2012-10-12

DARPA Wants to Install Transcranial Ultrasonic Mind Control Devices in Soldiers' Helmets

Vatic Note:  I am sitting here getting ready to write my vatic note and find myself not knowing what to say to all this.  Why is that?  Because until this article I was like everyone else,  I was operating from a totally different reality that I grew up with.  Even though I know the truth and research every single day and publish that which is confirmable,  I still had not reconciled my internal reality with the external reality we are living in.  While they may be doing what they say for the reasons they say, they never do anything for only one reason, so that means we have to consider this an alert to some nefarious agenda they intend with this.  They use soldiers as guinea pigs for their experiments to test for obtaining the affects they want.   Directed Mind Control comes to mind.  Sort of like a drone only human and someone sitting in a safe office gets to tell the soldier what to do and not worry about him thinking for himself.  Talk about anal retentive control freaks.   


Standard Issue Mind Control DARPA wants ultrasound-enhanced helmets that allow soldiers to stimulate certain regions of their brains.

DARPA has been trying to crawl inside the minds of soldiers for a while now, but a new ultrasound technology could let them get deeper inside than ever. Working under a DARPA grant, a researcher at Arizona State is developing transcranial pulsed ultrasound technology that could be implanted in troops’ battle helmets, allowing soldiers to manipulate brain functions to boost alertness, relieve stress, or even reduce the effects of traumatic brain injury.

Manipulating the brain to enhance warfighting capabilities and maintain mental acuity on the battlefield has long been a topic of interest for DARPA and various military research labs, but the technology to do so remains limited. 

Deep brain stimulation (DBS), for instance, requires surgically implanted electrodes to stimulate neural tissues, while less-invasive methods like transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) possess limited reach and low spatial resolution.


Tyler’s technology, packaged in a warfighter’s helmet, would allow soldiers to flip a switch to stimulate different regions of their brains, helping them relieve battle stress when it’s time to get some rest, or to boost alertness during long periods without sleep. 

Grunts could even relieve pain from injuries or wounds without resorting to pharmaceutical drugs. More importantly, in the periods after brain trauma ultrasound technology could reduce swelling and metabolic damage that is often the root cause of lasting brain damage.

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