> Basically, Frey had discovered another sensory motor input in the higher blue-band frequencies of 0.3-3.0 GHz. - at very low amplitudes of power. It was "as if" we had another type of "vision," but did not know how to "see" what was being received. It constituted the next generation of subliminal communications. Every common device falls into that frequency spectrum: Cell phones WiFi routers and devices Microwave ovens Bluetooth devices Cordless phones GPS devices Television broadcasts (UHF) Garage door openers Baby monitors Two-way radios Satellite radio Wireless security systems Diathermy machines Electrosurgical units If this is true, we’re all surrounded by many more potentialy mind control related technologies than I previously assumed. We’re basically bathing in it 24/7: https://cdn.preterhuman.net/texts/government_information/intelligence_and_espionage/homebrew.military.and.espionage.electronics/servv89pn0aj.sn.sourcedns.com/_gbpprorg/mil/mindcontrol/mindwar.html

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I’ve been dabbling in that for quite some time but most of what I found was conjecture, hypothesis, rumors and connections between patents/companies/universities. Never found such a compelling summary that is this tight.
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npub1643c...7ca4 10 months ago
> it's exactly what you think it is So basically just bullshit? Even IF this thing existed, it would not mean mind control. You have your eyes, ears, touch, smell and taste sense working but no one is claiming mind control over touch sensory input, because that easy to prove is not true. So the only thing these people have left are these "senses that you didn't know you had" and that oh just happen to coincide with wireless devices. It's not a coincidence. It's on purpose. But not for mind control. The thing that is on purpose are these paranoid, pranksters and scammers picking them for their fake senses