by Anna Keeler
Reprinted from
SECRET AND SUPPRESSED: BANNED IDEAS
AND HIDDEN HISTORY
edited by Jim Keith
from
BugSweeps Website
There had been an ongoing controversy
over health effects of electromagnetic fields (EMF)
for years (e.g., extremely low frequency radiation and the Navy's
Project Seafarer; emissions of high power lines and video display
terminals; radar and other military and industrial sources of radio
frequencies and microwaves, such as plastic sealers and molders.)
Less is known of Department of
Defense (DOD) and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
interest in anti-personnel applications of the invisible energies.
The ability of certain parameters of EMF to cause health effects,
including neurological and behavioral disturbances, has been part of
the military and CIA arsenal for years.
Capabilities of the energies to cause predictable and exploitable
effects or damages can be gleaned from discussion of health effects
from environmental exposures. Interestingly, some scientists funded
by the DOD or CIA to research and develop invisible electromagnetic
weapons have voiced strong concern (perhaps even superior knowledge
or compensatory to guilt) over potentially serious consequences of
environmental exposures.
Eldon Byrd who worked for Naval Surface Weapons, Office of
Non-Lethal Weapons, was commissioned in 1981 to develop
electromagnetic devices for purposes including "riot control,"
clandestine operations and hostage removal. In the context of a
controversy over reproductive hazards to Video Display Terminal
(VDT) operators, he wrote of alterations in brain function of
animals exposed to low intensity fields.
Offspring of exposed animals,
"exhibited a drastic degradation of
intelligence later in life... couldn't learn easy tasks...
indicating a very definite and irreversible damage to the
central nervous system of the fetus."
With VDT operators exposed to weak
fields, there have been clusters of miscarriages and birth defects
(with evidence of central nervous system damage to the fetus). Byrd
also wrote of experiments where behavior of animals was controlled
by exposure to weak electromagnetic fields. "At a certain frequency
and power intensity, they could make the animal purr, lay down and
roll over."
Notorious Jose Delgado, advocate of a psycho-civilized society
through mind control, no longer implants electrodes in the brains of
mental patients and prisoners; he now induces profound behavioral
changes (hyper-activity, passivity, etc.) by exposing animals to
precisely tuned EMFs. He has also written of genetic damage produced
by weak EMF fields, similar to those emitted by VDTs. Invariably,
brain tissue damage and skeletal deformation was observed in new
born chicks that had been exposed. He was concerned enough to check
emissions from the appliances in his kitchen.
Ross Adey induces calcium efflux in brain tissue with low
power level fields (a basis for the CIA and military's "confusion
weaponry") and has done behavioral experiments with radar modulated
at electroencephalogram (EEG) rhythms. He is
understandably concerned about environmental exposures within 1 to
30 Hz (cycles per second), either as a low frequency or an amplitude
modulation on a microwave or radio frequency, as these can
physiologically interact with the brain even at very low power
densities.
Microwaves
Microwave health effects is a juncture where Department of Defense
and environmental concerns collide and part ways.
Security concerns, according to Sam Koslov of Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), first prompted
U.S. study of health effects of low intensity (or non-thermal)
microwaves. At times, up to 70-80% of the research was funded by the
military.
From 1965 to 1970, a study dubbed Project Pandora was
undertaken to determine the health and psychological effects of low
intensity microwaves, the so-called "Moscow signal" registered at
the American Embassy in Moscow.
Initially, there was confusion over
whether the signal was an attempt to activate bugging devices or for
some other purpose. There was suspicion that the microwave
irradiation was being used as a mind control system. CIA agents
asked scientists involved in microwave research whether microwaves
beamed at humans from a distance could affect the brain and alter
behavior.
Dr. Milton Zarat who undertook to
analyze Soviet literature on microwaves for the CIA, wrote:
"For non-thermal irradiations, they
believe that the electromagnetic field induced by the microwave
environment affects the cell membrane, and this results in an
increase of excitability or an increase in the level of
excitation of nerve cells. With repeated or continued exposure,
the increased excitability leads to a state of exhaustion of the
cells of the cerebral cortex."
Employees first learned of the
irradiation ten years after Project Pandora began. Before that,
information had been parceled out on a strict "need to know" basis,
which excluded most employees at the compound. Due to secrecy, and
probably reports like Dr. Zaret's, Jack Anderson speculated that the
CIA was trying to cover up a Soviet effort at behavior modification
through irradiation of the U.S. diplomats, and that the cover up was
created to protect the CIA's own mind control secrets.
Finally, an unusually large number of illnesses were reported among
the residents of the compound. U.S. Ambassador Walter Stoessel
developed a rare blood disease similar to leukemia; he was suffering
headaches and bleeding from the eyes.
A source at the State Department
informally admitted that excessive radiation had been leaking from
his telephone; an American high frequency radio transmitter on the
roof of the building had, when operating, induced high frequency
signals well above the U.S. safety standard through the phones in
the political section, as well as in lines to Stoessel's office. No
doubt, National Security Agency or CIA electronic devices also
contributed to the electromagnetic environment at the embassy,
although values for these were never released, as they are secret.
Stoessel was reported as telling his
staff that the microwaves could cause leukemia, skin cancer,
cataracts and various forms of emotional illness. White blood cell
counts were estimated to be as high as 40% above normal in one third
of the staff, and serious chromosome damage was uncovered.
The Soviets began research on biological effects of microwaves in
1953. A special laboratory was set up at the Institute of Hygiene
and Occupational Diseases, Academy of Medical Sciences. Other labs
were set up in the U.S.S.R. and in Eastern Europe that study both
effects of microwaves and low frequency electromagnetic radiation.
Years ago, in the halls of science, complaints could be heard that
Soviet experiments regarding bio-effects couldn't be duplicated due
to insufficient details in their scientific literature, although,
according to one DOD official, 75% of the U.S. papers on the subject
carried insufficient parameters for duplication. Scientists even
questioned, with McCarthy like sentiments, whether the Soviets were
attempting to frighten or disinform with false scientific reporting
of bio-effects.
It was unthinkable, according to cruder
scientific theory, that non-thermal levels of microwaves could cause
harm. Impetus for a study of such effects came not from concern for
the public, but rather in the military and intelligence community's
suspicion of the Soviets, and their equally strong interest in
developing exploitable anti-personnel effects - an interest that
continues unabated today.
The CIA and DOD "security" concerns metamorphosized into research
and development of invisible weapons capable of impacting on health
and psychological processes. In fact, due to the finding of
startling effects, DARPA's security became even tighter, and a new
code name - "Bizarre" - was assigned to the project.
Military
Disinformation
Scientist Allen Frey of
Randomline, Inc. was always more interested
in low intensity microwave hazards: thermal effects were known.
During Project Pandora, the Navy funded such projects of his, as how
to use low average power intensities, to: induce heart seizures;
create leaks in the blood brain barrier, which would allow
neurotoxins in the blood to cross and cause neurological damage or
behavioral disorders; and how to produce auditory hallucinations or
microwave hearing, during which the person can hear tones that seem
to be coming from within the head or from directly behind it.
In 1976, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)
released a report in which they attributed the results of Dr. Frey's
studies to the Soviets. According to Dr. Frey, who acknowledges that
his work was misattributed, he had thought up the projects himself.
The DIA, but not the CIA, is allowed to use "mirror imaging" and
"net assessment" in their reports, i.e., respectively, the
attribution of one's own motives and weapons capabilities to "the
other side", in this case, the Soviets.
It follows, that there is nothing to
prevent them from releasing a report prepared in this manner, and
thus muddy the water of decision making, pervert public opinion,
stoke up congressional funding or enlist the support of naive
scientists to counter "the threat". There was strong concern over
CIA disinformation abroad, leaking back to the home front, through
the American press, but apparently the DIA, at least on some issues,
can dish it up with impunity.
Dr. R.O. Becker, twice nominated for the Nobel prize for his health
work in bio-electromagnetism, was more explicit in his concern over
illicit government activity. He wrote of "obvious applications in
covert operations designed to drive a target crazy with "voices."
The 1976 DIA report also credits the
Soviets with other capabilities, stating,
"Sounds and possibly even words
which appear to be originating inter-cranially can be induced by
signal modulations at very low power densities."
Dr. Sharp, a Pandora researcher at
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, some of whose work was so
secret that he couldn't tell his boss, conducted an experiment in
which the human brain has received a message carried to it by
microwave transmission. Sharp was able to recognize spoken words
that were modulated on a microwave carrier frequency by an
"audiogram", an analog of the words' sound vibrations, and carried
into his head in a chamber where he sat.
Dr. James Lin of Wayne State University has written a book entitled,
Microwave Auditory Effects and Applications. It explores the
possible mechanisms for the phenomenon, and discusses possibilities
for the deaf, as persons with certain types of hearing loss can
still hear pulsed microwaves (as tones or clicks and buzzes, if
words aren't modulated on).
Lin mentions the Sharp experiment and
comments,
"The capability of communicating
directly with humans by pulsed microwaves is obviously not
limited to the field of therapeutic medicine."
What is frightening is that words,
transmitted via low density microwaves or radio frequencies, or by
other covert methods, might be used to create influence. For
instance, according to a 1984 U.S. House of Representatives report,
a large number of stores throughout the country use high frequency
transmitted words (above the range of human hearing) to discourage
shoplifting. Stealing is reported to be reduced by as much as 80% in
some cases. Surely, the CIA and military haven't overlooked such
useful technology.
Dr. Frey also did experiments on reduction of aggression. Rats who
were accustomed to fighting viciously when their tails were pinched,
accepted the pinching with relative passivity when irradiated with
pulsed microwaves in the ultra high frequency rage (UHF) at a power
density of less than 1,000 microwatts/cm2. He has also
done low intensity microwave experiments degrading motor
coordination and balance.
When asked about weapons applications of
his work, he answered by referring to himself as "just a biological
theorist", and his work for the Navy, "basic medical research."
Lies Before
Congress
In 1976, George H. Heilmeier, director of Defense Advances Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) responded to a mailgram to President Ford
from Don Johnson of Oakland, paraphrasing Johnson's concern, and
assuring him that the DARPA sponsored Army/Navy Pandora experiments
were "never directed at the use of microwaves as a surveillance
tool, nor in a weapons concept."
Don Johnson lingered in the memory of
one DOD official who sponsored microwave research in the 1970s.
Johnson was enigmatically described as,
"brilliant... schizophrenic... he
knew too much... a former mental patient... buildings where work
was done."
(Scientists who have disagreed with
the DOD on health effects of microwaves and on the U.S. exposure
standard, have received scant more respect and have had their
funding cut.)
The next year, Heilmeier elaborated in a
written response to an inquiry before Congress.
"...This agency [DARPA] is not aware
of any research projects, classified or unclassified, conducted
under the auspices of the Defense Department, now ongoing, or in
the past, which would have probed possibilities of utilizing
microwave radiation in a form of what is popularly known as
'mind control.'
We do not foresee the development,
by DARPA of weapons using microwaves and actively being directed
toward altering nervous system function or behavior. Neither are
we aware of any of our own forces... developing such weapons..."
Lies Exposed
Finally, memoranda were released that rendered the goals of Pandora
transparent. Richard Cesaro, initiator of Pandora and director of
DARPA's Advanced Sensor program, justified the project in that,
"little or no work has been done in
investigation of the subtle behavioral changes which may be
evolved by a low-level electromagnetic field."
Researchers had long ago established
that direct stimulus of the brain could alter behavior. The question
raised by radio frequencies - microwaves or radio frequencies of the
UHF or VHF band - was whether the electromagnetic could have a
similar effect at very low levels. Pandora's initial goal: to
discover whether a carefully constructed microwave signal could
control the mind. In the context of long term, low-level effects:
Cesaro felt that central nervous system effects could be important,
and urged their study "for potential weapons applications."
After testing a low-level modulated
microwave signal on a chimpanzee, and within approximately a week
causing stark performance decrements and behavioral disorganization.
Cesaro wrote,
"the potential of exerting a degree of control on
human behavior by low-level microwaves seems to exist."
On the basis
of the primate study, extensive discussions took place and plans
were made to extend the studies to humans.
According to a former DOD security analyst, one such microwave
experiment with human subjects took place at Lorton Prison in the
early 1970s. He said that such research (in a weapons context) has
occurred on behavioral effects of microwaves since 1976.
He also
asked,
"Why are you so concerned about
then? What about now? They can call anyone a terrorist. Who are
they using it on now?"
Behavioral Effects
In June, 1970, a government think tank, Rand Corporation, published
a report by R.J. MacGregor, entitled "A Brief Survey of Literature
Relating to Influence of Low Intensity Microwaves on Nervous
Function." After noting that the U.S. microwave guideline in effect
in 1970 for the public, 10,000 microwatts/^2 (now the industrial and
military "guideline"), is proscribed from consideration of the rate
that thermal effects are dissipated, the author, a specialist in
modeling neural networks, states that scientific studies have
consistently shown that humans exhibit behavioral disturbances when
subjected to non-thermal levels of microwaves, well below this
level.
The symptoms that MacGregor lists for
those humans exposed more or less regularly at work or in the living
environment are insomnia, irritability, loss of memory, fatigue,
headache, tremor, hallucination, autonomic disorders and disturbed
sensory functioning. He reports that swelling and distention of
nerve cells have been produced at intensities as low as 1,000
microwatts/cm2 (the current U.S. guideline for the
public).
In a companion Rand paper, June, 1970, entitled "A Direct Mechanism
for the Direct Influence of Microwave Radiation on Neuroelectric
Function," MacGregor sets forth the idea that the electrical
component of microwave radiation induces transmembrane potentials in
nerve cells and thereby disturbs nervous function and behavior.
Microwaves penetrate and are absorbed more deeply so that they can
produce a direct effect on the central nervous system. With smaller
wave lengths the principal absorption occurs near the body surface
and causes peripheral or "lower" nervous system effects.
Dr. Milton Zaret who analyzed neurological effects for the CIA
during Project Pandora (he is now one of the few doctors willing to
take the government on by testifying on behalf of plaintiffs filing
claims for microwave health damage), wrote that,
"receptors of the brain are
susceptible and react to extremely low intensities of microwave
irradiation if this is delivered in accordance with appropriate
"coding." Coding is reported to be influenced by the character
of the signal so as to be a function, for example, of the shape
and amplitude of the pulse or waveform."
Remotely Reinforcing
Specific Brain Rhythms
Dr. Ross Adey, formerly of the Brain Research Center at University
of Southern California, Los Angeles, now at Loma Linda University
Medical School, Loma Linda, California, was among the first of the
Pandora researchers. His work is more precise in inducing specific
behavior, rather than merely causing disorganization or decrements
in performance -that is, apart from his studies on inducing calcium
efflux in brain tissue, which causes interference with the
functioning of the brain and is one basis of "confusion weaponry."
More specifically, Adey's thesis is that if the electroencephalogram
(EEG) has informational significance, one can induce behavioral
changes if one imposes environmental fields that look like EEG.
During Adey's career, he has correlated a wide variety of behavioral
states with EEG, including emotional states (e.g., stress in hostile
questioning), increments of decision making and conditioning,
correct versus incorrect performance, etc., and he has imposed
electromagnetic fields that look like EEG, which has resulted in
altered EEG and behavior.
In published accounts of Adey's work, he has shown that it is
possible to apply low biologic frequencies by using a radio
frequency carrier modulated at specific brain frequencies. He
demonstrated that if the biological modulation on the carrier
frequency is close to frequencies in the natural EEG of the subject,
it will reinforce or increase the number of manifestations of the
imposed rhythms, and modulate behavior.
The conditioning paradigm: animals were trained through aversion to
produce specific brain wave rhythms; animals trained in a field with
the same rhythm amplitude modulated on it, differed significantly
from control animals in both accuracy and resistance to extinction
(at least 50 days versus 10 in the controls). When the fields were
used on untrained animals, occurrence of the applied rhythm
increased in the animals' EEG.
Dr. Adey is an accomplished scientist, which leads one to believe
the significance of this experiment goes beyond mere reinforcement
of the animal's brain waves. Did the rhythms that he chose to apply
have special significance with relation to information processing or
conditioning? The 4.5 theta rhythm that he applied was the natural
reoccurring frequency that he had measured in the hippocampus during
a phase of avoidance learning.
The hippocampus, as Adey wrote in an
earlier paper,
"...involves neural processes
connected with consolidation of memory traces. It relates
closely to the need for focusing attention, and the degree to
which recapitulation of past experience is imposed."
One might add, to ensure survival.
Does it follow that an EEG modulated carrier frequency can be used
to enhance human avoidance learning? You bet, provided the same
careful procedures are followed with humans as were with animals,
the same result would accrue. Recall again the goals of Pandora - to
discover whether a carefully constructed electromagnetic signal
could direct the mind.
The obvious question becomes, how many and with how much accuracy
can behavioral states or "frames of mind" be intentionally imposed,
that is, apart from the certain technological capability to promote
disorganization and degradation of perception and performance
through use of the fields.
In fact, many components of learning or conditioning including
affect (i.e., "feeling" or emotional states) can be imposed through
use of the fields from a distance. E.g., behavioral arousal,
orienting reflex, subliminal stress (alarm reaction without
realization of the contextual significance), so-called levels of
consciousness, inhibition of cerebral functions, which would render
one more susceptible to suggestion or influence, and so on.
All components necessary to produce
behavioral conditioning, including ways to provide contextual
significance, can be applied from a distance (i.e., without direct
brain contact, as was necessary in older behavior modification
experiments.)
Applications
The end of Project Pandora may have signified the end of research
into the cause of effects of the varying frequencies registered at
the American embassy in Moscow - some known to be due to CIA and
National Security Agency equipment, but interest in microwave and
biological frequency weapons did not wane.
Indeed, there are indications of
applications. As we have seen, research that began in response to a
security concern, transformed almost overnight into a search for
weapons applications, while cloaked in disinformation about the
Soviets.
What types of weapons?
There Are Three Possibilities:
(1) that microwaves, perhaps
modulated with low biological frequencies, are used from a
distance to cause performance decrements and disorganization by
interfering with neuro-electric function; or by causing central
nervous system effects, subjective feelings of ill health, or
health syndrome associated with periodic exposures at
intensities below 10,000 microwatts/cm2;
(2) that microwaves are used to create organ specific effects,
e.g., tissues with less blood circulation, like the gall
bladder, lens of the eye, etc., can compensate less to increased
heating; heart dysfunctions can be caused; lesions or necrosis
of internal tissues can be induced without a subject necessarily
feeling heat, and symptoms might manifest later, at certain
frequencies, slight heating or "hot spots" can be created at the
center of the head; there is an ongoing Navy contract to find
parameters to disrupt human metabolic functions; or
(3) that they are used in an interdisciplinary approach to
remote conditioning by creating information processing effects,
as Dr. Adey's work shows, or to induce "feeling" or "emotional"
elements of cognition, such as excitatory reactions, subliminal
stress, behavioral arousal, enhanced suggestibility by
inhibition of higher functions, or various other EEG or
behavioral effects.
There are strong indications that
microwaves have been used to cause the decrements. There is no
question but that the U.S. military and the CIA know the behavioral
or psycho-active significance of applied biological rhythms and
other frequencies, as this was part of the thrust of their work
during Pandora.
Inducing emotion or feelings through use
of electromagnetic fields, and then synchronizing the feelings with
words (symbolic of ideas) would be an effective way to induce
preferences or attitude change, because it would mirror natural
thought processes.
The question seems less whether
conditioning through use of covert technology is possible, than
whether there has been a policy choice to use it. If the results of
their research are used as part of a system that can condition
behavioral responses from a distance, it is a secret that they hold
close like a baby.
Richard Helms wrote of such a system in the mid-1960s while he was
CIA Plans Director. He spoke of,
"sophisticated approaches to the
'coding' of information for transmittal to population targets in
the 'battle for the minds of men'..." and of "an approach
integrating biological, social and physical-mathematical
research in attempts... to control behavior."
He found particularly notable,
"use of modern information theory,
automata theory, and feedback concepts... for a technology for
controlling behavior... using information inputs as causative
agents."
Due to Project Pandora, it is now known
that applied biological (and other) frequencies can also be used as
direct "information inputs" (e.g., of feeling or emotion) and to
reinforce brain rhythms associated with conditioning and information
processing. One way to get such a signal into a human may be through
use of a high frequency carrier frequency.
Results of research into information
processing, unconscious processes, decision making, memory processes
and evoked brain potentials would likely be exploited or integrated
in an interdisciplinary system.
Covert technological influence is not so foreign to the American way
of life as one may think. It was reported in a 1984 U.S. House of
Representatives hearing that high frequency audio transmissions are
applied, for instance, in some department stores to prevent theft
(one East Coast department store chain was reported to have saved
$600,000 over a nine-month period), and in some grocery stores with
the result that employee induced cash shortages significantly
decreased and employees are better mannered.
In other words, as Helms wrote of,
verbal messages are delivered at frequencies above human hearing.
Technology for commercial applications is relatively sophisticated
(one studio uses a "layered" approach and 31 channels in preparing
tapes; some employ a "dual coding" approach, integrating scientific
knowledge of information processing modes of the two brain
hemispheres, and others use techniques where a consumer is spoken to
as a three year old child.)
There is no U.S. law specifically
regulating these types of transmission (over radio and TV a Federal
Communication Commission "catch all" provision might apply). If
industry uses undetectable audio transmissions to meet security
concerns, it seems that the military and CIA would exploit the same
technology and would have developed much more sophisticated
technology for applications. The public's conception of "subliminals"
is naive compared to capabilities.
It seems reasonable to conclude that to the extent that such an
approach exists to manipulate behavior, "defensive" applications
would consist of applying it wherever a potential threat exists or
to counter a threat. For instance, Central America is an area where
those in officialdom keenly feel the "threat of Soviet domination."
If there is technology available that
could conceivably influence Central Americans toward the Soviets,
then the U.S. would use the same kind of technology to "even the
score." The same is true within the U.S.; if covert technological
influence might be had against Americans, the same feared technology
would be applied to counter the threat.
Special security risks might include
peace groups, whom are felt to be threatened by Soviet influence (a
big security concern in Western Europe and in the U.S.),
progressives, or any group or individual felt to pose a challenge to
U.S. goals subsumed under the rubric of "national security
interest."
Given the nature and dubious goals of lumbering military inertia,
and circuitous CIA "mirror logic", leads one to the conclusion that
"defending" against possible or actual attempts to manipulate
behavior means moving to the offensive, and perhaps, having the
"edge" with applications. Possible or actual threats, according to
tenets of military and intelligence craft, means "the other side"
has the technology if the United States does.
Also, it would be too difficult to
monitor behavior altering transmissions and to defend against them.
Short of exposing such technology there would be no way to defend
except by having one's own "system" (of behavioral patterns
consisting of a set of signals signifying "yes" and "no," or "good"
feeling and "bad" feeling that can be linked to ideas).
Recall that apart from Project
Pandora, the CIA spent decades during
MKULTRA and related projects,
devising operational techniques to surreptitiously influence and
affect behavior. Workable invisible weapons are too useful for arms
control talks, and don't readily lend themselves to proofs of use or
"verification" processes. Additionally, the importance of finding
ways to circumvent dissent may have been one of the most significant
lessons of Vietnam.
Over the counter audio aside, the military has studied and
considered for usefulness in a warfare and psychological warfare
context a wide range of biologicals or pharmacological substances.
In the memo referred to above, Helms wrote that the U.S. is five
years ahead of the Soviets in pharmacological agents producing
behavioral effects. Some of these substances would increase
susceptibility to influence if incorporated in the multidisciplinary
approach he wrote of.
For difficult subscribers, perhaps in
foreign parts, there are substances that have psychological or
psychobiological effects ranging from subtle through devastating,
and that cause increased susceptibility to conditioning. Some of
these substances are similar to ones which are recognized by neuro-toxicologists
or behavioral toxicologists as occupational hazards; some are
variations of substances used experimentally in laboratories to
produce selective damage in certain neuronal tracts.
Many substances needn't be injected or
orally ingested, as they may be inhaled or applied with "skin
transferal agents," i.e. chemicals like the popular industrial
solvent, dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO), which can, in
fact, enhance the applied substance's effect. For instance, some
compounds cause damage that produces increased sensitivity to
stimulus, distraction (or flooding of thought associations), and
enhance susceptibility to influence. I.e., a state where automatic
parallel information processing, which usually takes place outside
of awareness, and interferes with conscious or more intentional
limited channel processing.
While causing acute mental symptoms
wouldn't be the goal in groups, producing mild distraction, an ego
weakened blurring between the sense of "I" and "you", would enhance
some kinds of conditioning and promote suggestibility; then, perhaps
transmitted "thought associations," "the voice of God", "lucky
advice" or whatever, can more easily get through and have an effect.
A side effect of lowered resistance to
sub-threshold stimulus might be that some would become aware of
illicit influence (even under normal circumstances there is a wide
variation in sensitivity among individuals to sub-threshold
stimulus; normal individuals whom psychology terms "reducers" are
much more sensitive in this way; actually, most schizophrenics are
extreme reducers, and therefore, much more aware of stimulus that
others aren't cognizant of).
Convenient to the agencies involved in
covert influence, is that among primary symptoms of schizophrenia or
mental illness are ideas that one is being influenced by
"transmissions" (e.g. radio frequencies), "voices" or even
telepathy; unless complaints about covert psychological weapons are
well organized, they would tend to be discounted as indicative of
mental imbalance.
There are many ways to create temporary or permanent states that
increase receptivity to suggestion and/or conditioning. It is
interesting to note that scientific studies have correlated exposure
to electromagnetic fields alone with mental hospital admissions and
worsening of symptoms of mental patients, even as an etiological
factor in the onset of mental illness. (A marker disease for
exposure to microwaves is damage behind the lens of the eye; a
disproportionate number of persons so damaged also suffer from
mental disease or neurological impairment.)
The CIA is also interested in neuropeptides; these have profound
effects when administered within a conditioning paradigm.
Specific
Targets
Weapons against whom?
Safe to say, in order to enlist the aid of
scientists, the military and CIA would act true to form, that is, to
motivate and overcome reluctance due to dictates of conscience, they
would evoke a serious security risk, like the Soviets, during
initial phases of development. In fact, on the "unclassified" face
of it, a number of reports have openly suggested use of "microwaves"
against "terrorists".
Los Alamos National Laboratory, now under supervision of University
of California, prepared a report for Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA)
setting forth that use of microwave radiation on terrorists could
kill them, stun them or at least modify their behavior by changing
their "perceptions."
At this point the cloak is donned, and
the report continues:
"There are reports of Eurasian
communist countries performing research with combined fields of
signals from several different microwave frequencies to produce
at least perceptual distortions in humans."
Cable News Network recently aired a
report on electromagnetic weapons and showed an official document
that was a contingency plan to use electromagnetic weapons against
terrorists. It wasn't made clear who the terrorists were or what the
contingency was. Prior to the news show, however, reports had
surfaced, the source a DOD medical engineer, that in the content of
conditioning, microwaves and other modalities had regularly been
used against Palestinians.
It makes sense that the Palestinians would be targeted as a group
for experimental purposes and to meet strategic goals.
For instance, to exacerbate discord
between political factions, a "bad feeling" (biologically
uncomfortable or threatening) would simply be associated through use
of sound with the idea of the "other" faction. It is an easy
psychological trick to induce negative attribution (where a "bad
feeling" is caused to be misattributed to something in our
environment): feeling, followed close in time with information input
will color a thought, and become a conditioned emotional response (CER)
if repeated.
An excitatory autonomic reaction
requires a cognitive appraisal or "labeling" of the inducing cause.
Both the autonomic reaction and the labeling can be transmitted from
a distance using electromagnetic fields, like radio frequencies or
microwaves and "sound."
Specific frequencies at low intensities can predictably influence
sensory processes. Feeling: pleasantness - unpleasantness, strain -
relaxation, and excitement - quiescence, can be created with the
fields. Negative feelings and avoidance are strong biological
phenomena and relate to survival. Feelings are the true basis of
much "decision-making" and often occur as sub-threshold impressions.
Anger and other negative feelings are
easy to cause to be displaced, and most people believe in the
"trueness" of their feelings. Ideas including names can be
synchronized with the the feelings that the fields can induce.
Greenham Common
Rather than belabor the obvious, for when DOD develops a weapon it
can be said with certainty that it will be tested and, if possible,
where it would be useful to meet their goals; another example will
put motives and, at least, one type of application in more realistic
perspective.
Women peace activists have kept an ongoing vigil at the periphery of
the U.S. Air Force base at Greenham in England since 1981. They are
protesting build-up of nuclear weapons. The U.S. Cruise missiles,
which are nuclear warheads small enough to be mounted on the back of
a truck called a launcher vehicle, arrived at the base in March,
1984.
Since then the women in the encampment
and members of the Cuisewatch network have insured that when the
launcher vehicle and its convoy are taken out into the British
countryside, the "dispersal exercises" aren't as secret as the
military intended them to be. The women of the network, non-violent
activists, have been subjected to intense harassment in an effort to
be rid of their presence.
In the Fall of 1984, things changed dramatically; many, if not most
of the women began suffering illness; and, simultaneously, the
massive police and military presence at the base virtually
disappeared, and new and different antenna were installed at the
base.
In a report prepared by Rosalie Bertell,
commissioner for International Commission of Health Professionals
for Human Rights, a non-governmental organization based in Geneva,
Switzerland, the unusual patterns of illness ranged from "severe
headaches, drowsiness, menstrual bleeding at abnormal times or
post-menopausal, to bouts of temporary paralysis, faulty speech
coordination and in one case apparent circulatory failure requiring
hospitalization."
Other symptoms documented by peace activist Kim Bealy, who
coordinates investigations into reports of illness at specific
places around the base, included; vertigo, retinal bleeding, burnt
face (even at night), nausea, sleep disturbances and palpitations.
Psychobiological symptoms included lack of concentration,
disorientation, loss of memory, irritability and a sense of panic in
non-panic situations. The symptoms have virtually all been
associated in medical literature with exposure to microwaves and
most listed can be induced through low intensity or non-thermal
exposures.
Measurements were taken around the base by members of Electronics
for Peace and by others. Strong signals, up to one hundred times the
normal background level were detected on a number of occasions. In
fact, signals ten times stronger than those felt to be emanating
from normal base transmitting systems were found.
The strongest signals generally appeared in the areas where the
women said that they suffered ill effects. For instance, they were
found to cover the women's encampment near the "green gate" (gates
to the base are designated by color), but stopped abruptly at the
edge of the road leading to the gate.
The strength of the signals were also
found to reflect the activity of the women: e.g., they increased
rapidly when the women started a demonstration. Visitors to the
encampment, both men and women, reported experiencing the same types
of symptoms and the same pattern of variation as the Greenham women.
It may be revealing that British personnel who guard the perimeter
of the base work very short shifts (two hours at a time) and only
for two weeks.
What else has been used against the women of Greenham Commons?
If
high frequency verbal transmissions are used in U.S. department
stores and have a significant effect in meeting their security
goals, it seems likely that the military would also exploit the same
technology.
What would such a message tell the
women?
"There is something wrong with this
place, 'I' want to get out of here, 'I' don't like it here..."
Perhaps auditory transmissions would be
simultaneous with the transmissions that were making them feel
unwell.
In a review prepared by National Bureau of Standards, Law
Enforcement Standards Laboratory, for Nuclear Defense Agency,
Intelligence and Security Directorate, use of low intensity
microwaves was considered for application as a "psychological
deterrent."
The report stated,
"...microwave radiation has
frequently been cited as being responsible for non-thermal
effects in integrated central nervous system activity. The
behavioral consequences most frequently reported have been
disability, listlessness and increased irritability."
The report fails to mention just as
frequently cited low intensity microwave health effects as
chromosome damage; congenital birth defects; autonomic nervous
system disregulation, including disruption of bio-cycles; impaired
immune function; brain damage and other neurological abnormalities,
including leaks in the blood brain barrier and depletion of some
neurotransmitters; among a host of other health impairments not to
be taken lightly.
A reckless form of biological and psychological control has been
perpetuated whether the source of the symptoms of the Greenham
Commons is radar surveillance aimed at the women, or if there is
conscious application of the microwaves as a "deterrent" or a means
to drive the women away.
Calculated efforts were also directed at
preventing or eroding community support. In the summer of 1985,
women planning to visit the camp had to be notified that long term
health effects might ensue for women who were pregnant or intended
to be.
As activist Kim Bealy put it,
"It would now appear that we
are protecting the missiles by killing people slowly."
Health complaints similar to those of the women at Greenham Common
are being made by women peace activists at Seneca, New York, and
from activists at other locations. The symptoms at Greenham seem to
occur on an occasional basis now, perhaps due to the Intermediate
Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty, which applies to the missiles
housed there, or due to somewhat increased public or congressional
awareness.
It is not necessary that the transmission take place from equipment
in the vicinity of a target (although the Greenham women seemed to
be suffering from transmissions made from within the base.)
Propagation of microwaves has been very well studied and is very
sophisticated, e.g., a two inch beam can be sent from a satellite,
point to point, to a receiving dish on earth; and, it was reported
in 1978, that the CIA had a program called Operation Pique, which
included bouncing radio signals or microwaves off of the ionosphere
to affect the mental functions of people in selected areas,
including Eastern European nuclear installations.
In the U.S. the military has intentionally obfuscated discussion of
environmental health effects. With their ally "industry" they have
won, at least for the time being, the right to perpetuate their
interests, to the detriment of the public's best interests.
Scientists who have spoken up on the environmental impact of
military microwave or electromagnetic systems have been treated as
security risks, and have had their funds cut, so great is the
military's concern in protecting their communications systems by
ensuring themselves unlimited use of radio frequencies or
microwaves.
The upshot is that in the U.S. at this time, there is no legally
enforceable microwave standard. There never has been an enforceable
standard for the public or the workplace. Microwaves at intensities
within the suggested "guideline" have finally been shown, even by
U.S. research, to cause health damage.
Worse, some industrial exposures are extraordinarily high. For
instance, plastic sealers, a low income group comprised mainly of
women within childbearing years, use equipment that exposes them to
over 10,000 microwatts of microwaves or radio frequencies throughout
an eight hour day, and in some case, to hundreds of milliwatts. As
energy absorbed from their equipment flows to ground, so much heat
has been felt in the ankles of some workers that they have learned
to do their tasks with their feet elevated on plastic. They are not
provided metal shielding as workers are in more health conscious
countries.
While most of the public are only exposed to very low levels of
microwaves and radio frequencies, a considerable number (between one
and two percent) live or work near emitters, such as radio and
television transmitters, military and airport radar, and industrial
tools utilizing these frequencies. Therefore, it is likely that they
are exposed to levels that have been proven to be unhealthful or
downright dangerous.
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Remote Mind Control Technology
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To get more on mind control and
microwaves, take a look at this
patent 4,858,612
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