Thursday, September 28, 2017

like somethin' outta' a comic book movie



(Advanced SPL Research) Ricks, Thomas E. "Nonlethal Arms, New Class of Weapons Would Incapacitate Foe, Limit Casualties," Wall Street Journal, 4 Jan. 1993, Front Page. Los Alamos Laboratory. "Non-Lethal Defense, Conference with Janet Reno, Attorney General, Speaker,"

..The initial research into the effects of microwaves on living tissue began in 1931 with experiments examining the capacity of radio waves to induce unusual rhythms into the heart. By the mid 1940s, research expanded to examine possible relationships between microwaves and the unusual incidence of cataracts in the eyes of personnel who worked in the microwave industry. By 1957, the scope of research expanded further as scientists probed the death of a young military member who died from an apparent overexposure to radar energy. Research on effects of large doses of microwaves on various human organs continued through the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Throughout this research, scientists have demonstrated a myriad of microwave effects among which are biological changes on the cellular level, changes in brain chemistry and function, changes in cardiovascular function, creation of lesions within the eye, temporary incapacitation, and even death. Early research in microwaves also showed that low dosages over long periods could cause changes in the formation of cells in lung tissue and decreasing lung function;changes in calcium ions affecting brain and cell function, changes in blood chemistry; changes in immune system function, some favorable and others adverse; and increases in histamine production. In addition, microwaves have been able to produce performance-degrading effects. For example, microwaves have been able to turn alpha waves into beta waves in the brains of some animals, and a recent Pentagon briefing indicated that effects such as using electromagnetic waves to put humans to sleep or heat them up have been explored. This research seems to have been confirmed by the Marine Corps Electromagnetic Weapons Project in the early 1980s, which discovered that electromagnetic radiation could be used to cause mammals to release eighty percent of the natural opioids in their brains, placing animals in a stupor. Substantial research has been conducted into the pain-inducing effects of heating the outermost epidermal layers, and the

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