Yesterday, 05:45 PM
Yes, this is AI, but the purpose is to discuss this phenomenon and all the conspiracy-related drifts that come from it.
I dont want to really speculate where they took this after the discovery, or if they worked out its limitations and eventually started posing as god or something... or who else uses it... or if I should fear dongles...
But its a conspiacy site, so you must.
IDK, maybe you really cant see Marchurian-California without Marlon Brando's Eye?
And if they did use it to create an army of crazy street people, you gotta wonder at what point their minds took over and they started doing the voices themselves.
Luckily for plausible deniability it often ends not believing anyone that says "there are goddamn spies are in my head," and even if there were, this random crazy person was never important enough to be Havana Syndromed.
*Or* people assume they are just "possessed by demons," which is another form of plausible deniability (apart from crazy) that prevents instances of its true use from being called out.
Quote: The Frey effect was a real, documented phenomenon first noticed by World War II radar technicians and operators. In 1947, engineers standing near a 75-foot radar antenna at the Airborne Instruments Laboratory in New York realized they could hear internal buzzing and clicking. The noises precisely matched the pulse repetition frequency of the radar dish. They were completely independent of the radar screen or any audio receiver.
The Anecdotes: During WWII, radar personnel reported that when they stood directly in the transmission path of a radar dish, they heard "clicks," "pings," or "buzzes" inside their heads.
The Mystery: The sounds occurred even when they wore hearing protection and stood in completely silent environments. No one else around them could hear the noise
How It Works: Physics, Not Telepathy
Initially, people thought the radio waves were interacting directly with brain cells or "mind-controlling" the operators. However, the actual science is a mechanical process known as thermoelastic expansion:
Absorption: The human head acts as an effective antenna, absorbing the brief, high-energy pulses of microwave radiation emitted by the radar.
Thermal Spike: Each pulse causes a minute, rapid rise in temperature (by just a fraction of a millionth of a degree) within the tissue of the head.
Pressure Wave: This rapid temperature change causes the brain tissue to expand slightly, creating an acoustic pressure wave.
Internal Hearing: The pressure wave travels through the bones of the skull to the inner ear (cochlea). The brain translates this mechanical vibration into a perceived sound, like a click or a ping.
This phenomenon became the subject of intense military research during the Cold War. In recent years, it has resurfaced in public discourse during investigations into the mysterious Havana Syndrome.
Turning Microwaves into Audio Tones
The Microwave Auditory Effect can be converted into audio tones and words. However, the way humans perceive words through microwaves is fundamentally different from a normal loudspeaker.
Creating simple tones (like clicks, buzzes, or hums) is relatively straightforward. Because the sound is caused by thermoelastic expansion, the perceived pitch depends entirely on how the microwave pulses are spaced out.
Single Pulse: Results in a single, sharp "click" or "pop".
Repeated Pulses: If a radar dish pulses at 400 Hz (400 times per second), the brain perceives a continuous 400 Hz audio tone or buzz.
Frequency Modulation: By changing the spacing of the pulses, scientists can change the pitch of the "voice" inside the subject's head.
Turning Microwaves into Spoken Words
Transmitting actual speech (words) directly into a person's head was achieved in 1974 by researcher Dr. Joseph C. Sharp at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.
Instead of using raw, unmodulated radar pulses, Dr. Sharp used a technique called Pulse-Position Modulation (PPM) to encode voice data.
The 4-Step Process for Speech Transmission
Voice Capture: A person speaks into a standard microphone to capture the sound wave of a word.
Audio Slicing: A computer samples the sound wave, turning the continuous voice into individual data points.
Pulse Customization: The microwave transmitter is programmed to fire a pulse only when the voice wave hits a peak or valley. The exact timing between the microwave bursts mimics the shape of the sound wave.
Brain Demodulation: When these precisely timed microwave pulses hit the human head, the rapid internal expansion and contraction create acoustic waves that perfectly mirror the original voice. The cochlea processes it, and the subject hears the spoken words.
During Dr. Sharp's experiments, he sat inside a screened isolation chamber and successfully heard and understood spoken words—specifically the numbers 1 through 10—beamed directly into his head via a microwave antenna.
I dont want to really speculate where they took this after the discovery, or if they worked out its limitations and eventually started posing as god or something... or who else uses it... or if I should fear dongles...
But its a conspiacy site, so you must.
IDK, maybe you really cant see Marchurian-California without Marlon Brando's Eye?
And if they did use it to create an army of crazy street people, you gotta wonder at what point their minds took over and they started doing the voices themselves.
Luckily for plausible deniability it often ends not believing anyone that says "there are goddamn spies are in my head," and even if there were, this random crazy person was never important enough to be Havana Syndromed.
*Or* people assume they are just "possessed by demons," which is another form of plausible deniability (apart from crazy) that prevents instances of its true use from being called out.


![[Image: 6c523d825a05b90a482a2f7343d439f0.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/6c523d825a05b90a482a2f7343d439f0.jpg)


