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Monday 1 June 2020

The Secret Of Waterboarding

By now all those who have read all the way through the tiny small little thing that is still available on the free format site - here:


...will have already noticed that there are a number of 'dual-use' technologies referred to in there.

One of them is the graduated-density gel set that for currently still-classified uses such as ultra high-performance head-gear, is used to replace old school transducers (bio-potential electrodes) stuck onto people's heads. Well you can certainly use the same set-up to extract completely accurate information from out of anyone's head! 
Because, we're celebrating

They're not going to tell you what they're really doing if you're an enemy combatant - and so they will place heavy covering over your eyes and maybe even convince you that it is all about 'the torture...' You know, that they are 'torturing' you to get you to 'talk.'

LOL

When I say 'still-classified' I mean Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory made this 'aerogel headgear' or performance helmet, really, way back a long time ago and sure, most of the academic papers were quickly 'taken away.' But it was published, so it's only slightly classified. I mean maybe if I say which vehicles these items are used in then maybe, that would be going too far - but I haven't done that have I. Because if I did do that then those countries which buy the F-35 would want all the add-on's, right? Which they are not allowed to even know exist, because for one thing, they would quickly wake up that their versions were 'under-spec'd.'

Everyone all clear about the operas then, as well?

Which one did you like best?

And the big question - if Harlequin, Arlecchina (it's ArlecchinA, okay, not 'o' as everyone thinks), same way as the idiots who think they are Wiccans, say 'Wicca;' but well of course it's not that, is it? It's Wicce, pronounced Vixxie. Or Wixxie, the English mid-landers say 'W')
The Duchy of Monte Carlo puts on a fashion
thing, don't know what you'd call it, each year in Venice,
though not this year, as far as I know.


 

...if Arlecchina ended up in a Venetian nunnery, what did she wear in there? Five thousand tiles of gold-pressed Latinum to anyone who gets it correct without Google-searching first!! 

You want an authority on that it is Wicce, I can give you one, if you like.

Next article, something on her invention of the glass harmonica - which also appears briefly in Chapter & 'The Floating Man Experiment' of the linked title, above at the top of the article.

Because you see, I think most of you are still not getting this...

What happens to your brain when you listen to classical music...? There's your clue.


4 comments:

  1. "What happens to your brain when you listen to classical music...?"

    Classical music sharpened up Little Alex, yes? Leni Riefenstahl used it to sharpen up the "Triumph of the Will" audience.

    And then there was the Ludovico Technique:

    "What's all this about sin, eh?"

    "That," I said, very sick. "Using Ludwig van like that. He did no harm to anyone. Beethoven just
    wrote music." And then I was really sick and they had to bring a bowl that was in the shape of
    like a kidney.

    "Music," said Dr. Brodsky, like musing. "So you're keen on music. I know nothing about it myself. It's a useful emotional heightener, that's all I know. Well, well. What do you think about that, eh, Branom?"

    "It can't be helped," said Dr. Branom. "Each man kills the thing he loves, as the poet-prisoner
    said. Here's the punishment element, perhaps. The Governor ought to be pleased."

    - Anthony Burgess, "A Clockwork Orange"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bloody Burgess again, eh. It's definitely involved of course - Tavistock uses it but hey guess what? They don't actually don't even how; they don't really know how it works, what it's all about. Frankly, I can't really say, like, BLURT IT ALL OUT HERE. You can work enough out on your own, in the sense that the basics are quote simple enough. As 'the human race' our instrumentation is catching up, if slowly, to the complexity of ourselves. Then again, until recently, our instrumentation was catching up a little quicker. I think we've gotten stuck again now though, and that might be a good thing all the same. So, what can we 'work out ourselves?' Slowly slowly. There's no hurry.

      Delete
  2. I enjoyed all the opera performances for different reasons so I can't really pick a favorite. I've never been an opera guy but these ladies are amazingly talented. I believe classical music stimulates the brain into releasing dopamine, which can come in handy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh but, you ARE an 'opera guy.'

      And you always WERE one. It's the one's who don't know what you know, and still go to be seen and to show off to all the wrong people - they're the ones that are NOT opera guys. Best of all you never SAID (or picked) a favorite. Maybe you do have a favorite and that's fine too, but because they ARE all so fantastic, we never say, too loudly anyway.

      Delete

Your considered comments are welcome