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Huge Mainstream Revelation! NY Times Story Adds Credibility To Claims Made By ‘Targeted Individuals’ Of ‘Electronic Harassment’

4-9-2018 < SGT Report 148 1264 words
 

by Stefan Stanford, All News Pipeline:


‘Directed Energy Weapon Terrorism’ Is Part Of The Globalists Plan To Takeover America


Nearly one year ago back on September 25th of 2017, globalist debunking website snopes published a so-called ‘fact check’ story in which they tackled the ‘conspiracy theory’ that so-called ‘sonic weapons’ somehow played a role in the attacks upon US embassy employees in Cuba. As we can see in the screenshot from their story below, they called the claim ‘false’.


Back in October of 2017, we published a story on ANP in which we took a look at those strange attacks that were happening in Cuba and warned that the mainstream media had then recently put out a video featuring the sounds that were heard by Cuban embassy employees, actually having their viewers listen to it. As we asked within our story, “was the msm was deliberately putting their audience in harms way by asking them to listen to the same sounds that gave embassy employees brain damage?”


Then on July 10th, after more attacks upon US embassy employees were reported in China, we published a story on ANP titled “Is ‘MEDUSA’ Technology Being Used To Carry Out The ‘Sonic Attacks’ Upon US Diplomats Around The World? The US Navy Developed ‘MEDUSA’ In The Early 2000’s – The Weapon Was Never Put Into Use Due To Fears It Might Cause Brain Damage “. Within the story we pointed out the technology to beam voices into people’s heads had been around for decades and developed by the US Navy.


Yet snopes and the msm have long called such weaponry and ‘targeted individuals’ a ‘conspiracy theory’. Well as we learn in this new story from the NY Times of all places, microwave weaponry and the ability of the government to beam voices into one’s heads is a ‘conspiracy theory’ no longer and ‘microwave weaponry’ can indeed being used to carry out ‘sonic attacks’. First, from the NY Times story:


During the Cold War, Washington feared that Moscow was seeking to turn microwave radiation into covert weapons of mind control.


More recently, the American military itself sought to develop microwave arms that could invisibly beam painfully loud booms and even spoken words into people’s heads. The aims were to disable attackers and wage psychological warfare. (ANP: THINK TARGETED INDIVIDUALS – T.I.s!)


Now, doctors and scientists say such unconventional weapons may have caused the baffling symptoms and ailments that, starting in late 2016, hit more than three dozen American diplomats and family members in Cuba and China. The Cuban incidents resulted in a diplomatic rupture between Havana and Washington.


The medical team that examined 21 affected diplomats from Cuba made no mention of microwaves in its detailed report published in JAMA in March. But Douglas H. Smith, the study’s lead author and director of the Center for Brain Injury and Repair at the University of Pennsylvania, said in a recent interview that microwaves were now considered a main suspect and that the team was increasingly sure the diplomats had suffered brain injury.



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As we had reported in that July 10th ANP story, voice to skull technology has been around for many decades and while we’re happy that the US Navy allegedly abandoned their usage of it due to the ability of the microwave beams to cause damage to sensitive braintissue, who else has gotten ahold of this tech since then?

We asked in that story: Were these ‘sonic attacks’ in Cuba, China and elsewhere due to the ‘microwave auditory effect‘ that the Hackaday story speaks of? As the Hackaday story further details for us, the US Navy launched a research project in the early 2000’s with a system called the ‘Mob Excess Deterrent Using Silent Audio’, MEDUSA for short. From their story:


One theory I haven’t seen passed around much is the microwave auditory effect. This is a phenomenon where RF energy directed at a human head is converted to sound perceivable by the target. The first paper published about the effect was by Allan H. Frey in 1961. Frey worked at the General Electric advanced electronics center at Cornell University in NY.


Frey’s article describes how test subjects were able to hear buzzing, clicking, hisses and even knocking when transmitters were pointed at their skulls. Strangely, some of the test subjects were partially deaf, and still were able to hear the microwave sounds. What’s more, subjects could feel the effects from the microwave beam.


Depending on the transmitter settings, subjects felt “severe buffeting of the head”. Further transmitter changes resulted in subjects reporting “pins and needles” sensations.What exactly causes the RF energy to be converted to sound? The mechanism behind the microwave auditory effect has not been scientifically proven. The leading theory is pulsed RF energy heats the tissues of the inner ear, causing them to expand quickly. These expansions cause tiny shockwaves which are then interpreted as sounds by the brain.


Frey noted that “one can shield, with 2-inch square piece of fly screen, a portion of the [temple] and completely cut off the RF sound.” Fly screen would be the fine metal grid used in screen doors. Frey may not have known it, but he was providing all the proof the tin-foil hat crowd needed.


Of course, a technology like this can’t exist without someone trying to build a weapon out of it. In the early 2000’s, the US Navy funded research on Mob Excess Deterrent Using Silent Audio (MEDUSA). This was a “less lethal weapon” which would use the microwave auditory effect for crowd control. It utilized an electronically steered antenna which allowed it to transmit a wide or narrow RF beam. MEDUSA could even “spotlight” multiple targets simultaneously.


MEDUSA never became a fieldable weapon. The initial results of the project were promising, but there were questions about its safety. At the high power levels used, could the micro shockwaves actually damage sensitive brain tissue? What about the RF exposure to sensitive neurons? The project was eventually canceled.


Coming back to the present day, could the microwave auditory effect be at play in Cuba? It’s quite possible. The technology is definitely there – the effecthas been demonstrated with 1960’s era transmitters. With sufficient power and a narrow beam antenna, the attackers wouldn’t even need to be in the same room or building as their targets. Power levels high enough to be audible or even cause pain might also cause dizziness, nausea, and even traumatic braininjury. All we can do is wait for the results of the current investigations, and keep a tin foil hat handy.



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With the NY Times story seemingly confirming what Hackaday wrote about back in September of 2017, what snopes attempted to debunk, what other ‘conspiracy theories’ will soon come crashing down as proven fact to the American people? Certainly nothing can awaken the ‘sleeping masses’ like the truth yet as we’ve witnessed for decades now running, the completely complicit mainstream media has little interest in reporting it.

But with the Times story actually confirming what had long been far-fringe conspiracy theory with these sentences:


The American military itself sought to develop microwave arms that could invisibly beam painfully loud booms and even spoken words into people’s heads. 


The aims were to disable attackers and wage psychological warfare.


Not only does the ‘targeted individual conspiracy theory’ gain much more weight but so do the warnings given by William Cooper in his book “Behold: A Pale Horse” within which he warned of targeted individuals, programmed school shooters, MKUltra, trauma based mind control and much, much more.


Read More @ AllNewsPipeline.com





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