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Mind Control In The 90'shttp://www.xontek.com/Advanced_Technology/Mind_Control/Mind_Control_In_The_90's.shtml Police State Of Mind
Everything you know could be wrong little more than
re-constructed memories planted by government mind-control programmes.
David Guyatt traces the history of thought control experiments and the
technology that might shape a future psycho-civilised society. The
Pentagon's crew-cut communication commandos say that less-than-lethal (LTL)
weapons won't kill you, but what they don't tell you is that their
new-age, high-tech, armoury has been secretly honed to mind-boggling
efficacy and it is your mind that's been scheduled for boggling. Your
future shot of non-lethal Novocain might be an electromagnetic field that
cocoons your every thought and inserts an inaudible 'command' message
directly into your unconscious. The whole caboodle has been lovingly
designed to re-programme the way you think and even what you think.
Alternatively, at the flip of a switch you might be turned off altogether.
Thought can be controlled remotely. There's no need to
attach wires or electrodes. Nowadays, the spooks of Langley, Fort George
Meade and elsewhere, can hack straight into your brain. This might sound
like the rabid fantasising of an X-Files fruitcake, but the technology is
out there and so is the will to use it.
In 1996, the US Air Force Scientific Advisory Board
published a 14-volume study of future developments in weapons called New
World Vistas. Tucked away on page 89 of an ancillary 15th volume are some
hair-raising insights into the future 'coupling' of man and machine in a
section dealing with 'Biological Process Control'. The author refers to an
'explosion' of knowledge in the field of neuroscience, adding, ominously:
"One can envision the development of electromagnetic energy sources,
the output of which can be pulsed, shaped, and focused, that can couple
with the human body in a fashion that will allow one to prevent voluntary
muscular movements, control emotions (and thus actions), produce sleep,
transmit suggestions, interfere with both short-term and long-term memory,
produce an experience set, and delete an experience set."1
Translating the words 'experience set' from military jargon into plain
English, this means, simply, that they envisage the ability to erase your
life's memories and substitute a new, fictitious set.
There is some debate whether these mind-weapons are not
already in 'low profile' service. By projecting such developments into the
future, the authors of New Vistas might be camouflaging present day
capabilities. A similar futuristic scenario with many references to mind
manipulation is described in The Revolution in Military Affairs and
Conflict Short of War(US Army War College, 1994). Authors Steven Metz and
James Kievit declare: "Behaviour modification is a key component of
peace enforcement" and "The advantage of [using] directed energy
systems is deniability." Savvy individuals, the authors ask:
"Against whom is such deniability aimed?" The direct answer is
"the American people". So much for 'open government'.
Set in the year 2010, Metz and Kievit write of
"perception moulding" and "advanced
psycho-technologies" to avoid irksome public protest, but that is
just the beginning. The major obstacle, they believe, is that
"traditional American ethics [are] a major hindrance," and thus,
sadly "old-fashioned notions of personal privacy and national
sovereignty [are to be] changed."
Individuals unwilling to go along with the revolutionary
changes are "identified using comprehensive inter-agency integrated
databases." They will then be "catergorized" and
"sophisticated computerized personality simulations" will be
used "to develop, tailor and focus psychological campaigns for [ie.
against] each."
Other techniques to be used in association with these new
mind weapons, including 'morphing' a present-day ability that controls
the distortion of TV images.8 So, if you are lucky enough not to have your
brains electronically scrambled or erased the electronic news media
will be manipulated especially for you, presenting convincing
near-real-life visual images through your combined TV set-cum-internet
interface.
While these new-age Da Vinci's continue to create their
speckled visions of our future, we should ask some hard question now;
specifically: "Is this technology just a futuristic dream or is it
here today?"
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