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Re: OT; latest tinfoil beanie technology
Wow...Michigan is just loaded with agents that are married to other
agents AND have their home numbers and addresses listed huh?
McGinn wrote:
> PUSSY Crash,
>
> Call and ask these NSA PSYCHOPATHS
>
> List of UNDERCOVER EVIL AMERICAN GOVT NSA and FBI PSYCHOPATHS and their
> ADDRESSES and PHONE NUMBERS.
>
>
> The FIRST TWO agents Maddelina Wahl and Kathleen Taylor are listed on
> www.infospace.com under their UNDERCOVER AGENTS HUSBANDS names Larry Wahl
> and Kevin Taylor.
>
>
> 1) Agent Maddelina Wahl , 28087 Hickory Drive, Farmington Hills, MI 38331
> ph 248-324-1527.
>
>
> 2) Agent Kathleen Taylor, 29390 Bermuda Lane, Southfield, MI 48034, Ph
> 248-356-1946.
>
>
> 3) Agent Mediha Krijestorac, 30408 Shiawasee Rd, Farmington MI 48336, ph
> 248-477-9161.
>
>
> 4) Agent Frank Spodek, email id: sfrank9 at aol.com or sfra...@xxxxxxx
>
>
> 5) 351 FTK - Atlanta, Georgia car registration in Sep 2004 (undercover
> agents)
>
>
> 6) Janet Lorna Brown, 20978 Delaware St, Southfield MI 48034 in 2002.
>
>
> 7) Ed Conrad - Ed Conrad@xxxxxxxxxxx
>
> 8) CoreyWhite - CoreyWhite@xxxxxxxxx
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> "Crash" <robosama@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:1152971904.615225.295170@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > Which model chip did you get implanted?
> >
> >
> >
> > McGinn wrote:
> >> "Crash" <robosama@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> >> news:1152888807.006848.186190@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >> > http://zapatopi.net/afdb/history.html#COINS
> >> >
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> Technology available to FBI, CIA and NSA PSYCHOPATHS is 30 years AHEAD of
> >> technology available to the american public.
> >>
> >> ONLY LOW IQ SLAVES and MORONS are obsessed by tin foils and meds. Read
> >> the
> >> following and EDUCATE and PROTECT YOURSELF and YOUR FAMILIES from the
> >> EVIL
> >> AMERICAN GOVT PSYCHOPATHS.
> >>
> >> EVERY AMERICAN will be MANDATORILY INSERTED with a SYNTHETIC TELEPATHY
> >> chip
> >> in about 10 -15 years from now so the EVIL AMERICAN GOVT can know WHAT
> >> YOU
> >> are THINKING.
> >>
> >> FDA already APPROVED verichip to be IMPLANTED in patients bodies. Just
> >> google for the words "verichip" and patients.
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics/msg/8add8661de87ddc3?hl=en&
> >>
> >>
> >> http://online.wsj.com/article/SB115274937020005165.html?mod=djemTAR
> >>
> >> A start-up founded by leading neuroscientists will report that a
> >> patient in a clinical trial who had electrodes implanted in his brain
> >> used
> >> his thoughts to control a computer cursor, send email and operate a
> >> robotic arm.
> >>
> >>
> >> Harnessing Thought to Help the Injured
> >>
> >> By SHIRLEY WANG and ANTONIO REGALADO
> >> July 13, 2006; Page B1
> >>
> >> Scientists have long dreamed of harnessing thoughts to allow amputees to
> >> move their prosthetic limbs or patients with brain-stem injuries to speak
> >> with the aid of a computer.
> >>
> >> Results released today from a clinical trial of four paralyzed patients
> >> suggest the mind-control technology faces complex challenges but appears
> >> to
> >> be feasible. In the latest in a series of pioneering human tests of
> >> direct
> >> mind control over electronic devices, a start-up company founded by
> >> leading
> >> neuroscientists reports in the journal Nature that a patient who had
> >> electrodes implanted in his brain used his thoughts to control a computer
> >> cursor, send email and operate a robotic arm.
> >>
> >> Engineers have envisioned using the mind to directly control devices for
> >> decades, but technological advances and better understanding of the brain
> >> have made actual tests in humans possible only recently. And some hope
> >> that
> >> new investments by the U.S. military will result in a few years in new
> >> devices to help veterans and others with devastating injuries.
> >>
> >> "The whole field is bubbling up," says Philip Kennedy, chief scientist
> >> and
> >> CEO of Neural Signals, a closely held Atlanta company doing research in
> >> the
> >> field. While still at an early stage, excitement over early findings has
> >> led
> >> to increases in funding and attention.
> >>
> >> The four-patient trial, including the patient described in Nature, uses
> >> what's known as a "neural prosthetic," an implant to record nerve signals
> >> inside the brain and use them to control electronic devices. The study
> >> was
> >> paid for and the brain implant built by Cyberkinetics Neurotechnology
> >> Systems Inc., a Foxborough, Mass. company.
> >>
> >> Researchers caution that it will likely take a decade for brain implants
> >> or
> >> similar devices to come to market -- a long time for companies in the
> >> field
> >> to wait for a payoff. "This is a start, showing efficacy in a human, but
> >> still far from being a useful device," says Andrew Schwartz, a professor
> >> of
> >> neurobiology and bioengineering at the University of Pittsburgh who has
> >> conducted similar research in monkeys.
> >>
> >> Scientists are pursuing a range of strategies to achieve the goal of
> >> direct
> >> mind control over machines. Some efforts measure signals inside the
> >> brain,
> >> others use brain waves that can be recorded outside the skull.
> >>
> >> Creating a fast, reliable and, above all, natural way for patients to use
> >> limbs and senses that they thought were gone is the ultimate goal of the
> >> field of brain-computer interfaces, says Leigh Hochberg, a neuroscientist
> >> at
> >> Massachusetts General Hospital who is the lead author of the Nature
> >> article.
> >>
> >> The study shows that "this part of the brain can still be used to control
> >> an
> >> external device even years after spinal-cord injury," Dr. Hochberg says.
> >>
> >> The large number of injured soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan
> >> has
> >> motivated the government to accelerate prosthetics research. In February,
> >> the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency kicked off two
> >> programs
> >> backed by $48.5 million in funding to create artificial limbs, including
> >> ones that can be operated by the wearer's thoughts.
> >>
> >> "We can have a big impact on people's lives. People who have been doing
> >> their part on behalf of the country," says Rick Needham, an engineer with
> >> Manchester, N.H.-based DEKA Research & Development Corp., which is being
> >> funded by Darpa. DEKA, whose president, Dean Kamen, also created the
> >> Segway
> >> upright scooter, is working on a sophisticated battery-powered prosthetic
> >> arm with rotating shoulder, elbow and wrist joints.
> >>
> >> To effectively operate such sophisticated devices, direct brain control
> >> could be useful. Scientists like Dr. Schwartz have shown that by placing
> >> electrodes in the brains of monkeys, they can listen in on nerve signals
> >> that tell them how an animal intends to move.
> >>
> >> In one 2000 experiment, for instance, researchers at Duke University used
> >> a
> >> monkey's thoughts to control a robot hundreds of miles away in
> >> Massachusetts.
> >>
> >> In the Cyberkinetics clinical trial, doctors have surgically implanted
> >> nearly 100 electrodes in the brains of four patients. Computer software
> >> was
> >> used to pick up signals from the patient's brains as they imagined making
> >> movements, such as moving their arms.
> >>
> >> The patient whose experience was described in Nature is Matthew Nagle,
> >> who
> >> was paralyzed in 2001 when he was 21. He was the first person outfitted
> >> with
> >> the Cyberkinetics system. He was able to draw simple figures on a
> >> computer
> >> screen, and even play the videogame Pong, using his thoughts. Mr. Nagle's
> >> implant also was connected to a robotic arm, which he used to move an
> >> object, and a prosthetic hand, which he opened and closed.
> >>
> >> Mr. Nagle had the device removed at the end of his one-year trial in
> >> order
> >> to have an operation to assist his breathing.
> >>
> >> Since 2004, Cyberkinetics has raised more than $17 million from selling
> >> stock and warrants to investors. The company's stock is traded on the OTC
> >> Bulletin Board, where stocks of small companies often trade when they
> >> can't
> >> meet the listing requirements for the larger Nasdaq market.
> >>
> >> Joseph Pancrazio, program director for neural engineering in the division
> >> of
> >> extramural research of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders
> >> and
> >> Stroke in Bethesda, Md., says the Nature study "has tremendous
> >> implications
> >> for the application of brain-machine interfaces with people with
> >> disabilities." Given that so much earlier work with implants involved
> >> healthy monkeys, their employment in injured humans is "a major
> >> milestone."
> >> The institute spent $25 million on neural prosthetics in 2005, he says,
> >> and
> >> funded work that led to the current study.
> >>
> >> Not all scientists in the field are ready to be impressed yet. "I'm
> >> asking
> >> myself, what was the advantage that the patient got?" says Miguel
> >> Nicolelis,
> >> a professor of neurobiology at Duke University. "What has been
> >> accomplished
> >> could have been accomplished from noninvasive methods?"
> >>
> >> The New York State Department of Health's Wadsworth Center in Albany,
> >> N.Y.,
> >> has been working on using a less-invasive technology, a brain-wave cap,
> >> which fits much like a swim cap, to allow patients to email from their
> >> homes, according to Jonathan Wolpaw, who heads the center's laboratory
> >> that
> >> studies nervous-system disorders. The first patient, a scientist in his
> >> late
> >> 40s with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, was
> >> fitted
> >> with a brain-computer-interface system in February and can send emails at
> >> the rate of a couple words a minute. A second user, an ALS sufferer in
> >> his
> >> late 60s, will be fitted with the system this month. The entire system
> >> costs
> >> less than $5,000.
> >>
> >> Dr. Wolpaw's research program, whose funding comes from the National
> >> Institutes of Health and various private foundations, is looking into
> >> establishing a nonprofit company for this technology in the next few
> >> months.
> >>
> >> For a few patients, any connection to the outside world may be of value.
> >> Neural Signals is in the process of harnessing brain-computer-interface
> >> technology to restore conversational speech in people who have lost the
> >> ability to talk. An electrode is implanted into one brain region involved
> >> in
> >> speech, Broca's area, and a computer tries to translate the patterns into
> >> sound.
> >>
> >> The company has implanted electrodes in five patients since 1996,
> >> according
> >> Dr. Kennedy, the CEO. Their current patient, a 23-year-old who suffered
> >> brain-stem trauma from a stroke following a car accident, received the
> >> implant in December 2004. He has limited ability to move just his eyes.
> >> After his semiweekly sessions using the system, he is able to make seven
> >> sounds or short words, including "yes" and "no." The goal is to give him
> >> the
> >> ability to speak 100 words, a goal that is reachable within the year,
> >> according to Dr. Kennedy.
> >>
> >> Write to Shirley Wang at shirley.wang@xxxxxxx and Antonio Regalado at
> >
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