Robert Naesland
The right of might: the source of inhumanity and state tyranny.
This is an account of the Swedish Security Police (SÄPO) and the use of humans for medical research, but it could well be from Nazi Germany, where state abuse was a natural part of the system. There are many similarities in the methods and routine of brutality between the Gestapo and SÄPO. Moreover, SÄPO is exploiting a new kind of computer technique to enable them to control human thoughts and behavior.
Pictured above left, is an X-ray of an object located in my skull directly anterior to the frontal bone. The object was forcibly implanted in 1967 at a hospital where I was awaiting an operation.
SÄPO had forced the surgeon to participate in their scheme, preventing him from performing the original surgery.
After violently sedating me, they made a 5 cm long incision in my frontal bone, in which they placed the object: a radio-transmitter which has been transmitting a high frequency electromagnetic beam through my brain 24 hours a day ever since. The dimensions of the device are a mere 7x4 mm.
The process of miniaturization has already passed the stage of the injectable transponder, a tiny ampoule capable of storing data and acting as a sender and a receiver.
Jan Freese - The Despotic Incompetence
The reason for SÄPO’s action was that I constituted a threat to the secret of state mind-control projects.
This covert operation of coupling people’s brains to computers has been going on for decades, and not only SÄPO is involved. Transmitters are being implanted in people’s heads during routine hospital surgery. Most commonly, these are inserted through the nostrils, from where they operate using two-way radio communication.
After penetrating the brain, the radio-wave is processed in a system that connects the neurological functions to a computer. Afterwards, mental activity, biological processes, sensory function, in fact the entire life of the individual, are laid bare for state inspection and control.
In his report, the eminent professor Peter Lindström calls the technique “radio-hypnotic intracerebral control.” This speaks a lot about a science which is also known as bio-medical telemetry, mind control or brain-computer interaction. He writes that there is a risk of meningitis and chronic infections with such implantations. I have, in fact, had constant sinus infections since the early 1970s, something which is most probably connected with the implanted objects.
In the late 1960s, the potential and areas of application of telemetry were already being discussed by J.M. Delgado in his book Physical Control of the Mind: Toward a Psychocivilized Society:
We are advancing rapidly in the pattern recognition of electronic correlates of behavior and in the method for two-way radio communication between brain and computers.
This has been going on much longer than most people can imagine. It was, in fact, one of the first applications of computer technology, forty years ago, to link the human biological system with a computer.
Thirty years ago, in 1968, Dr. Stuart Mackay published his Bio-Medical Telemetry, in which he outlined the potential of this latest science:
Among the many telemetry instruments being used today are miniature radio transmitters that can be swallowed or surgically implanted in man or animals ... The scope of observation is too broad to more than hint at with a few examples...
They permit the simultaneous study of behavior or physiological functioning... In cases such as the monitoring of the welfare of a diver in the ocean or an astronaut in orbit, a continuous flow of physiologic information is essential.
X-rays of my head show three implanted transmitters, of which one has been completely embedded in the frontal lobe.
All were implanted on different occasions during the 1970s by the Swedish Criminal Police while I was under arrest in Stockholm and Nacka. A paper published in 1975 at Yale University by an international team of six researchers as part of a joint project between Yale and the Medical University of Madrid entitled “Two-way Communication with the Brain” describes how communication can be achieved with deep-brain processes using tiny transmitters, thereby also being able to suppress EEG patterns. They also state that because both energy and data is supplied by radio-waves, these transmitters last for life.
Two-way communication with the depth of the brain makes it possible to send and to receive information to and from the brain. The technique eliminates the need to restrain the experimental subject, permitting free behavioral expression and social relations.
Instrumentation, including the radio links, is small and light and does not interfere with mobility...
Our experiment demonstrated the suppression of a specific EEG pattern by repeated feed-back radio stimulation of a specific intracerebral point ... As no batteries are used, the life of the instrument is indefinite. Power and information are supplied by radio frequencies.
It has been almost thirty years since the first transmitter was implanted in my head at Söder Hospital; the issue is in fact much bigger and even more shocking, since surgeons have also been placing these transmitters in the heads of patients under anesthetic on the operating table. This is what happened to me at the end of the 1960s when I underwent surgery at Söder Hospital. Prior to that time, I had been a completely normal member of society.
I had never committed a crime nor had any contact with psychiatry, and I was employed. In fact, there was nothing about my life which could warrant the taking of special measures to observe me. The only reasonable conclusion is that certain surgeons at the hospital were and may be continuing to implant transmitters during normal operations on a regular basis.
There is no reason whatever to believe that I was an exception.
Thirty-three years ago, in 1965, a researcher at the Defense Research Institution department for information technology named P.M. Persson published an article on biomedical telemetry in which he wrote:
Telemetry, i.e. the radio-transmission of data, is applied primarily when it is difficult or impossible to supply the parameters by any other method ... the word Telemetry is derived from the Greek “tele” meaning “to measure”.
In Swedish, telemetry would therefore be called “fjarrmatning” (long-distance measuring)... A significant part of biotelemetry is conducted principally with the use of implanted transmitters, the development of which has come a long way in medical research.
What had actually been well developed in medical research was of course the abuse of patients in whose heads the surgeons were implanting transmitters.
A Journey Into Madness
SNIP