Tag: State

  • Is MSM Waking Up To The Dangers Of Neuroweapons?

    An interesting NY Post article recently explored what has become a growing issue of privacy, public safety, and national-security concern: the uneasy intersection between the remarkable benefits of neurotechnology and its potential for misuse. As the piece notes, advances in brain-computer interfaces, neuro-monitoring tools, and cognitive-enhancement research hold enormous promise for medicine and rehabilitation. Yet those same tools, if left unregulated or developed in secrecy, could be exploited by hostile actors in ways that raise troubling ethical and geopolitical questions.

    For years, mainstream discussion of neurotechnology focused almost exclusively on its medical potential, while any mention of misuse was often dismissed as fringe speculation. That posture has shifted as prominent neuroscientists and biosecurity experts—most notably Dr. James Giordano, a professor of neurology and bioethics and a long-time advisor to the U.S. military—have publicly outlined the real risks emerging at the intersection of neuroscience and national defense. Dr. Giordano has repeatedly warned that neurotechnology can be “weaponized” not only in the traditional military sense but also through subtler means: tools capable of influencing cognition, degrading decision-making, targeting vulnerable populations, or exploiting neurological data. He emphasizes that while these capabilities are still constrained by scientific limits, several countries are actively researching them, and the U.S. should take that fact seriously. His point is not that science-fiction mind-control devices exist, but that neuro-enabled tools—chemical, biological, digital, or data-driven—can be adapted in ways that create new forms of coercion, surveillance, or tactical disruption.

    The NY Post article raises the central policy question of whether Congress is exercising meaningful oversight in this domain. The concern is that many lawmakers are only dimly aware of how far neurotechnology has advanced, and even fewer grasp its defense implications well enough to legislate around it. Those with the deepest knowledge—typically members of intelligence committees—operate under heavy classification restrictions, which discourages open debate and leaves the public largely unaware of how these technologies may be used or misused.

    The article’s broader message is that it is time for Congress to engage this issue with urgency and transparency. Neurotechnology is advancing whether policymakers address it or not, and without clear guardrails, the same tools that promise extraordinary medical breakthroughs could also be adapted in ways that threaten civil liberties, public health, and global stability. The call, essentially, is for lawmakers to act before the risks outpace the regulations designed to contain them.

  • TIs & Higher Education 090425 Edition

    ***An update from this earlier post***

    There’s an important update about school, that I have been slow to update you about. Remember I  had gotten caught up in some tuition drama during the Summer semester that forced me to appeal the charges? Well, turns out my appeal was approved, and I ended up successfully registering for the Fall Semester

    ***Approved Appeal***

    The interesting thing this Fall is that NY Governor Hochul has instituted a new program that allows people like me to attend college for FREE, yeah you read that right, totally FREE—tuition, books and everything.

    So when I was registering this Fall, I made it clear to the QCC folks—Registrar, Financial aid staff, everybody that I want the Governor’s free program. So the staff at QCC told me that only certain programs are eligible and I wasn’t currently enrolled in those—I should say, only certain Majors are eligible. 

    So they told me I had to switch my major to one of the eligible ones before I got considered for the program. So I switched my major for CIS to Cybersecurity, which is an eligible major.

    After the switch, they told me I had to go to the financial aid office because they are ultimately responsible for who gets into the free program—they make the determination

    So I went to the financial aid office right after switching my major to cybersecurity, just to double check on the info I had received thus far. The FinAid folks said the info was accurate—that even though it’s a free college program, one had to file a 2025-26 FAFSA and NY State aid(known as TAP) to be considered into the program—and their explanation made sense. They wanted to make sure the people who get the free ride are those who have no other available forms of financial aid—the last resort crowd like myself.

    I know I did my FAFSA back in late March-April so I had no issue with that. TAP on the other hand, I don’t even know what to tell you what kind of witchcraft is going on with the TAP folks.😂To date, I’ve made almost 10 applications, and it’s ALWAYS the same result—some alleged problem with my FAFSA that prevents them from processing my state aid. Somebody at NY state aid (TAP) does NOT want this TI attending school FOR REAL!!😂

    The latest one I filed was on…right after I spoke with financial aid office after switching my major to cybersecurity. Look what I got anback this morning—the SAME damn thing😳

    As of now it still shows that I owe tuition so I’m not sure if the financial aid folks will use this as the reason to throw me on the free ride program, or will they stick a TI with the bill again. I think we all know the odds are 90-10 stick the TI with the bill😂. But anyway, stay tuned. We shall see. 

    Just so you know, if there were “issues” with my financial aid application that needed fixing/addressing, the good folk at QCC Financial Aid office would know, and would have told me about it. According to them, everything is fine with my FAFSA, I’m just maxed out on the Pell & the loans. Very fishy what’s going on with the TAP folk. TI alarm has been going off every time they show up on the scene 🚨 🚨. Something there just ain’t right, SOMETHING😂. I’ll dig into their affairs and report back to you.

    Also nowadays I like to check in with my new best friend, ChatGPT😂, so I figured I’d ask about the nexus between targeting programs and higher education. Here’s what came back. Notice the part about “denied scholarships”. Is that what TAP is up to?😳. Hmm, we report, you decide🤷‍♀️

    Also just to make sure you didn’t miss it. Notice what my new best friend ChatGPT also says towards the end—that they do this stuff “in subtle, deniable ways”—the good ol’ plausible deniability. See how smart my new best friend is? Something to think about next time somebody tells you all TIs are crazy. The truth is more often that they cannot prove beyond a reasonable doubt the crimes being done to them🤔

  • DMV Drama In Le Bronx

    Wednesday 08/06/25 was my day off. Importantly, I had managed to sneak in an appointment to go get a NY state ID—very hard to get an early booking. You usually have to wait for a month, if not longer

    So when I saw an opening in Le Bronx for 08/06, I jumped on it

    Turned out to be a very “interesting” day—full blown operation day. Almost cancelled the appointment at the last minute, but I chose to go along with it anyway—too many things going on on the journey there, plus feeling extra loopy that day (neuro attack stuff going on😂)—all the tell-tale signs of operation day.

    As a matter of fact fact I remember even getting off “by mistake”, one stop before Lexington & 63rd. I use the F train every day I go to work, but on this day, I got off at the wrong stop. All I’m saying is, it has been my experience that some type of “neuro-tinkering” goes on on operation days. Just trust me on that one. As a matter of fact this is going to be the dispositive issue in the coming Church-type committee. In other words, the question will not be whether TIs are paranoid, but rather, are there neuro weapons out there that can make someone paranoid, feel hot in a cold environment making them think they are being attacked by DEWs, and on, and on, and on…

    Anyway, I ended up going to appointment (barely made it-right before 4pm).

    I think there will be issues with my ID application, but let’s wait and see how it plays out. They are supposed to mail it to me in 10 days but — very strange feeling about it.

    Remember, I had a TX DL but I made it clear to them that I wanted a NY state ID—a non-driver ID. The intake lady told me it costs around $9 for a 4-year ID, which sounded about right to me

    When I got at the counter however, I ended up paying $60 plus. All the TI alarms 🚨 🚨 which had been going off all day, went off again at that moment.😂I asked the guy at the counter why it’s not the $9 I had been told earlier, but he insisted on the $60 without really addressing my question.🙄 He later said something about “Real ID”. I asked him if that’s why there was such a price hike and he agreed. Sounded odd, but I didn’t want to argue

    Long story short, I felt like homeboy deliberately “mistook” what I was applying for—made me pay for the wrong thing. That’s why I said, let’s wait and see how it plays out, but I feel like I got robbed—typical TI experience.

    We’ll see how it plays out, so stay tuned. Also remember, I was doing all this because I’d found a new security company that was very likely going to hire me. They needed me to get a NY state ID and then attend a one-day class to get a license for ONLY $50–as opposed to the week-long class + $400 license fee Allied Security asks of job applicants🙄. Very hard to do if one already has another job.

    So you can see why somebody—you know exactly who😂—might NOT have wanted me to get a NY state ID on 08/06—financial sabotage🤔

    So stay tuned on this one. I will definitely keep you posted.

    Oh and by the way, on my regular job, I’d requested PTO way in advance for Thursday 08/07–a day I would have used for the one day class(security license). Surprise surprise, that request(for PTO) was NOT honored. Coincidence? Hmm🤔

    Turned out to be quite an interesting day on the job too—almost got fired. See what TIs go through😂. So I got on the job and tried to log in using the company device so I can accept my packages for delivery—basically agreeing that you are going to deliver them. Somehow today, the device would not let me login without some two-factor authentication—they sent a code to my work email. This has never happened to me before, so I’ve never even accessed my work email(almost a year on the job😳). Remember, this was also supposed to be my PTO day so I’m coming into work kind off ticked off, plus the Le Bronx drama from the day before. Let’s just say, I’m not particularly friendly this morning😂. So the signing on problems kind of got me even more upset than I was already when I came in.

    And then on top of that, the route they had me doing had oversized packages that I couldn’t possibly fit in the cart for one trip. That took me over the edge.😂 I was about to end up on some NYC jail. So I told the lead, there are too many issues here, I’ll just go ahead and go home—forfeit my money for the day.

    LUCKILY, before I left the area, I contacted one of the supervisors, letting him know that I came in but I’m having login issues that nobody can fix. His response told me all I needed to know. He basically said without saying it that if I left, I would be terminated.😳He didn’t say it like that, but you couldn’t miss it from the tone of his message.

    I was still in that area so I brought my a$$ back and waited for him. So he came and dealt with the issue and I was able to work. He confirmed what I had suspected from his message—I would have been fired if I left.😳 So a TI lived to see another day. Crooked Deep State probably knew he was coming triggered after Le Bronx drama, so did all the signing in chicanery to throw a TI off—make him blow a gasket. Almost succeeded😂🤷‍♀️