In The United States, Documents On "psycho-electronic" Weapons Were Accidentally Released - Alternative View

In The United States, Documents On "psycho-electronic" Weapons Were Accidentally Released - Alternative View
In The United States, Documents On "psycho-electronic" Weapons Were Accidentally Released - Alternative View

Video: In The United States, Documents On "psycho-electronic" Weapons Were Accidentally Released - Alternative View

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Video: US GOV ACCIDENTALLY RELEASES DOCUMENTS ON MIND CONTROL PSYCHO ELECTRIC WEAPONS, DOCS LEAKED 2024, May
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A strange story happened recently in Washington. When the journalist turned to the Information Processing Center, for some reason they sent him an incomprehensible archive, which contained information about "psycho-electronic" weapons, which are supposedly capable of controlling the human mind.

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The news organization MuckRock, which specializes in inquiries to government agencies under the Freedom of Information Act, received strange documents about technologies that allegedly control minds.

Journalist Curtis Waltman sent an inquiry to the Washington Information Center for information on the nationalist organizations and organizations of Antifa. He received answers to his questions, but along with them there was also an archive called EM effects on human body. zip (Electromagnetic effects on the human body). Inside contained, for example, the following documents:

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Judging by the illustrations presented, the so-called "psycho-electronic" weapon affects the entire human body, it causes uncontrolled acute scabies in all parts of the body, involuntary movements of the arms and legs, uncontrolled speech, orgasm and is even capable of raising the toes almost 90 degrees, even if and for a short time. It also talks about reading and transmitting thoughts at a distance, controlling dreams, guiding hallucinations, as well as remote mind control and remote brain mapping.

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At least some of these images were printed in a Nexus article describing the lawsuit of a certain John St. Clair Akevi against the US State Security Agency. Akevi claimed that the Office was capable of "covertly killing American citizens or conducting covert psychological operations, after which the targets were diagnosed with psychiatric illnesses." True, Nexus itself is an Australian tabloid magazine covering the supernatural and conspiracy theories.

Curtis Waltman himself has no idea why these documents were included in the response, and does not know why the government agency needs them. The Information Processing Center itself did not give any comments on this matter.