Fellow Aspirant
5th June 2014, 16:29
Supersoldiers, it seems, are about to go mainstream.
This recent article on the BBC "Future" site is about a program of 'neuro enhancement' now underway at Wright-Patterson Air Force base in Ohio. From the article (italics mine):
The Wright-Patterson base is rich in aviation history. In and around this area, Wilbur and Orville Wright conducted pioneering experiments into flight. What they helped to start continues here, at the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL). Now the AFRL includes the 711th Human Performance Wing, whose mission is to “advance human performance in air, space and cyberspace”.
The researchers' use of an electrical 'net' to enhance brain performance and facilitate interaction between the brain and external hardware is reminiscent of the 'helmet' used in the Montauk 'chair' experiments. It, in turn, had been retrieved from a crashed alien vessel, and the theory being investigated was that the helmet had been used to control the craft itself.
Of further interest is the 'fact' that Wright-Patterson is reputed by many insiders to have been the final destination of the alien biological and hardware remains from the Roswell crash. It's a fascinating and revealing piece about the current state of affairs in some of the open, non-black military programs.
Here's another quotation from the article itself; the link to the article is at the bottom of this post:
Along with improvements in learning and attention in normal situations, McKinley has found that tDCS can combat the kinds of decline in mental performance normally seen with sleep deprivation. Other researchers have found that, depending on where the current is applied, tDCS can make someone more logical, boost their mathematical ability, improve their physical strength and speed, and even affect their ability to make plans, propensity to take risks and capacity to deceive – the production of lies can be improved or impaired by tDCS, it seems.
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140603-brain-zapping-the-future-of-war (http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140603-brain-zapping-the-future-of-war)
Namaste,
Brian
This recent article on the BBC "Future" site is about a program of 'neuro enhancement' now underway at Wright-Patterson Air Force base in Ohio. From the article (italics mine):
The Wright-Patterson base is rich in aviation history. In and around this area, Wilbur and Orville Wright conducted pioneering experiments into flight. What they helped to start continues here, at the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL). Now the AFRL includes the 711th Human Performance Wing, whose mission is to “advance human performance in air, space and cyberspace”.
The researchers' use of an electrical 'net' to enhance brain performance and facilitate interaction between the brain and external hardware is reminiscent of the 'helmet' used in the Montauk 'chair' experiments. It, in turn, had been retrieved from a crashed alien vessel, and the theory being investigated was that the helmet had been used to control the craft itself.
Of further interest is the 'fact' that Wright-Patterson is reputed by many insiders to have been the final destination of the alien biological and hardware remains from the Roswell crash. It's a fascinating and revealing piece about the current state of affairs in some of the open, non-black military programs.
Here's another quotation from the article itself; the link to the article is at the bottom of this post:
Along with improvements in learning and attention in normal situations, McKinley has found that tDCS can combat the kinds of decline in mental performance normally seen with sleep deprivation. Other researchers have found that, depending on where the current is applied, tDCS can make someone more logical, boost their mathematical ability, improve their physical strength and speed, and even affect their ability to make plans, propensity to take risks and capacity to deceive – the production of lies can be improved or impaired by tDCS, it seems.
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140603-brain-zapping-the-future-of-war (http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140603-brain-zapping-the-future-of-war)
Namaste,
Brian