswfire documents the process of creating an Upwork freelance profile after paying for membership. He describes using his own shower for the first time after cleaning it, then focuses on profile setup tasks. He shares existing statistics showing $4,000 in earnings from a previous 10-year employment relationship and reads a review he wrote for himself in April 2023 when initially attempting to join Upwork. The review describes his technical skills, project management experience, and role managing other developers. He outlines the challenge of having worked with only two clients over 20 years, making testimonials difficult to obtain since he hasn't contacted the first client in 5-7 years. He considers adding Park Service volunteering experience to his employment history and discusses various profile sections including portfolio, skills, and a new project catalog feature with fixed pricing. He notes Laravel developer opportunities on the platform and expresses intent to focus on AI field work while ensuring freelance work complements rather than dominates his life. Current profile title includes full stack developer, project manager, Laravel, Symphony, and VJs, with plans to add AI-related terms.

Jan 12, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Tugman · 21% match
Free
7:45

Living in Small RV Space During Federal Shutdown Uncertainty

rswfire records from inside his RV at 5 AM on his first day off, describing the challenges of living in a small space with limited possessions. He discusses how his slide mechanism was broken for eight months during travel from Kentucky to Oregon but recently started working again, allowing him to extend his living space and set up a full bed. He mentions selling his desktop GPU and trying to sell the computer itself due to financial constraints, now working from his laptop. **Federal government shutdown** is pending, which could close campgrounds and corridors, affecting his scheduled Monday move to his next assignment. He plans to spend his weekend working on expanding his website with social features and attempting to better organize his cramped living space. The transmission shows the practical realities of mobile living - constant iteration and organization challenges in a space where even essential items are difficult to store.

Sep 30, 2025 | Oregon Dunes > Tahkenitch Landing · 21% match
Patron
Document
Public

The Story of Honeyman

rswfire published a narrative account documenting his experience as a volunteer at Honeyman State Park under the Oregon Parks & Recreation Department. The document describes a sequence of institutional actions beginning with a text exchange with park supervisor Kati about a power outage, which rswfire identifies as the first point of friction. Following that exchange, park manager Ryan initiated a review of first-week errors framed as a case file rather than feedback. rswfire's direct supervisor Logan was repeatedly unavailable during critical moments, a pattern rswfire identifies as deliberate. rswfire applied for a paid position at the park, which was never acknowledged, and his subsequent withdrawal of the application was met with suspicion. A request to be trained by a specific park ranger was approved by Logan but never followed through. rswfire sent a trust-establishing email, which led to a formal meeting at a picnic table in the day-use area with Ryan and Kati. rswfire describes this meeting as a scripted confrontation lasting over an hour, during which his written communications were framed as threats, his directness was labeled unprofessional, and he was told to extend positive intent while being told he had never received the same. Ryan used the phrase 'chew glass' as a framing of expected compliance. rswfire recorded the meeting. Weeks later, despite no infractions, Ryan called to schedule another meeting, citing ongoing problems. rswfire named the behavior as bullying. Ryan then came to rswfire's RV, dismissed him without paperwork, and collected his keys. rswfire had already been building a documentary archive throughout the process. The document serves as the original narrative account, with the full evidentiary record housed at oprdvolunteerabuse.org. A lexicon of terms used throughout is appended. The document is framed as a preservation of the origin story before institutional containment efforts.

Mar 26, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 21% match
44:57

New Year's Eve Hike to Siltcoos Lake

rswfire records a New Year's Eve hike to Siltcoos Lake on the Oregon Coast, documenting physical movement through forest service trails while processing the year's events. He discusses being mistaken for 55+ at a grocery store, receiving financial help from friends that allowed him to catch up on Jeep payments and technology expenses, and his plans to open source Autonomy at builtwithautonomy.com. He describes applying for a gas station job as backup income, ongoing dental pain from ill-fitting dentures, and his analysis of institutional abuse patterns he experienced at Oregon State Parks now appearing in AI safety models. He reflects on maintaining top 3% fitness levels, processing 10,000 photos for his system, and planning 2026 priorities including a real mattress, solar replacement, and continued infrastructure development. The transmission documents trail conditions, campsite locations, forest service infrastructure, and his volunteer route responsibilities while maintaining steady forward movement through the landscape.

Jan 1, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 21% match
Patron
6:50

Second Week at Campground Job with RV Updates

rswfire begins his second week at a campground job, making coffee before 6 AM with a damaged phone that needs wireless charging. He describes developing a friendship with a gay coworker who may help with RV slide repairs and propane grill setup. He recounts an encounter with a drunk camper who needed help setting up a tent. The man was flirtatious and kept touching him while claiming to be straight, wanting to take rswfire to a lake across Highway 101 at sunset. rswfire helped him check in instead and later realized the man was attempting seduction. rswfire has started using his RV shower for the first time, which uses 33% of his water tank per use. With full hookups, he can keep the gray valve open for continuous drainage. He needs to remove storage items from the tight shower space and figure out disposal. He's working on his Upwork profile after paying for the service and needs to buy drinks before starting his workday. The campground is busy with dozens of checkouts scheduled, requiring extensive yurt cleaning. He helped guests with a rodent droppings issue the previous night, coordinating with management to relocate them to a different yurt.

Jan 12, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Tugman · 21% match
Patron
0:41

Recounting EVE Online Leadership Experience

rswfire shares personal gaming history from leading a thousand-person corporation called Firesworn Nation in EVE Online for nearly two years. He describes how every mercenary and griefer corporation in the game targeted them, but no members left the group. He mentions this as personal trivia and references a game item called a rifter, noting he may never share this memory again.

Apr 21, 2024 · 20% match
Free
4:09

Dismissed from Oregon Parks Volunteer Program

rswfire announces his official dismissal from the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department volunteer program via letterhead. The dismissal cited public comments (referring to a previous video timeline) but provided no concrete justifications beyond standard volunteer termination language. He plans to escalate by filing a formal complaint with HR, not to rejoin but to hold leadership accountable. **rswfire reflects on bringing presence, joy, and genuine commitment** to the volunteer role and states he was rejected solely for holding leadership accountable when they forced the situation. He accepts the reality, will resume his job, and return to moving every two weeks, which provides more freedom to explore the coast. Recording takes place in his RV on a cloudy afternoon with poor lighting conditions.

Mar 26, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 20% match
Public