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

No comments:

Post a Comment

Psychotronic mind games