"Ateh, Malkuth, Ve Geburah, Ve Gedulah, Le Olahm" Unto thee O'God the kingdom the power and the glory forever.
He should have known, anything worth doing, America usually would be there first, to industrialize and supersize before their competitors had a chance to. Morality be dammed... there was a future to build. Right? Or so how it appeared to Mudi. What good was an objection to a matter of National Security programs that he could not even mention by law? It was all so murky and hard to see that it almost seemed useless to protest in vain.
Mudi contemplated his Taco Bell sauce pack while praying his taco wasnt really soylentgreen. He read the phrase "Live Mas". Reading it backward he read Evil Sam... looking at the eye of the bell in the logo wanted to unsettle him but for some reason it did not. Suddenly the Japanese spirit of Sammara came to mind. Finishing his thoughts over his meal, Mudi noted the wind had shifted. It was time to move upwind.
He should have known, anything worth doing, America usually would be there first, to industrialize and supersize before their competitors had a chance to. Morality be dammed... there was a future to build. Right? Or so how it appeared to Mudi. What good was an objection to a matter of National Security programs that he could not even mention by law? It was all so murky and hard to see that it almost seemed useless to protest in vain.
Mudi contemplated his Taco Bell sauce pack while praying his taco wasnt really soylentgreen. He read the phrase "Live Mas". Reading it backward he read Evil Sam... looking at the eye of the bell in the logo wanted to unsettle him but for some reason it did not. Suddenly the Japanese spirit of Sammara came to mind. Finishing his thoughts over his meal, Mudi noted the wind had shifted. It was time to move upwind.
additional intel
Date: 2019-05-17 03:17 am (UTC)From:followed by:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_harassment#Pandora_Project_and_other_research
Conspiracy theories
Mind control conspiracy advocates believe they have found references to secret weapons in government programs such as "Project Pandora", a DARPA research effort into biological and behavioral effects of microwave radiation commissioned after the Moscow Signal incident, when the US embassy in Moscow was bombarded with microwaves by the Soviets beginning in 1953. It was discovered that the Soviets' intent was eavesdropping and electronic jamming rather than mind control.[1] Project Pandora studied the effects of occupational radiation exposure, and the project's scientific review committee concluded that microwave radiation could not be used for mind control.[20] Conspiracy advocates also frequently cite the 2002 Air Force Research Laboratory patent for using microwaves to send spoken words into someone's head. Although there is no evidence that mind control using microwaves exists, rumors of continued classified research fuel the worries of people who believe they are being targeted.[1]
In 1987, a U.S. National Academy of Sciences report commissioned by the Army Research Institute noted psychotronics as one of the "colorful examples" of claims of psychic warfare that first surfaced in anecdotal descriptions, newspapers, and books during the 1980s. The report cited alleged psychotronic weapons such as a "hyperspatial nuclear howitzer" and beliefs that Russian psychotronic weapons were responsible for Legionnaire's disease and the sinking of the USS Thresher among claims that "range from incredible to the outrageously incredible". The committee observed that although reports and stories as well as imagined potential uses for such weapons by military decision makers exist, "Nothing approaching scientific literature supports the claims of psychotronic weaponry".[21]
Psychotronic weapons were reportedly being studied by the Russian Federation during the 1990s[22][23] with military analyst Lieutenant Colonel Timothy L. Thomas saying in 1998 that there was a strong belief in Russia that weapons for attacking the mind of a soldier were a possibility, although no working devices were reported.[23] In Russia, a group called "Victims of Psychotronic Experimentation" attempted to recover damages from the Federal Security Service during the mid-1990s for alleged infringement of their civil liberties including "beaming rays" at them, putting chemicals in the water, and using magnets to alter their minds. These fears may have been inspired by revelations of secret research into "psychotronic" psychological warfare techniques during the early 1990s, with Vladimir Lopatkin, a State Duma committee member in 1995, surmising "Something that was secret for so many years is the perfect breeding ground for conspiracy theories."[24]
In 2012, Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin commented on plans to draft proposals for the development of psychotronic weapons.[25] NBC News Science Editor Alan Boyle dismissed notions that such weapons actually existed, saying, "there's nothing in the comments from Putin and Serdyukov to suggest that the Russians are anywhere close to having psychotronic weapons."[25]
Mike Beck, a former NSA spy, believes his Parkinson's disease was caused by electronic harassment.[26] According to Beck's attorney, Mark Zaid, the NSA stated that an unnamed foreign power built a microwave weapon designed to cause damage to the nervous system. Zaid reportedly stated that he believes covert strikes with microwave beams have been going on for decades.[27] Zaid's claims are disputed by the NSA and the Department of Labor.[26]
no subject
Date: 2019-05-17 03:28 am (UTC)From: