I sincerely request the readers to POST this COLUMN on EVERY FORUM
possible to EDUCATE the AMERICAN PUBLIC.
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On the Need for New Criteria of Diagnosis of Psychosis in the Light of
Mind Invasive Technology
http://www.globalresearch.ca/on-the-...echnology/7123
By Carole Smith
Global Research, October 18, 2007
Journal of Psycho-Social Studies, 2003. 18 October 2007
“We have failed to comprehend that the result of the technology that
originated in the years of the arms race between the Soviet Union and
the West, has resulted in using satellite technology not only for
surveillance and communication systems but also to lock on to human
beings, manipulating brain frequencies by directing laser beams,
neural-particle beams, electro-magnetic radiation, sonar waves,
radiofrequency radiation (RFR), soliton waves, torsion fields and by
use of these or other energy fields which form the areas of study for
astro-physics. Since the operations are characterised by secrecy, it
seems inevitable that the methods that we do know about, that is, the
exploitation of the ionosphere, our natural shield, are already
outdated as we begin to grasp the implications of their use.”
[Excerpt]
For those of us who were trained in a psychoanalytical approach to the
patient which was characterised as patient centred, and which
acknowledged that the effort to understand the world of the other
person entailed an awareness that the treatment was essentially one of
mutuality and trust, the American Psychiatry Association’s Diagnostic
Criteria for Schizotypal personality was always a cause for alarm. The
Third Edition (1987) of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders (DSM) required that there be at least four of the
characteristics set out for a diagnosis of schizophrenia, and an
approved selection of four could be: magical thinking, telepathy or
sixth sense; limited social contact; odd speech; and over-sensitivity
to criticism. By 1994, the required number of qualifying
characteristics were reduced to two or more, including, say,
hallucinations and ‘negative ‘ symptoms such as affective flattening,
or disorganised or incoherent speech – or only one if the delusions
were bizarre or the hallucination consisted of a voice keeping up a
running commentary on the person’s behaviour or thoughts. The next
edition of the DSM is not due until the year 2010.
In place of a process of a labelling which brought alienation and
often detention, sectioning, and mind altering anti-psychotic
medication, many psychoanalysts and psychotherapists felt that even in
severe cases of schizoid withdrawal we were not necessarily wasting
our time in attempting to restore health by the difficult work of
unravelling experiences in order to make sense of an illness. In this
way, psychoanalysis has been, in its most radical form, a critic of a
society, which failed to exercise imaginative empathy when passing
judgement on people. The work of Harry Stack Sullivan, Frieda
Fromm-Reichmann, Harold Searles or R.D. Laing – all trained as
psychiatrists and all of them rebels against the standard procedures –
provided a way of working with people very different from the
psychiatric model, which seemed to encourage a society to repress its
sickness by making a clearly split off group the carriers of it. A
psychiatrist in a mental hospital once joked to me, with some truth,
when I commented on the number of carrier bags carried by many of the
medicated patients around the hospital grounds, that they assessed the
progress of the patient in terms of the reduction of the number of
carrier bags. It is too often difficult to believe, however, when
hearing the history of a life, that the “schizophrenic” was not
suffering the effects of having been made, consciously and
unconsciously, the carefully concealed carrier of the ills of the
family.
For someone who felt his mind was going to pieces, to be put into the
stressful situation of the psychiatric examination, even when the
psychiatrist acquitted himself with kindness, the situation of the
assessment procedure itself, can be ‘an effective way to drive someone
crazy, or more crazy.’ (Laing, 1985, p 17). But if the accounting of
bizarre experiences more or less guaranteed you a new label or a trip
to the psychiatric ward, there is even more reason for a new group of
people to be outraged about how their symptoms are being diagnosed. A
doubly cruel sentence is being imposed on people who are the victims
of the most appalling abuse by scientific-military experiments, and a
totally uncomprehending society is indifferent to their evidence. For
the development of a new class of weaponry now has the capability of
entering the brain and mind and body of another person by
technological means.
Harnessing neuroscience to military capability, this technology is the
result of decades of research and experimentation, most particularly
in the Soviet Union and the United States. (Welsh, 1997, 2000) We have
failed to comprehend that the result of the technology that originated
in the years of the arms race between the Soviet Union and the West,
has resulted in using satellite technology not only for surveillance
and communication systems but also to lock on to human beings,
manipulating brain frequencies by directing laser beams,
neural-particle beams, electro-magnetic radiation, sonar waves,
radiofrequency radiation (RFR), soliton waves, torsion fields and by
use of these or other energy fields which form the areas of study for
astro-physics. Since the operations are characterised by secrecy, it
seems inevitable that the methods that we do know about, that is, the
exploitation of the ionosphere, our natural shield, are already
outdated as we begin to grasp the implications of their use. The
patents deriving from Bernard J. Eastlund’s work provide the ability
to put unprecedented amounts of power in the Earth’s atmosphere at
strategic locations and to maintain the power injection level,
particularly if random pulsing is employed, in a manner far more
precise and better controlled than accomplished by the prior art, the
detonation of nuclear devices at various yields and various altitudes.
(ref High Frequency Active Auroral Research Project, HAARP).
Some patents, now owned by Raytheon, describe how to make “nuclear
sized explosions without radiation” and describe power beam systems,
electromagnetic pulses and over-the-horizon detection systems. A more
disturbing use is the system developed for manipulating and disturbing
the human mental process using pulsed radio frequency radiation (RFR),
and their use as a device for causing negative effects on human health
and thinking. The victim, the innocent civilian target is locked on
to, and unable to evade the menace by moving around. The beam is
administered from space. The Haarp facility as military technology
could be used to broadcast global mind-control, as a system for
manipulating and disturbing the human mental process using pulsed
radio frequency (RFR). The super-powerful radio waves are beamed to
the ionosphere, heating those areas, thereby lifting them. The
electromagnetic waves bounce back to the earth and penetrate human
tissue.
Dr Igor Smirnov, of the Institute of Psycho-Correction in Moscow,
says: “It is easily conceivable that some Russian ‘Satan’, or let’s
say Iranian – or any other ‘Satan’, as long as he owns the appropriate
means and finances, can inject himself into every conceivable computer
network, into every conceivable radio or television broadcast, with
relative technological ease, even without disconnecting cables…and
intercept the radio waves in the ether and modulate every conceivable
suggestion into it. This is why such technology is rightfully
feared.”(German TV documentary, 1998).
If we were concerned before about diagnostic criteria being imposed
according to the classification of recognizable symptoms, we have
reason now to submit them to even harsher scrutiny. The development
over the last decades since the Cold War arms race has included as a
major strategic category, psycho-electronic weaponry, the ultimate aim
of which is to enter the brain and mind. Unannounced, undebated and
largely unacknowledged by scientists or by the governments who employ
them – technology to enter and control minds from a distance has been
unleashed upon us. The only witnesses who are speaking about this
terrible technology with its appalling implications for the future,
are the victims themselves and those who are given the task of
diagnosing mental illness are attempting to silence them by
classifying their evidence and accounts as the symptoms of
schizophrenia, while the dispensers of psychic mutilation and
programmed pain continue with their work, aided and unopposed.
If it was always crucial, under the threat of psychiatric sectioning,
to carefully screen out any sign of confused speech, negativity,
coldness, suspicion, bizarre thoughts, sixth sense, telepathy,
premonitions, but above all the sense that “others can feel my
feelings, and that someone seemed to be keeping up a running
commentary on your thoughts and behaviour,” then reporting these to a
psychiatrist, or anyone else for that matter who was not of a mind to
believe that such things as mind-control could exist, would be the end
of your claim to sanity and probably your freedom. For one of the
salient characteristics of mind-control is the running commentary,
which replicates so exactly, and surely not without design, the
symptoms of schizophrenia. Part of the effort is to remind the victim
that they are constantly under control or surveillance. Programmes
vary, but common forms of reminders are electronic prods and nudges,
body noises, twinges and cramps to all parts of the body, increasing
heart beats, applying pressures to internal organs – all with a
personally codified system of comments on thoughts and events,
designed to create stress, panic and desperation. This is mind control
at its most benign. There is reason to fear the use of beamed energy
to deliver lethal assaults on humans, including cardiac arrest, and
bleeding in the brain.
It is the government system of secrecy, which has facilitated this
appalling prospect. There have been warning voices. “…the government
secrecy system as a whole is among the most poisonous legacies of the
Cold War …the Cold War secrecy (which) also mandate(s) Active
Deception…a security manual for special access programs authorizing
contractors to employ ‘cover stories to disguise their activities. The
only condition is that cover stories must be believable.” (Aftergood &
Rosenberg, 1994; Bulletin of Atomic Scientist). Paranoia has been
aided and abetted by government intelligence agencies.
In the United Kingdom the fortifications against any disturbing
glimmer of awareness of such actual or potential outrages against
human rights and social and political abuses seem to be cast in
concrete. Complete with crenellations, ramparts and parapets, the
stronghold of nescience reigns supreme. To borrow Her Majesty the
Queen’s recent observation: “There are forces at work of which we are
not aware.” One cannot say that there is no British Intelligence on
the matter, as it is quite unfeasible that the existence of the
technology is not classified information. Indeed it is a widely held
belief that the women protesting against the presence of cruise
missiles at Greenham Common were victims of electro-magnetic radiation
at gigahertz frequency by directed energy weapons, and that their
symptoms, including cancer, were consistent with such radiation
effects as reported by Dr Robert Becker who has been a constantly
warning voice against the perils of electro-magnetic radiation. The
work of Allen Frey suggests that we should consider radiation effects
as a grave hazard producing increased permeability of the blood-brain
barrier, and weakening crucial defenses of the central nervous system
against toxins. (Becker, 1985, p. 286). Dr Becker has written about
nuclear magnetic resonance as a familiar tool in medecine known as
magnetic resonance imaging or MRI. Calcium efflux is the result of
cyclotronic resonance which latter can be explained thus: If a
charged particle or ion is exposed to a steady magnetic field in
space, it will begin to go into a circular or orbital, motion at right
angles to the applied magnetic field.The speed with which it orbits
will be determined by the ratio between the charge and the mass of the
particle and by the strength of the magnetic field. (Becker,
1990,p.235) The implications of this for wide scale aggression by
using a combination of radar based energy and the use of nuclear
resonating are beyond the scope of the writer, but appear to be worth
the very serious consideration of physicists in assessing how they
might be used against human beings.
Amongst medical circles, however, it has so far not been possible for
the writer to find a neuroscientist, neurologist or a psychiatrist,
nor for that matter, a general medical practitioner, who acknowledges
even the potential for technological manipulation of the nervous
system as a problem requiring their professional interest. There has
been exactly this response from some of England’s most eminent
practitioners of the legal profession, not surprisingly, because the
information about such technology is not made available to them. They
would refer anyone attempting to communicate mind- harassment as a
psychiatric problem, ignoring the crime that is being committed.
The aim here is not to attempt a comprehensive history and development
of the technology of mind control. These very considerable tasks –
which have to be done under circumstances of the most extreme
difficulty – have been addressed with clarity and courage by others,
who live with constant harm and threats, not least of all contemptuous
labelling. Their work can be readily accessed on the internet
references given at the end of this paper. For a well-researched
outline of the historical development of electro-magnetic technology
the reader should refer to the timeline of dates and electromagnetic
weapon development by Cheryl Welsh, president of Citizens against
Human Rights Abuse. (Welsh 1997; 2001). There are at least one and a
half thousand people worldwide who state they are being targeted.
Mojmir Babacek, now domiciled in his native Czech Republic, after
eight years of residence in the United States in the eighties, has
made a painstakingly meticulous review of the technology, and
continues his research. (Babacek 1998, 2002)
We are concerned here with reinforcing in the strongest possible
terms:
i) The need for such abuses to human rights and the threats to
democracy to be called to consciousness, and without further delay.
ii) To analyse the reasons why people might defend themselves from
becoming conscious of the existence of such threats.
iii) To address the urgent need for intelligence, imagination, and
information – not to mention compassion – in dealing with the
victims of persecution from this technology, and
iv) To alert a sleeping society, to the imminent threats to their
freedom from the threat from fascist and covert operations who have in
all probability gained control of potentially lethal weaponry of the
type we are describing.
It is necessary to emphasise that at present there is not even the
means for victims to gain medical attention for the effects of
radiation from this targeting. Denied the respect of credulity of
being used as human guinea pigs, driven to suicide by the breakdown of
their lives, they are treated as insane – at best regarded as ‘sad
cases’. Since the presence of a permanent ‘other’ in one’s mind and
body is by definition an act of the most intolerable cruelty, people
who are forced to bear it but who refuse to be broken by it, have no
other option than to turn themselves into activists, their lives
consumed by the battle against such atrocities, their energies
directed to alerting and informing the public of things they don’t
want to hear or understand about evil forces at work in their society.
It is necessary, at this point, to briefly outline a few – one might
say the precious few – attempts by public servants to verify the
existence and dangers inherent in this field:
? In January 1998, an annual public meeting of the French National
Bioethics Committee was held in Paris. Its chairman, Jean-Pierre
Changeux, a neuroscientist at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, told the
meeting that “advances in cerebral imaging make the scope for invasion
of privacy immense. Although the equipment needed is still highly
specialized, it will become commonplace and capable of being used at a
distance. That will open the way for abuses such as invasion of
personal liberty, control of behaviour and brainwashing. These are far
from being science-fiction concerns…and constitute “a serious risk to
society.” (“Nature.” Vol 391, 1998.
? In January 1999, the European Parliament passed a resolution where
it calls “ for an international convention introducing a global ban on
all development and deployment of weapons which might enable any form
of manipulation of human beings. It is our conviction that this ban
can not be implemented without the global pressure of the informed
general public on the governments. Our major objective is to get
across to the general public the real threat which these weapons
represent for human rights and democracy and to apply pressure on the
governments and parliaments around the world to enact legislature
which would prohibit the use of these devices to both government and
private organisations as well as individuals.” (Plenary
sessions/Europarliament, 1999)
? In October 2001, Congressman Dennis J. Kucinich introduced a bill
to the House of Representatives which, it was hoped would be extremely
important in the fight to expose and stop psycho-electronic mind
control experimentation on involuntary, non-consensual citizens. The
Bill was referred to the Committee on Science, and in addition to the
Committee on Armed Services and International Relations. In the
original bill a ban was sought on ‘exotic weapons’ including
electronic, psychotronic or information weapons, chemtrails, particle
beams, plasmas, electromagnetic radiation, extremely low frequency
(ELF) or ultra low frequency (ULF) energy radiation, or mind control
technologies. Despite the inclusion of a prohibition of the basing of
weapons in space, and the use of weapons to destroy objects or damage
objects in space, there is no mention in the revised bill of any of
the aforementioned mind-invasive weaponry, nor of the use of satellite
or radar or other energy based technology for deploying or developing
technology designed for deployment against the minds of human beings.
(Space Preservation Act, 2002)
In reviewing the development of the art of mind-invasive technology–
there are a few outstanding achievements to note:
In 1969 Dr Jose Delgado, a Yale psychologist, published a book:
“Physical Control of the Mind: Towards a Psychocivilized Society”. In
essence, he displayed in practical demonstrations how, by means of
electrical stimulation of the brain which had been mapped out in its
relations between different points and activities, functions and
sensations, – by means of electrical stimulation, how the rhythm of
breathing and heartbeat could be changed, as well as the function of
most of the viscera, and gall bladder secretion. Frowning, opening and
closing of eyes and mouth, chewing, yawning, sleep, dizziness,
epileptic seizures in healthy persons were induced. The intensity of
feelings could be controlled by turning the knob, which controlled the
intensity of the electric current. He states at the end of his book
the hope that the new power will remain limited to scientists or some
charitable elite for the benefit of a “psychocivilized society.”
In the 1980’s the neuromagnetometer was developed which functions as
an antenna and could monitor the patterns emerging from the brain. (In
the seventies the scientists had discovered that electromagnetic
pulses enabled the brain to be stimulated through the skull and other
tissues, so there was no more need to implant electrodes in the
brain). The antenna, combined with the computer, could localize the
points in the brain where the brain events occur. The whole product is
called the magnetoencephalograph.
In January 2000 the Lockheed Martin neuroengineer Dr John D. Norseen,
was quoted (US News and World Report, 2000) as hoping to turn the
electrohypnomentalaphone, a mind reading machine, into science fact.
Dr Norseen, a former Navy pilot, claims his interest in the brain
stemmed from reading a Soviet book in the 1980’s claiming that
research on the mind would revolutionize the military and society at
large. By a process of deciphering the brain’s electrical activity,
electromagnetic pulsations would trigger the release of the brain’s
own transmitters to fight off disease, enhance learning, or alter the
mind’s visual images, creating a ‘synthetic reality’. By this process
of BioFusion, (Lockheed Martin, 2000) information is placed in a
database, and a composite model of the brain is created. By viewing a
brain scan recorded by (functional) magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
machine, scientists can tell what the person was doing at the time of
recording – say reading or writing, or recognise emotions from love to
hate. “If this research pans out”, says Norseen, “you can begin to
manipulate what someone is thinking even before they know it.” But
Norseen says he is ‘agnostic’ on the moral ramifications, that he’s
not a mad scientist – just a dedicated one. “The ethics don’t concern
me,” he says, “but they should concern someone else.”
The next big thing looks like being something which we might refer to
as a neurocomputer but it need not resemble a laptop – it may be
reducible to whatever size is convenient for use, such as a small
mobile phone. Arising from a break-through and exploitation of
PSI-phenomena, it may be modelled on the nervous-psychic activity of
the brain – that is, as an unbalanced, unstable system of
neurotransmitters and interacting neurones, the work having been
derived from the creation of a copy of a living brain – accessed by
chance, and ESP and worked on by design.
On receiving a communication from the writer on the feasibility of a
machine being on the horizon which, based on the project of collecting
electromagnetic waves emanating from the brain and transmitting them
into another brain that would read a person’s thoughts, or using the
same procedure in order to impose somebody else’s thoughts on another
brain and in this way direct his actions – there was an unequivocal
answer from IBM at executive level that there was no existing
technology to create such a computer in the foreseeable future. This
is at some variance with the locating of a patent numbered 03951134 on
the Internet pages of IBM Intellectual Property Network for a device,
described in the patent, as capable of picking up at a distance the
brain waves of a person, process them by computer and emit correcting
waves which will change the original brain waves. Similar letters
addressed to each of the four top executives of Apple Inc., in four
individual letters marked for their personal attention, produced
absolutely no response. This included the ex- Vice President of the
United States, Mr Al Gore, newly elected to the Board of Directors of
Apple.
Enough people have been sufficiently concerned by the reports of
victims of mind control abuse to organise The Geneva Forum, in 2002,
held as a joint initiative of the Quaker United Nations Office,
Geneva; the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research; the
International Committee of the Red cross, and the Human Rights Watch
(USA), and Citizens against Human Rights Abuses (CAHRA); and the
Programme for Strategic and International Security Studies, which was
represented by the Professor and Senior Lecturer from the Department
of Peace Studies at the University of Bradford.
In England, on May 25, 1995, the Guardian newspaper in the U.K.
carried an article based on a report by Nic Lewer, the peace
researcher from Bradford University, which listed “more than 30
different lines of research into ‘new age weapons’…”some of the
research sounds even less rational. There are, according to Lewer,
plans for ‘pulsed microwave beams’ to destroy enemy electronics, and
separate plans for very-low-frequency sound beams to induce vomiting,
bowel spasm, epileptic seizures and also crumble masonry.” Further,
the article states, “There are plans for ‘mind control’ with the use
of ‘psycho-correction messages’ transmitted by subliminal audio and
visual stimuli. There is also a plan for ‘psychotronic weapons’ –
apparently the projection of consciousness to other locations – and
another to use holographic projection to disseminate propaganda and
misinformation.” (Welsh, Timeline). Apart from this notable exception
it is difficult to locate any public statement of the problem in the
United Kingdom.
Unfortunately, the problem of credulity does not necessarily cease
with frequent mention, as in the United States, in spite of the number
of reported cases, there is still not sufficient public will to make
strenuous protest against what is not only already happening, but
against what will develop if left unchecked. It appears that the
administration believes that it is necessary and justifiable, in the
interests of national security, to make experimental human sacrifices,
to have regrettable casualties, for there to be collateral damage, to
suffer losses in place of strife or war. This is, of course, totally
incompatible with any claims to be a democratic nation which respects
the values of human life and democracy, and such an administration
which tutors its servants in the ways of such barbaric tortures must
be completely condemned as uncivilised and hypocritical.
Disbelief as a Defence Mechanism
In the face of widespread disbelief about mind-control, it seems worth
analysing the basis of the mechanisms employed to maintain disbelief:
i) In the sixties, Soviet dissidents received a significant measure of
sympathy and indignant protest from western democracies on account of
their treatment, most notedly the abuse of psychiatric methods of
torture to which they were subjected. It is noteworthy that we seem to
be able to access credulity, express feelings of indignant support
when we can identify with victims, who share and support our own value
system, and who, in this particular historical case, reinforced our
own values, since they were protesting against a political system
which also threatened us at that time. Psychologically, it is equally
important to observe that support from a safe distance, and the
benefits to the psyche of attacking a split-off ‘bad father’, the
soviet authorities in this case, presents no threat to one’s internal
system; indeed it relieves internal pressures. On the other hand,
recognizing and denouncing a similar offence makes very much greater
psychic demands of us when it brings us into conflict with our own
environment, our own security, our own reality. The defence against
disillusion serves to suppress paranoia that our father figure, the
president, the prime minister, our governments – might not be what
they would like to be seen to be.
ii) The need to deposit destructive envy and bad feelings elsewhere,
on account of the inability of the ego to acknowledge ownership of
them – reinforces the usefulness of persons or groups, which will
serve to contain those, disowned, projected feelings which arouse
paranoid anxieties. The concepts of mind-invasion strike at the very
heart of paranoid anxiety, causing considerable efforts to dislodge
them from the psyche. The unconscious identification of madness with
dirt or excrement is an important aspect of anal aggression,
triggering projective identification as a defence.
iii) To lay oneself open to believing that a person is undergoing the
experience of being invaded mentally and physically by an unseen
manipulator requires very great efforts in the self to manage dread.
iv) The defence against the unknown finds expression in the split
between theory and practice; between the scientist as innovator and
the society who can make the moral decisions about his inventions;
between fact and science fiction, the latter of which can present
preposterous challenges to the imagination without undue threat,
because it serves to reinforce a separation from the real.
v) Identification with the aggressor. Sadistic fantasies, unconscious
and conscious, being transferred on to the aggressor and identified
with, aid the repression of fear of passivity, or a dread of
punishment. This mechanism acts to deny credulity to the victim who
represents weakness. This is a common feature of satanic sects.
vi) The liberal humanist tradition which denies the worst destructive
capacities of man in the effort to sustain the belief in the great
continuity of cultural and scientific tradition; the fear, in one’s
own past development, of not being ‘ongoing’, can produce the psychic
effect of reversal into the opposite to shield against aggressive
feelings. This becomes then the exaggerated celebration of the ‘new’
as the affirmation of human genius which will ultimately be for the
good of mankind, and which opposes warning voices about scientific
advances as being pessimistic, unenlightened, unprogressive and
Luddite. Strict adherence to this liberal position can act as
overcompensation for a fear of envious spoiling of good possessions,
i.e. cultural and intellectual goods.
vii) Denial by displacement is also employed to ignore the harmful
aspects of technology. What may be harmful for the freedom and good of
society can be masked and concealed by the distribution of new and
entertaining novelties. The technology, which puts a camera down your
gut for medical purposes, is also used to limit your freedom by
surveillance. The purveyors of innovative technology come up with all
sorts of new gadgets, which divert, entertain and feed the acquisitive
needs of insatiable shoppers, and bolster the economy. The theme of
“Everything’s up to date in Kansas City” only takes on a downside when
individual experience – exploding breast implants, say – takes the
gilt off the gingerbread. Out of every innovation for evil (i.e.
designed for harming and destroying) some ‘good’ (i.e. public
diversion or entertainment) can be promoted for profit or
crowd-pleasing.
viii) Nasa is sending a spacecraft to Mars, or so we are told. They
plan to trundle across the Martian surface searching for signs of
water and life. We do not hear dissenting voices about its
feasibility.
Why is it that, when a person accounts that their mind is being
disrupted and they are being persecuted by an unseen method of
invasive technology, that we cannot bring ourselves to believe them?
Could it be that the horror involved in the empathic identification
required brings the shutters down? Conversely, the shared experience
of the blasting of objects into space brings with it the possibilities
of shared potency or the relief that resonates in the unconscious of
a massive projection or evacuation – a shared experience which is
blessed in the name of man’s scientific genius.
ix) The desire ‘not to be taken in’, not to be taken for a fool,
provides one of the most powerful and common defence mechanism against
credulity.
Power, Paranoia and Unhealthy Governments
The ability to be the bearer and container of great power without
succumbing to the pressures of latent narcissistic psychoses is an
important matter too little considered. The effect of holding power
and the expectation and the need to be seen as capable of sustaining
it, if not exercising it, encourages omnipotence of thought. In the
wake of this, a narcissistic overevaluation of the subject’s own
mental processes may set in. In the effort to hold himself together as
the possessor, container and executor of power, he (or indeed, she)
may also, undergo a process of splitting which allows him, along with
others, to bear enthralled witness of himself in this illustrious
role. This may mean that the seat of authority is vacated, at least at
times. The splitting process between the experiencing ego and the
perceiving ego allows the powerful leader to alternate his perception
of himself inside and outside, sometimes beside, himself. With the
reinforcement of himself from others as his own narcissistic object,
reality testing is constrained. In this last respect, he has much in
common with the other powerful figure of the age, the movie star. or
by those, in Freud’s words, who are “ruined by success.”
In a world, which is facing increasing disillusion about the gulf
between the public platforms on which governments are elected, and the
contingencies and pragmatics of retaining defence strategies and
economic investments, the role of military and intelligence
departments, with their respective tools of domination and covert
infiltration, is increasingly alarming. Unaccountable to the public,
protected from exposure and prosecution by their immunity, licensed to
lie as well as to kill, it is in the hands of these agents that very
grave threats to human rights and freedom lies. Empowered to carry out
aggression through classified weapon experimentation which is
undetectable, these men and women are also open to corruption from
lucrative offers of financial reward from powerful and sinister groups
who can utilize their skills, privileged knowledge and expertise for
frankly criminal and fascist purposes.
Our information about the psychological profiles of those who are
employed to practice surveillance on others is limited, but it is not
difficult to imagine the effects on the personality that would ensue
with the persistent practice of such an occupation, so constantly
exposed to the perversions. One gains little snatches of insight here
and there. In his book on CIA mind control research (Marks, 1988),
John Marks quotes a CIA colleague’s joke (always revealing for
personality characteristics): “If you could find the natural radio
frequency of a person’s sphincter, you could make him run out of the
room real fast.” (One wonders if the same amusement is derived from
the ability to apply, say infra-sound above 130 decibels, which is
said to cause stoppage of the heart, according to one victim/activist
from his readings of a report for the Russian Parliament.)
Left to themselves, these servants of the state may well feel exempt
from the process of moral self-scrutiny, but the work must be
dehumanising for the predator as well as the prey. It is probably true
that the need to control their agents in the field was an incentive to
develop the methods in use today. It is also an effectively
brutalising training for persecuting others. Meanwhile the object, the
prey, in a bid for not only for survival but also in a desperate
effort to warn his or her fellows about what is going on, attempts to
turn himself into a quantum physicist, a political researcher, a legal
sleuth, an activist, a neurologist, a psychologist, a physiologist –
his own doctor, since he cannot know what effects this freakish
treatment might have on his body, let alone his mind. There are always
new methods to try out which might prove useful in the search to find
ways of disabling and destroying opponents – air injected into brains
and lungs, lasers to strike down or blind, particle beams, sonar
waves, or whatever combination of energies to direct, or destabilise
or control.
Science and Scepticism
Scientists can be bought, not just by governments, but also by
sinister and secret societies. Universities can be funded by
governments to develop technology for unacceptably inhumane uses. The
same people who deliver the weapons – perhaps respected scientists and
academics – may cite the acceptable side of scientific discoveries,
which have been developed by experimenting on unacknowledged,
unfortunate people. In a cleaned up form, they are then possibly
celebrated as a break-through in the understanding of the natural laws
of the universe. It is not implausible that having delivered the
technical means for destruction, the innovator and thinker goes on,
wearing a different hat, to receive his (or her) Nobel Prize. There
are scientists who have refused to continue to do work when they were
approached by CIA and Soviet representatives. These are the real
heroes of science.
In the power struggle, much lies at stake in being the first to gain
control of ultimate mind-reading and mind-controlling technology. Like
the nuclear bomb, common ownership would seem by any sane calculations
to cancel out the advantage of possession, but there is always a race
to be the first to possess the latest ultimate means of mass
destruction. The most desirable form is one that can be directed at
others without contaminating oneself in the process – one that can be
undetected and neatly, economically and strategically delivered. We
should be foolish to rule out secret organisations, seeing threat only
from undemocratic countries and known terrorist groups.
As consumers in a world which is increasingly one in which shopping is
the main leisure activity, we should concern ourselves to becoming
alert to the ways in which human welfare may have been sacrificed to
produce an awesome new gadget. It may be the cause for celebration for
the ‘innovator’, but brought about as the result of plugging in or
dialling up the living neuronal processes of an enforced experimentee.
If we are concerned not to eat boiled eggs laid by battery hens, we
might not regard it morally irrelevant to scrutinise the large
corporations producing electronically innovative ‘software.’ We might
also be wary about the origins of the sort of bland enticements of
dating agencies who propose finding your ideal partner by matching up
brain frequencies and ‘bio-rhythms’.
We do not know enough about the background of such technology, nor
how to evaluate it ethically. We do not know about its effects on the
future, because we are not properly informed. If governments persist
in concealing the extent of their weapon capability in the interests
of defence, they are also leaving their citizens disempowered of the
right to protest against their deployment. More alarmingly, they are
leaving their citizens exposed to their deployment by ruthless
organisations whose concerns are exactly the opposite of democracy and
human rights.
Back in the United Kingdom
Meanwhile, back in England, the Director of the Oxford Centre for
Cognitive Neuroscience, Professor Colin Blakemore, also the elective
Chief Executive of the Medical Research Council writes to the author
that he “… knows of no technology (not even in the wildest
speculations of neuroscientists) for scanning and collecting ‘neuronal
data’ at a distance.” (Blakemore, 2003, ) This certitude is at
distinct variance with the fears of other scientists in Russia and the
United States, and not least of all with the fears of the French
neuroscientist, Jean-Pierre Changeux of the French National Bioethics
Committee already quoted (see page 5). It is also very much at odds
with the writing of Dr Michael Persinger from the Behavioural
Neuroscience Laboratory at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario,
Canada. His article “On the Possibility of Directly Accessing Every
Human Brain by Electromagnetic Induction of Algorithms” (1995), he
describes the ways that individual differences among human brains can
be overcome and comes to a conclusion about the technological
possibilities of influencing a major part of the approximately six
billion people on this planet without mediation through classical
sensory modalities but by generating electromagnetic induction of
fundamental algorithms in the atmosphere. Dr Persinger’s work is
referred to by Captain John Tyler whose work for the American Air
Force and Aerospace programmes likens the human nervous system to a
radio receiver. (1990)
Very recently the leading weekly cultural BBC radio review had as one
of its guests, the eminent astro-physicist and astronomer royal, Sir
Martin Rees, who has recently published a book, “Our Final Century”,
in which he makes a sober and reasoned case for the fifty-fifty chance
that millions of people, probably in a ‘third-world country’ could be
wiped out in the near future through biotechnology and bio-terrorism –
“by error or malign release.” He spoke of this devastation as possibly
coming from small groups or cults, based in the United States. “…few
individuals with the right technology to cause absolute mayhem.” He
also said that in this century, human nature is no longer a fixed
commodity, that perhaps we should contemplate the possibility that
humans would even have implants in the brain.
The other guests on this programme were both concerned with
Shakespeare, one a theatre producer and the other a writer on
Shakespeare, while his remaining guest was a young woman who had a
website called “Spiked”, the current theme of which was Panic Attack,
that is to say, Attack on Panic. This guest vigorously opposed what
she felt was the pessimism of Sir Martin, regarding his ideas as
essentially eroding trust, and inducing panic. This reaction seems to
typify one way of dealing with threat and anxiety, and demonstrates
the difficulty that a warning voice, even from a man of the academic
distinction of Martin Rees, has in alerting people to that which they
do not want to hear. This flight reaction was reinforced by the
presenter who summed up the morning’s discussion at the end of the
programme with the words: “We have a moral! Less panic, more
Shakespeare!”
The New Barbarism
Since access to a mind-reading machine will enable the operator to
access the ideas of another person, we should prepare ourselves for a
new world order in which ideas will be, as it were, up for grabs. We
need not doubt that the contents of another’s mind will be scooped up,
scooped out, sorted through as if the event was a jumble sale. The
legal profession would therefore be well advised to consider the laws
on Intellectual Property very judiciously in order to acquit
themselves with any degree of authenticity. We should accustom
ourselves to the prospect of recognizing our work coming out of the
mouth of another. The prospect of wide-scale fraud, and someone
posturing in your stolen clothes will not be a pretty sight. The term
“personal mind enhancement” is slipping in through the back door, to
borrow a term used by the Co-Director of the Center for Cognitive
Liberty and Ethics, and it is being done through
technologically-induced mental co-ercion – mind raping and looting. In
place of, or in addition to, cocaine, we may expect to see
‘mind-enhanced’ performances on “live” television.
The brave new science of neuropsychiatry and brain mapping hopes to
find very soon, with the fMRI scanner – this “brand new toy that
scientists have got their hands on” – “the blob for love” and “the
blob for guilt”, (BBC Radio 4: All in the Mind, 5 March, 2003). Soon
we will be able to order a brain scan for anyone whose behaviour
strikes us as odd or bizarre, and the vicissitudes of a life need no
longer trouble us in our diagnostic assessments. In his recent Reith
Lectures for the BBC (2003), Professor Ramachandran, the celebrated
neuroscientist from the La Hoya Institute in San Diego, California,
has demonstrated for us many fascinating things that the brain can do.
He has talked to us about personality disorders and shown that some
patients, who have suffered brain damage from head injury, do not have
the capacity to recognise their mothers. Others feel that they are
dead. And indeed he has found brain lesions in these people. In what
seems to be an enormous but effortless leap, the self-styled “kid in a
candy store” is now hoping to prove that all schizophrenics, have
damage to the right hemisphere of the brain, which results in the
inability to distinguish between fantasy (sic) and reality. Since
Professor Ramachandran speaks of schizophrenia in the same breath as
denial of illness, or agnosia, it is not clear, and it would be
interesting to know, whether the person with the head injury has been
aware or unaware of the head injury. Also does the patient derive
comfort and a better chance at reality testing when he is told of the
lesion? Does he feel better when he has received the diagnosis? And
what should the psychoanalysts – and the psychiatrists, – feel about
all those years of treating people of whose head injuries they were
absolutely unaware? Was this gross negligence? Were we absolutely
deluded in perceiving recovery in a sizeable number of them?
It is, however, lamentable that a neuroscientist with a professed
interest in understanding schizophrenia should seek to provide light
relief to his audience by making jokes about schizophrenics being
people who are “convinced that the CIA has implanted devices in their
brain to control their thoughts and actions, or that aliens are
controlling them.” (Reith Lecture, No 5, 2003).
There is a new desire for concretisation. The search for meaning has
been replaced by the need for hard proof. If it doesn’t light up or
add up it doesn’t have validity. The physician of the mind has become
a surgeon. “He found a lump as big as a grapefruit!”
Facing up to the Dread and Fear of the Uncanny
Freud believed that an exploration of the uncanny would be a major
direction of exploration of the mind in this century. The fear of the
uncanny has been with us for a very long time. The evil eye, or the
terrifying double, or intruder, is a familiar theme in literature,
notably of Joseph Conrad in The Secret Sharer, and Maupassant’s short
story, Le Horla. Freud’s analysis of the uncanny led him back to the
old animistic conception of the universe: “…it seems as if each one of
us has been through a phase of individual development corresponding to
the animistic phase in primitive men, that none of us has passed
through it without preserving certain residues and traces of it which
are still capable of manifesting themselves, and that everything which
now strikes us as ‘uncanny’ fulfils the condition of touching those
residues of animistic mental activity within us and bringing them to
expression.” (Freud: 1919. p.362)
The separation of birth, and the childhood fear of ‘spooks in the
night’, also leave their traces in each and every one of us. The
individual experience of being alone in one’s mind – the solitary fate
of man which has never been questioned before, and upon which the
whole history of civilised nurture is based – is now assaulted
head-on. Since growing up is largely synonymous with acceptance of
one’s aloneness, the effort to assuage it is the basis for compassion
and protection of others; it is the matrix for the greatest good, that
of ordinary human kindness, and is at the heart of the communicating
power of great art. Even if we must all live and die alone, we can at
least share this knowledge in acts of tenderness which atone for our
lonely state. In times of loss and mental breakdown, the starkness of
this aloneness is all too clear. The best of social and group
constructiveness is an effort to allay the psychotic anxieties that
lie at the base of every one of us, and which may be provoked under
extreme enough conditions.
The calculated and technological entry into another person’s mind is
an act of monumental barbarism which obliterates– perhaps with the
twiddling of a dial – the history and civilisation of man’s mental
development. It is more than an abuse of human rights, it is the
destruction of meaning. For any one who is forced into the hell of
living with an unseen mental rapist, the effort to stay sane is beyond
the scope of tolerable endurance. The imaginative capacity of the
ordinary mind cannot encompass the horror of it. We have attempted to
come to terms with the experiments of the Nazis in concentration
camps. We now have the prospect of systematic control authorised by
men who issue instructions through satellite communications for the
destruction of societies while they are driving new Jaguars and
Mercedes, and going to the opera.
This is essentially about humiliation, and disempowerment. It is a
manifestation of rage acted out by those who fear impotence with such
dread, that their whole effort is directed into the emasculation and
destruction of the terrifying rival of their unconscious fantasies. In
this apocalypse of the mind the punitive figure wells up as if out of
the bowels of the opera stage, and this phantasmagoria is acted out
on a global scale. These men may be mad enough to believe they are
creating a ‘psychocivilised world order”. For anyone who has studied
damaged children, it is more resonant of the re-enactment from the
unconscious, reinforced by a life devoid of the capacity for empathic
identification, of the obscenities of the abused and abusing child in
the savage nursery. Other people -which were to them like Action Man
toys to be dismembered, or Barbie Dolls to be obscenely defiled –
become as meaningless in their humanity as pixillated dots on a
screen.
Although forced entry into a mind is by definition obscene, an
abbreviated assessment of the effects that mind-invaded people
describe testifies to the perverted nature of the experiments.
Bizarre noises are emitted from the body, a body known well enough by
its owner to recognise the noises as extrinsic; air is pumped in and
out of orifices as if by a bicycle pump. Gradually the repertoire is
augmented – twinges and spasms to the eyes, nose, lips, strange tics,
pains in the head, ringing in the ears, obstructions in the throat,
pressure on the bowel and bladder causing incontinence; tingling in
the fingers, feet, pressures on the heart, on breathing, dizziness,
eye problems leading to cataracts; running eyes, running nose;
speeding up of heart beats and the raising of pressure in the heart
and chest; breathing and chest complaints leading to bronchitis and
deterioration of the lungs; agonizing migraines; being woken up at
night, sometimes with terrifying jolts ; insomnia; intolerable levels
of stress from the loss of one’s privacy. This collection of assorted
symptoms is a challenge to any medical practitioner to diagnose.
There are, more seriously, if the afore-going is characterised as
non-lethal, the potential lethal effects since the capability of
ultrasound and infra-sound to cause cardiac arrest, and brain lesions,
paralysis and blindness, as well as blinding by laser beam, or
inducing asphyxia by altering the frequencies which control breathing
in the brain, epileptic seizure – all these and others may be at the
fingertips of those who are developing them. And those who do choose
to use them may be sitting with the weapon, which resembles, say, a
compact mobile telephone, on the restaurant table next to the bottle
of wine, or beside them at the swimming pool.
Finally – if the victims at this point in the new history of this
mind-control, cannot yet prove their abuse, it must be asserted that,
faced with the available information about technological development –
it is certainly not possible for those seeking to evade such claims –
to disprove them. To wait until the effects become widespread will be
too late.
? For these and other reasons which this paper has attempted to
address, we would call for an acknowledgement of such technology at a
national and international level. Politicians, scientists and
neurologists, neuroscientists, physicists and the legal profession
should, without further delay, demand public debate on the existence
and deployment of psychotronic technology; and for the
declassification of information about such devices which abuse
helpless people, and threaten democratic freedom.
? Victims’ accounts of abuse should be admitted to public account, and
the use of psycho-electronic weapons should be made illegal and
criminal,
? The medical profession should be helped to recognise the symptoms of
mind-control and psychotronic abuse, and intelligence about their
deployment should be declassified so that this abuse can be seen to be
what it is, and not interpreted automatically as an indication of
mental illness.
If, in the present confusion and insecurity about the search for
evidence of weapons of mass destruction, we conclude that failure to
locate them – whatever the truth of the matter –encourages us to be
generally complacent, then we shall be colluding with very dark forces
at work if we conclude that a course of extreme vigilance signifies
paranoia. For there may well be other weapons of mass destruction
being developed and not so far from home; weapons which, being even
more difficult to locate, are developed invisibly, unobstructed,
unheeded in our midst, using human beings as test-beds. Like ESP, the
methods being used on humans have not been detectable using
conventional detection equipment. It is likely that the signals being
used are part of a physics not known to scientists without the highest
level of security clearance. To ignore the evidence of victims is to
deny, perhaps with catastrophic results, the only evidence which
might otherwise lead the defenders of freedom to becoming alert to the
development of a fearful new methods of destruction. Manipulating
terrorist groups and governments alike, these sinister and covert
forces may well be very thankful for the professional derision of the
victims, and for public ignorance.
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Carole Smith is a British psychoanalyst. In recent years she has been
openly critical of government use of intrusive technology on
non-consenting citizens for the development of methods of state
control. Carole Smith
E-mail: rockpool@dircon.co.uk