Old but funny, kek……SOROS
……..The frequency I’d stumbled upon was broadcasting a “numbers station.” The message was almost certainly sent by the Central Intelligence Agency, which broadcast numbers over shortwave during the Cold War from a facility in Warrenton, Va., about a 10-hour drive from my home at the time in the suburbs of Nashville, Tenn. That series of seemingly random numbers was actually a coded message, which anyone with an inexpensive shortwave radio could hear, but that could only be understood by someone with the right key.
I heard the numbers in 1986, when U.S. spycraft was devoted to defeating the Soviet Union and its proxies. The message was probably intended for a U.S. intelligence officer working in an embassy in Latin America or a CIA agent in the field there. But the agency had a global network of radio broadcasts for communicating with agents in every country where it was running operations.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-stupidly-simple-spy-messages-no-computer-could-decode