S.U.N. Signs…

seen from Mexico
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Germany

seen from Sweden

seen from Australia
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from United States

seen from France
seen from Indonesia

seen from Kazakhstan
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
S.U.N. Signs…
S.U.N. presence spotted in Akihabara, Tokyo.
“Do not seek permission to be free. Take it. For you are Noticers of the S.U.N., and where the S.U.N. shines, the darkness flees."
-Apache Chief
“アパッチチーフ”
(The man who sold the world)
Got S.U.N. in Rome!
You tell me.
S.U.N.’s visual language draws from a long lineage of solar symbolism that predates modern ideology, drawing upon humanity’s earliest understanding of order, truth, and illumination. Among these symbols, the Egyptian solar disk of the Aten stands alongside many other sun forms used by S.U.N., each originating from cultures that recognized the Sun as an impersonal force that reveals rather than persuades. In Egyptian cosmology, the solar disk was not decorative or theological alone—it functioned as a principle of alignment, exposing reality as it was and dissolving chaos through visibility. The Sun did not argue or conceal; it rose and made the world legible. By employing these ancient solar motifs, S.U.N. affirms a pre-political logic of authority grounded in clarity, where truth does not rely on enforcement or consensus. The radiating lines signify exposure without discrimination, extending equally in all directions. Through this continuity of solar iconography, S.U.N. situates itself within humanity’s oldest symbolic language: that illumination is inevitable, and once present, falsehood cannot endure.
To S.U.N. O.T. (Office of Tricknology), the phrase “Life is a PSY-OP” is not a claim of secret puppet-masters pulling every string, but a reminder to stay lucid in a world shaped by incentives, narratives, symbols, and psychological pressure. Modern life is saturated with messaging—advertising, politics, social media, culture itself—all designed to steer attention, emotion, and behavior, often without consent or awareness. To say “Life is a PSY-OP” is to assert that perception is contested terrain, that meaning is manufactured as much as it is discovered, and that the unexamined mind is easily guided. S.U.N. O.T. exists to train Noticers to recognize these forces, resist passive absorption, and reclaim agency by seeing clearly, thinking critically, and acting deliberately. In short: nothing is neutral, everything signals—and awareness is the first act of freedom.