"Digital morphing — voice, video, and photo — has come of age, available for use in psychological operations. PSYOPS, as the military calls it, seek to exploit human vulnerabilities in enemy governments, militaries and populations to pursue national and battlefield objectives.
To some, PSYOPS is a backwater military discipline of leaflet dropping and radio propaganda. To a growing group of information war technologists, it is the nexus of fantasy and reality. Being able to manufacture convincing audio or video, they say, might be the difference in a successful military operation or coup.
...But the "strategic" PSYOPS scheming didn't die. What if the U.S. projected a holographic image of Allah floating over Baghdad urging the Iraqi people and Army to rise up against Saddam, a senior Air Force officer asked in 1990?According to a military physicist given the task of looking into the hologram idea, the feasibility had been established of projecting large, three-dimensional objects that appeared to float in the air.
The Gulf War hologram story might be dismissed were it not the case that washingtonpost.com has learned that a super secret program was established in 1994 to pursue the very technology for PSYOPS application. The "Holographic Projector" is described in a classified Air Force document as a system to "project information power from space ... for special operations deception missions.
Voice-morphing? Fake video? Holographic projection? They sound more like Mission Impossible and Star Trek gimmicks than weapons. Yet for each, there are corresponding and growing research efforts as the technologies improve and offensive information warfare expands."
In his book, "The Body Electric," Nobel Prize nominee Robert Baker describes a series of experiments conducted in the early 1960s by Allen Frie where this phenomena was demonstrated as well as later experiments conducted in 1973 at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research by Dr. Joseph C. Sharp who personally underwent tests in which he proved he could hear
and understand messages delivered to him in an echo-free isolation chamber via a pulsed microwave audiogram which is an analog of the word's sound vibration beamed into his brain. Baker then goes on to state, "Such a device has obvious application for covert operations designed to drive a target crazy with unknown voices or deliver undetectable instructions to a programmed assassin."
Now figure out when we hear that voice from the new world messiah who would be speaking from space to all of the sane people of the earth who might give instructions to zealots and religious fanatics, we would see hysteria and social mayhem on a scale never witnessed before on this planet. No police forces in the world, even as a combined front, could deal with the disorder that will follow!
A 1978 book entitled, "Microwave Auditory Effect and Application," by James C. Lynn describes how audible voices can be broadcast directly into the brain. This technology could actually allow the blind to see and the deaf to hear. Instead, it has been turned into a weapon to enslave the world. Allen Frie also reports that he could speed up, slow down or stop the hearts of isolated frogs by synchronizing the pulsed rate of a microwave beam with the heart itself.
The microwave auditory effect, also known as the microwave hearing effect or the Frey effect, consists of audible clicks induced by pulsed/modulated microwave frequencies. The clicks are generated directly inside the human head without the need of any receiving electronic device. The effect was first reported by persons working in the vicinity of radar transponders during World War II. These induced sounds are not audible to other people nearby. The microwave auditory effect was later discovered to be inducible with shorter-wavelength portions of the electromagnetic spectrum. During the Cold War era, the American neuroscientist Allan H. Frey studied this phenomenon and was the first to publish (Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol. 17, pages 689-692, 1962) information on the nature of the microwave auditory effect; this effect is therefore also known as the Frey effect.
A focused sonic wave is a single sonic wave traveling in a single direction with a single frequency. If you have ever seen a laser, you have seen a focused electromagnetic wave traveling in a single direction with a single wavelength. A laser is an electromagnetic wave (light) but sound (sonic or acoustic) is an atmospheric wave. For illustrative purposes, a good way to think of a focused sonic wave is as a "Sonic Laser". A sonic laser travels in a straight line, just like a regular light laser does.
If you have a laser pointer, you can get an idea of how a sonic laser will travel by using the laser pointer to strike an object without striking any other objects. Take a laser pointer and move the red dot produced by the laser pointer around the room. Where the red dot appears is where the sonic laser would strike if sonic laser were used instead of a laser pointer. The sonic laser is focused and controlled, as is a light laser.
UltraSonics can use their sound projection equipment to project an audible message to Target in his home. One technique UltraSonics will use is to project an audible message that is a sentence in the Target’s own voice stating "YOUR BEING TARGETED, BETTER KEEP MOVING". UltraSonics will take several sentences the Target has spoken in his house and chop words out of those sentences to form this new sentence. UltraSonics is recording the Target’s conversations in his home with their surveillance technology so UltraSonics will have access to a large amount of the Target’s personal conversations. UltraSonics will use the Target’s voice to send the message because it will lead the Target to the conclusion that he is being eavesdropped on by surveillance technology. This will increase the Target’s paranoid state of mind.
Acoustic, Deference Tones. Devices which can project a voice or other sound to a particular location. The resulting sound can only be heard at that location.
Acoustic, Infrasound. Very low-frequency sound which can travel long distances and easily penetrate most buildings and vehicles.
Transmission of long wavelength sound creates biophysical effects; nausea, loss of bowels, disorientation, vomiting, potential internal organ damage or death may occur. Superior to ultrasound because it is "in band" meaning that its does not lose its properties when it changes mediums such as from air to tissue. By 1972 an infrasound generator had been built in France which generated waves at 7 hertz. When activated it made the people in range sick for hours.
I posted this information because I was woke from sleep by a voice in my room saying can you hear me as if someone was testing sound equipment. I have not been able to get over it and have not stopped talking about it. The lady in this video is the first one to confirm that I am not the only one that this has happened to.
No comments:
Post a Comment