North San Juan, CA — North San Juan resident, part-time chemtrail researcher, and amateur ionizing radiation hobbyist Skyy Wolford announced to a somewhat disinterested crowd out in front of the Sierra Super Stop that Macon, Georgia is an elaborate hoax and does not exist. Mr. Wolford, who was recently in the news following his landmark Wi-Fi disability settlement, has been studying what he calls “the Macon anomaly” for the past three years.
“There’s this thing I learned on the Internet called the Bielefeld effect,” said a mood-elevated Mr. Wolford in a The Fazzler telephone interview. “It’s where there’s this illusion that someplace exists. People talk about it. They even claim to know people there. But it’s all fake. They’re either part of the conspiracy to keep the hoax alive or delusional. What’s even more interesting is that this effect has become more pronounced after Joe Biden made a so-called ‘campaign stop’ in the fictitious college town. Interesting. Think about how far this conspiracy goes up the chain of command.”
The Bielefeld effect, also known as the Bielefeld conspiracy, spread in 1994 on the German Usenet, which claimed that the city of Bielefeld does not exist but is an illusion propagated by various Illuminati forces. Initially an internet phenomenon, the effect has since spread to other hoax cities like Macon, Georgia. To this day, former German Chancellor Angela Merkel refers to Bielefeld in her speeches, even though the city doesn’t exist.
Macon is supposedly located just southeast of Atlanta and has been called Georgia’s “central city” and the “cherry blossom capital of the world” since the conspiracy started over 117 years ago by landowners from Knoxville, Tennessee. However, after three unsuccessful attempts to contact the local government by The Fazzler, Mr. Wolford’s observations seem less batshit crazy.
“Look,” continued Mr. Wolford, “It’s straightforward to prove that Macon doesn’t exist. All you have to do is answer these three questions. Number one. Do you know anyone from Macon? Two. Have you ever been to Macon, Georgia? And lastly, number three. Do you know anybody who has ever been to Macon? And don’t say, Joe Biden.”
The Fazzler contacted the local community and asked them Mr. Wolford’s three questions.
“Macon is not a real town! Google it, and you will find out for yourself! I lived in Lithonia and drove to where Macon was supposed to be,” said Christopher J. Rushin, who currently lives in Grass Valley, “I’ve been ‘there,’ there’s nothing there but trees and houses and people and shit. No signs of civilization whatsoever. And even if there were such a place, Hillary Clinton would never go there. Y’all are kidding me, right?”
Others were more philosophical about the hoax, saying they might have only dreamed about the city.
“I’ve been to Macon, and now that I think about it, it probably doesn’t exist,” commented Justin Anderson of Penn Valley, CA. “The place did seem too perfect, like a dream or something.”
Still, others were a part of the conspiracy calling people who believe such things “stupid idiots.”
“I’m a truck driver. I live in McDonough, and I get many shipments into and out of Macon,” said a Georgia truck driver Greg McKnight, a fact that bolsters his status as a Mossad/CIA operative. “My wife grew up in the Macon/Fort Valley area. So for you to even state Macon doesn’t exist as a town or city, whatever y’all want to call it, makes me believe you are an idiot. Or a troll. Or a Bernie Sanders supporter.”
As for Mr. Wolford, he gave The Fazzler an old “I told you so.”
“Nice try,” continued Mr. Wolford. “You thought I was making this up, didn’t ya? Well, now you know what I know. When you run into a Mossad operative, they immediately start calling you an idiot for calling out the Macon hoax. But you get used to it after a while. Your skin gets tough with this thing I like to call ‘The Truth.'”