Anonymous ID: d9b1f4 Aug. 11, 2021, 4:05 p.m. No.14328899   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8971

https://www.jonathandmoreno.com/about/mind-wars/

 

A provocative book that reads like an edge-of-your seat investigation into the intertwining worlds of science, technology, and government, Mind Wars is the first ever systematic overview of brain research and national security.

 

Jonathan Moreno unearths a multitude of questions about federal defense agenciesโ€™ interest in the burgeoning field of neuroscience and describes the many fascinating ethical and policy issues that may emerge from this relationship.

 

Moreno, one of the best-known bioethicists in the US, calls for the scientific community to be more engaged in dealing with the unintended consequences of their work. As new kinds of weapons are added to the arsenal already at the disposal of fallible human leaders and their war fighters, we need to be sure we understand how they are used.

Anonymous ID: d9b1f4 Aug. 11, 2021, 4:12 p.m. No.14328971   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8995

>>14328899

Bourne Legacy's Gene-Doped Superspies Aren't as Far-Fetched as They Sound

In The Bourne Legacy, Jeremy Renner plays Aaron Cross, a superspy who's been pharmaceutically tweaked to jump higher, think faster, punch harder, hear better and tolerate extreme cold. The surprising thing is, this type of gene-doped warrior is not a total figment of filmmaker Tony Gilroy's imagination.

 

https://www.wired.com/2012/08/bourne-legacy-gene-doping/

 

In the Bourne Legacy, Jeremy Renner plays Aaron Cross, a superspy who's been pharmaceutically tweaked to jump higher, think faster, punch harder, hear better and tolerate extreme cold. The surprising thing is, this type of gene-doped warrior is not a total figment of filmmaker Tony Gilroy's imagination

 

Gilroy became fascinated with behavior modification through gene-doping, and now says the idea that government-funded scientists have gone far beyond steroids to produce a new breed of hypertough warriors isn't as far-fetched as it seems.

 

"I'm not a scientist but I'm a real good idiot screenwriter and layman reader of science," Gilroy told Wired in a phone interview. "There are different ways to introduce chromosomal changes to affect genomics. You can hijack a virus, put in what you want and use that as the delivery system. I got really interested in this idea of genomic alteration, where you go in on a chromosomal level."

 

To vet the film's viral-modification premise, Gilroy and actress Rachel Weisz whose Bourne Legacy character tests viruses on black-ops agents met with scientists working in the biotech industry. "We wanted reassurance that we weren't doing anything too far-fetched," Gilroy said. "We had some really cool conversations with someone who had a CV very similar to Rachel's character, and this person confirmed a lot of what we were doing in the film."

 

Olympic Testing Grounds

Further confirmation about the feasibility of gene-altered performance came this summer when Olympics officials started worrying in public about potential gene-doping abuses by athletes.

 

"I've been staggered to see articles where you have the Olympics' main drug-testing guy saying they don't know if they'll be able to test for gene-doping," Gilroy said. "I'm going, 'Holy shit!' This is the cutting edge of athletic enhancement. There's a legitimate fear in the sports world that gene doping is going to be the next turn of the wheel."

 

Eager to avoid sci-fi extravagance in favor of reported fact, Gilmore read bioethicist Jonathan Moreno, bookmarked Wired's Danger Room blog, studied the Washington Post's "Top Secret America" series, monitored Darpa's ongoing supersoldier experiments and surveyed the teeming biotech corridor anchored by Maryland's Fort Detrick research center.

 

"I'm sure a number of these companies are legit," he said, "but there's always a couple in there where you just go, 'Wow, I know this place is hidden behind a berm somewhere and it's not what it is. I really started to feel like, 'OK, we're in a really solid place.'"

 

While Gilroy and his brother, Legacy co-writer Dan Gilroy, did plenty of homework to back up Aaron Cross' wild adventures, they never contacted any real-life operatives who had direct involvement with covert gene-doping programs.

 

"You want to know the truth?" Tony Gilroy said. "I really wouldn't want to be that close to the flame."

Anonymous ID: d9b1f4 Aug. 11, 2021, 4:36 p.m. No.14329175   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>14328888

>>14329031

CLOWNS are talking scary talk

Because they are DEATHLY FRIGHTENED

That their sleeper agents

Will go in for a jab

And be offered a deal instead

If all their sleepers flip on them

Then these CLOWNS will get death sentences

From the Military Tribunals

There are 3 special prisons

Already operating in the 50 states

Ofthe former USA

That is now ruled by a Military Occupying force

Commanded by Commander-In-Chief Trump

They apply the Law of War

Not the Constitution, which no longer exists

Of the US Code, which no longer exists

Since the Federal Republic no longer exists.

 

https://patelpatriot.substack.com/p/devolution-part-8

 

Sleepers who have not committed murder

Generally get good deals

They may have to give back stolen treasure

If they have a big stash

(Forensic Auditors have already found who has them)

But many sleepers actually do more or less

Work for a living

So they get freedom in return for info and evidence

And testimony.

 

All the talk and memes about dangerous vaccines

Come from the agents in CIA Psychological Operations

They are already all in hiding in foreign countries

But JSOC is good at exfiling people that are wanted at home