SD. UPDATE: NASA HOLDS EMERGENCY PRESS CONFERENCE AFTER “PROXIMA SIGNAL” LEAKS ONLINE

In what could become the most groundbreaking discovery in human history, NASA scientists have just confirmed that a series of intelligent, structured audio signals — resembling human speech patterns — were detected coming from Proxima Centauri, our nearest neighboring star system, only 4.2 light-years away 🌌.
“It’s not random noise. It’s deliberate. And it sounds eerily familiar,” one senior NASA astrophysicist said under condition of anonymity.
The transmission reportedly contained three repeating words that translators are still trying to decode — but early spectrograms appear to form a waveform similar to the human heartbeat. ❤️🔥
Social media has exploded worldwide, with hashtags like
#WeAreNotAlone, #NASAContact, and #SignalFromProxima trending across X, TikTok, and YouTube.
Some users claim the pattern matches ancient Sumerian chants, while others believe it’s the first interstellar “handshake” in history. 🌍🤝🌌

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Only hours after news broke that NASA detected a mysterious human-like signal from Proxima Centauri, a 49-second audio clip allegedly from inside NASA’s Deep Space Listening Lab has leaked online — and it’s sending chills around the world 🌍👂
The audio begins with static… then a soft rhythmic pulse… and finally, a calm, human-sounding voice whispering: “We waited for you.” 😨
Within minutes, the clip went viral — over 120 million views across TikTok and X — with users claiming to hear different words depending on their language. Some report “chúng tôi đợi các bạn,” others swear it says “welcome home.”
At an emergency press conference this morning, NASA Administrator Dr. Elena Mendoza refused to confirm or deny the leak:
“What you’re hearing may not be from Earth… but we must proceed with caution.”
Meanwhile, Elon Musk has posted a cryptic message on X:
“If it’s real — we’ll answer.” 🛸
Scientists, theologians, and world leaders are scrambling to respond. The Vatican has called for “calm and reflection,” while China’s National Space Agency announced it will point its FAST radio telescope toward Proxima Centauri tonight.
