Topic: Important PSA
+Anonymous A — 9 years ago #48,370
+Anonymous B — 9 years ago, 45 minutes later[T] [B] #524,591
I read something the other day...it was saying that guy that went in and shot up a college in Florida was the victim of some king of stuff like this...only much more sinister and intense...it's supposed to be happening to a lot of people..
·Anonymous A (OP) — 9 years ago, 18 minutes later, 1 hour after the original post[T] [B] #524,597
@previous (B)
Yes, nefarious forces are using DEW (directed energy weapons), gangstalking, and other means to manipulate and even murder people, but there's a virtual media blackout about it. It's possible that you yourself are a TI (targeted individual) who has experienced psychological torture or electronic harassment at the hands of these unseen forces even.
+ducky !MwWb.dJjRc — 9 years ago, 1 hour later, 2 hours after the original post[T] [B] #524,608
@524,591 (B)
Yeah sounds more accurate than a official story
·Anonymous A (OP) — 9 years ago, 8 minutes later, 2 hours after the original post[T] [B] #524,609
Bad news or government directed subterfuge?
> Tin Foil Hats Actually Make it Easier for the Government to Track Your Thoughts
> Matt Soniak Sep 28, 2012 Health
> Let's say some malevolent group the government, powerful corporations, extraterrestrials really is trying to read and/or control your thoughts with radio waves. Would the preferred headgear of the paranoid, a foil helmet, really keep The Man and alien overlords out of our brains?
> The scientific reasoning behind the foil helmet is that it acts as a Faraday cage, an enclosure made up of a conducting material that shields its interior from external electrostatic charges and electromagnetic radiation by distributing them around its exterior and dissipating them. While sometimes these enclosures are actual cages, they come in many forms, and most of us have probably dealt with one type or another. Elevators, the scan rooms that MRI machines sit in, "booster bags" that shoplifters sometimes use to circumvent electronic security tags, cables like USB or TV coaxial cables, and even the typical household microwave all provide shielding as Faraday cages.
> While the underlying concept is good, the typical foil helmet fails in design and execution. An effective Faraday cage fully encloses whatever it's shielding, but a helmet that doesn't fully cover the head doesn't fully protect it. If the helmet is designed or worn with a loose fit, radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation can still get up underneath the brim from below and reveal your innermost thoughts to the reptilian humanoids or the Bilderberg Group.
> In 2005, a group of MIT students, prodded by "a desire to play with some expensive equipment," tested the effectiveness of foil helmets at blocking various radio frequencies. Using two layers of Reynolds aluminum foil, they constructed three helmet designs, dubbed the Classical, the Fez, and the Centurion, and then looked at the strength of the transmissions between a radio-frequency signal generator and a receiver antenna placed on various parts of their subjects' bare and helmet-covered heads.
> The helmets shielded their wearers from radio waves over most of the tested spectrum (YouTube user Mrfixitrick likewise demonstrates the blocking power of his foil toque against his wireless modem) but, surprisingly, amplified certain frequencies: those in the 2.6 Ghz ( allocated for mobile communications and broadcast satellites) and 1.2 Ghz (allocated for aeronautical radionavigation and space-to-Earth and space-to-space satellites) bands.
> While the MIT guys' tongue-in-cheek conclusion "the current helmet craze is likely to have been propagated by the Government, possibly with the involvement of the FCC" maybe goes a few steps too far, their study at least shows that foil helmets fail at, and even counteract, their intended purpose. That, or the students are aliens who fabricated these results in an effort to get you to take your perfectly functional helmet off.
·ducky !MwWb.dJjRc — 9 years ago, 10 hours later, 12 hours after the original post[T] [B] #524,624
K chill
·Anonymous A (OP) — 9 years ago, 2 hours later, 15 hours after the original post[T] [B] #524,628
@previous (ducky !MwWb.dJjRc)
How can you chill when you know they're manipulating our thoughts and murdering TIs?
·ducky !MwWb.dJjRc — 9 years ago, 10 hours later, 1 day after the original post[T] [B] #524,651
@previous (A)
Bcos I smoke too much 2 care baby
·Anonymous A (OP) — 9 years ago, 3 hours later, 1 day after the original post[T] [B] #524,716
@previous (ducky !MwWb.dJjRc)
Fellow TIs and I have noted that cannabis does seem to reduce the effects of some DEWs. Coincidence? Could be, but it's more likely mother gaia giving us the means to protect ourselves from these malevolent entities.
·ducky !MwWb.dJjRc — 9 years ago, 5 hours later, 1 day after the original post[T] [B] #524,747
@previous (A)
What is dew
·Anonymous A (OP) — 9 years ago, 4 hours later, 1 day after the original post[T] [B] #524,765
@previous (ducky !MwWb.dJjRc)
Directed energy weapons. Less obvious than projectile weapons, like modern firearms, but just as harmful.
+Anonymous D — 9 years ago, 2 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[T] [B] #524,766
@previous (A)
Like, weaponizing bad Feng-shui?
+Anonymous E — 9 years ago, 2 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[T] [B] #524,768
@previous (D)
In a way, yes. Bad feng shui is less harmful, tho. No good for the Military Industrial Complex.
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