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Originally posted by yourmaker
is this for real?
Originally posted by truthinfact
the only thing that scares me about this is
has it already been used?!?!?!??!?!
What if the policy makers have been tampered... That truly is a scary thought.
Originally posted by Maxmars
Originally posted by yourmaker
is this for real?
It's something else, isn't it?
I heard of this on April 1st and of course, chuckled wryly thinking it was a joke.
Heh, the joke is on me.
Originally posted by starheart
The American and the rest of the world NWO allready have this weapon since the '90s.
Originally posted by yourmaker
is this for real?
Mounted above the billboard, the system projects an isolated beam of sound down onto a targeted area of the sidewalk - from seven stories up! People who pass by the billboard are startled and entertained by the sudden message, and their attention is drawn directly to the billboard itself. Meanwhile, quiet is preserved for all of the neighbors.
Originally posted by matthewgraybeal
The most recent was a Captain on a flight filled with Private security folk going to a Vegas Conference
Originally posted by Atzil321
I honestly thought this was an april fools as well. Any development of such weapons should be banned, and the use of them deemed a crime against humanity. Where is the UN when you need them...?
psychotronic weapons enjoys some respectability in Russia. In the late 1990s,
Vladimir Lopatin, then a member of the Duma, Russia's parliament, pushed to restrict mind control
weapons, a move that was taken seriously in Russia but elicited some curious mentions in the Western
press.
In an interview in Moscow, Lopatin, who has since left the Duma, cited Smirnov's work
as proof that such weaponry is real.
the Soviet military enlisted Smirnov's psychotechnology during the Soviet Union's bloody war in Afghanistan in the 1980s. "It was used for combating the Mujahideen, and also for treating post-traumatic stress syndrome" in Russian soldiers, she says.
Rusalkina markets the technology as a program called Mindreader 2.0. To sell Mindreader to the West, she's teamed up with a Canadian firm, which is now working with a U.S. defense contractor called SRS Technologies. This May, DHS announced plans to award a sole-source contract to conduct the first U.S.-government sponsored testing of SSRM Tek.
The contract is a small victory for the Psychotechnology Research Institute and its leaders, who have struggled for years to be accepted in the West. It also illustrates how the search for counter-terrorism technology has led the U.S. government into unconventional -- and some would say unsound -- science.
www.wired.com...