Friday, January 16, 2026

Psychotronic mind games

Controversy over military ray guns resurfaces

Did U.S. forces use a ray gun to incapacitate Venezuelan soldiers during the Maduro raid?

Have Russian operatives used a similar ray gun to cause brain damage to U.S. diplomats who were overly effective against Russian interests?

These questions are generating a renewed storm of debate.

Yet for those who think the possibilities are silly, I refer you to a report of mine that appeared in 2002 concerning psychotronic weapons. At that time, the CIA did not have a web site devoted to psychotronics, as it does now. There was quite a bit of silence and pooh-poohing of “conspiracy theories” back then. And, obviously, since then a great deal of (unclassified) progress has been made on brain-machine interfacing.

In any case, GRIST presents Paul Conant’s mildly edited 2002 report below for those interested in background on this subject. The paper is, to a degree, dated, but only because the scenarios it lays out are now even more technologically vivid.

To continue reading, please go HERE

Friday, January 9, 2026

Perplexity.ai spontaneous code test

Conant comments: The content is blah, but the visuals are handy, because I surely never wanted to learn all the coding that goes into them.

Here is a ready‑to‑paste HTML/CSS/JS block you can drop into the HTML view of a single Blogger post to make it look snazzy and interactive. It creates a neon title, animated “fact cards,” a click‑to‑reveal quote, and a tiny easter‑egg game. ​ How to use it In Blogger, edit your post, switch to HTML mode. Paste everything below where you want the fancy section to appear. Publish or preview the post. Snazzy post section code xml

Today’s Curious Corner

Scroll slowly, hover boldly, click curiously.

Micro‑Moment
The 8‑Second Rule

The average online attention span is often said to be under ten seconds, so this little box is racing the clock to earn its stay on your screen.

Brain Candy
Stories Beat Stats

When you wrap information in a story, readers remember it far better than when it is presented as raw data alone.

Tiny Challenge
Find the Hidden Line

Somewhere in this post is a sentence that quietly became your favorite. See if you can point to it without scrolling back up.

Click the orb to reveal a one‑sentence manifesto for this blog.

“This corner of the internet exists for one reason: to turn passing curiosity into the kind of fascination that keeps you learning long after the tab is closed.”

Your challenge will appear here.
You can customize the text inside the cards, the quote, and the list of “quests” to better match your voice or topic, while keeping the same visual and interactive scaffolding.

Psychotronic mind games