Secretly
forced human brain implants connected to computers for mind control is a
reality today, one that has shattered lives of hundreds of thousands of
innocent victims globally. It is today’s most hidden human rights abuse
and Russia has taken the lead to expose it in a TV news program that
the host called a “profound” interview with a leading Targeted Individual advocate from Sweden.
Recently, a California woman and an expert in the field provided evidence to won the first court case involving today’s mind control cell tower weapon system.
Russia Today has broadcast (below) what
experts call the best coverage of today’s mind control crime, the old
MKUltra on steroids. In the RT program, produced by Daniel Estulin,
Deste La Sombra (From the Shadows) Magnus Olsson, a Targeted Individual,
explains that today’s secretly forced human chips are as tiny as a few
nonometers – and many more shocking details that make Edward Snowden’s
disclosures seem sophomoric.
Olsson,
despite victimized himself, worked several years to expose this crime.
He agrees with Dupré that this is the “biggest human rights abuses of
our times:” connecting people against their will and knowledge to
computers via implants of the size of a few nanometers – leading to
complete destruction of not only the victims’ lives and health, but
also their personalities and identities.
There is
complete amnesia about its early development, according to Olsson. The
CIA funded experiments on people without consent through leading
universities and by hiring prominent neuroscientists of that time. These
experiments have since the 50s been brutal, destroying every aspect of a
person’s life, while hiding behind curtains of National Security and
secrecy but also behind psychiatry diagnosis.
The results
of today’s mind control — mind reading, thought police, surveillance,
pre-crime, behavior modification, control of citizen’s behavior; tastes,
dreams, feelings and wishes; identities; personalities and not to
mention the ability to torture and kill anyone from a distance — are
completely ignored, dismissed, often even mocked by professionals.
All the
important ethical issues regarding the most special aspects of being a
free human being living a full human life are dismissed.
“The praise
of the machine in these discourses dealing with not only transhumanism
ideals but also neuroscience today has a cost and that is complete
disrespect, despise and underestimation of human beings, at least when
it comes to their bodies, abilities and biological functions,” Olsson
says. “The brain is seen as the only valuable thing; not just because of
its complexity and mysteries, but also because it can create
consciousness and awareness.
“We’re prone
to diseases, we die, we make irrational decisions, we’re inconsistent,
and we need someone to look up to. In a radio interview on Swedish
‘Filosofiska rummet’ entitled “Me and my new brain” (Jag och min nya
hjärna), neuroscientist Martin Ingvar referred to the human body as a
“bad frame for the brain.”
Individual
free will and personal identity have been discussed and the point of
view of Martin Ingvar was alligned with José Delgado’s some 60 years ago
– a buried history of mind control: We don’t really have any choice,
we’re not really having a free will or for that matter any consistent
personality.
Olsson says that would be enough reason to change humans to whatever “someone else” wishes. For example, an elite.
“Both the US
and the EU pour billions of dollars and euros in brain research every
single year, a brain research very focused on not only understanding the
brain, but also highly focused on merging human beings with machines;
using neuro-implants to correct behavior and enhance intelligence;
creating robots and other machines that think and make autonomous
intelligent decisions — just like humans do.“
Ray Kurzweil
predictions about future technological developments have been correct
thusfar. Now, he claims that in only 20 years, implant-technology will
have advanced to the point that it will completely transform humanity.
“We cannot
know right now whether [Kurzweil's] prediction is right or wrong, but we
have the right to decide on the kind of future we want,” says Olsson.
“I do not know if eradicating humanity as we know it is the best future
or the only alternative. Today, we might still have a choice.”