Big Brother Controlling Your Head
Anyone who thinks someone isn't watching, listening to and constantly plotting to control the minds of the masses
might be shocked to view the following list of patents by a string of inventors who apparently found a variety of ways to
do it all.
The problem: which devices will be chosen, and when were they put in service. Notice that many of these patents
are 20 to 30 years old.
The list was sent to me by a reader who noted that it was marked Top Secret, and the patent list was to be removed
from public domain. Of course the list immediately ended up on the Internet.
In the chance that the list is bogus, I did a search on the patent names and numbers. They came up as legitimate
invention ideas being hawked, sometimes by their inventors, on line. Most commonly they were in lists of mind control
devices. Beyond that, I have no reason to verify or deny them as factual. Click on the highlighted search links and decide
for yourself.
Do they work?
What other explanation do we have for the masses following George W. Bush into an attack on Iraq like they did,
with few questions asked? What other reason do we have for the people taking the Bush Supreme Court appointment over Al Gore
to the presidency, even though most voters chose Gore in 2000?
This list ought to alarm everybody. I am betting it doesn't.
Silent Subliminal Presentation System, US Patent #5,159,703, Oliver Lowery, October 27, 1992. A silent communications system in which non-aural carriers in the
very low or very high audio-frequency range, or in the adjacent ultrasonic frequency spectrum, are amplitude-modulated with
the desired intelligence and propagated acoustically or vibrationally for inducement into the brain.
Hearing System, US Patent #4,877,027, Wayne Brunkan, October 31, 1989. A method for directly inducing sound into the head of a person, using
microwaves in the range of 100 MHz to 10,000 MHz, modulated with a waveform of frequency- modulated bursts.
Psycho-Acoustic Projector, US Patent #3,568,347, Andrew Flanders, February 23, 1971. A system for producing aural psychological disturbances and partial
deafness in the enemy during combat situations.
Method and System for Altering Consciousness, US Patent #5,123,899, James Gall, June 23, 1992. A system for altering the states of human consciousness involving the use
of simultaneous application of multiple stimuli, preferably sounds, having differing frequencies.
Subliminal Message Generator, US Patent #5,270,800, Robert Sweet, December 14, 1993. A combined subliminal and supraliminal message generator for use
with a television receiver; permits complete control of subliminal messages and their presentation. Also applicable to cable
television and computers.
US Patent #4,717,343, Alan Densky, January 5, 1988. A method of conditioning a person's unconscious mind in order to effect desired change in
the person's behavior, and which does not require the services of a trained therapist.
Auditory Subliminal Programming System, US Patent #4,777,529, Richard Schultz and Raymond Dolejs, October 11,
1988.
Ultrasonic Speech Translator and Communication System, US Patent #5,539,705, M. A. Akerman, Curtis Ayers, Howard Haynes, July 23, 1996. A wireless communication system, undetectable
by radio-frequency methods, for converting audio signals, including human voice, to electronic signals in the ultrasonic frequency
range, transmitting the ultrasonic signal by way of acoustic pressure waves across a carrier medium, including gases, liquids
and solids, and reconverting the ultrasonic acoustic pressure waves back to the original audio signal. This
invention was made with government support under Contract DE-ACO5-840R2l400, awarded by the US Department of Energy to Martin
Marietta Energy Systems, Inc.
Apparatus for the Treatment of Neuropsychic and Somatic Diseases with Heat, Light, Sound and VHF Electromagnetic
Radiation, US Patent #3,773,049, L. Y. Rabichev, V. F. Vasiliev, A. S. Putilin, T. G. Ilina, P. V. Raku and L. P. Kemitsky, November
20, 1973.
Nervous System Excitation Device, US Patent #3,393,279, Gillis Patrick Flanagan, July 16, 1968. A method of transmitting audio information via a radio frequency
signal modulated with the audio info through electrodes placed on the subject's skin, causing the sensation of hearing the
audio information in the brain.
Method and System for Simplifying Speech Waveforms, US Patent #3,647,970, G. Patrick Flanagan, March 7, 1972. A complex speech waveform is simplified so that it can be transmitted
directly through earth or water as a waveform and understood directly or after amplification.
Means for Aiding Hearing, US Patent #2,995,633, Henry Puharich and Joseph Lawrence, August 8, 1961. Means for converting audible signals to electrical
signals and conveying them to viable nerves of the facial system.
Hearing Device, US Patent #4,858,612, Philip Stocklin, August 22, 1989. A method and apparatus for simulation of hearing in mammals by introduction
of a plurality of microwaves into the regions of the auditory cortex.
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