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Unknown to most of the world, satellites can
perform astonishing and often menacing feats. This should come as no surprise
when one reflects on the massive effort poured into satellite technology since
the Soviet satellite Sputnik, launched in 1957, caused panic in the U.S. A spy
satellite can monitor a person’s every movement, even when the
"target" is indoors or deep in the interior of a building or traveling
rapidly down the highway in a car, in any kind of weather (cloudy, rainy,
stormy). There is no place to hide on the face of the earth.
It takes just three satellites to blanket the world with detection capacity.
Besides tracking a person’s every action and relaying the data to a computer
screen on earth, amazing powers of satellites include reading a person’s mind,
monitoring conversations, manipulating electronic instruments and physically
assaulting someone with a laser beam. Remote reading of someone’s mind through
satellite technology is quite bizarre, yet it is being done; it is a reality at
present, not a chimera from a futuristic dystopia! To those who might disbelieve
my description of satellite surveillance, I’d simply cite a tried-and-true
Roman proverb: Time reveals all things (tempus omnia revelat).
Probably the most sinister aspect of satellite
surveillance, certainly its most stunning, is mind-reading. As early as 1981, G.
Harry Stine (in his book Confrontation in Space), could write that computers
have "read" human minds by means of deciphering the outputs of
electroencephalographs (EEGs). Early work in this area was reported by the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in 1978. EEG’s are now known
to be crude sensors of neural activity in the human brain, depending as they do
upon induced electrical currents in the skin. Magnetoencephalographs (MEGs) have
since been developed using highly sensitive electromagnetic sensors that can
directly map brain neural activity even through even through the bones of the
skull. The responses of the visual areas of the brain have now been mapped by
Kaufman and others at Vanderbilt University. Work may already be under way in
mapping the neural activity of other portions of the human brain using the new
MEG techniques. It does not require a great deal of prognostication to forecast
that the neural electromagnetic activity of the human brain will be totally
mapped within a decade or so and that crystalline computers can be programmed to
decipher the electromagnetic neural signals.
In 1992, Newsweek reported that "with powerful new devices that peer
through the skull and see the brain at work, neuroscientists seek the
wellsprings of thoughts and emotions, the genesis of intelligence and language.
They hope, in short, to read your mind." In 1994, a scientist noted that
"current imaging techniques can depict physiological events in the brain
which accompany sensory perception and motor activity, as well as cognition and
speech." In order to give a satellite mind-reading capability, it only
remains to put some type of EEG-like-device on a satellite and link it with a
computer that has a data bank of brain-mapping research. I believe that
surveillance satellites began reading minds--or rather, began allowing the minds
of targets to be read--sometime in the early 1990s. Some satellites in fact can
read a person’s mind from space.
Read "The War of All Against
All."--John Fleming, St. Louis, MO, USA. Email: jfflemin@swebell.net
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