Cold War II Propaganda, say I.
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/scientists-are-questioning-whether-sonic-attacks-are-real
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/scientists-are-questioning-whether-sonic-attacks-are-real
Audio as a weapon
Cold War II Propaganda, say I. https://www.sciencenews.org/article/scientists-are-questioning-whether-sonic-attacks-are-real |
I agree the fact is our government could easily use equipment to detect any sort of sound wave weapon. The problem though, is bureaucracy First someone has to ask for it. The diplomat corp is not a high priority though,.. Then they have to make specifications, then bids. After ten years they will have a non working model that needs a least ten more million to get it working..And then find out it cannot reach the actual frequencies involved, Since no diplomats had any clue what it was anyway. So then they contract to modify the equipment for another $30,000,000By this time..... You get the picture. There is no 'guy' who can just go there, set up his own stuff and find out |
Making people deaf is not something that shows, like a knife in the gut, or a blown off leg. So they can use sonic attacks as a deterrent and punishment of a group, and get away with the non existent pr issues. Sonic attacks seemingly roll around in the same realm that the audiophile argument is in. Since people can’t actually see it our touch it, then in their mind it probably did not happen, if they have no "real" data on the source point.. (define real -please and thank you. Good luck with that. A place where science trips over its own psychological stance... and has to deal with being ensconced in a subjective human reality -as all human reality is) Even if it is all too real. Like the audiophile conundrum, it is a conundrum not because it is false ....but that the given mind has to weigh in on the subject, with no hard solid object that they can grab and sense directly. A case where objectivity taken to an illiterate extreme delivers a form of circular insanity to the position holder. |