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I did some digging on parasite related email and I found something interesting. https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%209/EFTA00740603.pdf
There's a 2010 email from John Brockman, the founder of EDGE foundation (edge.org) a 501 c3 "nonprofit". The email was sent to who Brockman calls "our Digerati friends", among them the heads of Google Sergey Brin, Nick Pritzker, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Eric Schmidt, leading scientists and engineers, and Jeff Bezos. Brockman is asking for quotes on quotes for three subjects: Mind (Mind altering Parasites), Evolution computers (AI), and Internet (How can we remove anonymity). Further down it goes into more detail.
Mind: HOW TOXOPLASMA AFFECTS HUMAN AND ANIMAL BEHAVIOR
Then there seems to be a connection between Toxoplasma gondii and schizophrenia, lack of interest in the novelties of life, and a noted correlation with people getting into more car accidents. It seems that the nature of this parasite's life cycle has created a strange symbiotic, psychological relationship between it and its typical feline and rodent hosts. Here's a must watch video interview of Sapolsky with Edge.org.
https://youtu.be/m3x3TMdkGdQ -added link
.. Key quote: Somehow, this damn parasite knows how to make cat urine smell sexually arousing to male rodents…
Edge: TOXO - A Conversation With DR. Robert Sapolsky…
Evolution computers:THE HILLIS KNOWLEDGE WEB (AI and censorship filters)
"One might reasonably ask: Why isn't that database the Wikipedia or even the World Wide Web? The answer is that these depositories of knowledge are designed to be read directly by humans, not interpreted by computers. They confound the presentation of information with the information itself. The crucial difference of the knowledge web is that the information is represented in the database, while the presentation is generated dynamically. Like Neal Stephenson's storybook , the information is filtered, selected and presented according to the specific needs of the viewer."
March 4, 2010
THE DANGERS AND DELIGHTS OF THE WEB (Anons bad article)
By Tom Young
(Having spent many a column espousing the wonders of the internet, my final column will sound a warning on the dangers. The first is anonymity. This can be a curse and a blessing online. Sites such as Wikileaks - which desperately needs funding to stay open - provide a valuable place where information can be put into the public domain anonymously. … But the intemet carries an arguably more pervasive and long-term danger than the provision of anonymity and that is the way that it changes and shapes thinking and the way people interact with information.