07 June, 2012

Who owns my brain? Possibly the Department of Defense

Ever since I was in California and started to get gang-stalked in SJSU, I was often surrounded by the people with DOD stickers. I often encountered the local police and people seemed to be working as the informants of some kinds. If you check my past posts, you see the DOD sticker cars or someone's DOD contract. So, I think it's easy to prove my part of story and how I got strange electronic harassment and other experiences as a Targeted Individual.

Here is an interesting article I found from my friends post.

cience and the military have historically made creepy bedfellows, with military curiosity about neuroscience leading the pack. Yet it's no secret that since the early 1950s, the US military has had a vested interest in harnessing cutting-edge developments in neuroscience to get a leg up on national defense (a la well-publicized failures like Project MK-ULTRA). In 2011, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the Pentagon's research arm credited with, among other things, spearheading the invention of the internet, had a budget of over $240 million devoted to cognitive neuroscience research alone. From brain-scan-based lie detection to memory-erasure pills, some of the technologies are, at first glance, simply the stuff of sci-fi. But an essay published in the March issue of PLoS Biology tells a cautionary tale of high-tech neuroscience developments on the horizon that "could be deployed before sufficiently validated."

..... Can a "love hormone" double as a "truth serum"? Additionally, DARPA's FY2012 budget states a plan to "initiate investigations into the relationship between...neurotransmitters such as oxytocin, emotion-cognition interactions, and narrative structures." Oxytocin, colloquially dubbed the "love hormone," exploded onto the research scene in the 90s for its demonstrated involvement in emotional behaviors such as parenting and pair-bond formation (it is secreted in the brain by breastfeeding moms and during sex). Interestingly, it's also known to increase feelings of trust and compassion in human subjects dosed with the hormone through their noses, a highly-speculative but possible boon for interrogators looking to extract info from otherwise tight-lipped prisoners. Though still in murky scientific territory, using oxytocin to get confessions from prisoners would likely be a violation of international law. "Under Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, you can't subject any prisoner to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and obviously you can't torture them," says George Annas, Professor of Health Law, Bioethics & Human Rights at the Boston University School of Public Health. "If used in a manner against their will, this would be a totally break with international law." But according to Lesley Wexler, Professor of International Humanitarian Law at the University of Illinois, there are many more gray areas to consider. "There is quite a debate about what humane treatment includes, and I would imagine whether oxytocin falls in that category is an open question," she says. Wexler stresses, however, that this is a matter of domestic discretion—not international law—and interrogation of prisoners of war (or the more nebulous "unlawful enemy combatants") is an area where the US clearly has a less-than-squeaky-clean track record. So while the exact motivations driving DoD's interests in oxytocin research are still vague, Moreno cautions that it might be wise for us to assume the worst. (http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2012/04/department-of-defense-neuroscience-bioethics-brains-law)
Well, in Switzerland, the canton police seems to be helping FBI and the US researchers to work with the people who are interested for them and they can let the informants and "economic hitman" for the gang stalking. You can see what happened in the refugee residence from my past posts.

And recently, I think I learned how the love hormone thing works, and I only made the observation from how that works and sudden change in the characteristics. But I think the patterns of "fall in love" is like what I wrote recently, and I can add some more in future in the different categories like in the chronological order like the subliminal positive thinking of someone specific and such. I wonder if that is used for the army, they can keep the nationalism on the solders to die for nothing. It works good for terrorist making, don't you think? Citizens must be smart enough to stay away from such dangerous mind control in order to have a normal civilized life without wicked activities.


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