Anonymous ID: b7960e Sept. 13, 2023, 7:27 a.m. No.19542785   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2792 >>2802

>>19542769

The Voice of God weapon a device that projects voices into your head to make you think God is speaking to you is the military's equivalent of an urban myth. Meaning, it's mentioned periodically at defense workshops (ironically, I first heard about it at the same defense conference where I first met Noah), and typically someone whispers about it actually being used. Now Steven Corman, writing at the COMOPS journal, describes his own encounter with this urban myth:

 

Is there any basis to this technology? Well, Holosonic Research Labs and American Technology Corporation both have versions of directed sound, which can allow a single person to hear a message that others around don't hear. DARPA appears to be working on its own sonic projector. Intriguingly, Strategy Page reports that troops are using the Long Range Acoustic Device as a modified Voice of God weapon:

 

And as Corman also notes, CNET recently wrote about an advertisement in New York for A&E's TV show Paranormal State, which uses some of this technology. Beyond directed sound, it's long been known that microwaves at certain frequencies can produce an auditory effect that sounds like it's coming from within someone's head (and there's the nagging question of classified microwave work at Brooks Air Force Base, that the Air Force stubbornly refuses to talk about).

 

That brings us back to the Voice of God/Allah Weapon. Is it real or bogus? In one version related to me by another defense reporter it's not just Allah's voice – but an entire holographic image projected above (um, who decides what Allah looks like?).

 

Does it exist? I'm not sure, but it's funny that when you hear it brought up at defense conferences, no one ever asks the obvious question: does anybody think this thing will actually convince people God is speaking to them? I'm thinking, not.

 

https://www.wired.com/2007/12/the-voice-of-go/