So we have a perfectly plausible cover for experimenting on people with government funding evolving to private enterprise that is not subject to FOIA. We know from John Alexanders amusing comments that belie what was occurring about projecting into the head of experiencers coupled with his interests in non lethal weapons. We would ignore that as we want to see woo woo ghosts and dogmen smoking cigarettes..we wanted entertainment not the boring simple science and truth of experiments..possibly cripplng and lethal..that would raise the ire a lot faster in rights advocate circles than the figment of a firefight with aliens..Imo that's what happened at the ranch..
If they are that dangerous..why bigelows obsession to even go into space to build space pods? Why isn't everyones spacecraft in space falling to the ground?
As if answering my own personal questions..this article ..very comprehensive..examines how the Cuban and Chinese sonic attacks may have just been the interference of waves by high frequency microwaves that operate in that range..that cause brain injury..as well as effects of other devices that cause schizophrenic episodes while couched as communications..
Parallels to the Cold War
www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-06-20/sonic-attacks-psychotronics-and-international-mistrust-how-we-can-preventDuring the Cold War, the Soviet Union and the United States were in a bizarre, unconventional arms race, as exposed in this report: An arms race of parapsychology or psychotronics, in which the U.S. vied with Soviet scientists to understand mind control, remote viewing and non-local physics.
The U.S. had MKULTRA, a 20-year CIA program that studied ways of manipulating people’s minds and altering their brain function. According to Senate hearings in 1977, these experiments included the use of hallucinogenic drugs, hypnosis and sensory deprivation. Some of America’s work on these topics is now public and has been the subject of books, TV documentaries and even the Hollywood film “The Men Who Stare at Goats,” starring George Clooney.
The Soviets had a similar program that included experiments in parapsychology, which was built on the idea that the human brain can receive and transmit a certain kind of high-frequency electromagnetic radiation.
Although much of this research was allegedly discontinued in 2003, according to the report’s author, Serge Kernbach at the Research Center of Advanced Robotics and Environmental Science in Stuttgart, Germany, “it is not clear whether Russia (or the U.S.) has ongoing programs in these areas.”
Earlier this year, MuckRock Journalist Curtis Waltman, who specializes in filing Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, wrote the Washington State Fusion Center (WSFC)—a joint operation between Washington State law enforcement and the federal government—to request information about Antifa and white supremacist groups. Attached to the response he received, inexplicably and unexplained, was a file entitled “EM effects on human body.zip.”
As Waltman wrote, the file contained information about “psycho-electronic” weapons that purportedly use electromagnetism to do a wide variety of horrible things to people, including artificial tinnitus, microwave hearing, causing intense pain, forced memory blanking, and even “rigor mortis.”
Microwave Hearing and Mind Control
Since it is referenced in this diagram (fourth line down from the top right), which was leaked to Waltman, and microwaves were originally listed as one of the three possible choices for sound weaponry, what is microwave hearing?
Essentially, it is the modification of radar units that transmit a beam of pulsed microwave energy into a person’s inner ear via “bone conduction,” causing ticks, buzzes, hisses, knocks, chirps and even words, according to this article on New World War, which clearly outlines the history of microwave hearing:
In a 1962 report, Human Auditory System Response to Modulated Electromagnetic Energy, which appeared in the, Dr. Allan Frey described how microwave hearing was demonstrated using a microwave transmitter that projected sound several hundred feet.
In 1973, Dr. Joseph Sharp proved the correct modulation of microwave energy could, in fact, result in the wireless and receiverless transmission of audible speech.
In 1976, the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner reported Soviets were also conducting extensive research into microwave hearing. This was brought to the attention of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, as words which appeared to be originating within a person’s skull could be induced by microwaves.
In 1998, U.S. Patent 4877027 mentioned sound could be induced in the head of an individual using microwaves in the range of about 100 MHz to 10 GHz. The waves consist of frequency modulated bursts lasting from about 500 nanoseconds to 100 microseconds that create a sense of hearing in the individual whose head is targeted. It is effective regardless of a person’s natural ability to hear.
Other patents pertaining to microwave hearing, such as the 1989 US Patent 4858612 and the 2003 US Patent 6587729, “Apparatus for Audibly Communicating Speech Using the Radio Frequency Hearing Effect,” are based on similar scientific principles.
In 2008, a story in WIRED entitled “Pentagon Report: Nonlethal Weapons Could Target Brain, Mimic Schizophrenia,” said “the U.S. military bankrolled early development of a non-lethal weapon that creates sound inside your head,” and outlined how microwave weapons are not only possible but have already been demonstrated.
Dr. Lev Sadovnik of the Sierra Nevada Corporation made an intriguing suggestion at the time, according to the article, that “instead of being used at high power to create an intolerable noise, it might be used at low power to produce a whisper that was too quiet to perceive consciously but might be able to subconsciously influence someone. The directional beam could be used for targeted messages, such as in-store promotions. Sadovnik even suggests subliminal advertising, beaming information that is not consciously heard.”
Modern Apps Also Use Privacy-Invasive Ultrasound
It's important to quickly note here, lest we think Sadovnik’s 2008 claims sound too futuristic, that today hundreds of privacy-invading apps are using ultrasonic sounds to track you, as outlined in this ZDNet article.
“These near-silent tones can't be picked up by the human ear, but there are apps in your phone that are always listening for them. This technology is called ultrasonic cross-device tracking, and it works by emitting high-frequency tones in advertisements and billboards, web pages, and across brick-and-mortar retail outlets or sports stadiums,” the article says. “Apps with access to your phone's microphone can pick up these tones and build up a profile about what you've seen, where, and in some cases even the websites you've visited. The technology is still in its infancy, but it's growing in popularity.”
Freaked out by this? Here’s an article in WIRED about “How to Block the Ultrasonic Signals You Didn’t Know Were Tracking You.”
What We Don’t Know (and Don’t Do) Can Hurt Us
Microwaves, ultrasounic spying and mind control, oh my. It is all a bit dizzying and nauseating.
To go back and tie up that loose end about the mind control zip file that was accidentally sent to Mr. Waltman, the origin of the bizarre diagrams and images included therein was unclear.
According to this article in Popular Mechanics, some of the images were from an article in Nexus magazine, "a fringe Australian publication about conspiracy theories and the paranormal." The article in question describes a lawsuit filed by John St. Clair Agnew against the NSA in 1992. Agnew claimed that the NSA used electromagnetic technology to “assassinate US citizens covertly or run covert psychological control operations to cause subjects to be diagnosed with ill mental health." The outcome of Agnew’s lawsuit is unknown, according to this RT article.
Elizabeth Quintana, a senior research fellow at the UK-based military think tank the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), specializes in emerging technologies in the defense world.
"The United States have been surprised at the extent to which others have caught up with them in all sorts of technologies," she told the BBC. "It's probably not so much a surprise that the technology exists, more that others are aware of it and using it."
Clearly these weapons and technologies can all be used for ill or good, although the overwhelming majority outlined above seem to be more sinister than benevolent in nature.
This is exactly why using the bad behavior (or fear) of other people and other countries to justify our own questionable tactics has monumental and lasting consequences.
Fear begets fear. Weapons beget weapons. Suspicion begets suspicion. Bad or unethical behavior
justifies bad and unethical behavior.
If we will govern our own fear, behavior and use of psychological hate on others by adhering to universal ethics and the golden rule—even when broken by others—we might be able to prevent a recurring Cold War and end this cycle of mistrust. We might be able to reach across the aisle see each other as fellow humans worth our respect. We might even be able to create a more harmonious world, one where America befriends North Korea and even Russia.