Doctors stumped by sonic experiences, doubt cause is viruses, delusions, or chemicals.
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We don't exactly know it's an attack. It could be a natural or manmade event in the general area. Maybe Cubans in the area are experiencing similar symptoms but aren't reporting them? Maybe they think the headaches and forgetfulness are just life?How do we know this is an attack? I am confused.
The effects of laser on eye sight are well known. Lasers are used for lot of things these days (UAV navigation and missile guidance among other things), so the fact that they had it on a ship isn't all that exotic, it's downright routine.
We don't exactly know it's an attack. It could be a natural or manmade event in the general area. Maybe Cubans in the area are experiencing similar symptoms but aren't reporting them? Maybe they think the headaches and forgetfulness are just life?How do we know this is an attack? I am confused.
Link for the sauce:Let's not forget that Canadian diplomatic staff were also affected by similar symptoms. It looks like these individuals were not part of the published study. It would be interesting to see if the long term effects were similar between the US and Canadian staff.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/ ... ing-damage
We obviously don't know what is going on. However, an exotic weapon is plausible because it has happened before. Canadian helicopter attempted to stop a Russian ship off the coast of WA a few years back, and the ship fired a high powered laser which permanently damaged the pilots' eyesight.
https://www.cnn.com/US/9705/14/russia.l ... l?_s=PM:US
Havana is not that backward at all. there are other hotels and lots people from all kinds of countries around. They have pretty good doctors and they even export their medical knowledge and medicine. If it was natural in the middle of Havana Vedado district where the big hotels and the embassy are that seems really strange to me. Or some machinery to produce radiation or sound that would seem really out of place.We don't exactly know it's an attack. It could be a natural or manmade event in the general area. Maybe Cubans in the area are experiencing similar symptoms but aren't reporting them? Maybe they think the headaches and forgetfulness are just life?How do we know this is an attack? I am confused.
Not if you know where it all is supposed to have happend. It has to be mass hysteria there is no other reasonable explanation.Link for the sauce:Let's not forget that Canadian diplomatic staff were also affected by similar symptoms. It looks like these individuals were not part of the published study. It would be interesting to see if the long term effects were similar between the US and Canadian staff.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/ ... ing-damage
We obviously don't know what is going on. However, an exotic weapon is plausible because it has happened before. Canadian helicopter attempted to stop a Russian ship off the coast of WA a few years back, and the ship fired a high powered laser which permanently damaged the pilots' eyesight.
https://www.cnn.com/US/9705/14/russia.l ... l?_s=PM:US
We obviously don't know what is going on. However, an exotic weapon is plausible because it has happened before. Canadian helicopter attempted to stop a Russian ship off the coast of WA a few years back, and the ship fired a high powered laser which permanently damaged the pilots' eyesight.
The effects of laser on eye sight are well known. Lasers are used for lot of things these days (UAV navigation and missile guidance among other things), so the fact that they had it on a ship isn't all that exotic, it's downright routine.
It's not only Russia that doesn't want that to happen. The Cuban ex-pat communities in the US don't want it, either, and elements of the US government.If this is a weapon, it's not a very good one. The effects are realtively mild, and everyone seems to have been well aware they were under attack. Not sure what the use case for this thing would be.
It's causing anxiety about visiting Cuba... if everything was moving forward that the Obama administration had wanted, then we would be slowly normalizing relations which Russia does not want to happen.
This is a great weapon - we have no idea who has it, what it is, how it works, and who's been hit with it... until after the damage is done.
It is Cuba so it must be brujeria and some evil santeros are doing this.Clearly one of those "psychic warfare" programs has finally borne fruit and the men who stare at goats are testing their Scanners-like abilities /s
Nothing I've read makes me think that a microwave beam is the wrong answer. In fact, I keep coming back to it.Hmmm interesting. When first hearing of this, I was thinking directed microwave beam but that sounds too James Bond. Or does it?What I've always found creepy about this was that the symptoms pretty much exactly match what my dad experienced when he was having radiation therapy for brain cancer. Sometimes he'd hear things, other times he'd see weird colors, but every experience I've heard of reminded me of what he went through.
If that's the case wouldn't the afflicted feel a burning sensation as well? I guess it could of been a low wattage but then you wouldn't get as good penetration past the skull. Plus people wouldn't have been able to hear AND record it in an audible range. I might be being a bit nit picky about the definition of "microwave" here but this would certainly have to be a much lower frequency than what typical microwaves are.
Nothing I've read makes me think that a microwave beam is the wrong answer. In fact, I keep coming back to it.Hmmm interesting. When first hearing of this, I was thinking directed microwave beam but that sounds too James Bond. Or does it?What I've always found creepy about this was that the symptoms pretty much exactly match what my dad experienced when he was having radiation therapy for brain cancer. Sometimes he'd hear things, other times he'd see weird colors, but every experience I've heard of reminded me of what he went through.
If that's the case wouldn't the afflicted feel a burning sensation as well? I guess it could of been a low wattage but then you wouldn't get as good penetration past the skull. Plus people wouldn't have been able to hear AND record it in an audible range. I might be being a bit nit picky about the definition of "microwave" here but this would certainly have to be a much lower frequency than what typical microwaves are.
You wouldn't necessarily feel it because you have no sensory nerves in your brain. Microwaves will naturally have "hot spots" and can be tuned to maximize this effect (which is why microwave ovens rotate your food.) It's not inconceivable that you could even use several beams of slightly different frequency to create a hotspot even further away. It might be possible to create a hotspot inside a person's head that they wouldn't feel on their skin surface, at least not for a while.
Because if it was an attack, the attacker likely would have stopped once found out, so recording now probably wouldn't going to do any good? Unless the attacker wanted to get caught it would be pretty damn stupid to continue.Ok, let me spell it out: saying the recording isn't very loud is a nonsense argument, because it can vary wildly from reality.So turn your volume up?Except these people aren't "hearing things", they heard things. As in they don't keep hearing them anymore, and the sounds were recorded, so actually happened.
I heard that recording. It did not sound loud at all. Im calling bs on it being evidence of an attack.
Yes I did. At max volume it sounds like an annoying buzz. Not loud. Did you even listen to it before snark?
Presumably the person recording it was hearing it and wanted a good recording so would have recorded it in the same circumstance as he was hearing it. He would want it to be representative. Thats why he recorded it.
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Besides which, they are reporting repeated attacks. So then, why havent better recordings been made? The gear to record microwaves, infrasonics, and ultrasonics is ridiculously easy to come by. If they are interested in figuring it out then why have they not done this?
Yeah, that's a better analogy.It's like complaining that a case of beer wasn't cold at the supermarket because you store it in your pantry at home.
More like saying that you were watching real footage of an eclipse on National Geographic.
Didn't even hurt a bit watching it on TV, so staring at the real eclipse should pose no threat at all. What's all the fuss about?
Let's not forget that Canadian diplomatic staff were also affected by similar symptoms. It looks like these individuals were not part of the published study. It would be interesting to see if the long term effects were similar between the US and Canadian staff.
Let's not forget that Canadian diplomatic staff were also affected by similar symptoms. It looks like these individuals were not part of the published study. It would be interesting to see if the long term effects were similar between the US and Canadian staff.
What I've always found creepy about this was that the symptoms pretty much exactly match what my dad experienced when he was having radiation therapy for brain cancer. Sometimes he'd hear things, other times he'd see weird colors, but every experience I've heard of reminded me of what he went through.
Except these people aren't "hearing things", they heard things. As in they don't keep hearing them anymore, and the sounds were recorded, so actually happened.
Ditto this. I ran the recorded signal through a FFT. It had a series of discreet tones rather than noise. This is a common signalling scheme it you want cheap and dirty comms without clock recovery. I didn't seen any modulation, but the sample could have been too short. So the signal could just trigger an event. If your target is RF shielded, hit it with something else. Sound for example.
Where can you get the recording and what was the date/time of the recording? I wonder if anyone caught it on sdr
I'm unclear if this is just in the building or a wider area? Could it be as simple as the break-room microwave is faulty and leaking and people are unwittingly microwaving their brains while they heat their frozen pizza?Nothing I've read makes me think that a microwave beam is the wrong answer. In fact, I keep coming back to it.Hmmm interesting. When first hearing of this, I was thinking directed microwave beam but that sounds too James Bond. Or does it?What I've always found creepy about this was that the symptoms pretty much exactly match what my dad experienced when he was having radiation therapy for brain cancer. Sometimes he'd hear things, other times he'd see weird colors, but every experience I've heard of reminded me of what he went through.
Sounds like malware to me.Ars, this page keeps serving up a redirect pop-up ad.Bad ad network, bad!
It depends which brown acid you are talking about really."Whatever you do, don't take the brown acid."
This is obviously the start of a huge Incident Zone.
I saw an interview with the guy who made the announcement about the brown acid. Turns out he was selling the blue acid. Or so he claims, he might have just been joking, but he certainly couldn't remember any actual problem with the brown acid.It depends which brown acid you are talking about really."Whatever you do, don't take the brown acid."
It was the Orange Barrels that did many people in. It was actually fucked up STP. Now yer Blue Flats and Pinky Purple Double Domes were amazing.![]()
I saw an interview with the guy who made the announcement about the brown acid. Turns out he was selling the blue acid. Or so he claims, he might have just been joking, but he certainly couldn't remember any actual problem with the brown acid.It depends which brown acid you are talking about really."Whatever you do, don't take the brown acid."
It was the Orange Barrels that did many people in. It was actually fucked up STP. Now yer Blue Flats and Pinky Purple Double Domes were amazing.![]()
In clinical evaluations of 21 of 24 individuals affected, an interdisciplinary team of doctors at University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine retrospectively pieced together symptoms—an average of 203 days after individuals were exposed. They found that the most common issues persisting more than three months after exposure were cognitive impairment (17/21); balance issues (15/21); visual (18/21) and hearing (15/21) problems; sleep impairment (18/21); and headaches (16/21).
Clearly, these were LRAD events (Long Range Acoustic Device)
Loss of hearing, balance and tinnitus are signature results.
How do we know this is an attack? I am confused.
How do we know this is an attack? I am confused.
Because that's the narrative being pushed. It seems as though hardly anyone is bothering to look into whether there's another explanation, or even if there's any actual thing happening here. A nebulous cloud of self-reported, widely varying systems is all being tossed with "Attack!" dressing without much cogency at all.
If certain people are trying to mock and cover up an article, then perhaps there's something to it?How do we know this is an attack? I am confused.
Because that's the narrative being pushed. It seems as though hardly anyone is bothering to look into whether there's another explanation, or even if there's any actual thing happening here. A nebulous cloud of self-reported, widely varying systems is all being tossed with "Attack!" dressing without much cogency at all.
I expected more from Ars. This is why we need to teach people to critically think when they read. I am blow away at how many comments are about how or why vs if this is even an attack... as for Ars this would never have passed my desk an an editor.