Yes, but I’ve done enough research to know that RU Sirius had nothing to do with the Principia Discordia. You may actually want to read the byline someday.
Hey, they don’t even need electrodes anymore:
Quoth Princhester:
Well, don’t keep us in suspense. What exactly can he see? Finish the sentence!
Fnord
Yeah , cant you read.
Using transcranial magnetic stimulation an alien abduction effect can be stimulated IIRC. The person can be overcome with a feeling of dread, feel like they are being draged down the bed and probed by space men. I am serious. Will try and find a cite.
I’m beginning to understand…
Think Russians & Woodpeckers. I’ll be right back.
Honestly, this was not foremost in my mind when I originally posted:
Naturally, I’ve heard of the Woodpecker transmitters before, but their use in mind control has, as far as I know, remained theoretical among conspircists. In other words, I’m not sure this example passes my initial caveat of “non-fiction.”
Tin foil or aluminum foil hats do NOT block mind control rays.
On the contrary, they convert you into an antenna and facilitate reception!
:eek:
Yeah, that bit you quoted is complete bullshit. For one thing there’s no such thing as “ELF modulation”, for another, Fourier transformations are not properties of radio waves, but rather a mathematical method of analyzing complex waveforms. This phrase particulary kills me: “multiple coherent frequencies are phase-locked into them.” How you phase-lock two different frequencies is beyond me. :rolleyes:
Easy, if they’re harmonics.
And if they’re all odd harmonics, you can add 'em up and get a square wave.
Further, blockheads are ideal absorbers of multiple coherent square waves.
(OK, I made the last one up…)
This struck me as a particularly odd statement. Which is faster: the blink of an eye or the transfomation of theory into hard-boiled fact for a conspiracist?
Vlad/Igor
Vlad/Igor? Whassup with that? Couldn’t make up your mind as to who you are? Spilt personality? Do you impale while limping and lisping?
I am a medical technologist, with seven years experience in hospital labs. One of the things I did, and still do, is draw blood, prompting the lame joke over and over:“Here comes the vampire!” Hence the name Vlad. For the past three years, I have been working in medical research in the Dept. of Pathology as a research assistant, hence the name Igor. Both adequately describe my job(s) over the past ten years, hence the “/”.
Anything else?
Vlad/Igor