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psychoceramics: Electronic Mind Control
- To: p--@z--.net
- Subject: psychoceramics: Electronic Mind Control
- From: "Newob Det, ASC" <ebowen @ kent.edu>
- Date: Wed, 1 Oct 1997 22:04:50 -0400
- Sender: owner-psychoceramics
Hey there. I don't often post to this list, but something that appeared in,
of all things, my local (Kent, Ohio) student newspaper (not known for its
interesting subject matter) today seems very appropriate and on-topic here.
It appeared under the prosaic title "Lives are endangered by government
testing," which was almost certainly made up by the ever-so-inventive
editors of said newspaper. What I found, to my surprise, was quite
psychoceramesque (the caps are wonderful!), and I submit it for your perusal
just as it appears in the paper (without double-quotes, of course):
"You have all heard disturbing reports over the past couple of years about
people chosen for inexplicable, but total covert and extremely invasive
harassment.
"(This is a continuation of covert psychological warfare testing which
started as CIA's 'MKULTRA' intelligence programs, exposed by the U.S.
Congress in 1977 and is on the public record.
"'MKULTRA' now continues in a 'private contractor' version, focussed
mainly on silent electronic weapons being tested on involuntary subjects in
their homes.)
"At the core of these stories are new electronic weapons which can
interact with the victim's brain and nervous system. Until recently, it was
virtually impossible to prove that electromagnetic signals could affect, and
do so substantially, and be used in the form of weapons against living
organisms.
"Just this year, however, some of thae technologies whcih were originally
developed for intelligence used have been 're-invented' in commercially
marketable forms. This is a watershed event for those of us who have been
in-home victims of this technology for years; for us it is truly Heaven-sent.
"This summary lists articles from technology publications which show how
these technologies are being used to harass covert weapons testing victims,
and are now coming out in commercial form, or hgave been announced to the
public:
"1. Aviation Week & Space Technology, March 10, 1997, 'Radar Warns Birds
of Impending Aircraft'.
"This article by Bruce Nordwall (Washington bureau) describes research
being carried on by the USAF Wright Laboratory at Dayton, Ohio. The article
describes the use of MODULATED radar signals to produce AUDIBLE SOUND within
the brains of birds near airport runways to cause them to fly away and avoid
collisions with landing aircraft.
"The transmission via MODULATED microwave pulses carrying voices to
selected weapons testing victims has been carried on for more than two
decades as reported by the victims.
"There has been little published about this phenomenon, and since
direct-to-skull voice transmissions are consistently misinterpreted by
psychiatrists as 'schizophrenia,' getting this information to the public
needs concerted attention.
"2. Electronic Business Today, February 1997, 'Business Trends' section,
page 20.
"Inventor Elwood Norris, and his small company, (American Technology
Corp., Poway Calif.) have designed a market ready device called an
'acoustical heterodyne.'
"This device sends out two sound signals in ultrasonic
(above-human-hearing) range which, when they impact a surface, which may be
a living creature, then and only then produce a sound at a frequency equal
to the DIFFERENCE ('heterodyne') of the two ultrasound frequencies.
"This technology has been used extensively by harassers who follow a
walking or driving victim and bounce raucous, unnatural bird calls and other
strange sounds off surfaces near the victim. This type of sound is tape
recordable.
"3. New York Times, April 7, 1997, "Devices May Let Police Find Hidden
Guns on Street) article.
"This article, with photos supplied by Millitech Corporation, describes
recently unclassified 'millimeter wave' cameras (and some other see-thru
technologies less well developed).
"These units operatelike cam-corders, giving the user a real-time
thru-clothing, thru-luggage for detecting weapons and drugs.
"Technology like this does not pop out of nowhere overnight, and it
probably has its roots in the 1960s classified microwave weapon
'renaissance' -- about the same time as U.S. embassy staff in Moscow
discovered they were being bathed in Soviet microwave signals.
"4. OEM Magazine, February 1997, page 20 "Electronic Dipstick" article.
"This article describes 'micropower impulse radar' or 'MIR' radar,
developed at Lawrence Livermore Lab in California and licensed to several
large companies for consumer products.
"Basically, this radar uses the highest radio frequencies and does not
need the supporting hardware like rotary antennas which 'conventional' radar
does.
"Uses include vehicle blind-spot sensors, traffic control sensors, heart
muscle response monitors and see-thru plaster stud finders. Thru-the-wall
radar has been covertly used for a number of years on weapons testing
victims. One common use has been to detect where the victim is standing or
walking in their apartment and 'follow' the victim's position by rapping
floor, walls, or ceiling from an adjacent apartment. This is designed to
let the victim know he/she is under constant surveillance.
"There will be an open pannel discussion on 'Electronic Mind Control'
during the Ninth Annual International Surveillance Expo at the Sheraton
Premiere, Tysons Corner, Va., on Oct. 27 - Oct. 29.
"We are seeking researchers, experts, victims and knowledgeable people
from this arena of information and requesting that speakers submit their
requests as soon as possible."
No doubt the haphazard appearance of this article is partly due to the
editorial skills of Kent State University's _Daily Kent Stater_ (witness the
close-parentheses instead of a close-quotes), but probably the original
article was a masterpiece of paranoid rambling. I wish I could see it. Any
spelling errors are my own, however.
Newob
Newob Det, A Sick Cookie (http://kent.edu/~ebowen; e--@k--.edu)
"You can't make an omlette without endangering the lives
of innocent people." -- old saying