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United States News Title: The US Govt Has Been Trying to Weaponize Pokemon for Two Decades — They Finally Succeeded On December 16, 1997, children across Japan plopped down in front of their TVs to watch an episode of Pokemon. 700 of them never saw the end. Hundreds of children experienced seizures and were rushed to the hospital after witnessing Pikachu use his lightning powers to blow up missiles. The episode, called Electric Soldier Porygon, was banned from airing again, even in edited form. The effects were so damning to Pokemon that the entire show was removed from the air for four months. However, while the world was scrambling to understand what couldve possibly caused this reaction, the US Army quietly began researching the episode to weaponize it. Seriously. The Army wanted to blast pulses similar to those used in the episode into the faces of its adversaries to overload their brains and cause them to convulse. Application of electromagnetic pulses could force neurons to all fire at once, causing a disruption of voluntary muscle control, reads a description of the ominous seizure weapon, contained in a declassified document from the Armys National Ground Intelligence Center. It is thought by using a method that would actually trigger nerve synapses directly with an electrical field, essentially 100% of individuals would be susceptible to seizure induction. The report was discovered thanks to an activist filing a Freedom of Information Act request. It revealed the Armys sinister intentions in making electromagnetic weapons propaganda. According to a report in Wired, the military needed weapons like these because TV news had hamstrung the militarys traditional proclivities to kill its way to victory: It now lived in a world where You dont win unless CNN says you win, the report lamented. But while the Pentagon still laments the impact of the 24/7 news cycle on the U.S. military, it hardly thinks less-lethal weapons are a solution to it. In fact, the U.S. has kept most of its electromagnetic arsenal off of the battlefield, in part because the idea of invisible pain rays would sound so bad coming out of an anchors mouth. This disturbing Pokemon weapon would disrupt chemicals in the brain and induce an immediate seizure in 100% of the population. The onset of synchony and disruption of muscular control is said to be near instantaneous, the 1997 Army report reads. Excitation is directly on the brain. And 100% of the population is supposed to be susceptible to the effects from distances of up to hundreds of meters [r]ecovery times are expected to be consistent with, or more rapid than, that which is observed in epileptic seizures. The report showed how Army officials likely drooled over the notion of inducing seizures in their unwitting victims, specifically mentioning the Pokemon episode. The photic-induced seizure phenomenon was borne out demonstrably on December 16, 1997 on Japanese television when hundreds of viewers of a popular cartoon were treated, inadvertently, to photic seizure induction, the analysis noted. Naturally, the Army has denied any such weapon exists. However, the Army also has no problem lying. Now, as a new Pokemon craze sweeps the nation, its ominous app roots are being exposed. While it is not a seizure gun, its an Orwellian governments wet dream. image: http://thefreethoughtproject.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/s3t4z98alhtqbbvz7gos.png Most Orwellian of all is this line: We may disclose any information about you (or your authorized child) that is in our possession or control to government or law enforcement officials or private parties. And its not like Pokémon Go itself doesnt already have a direct(-ish) line to the CIA. After all, Pokémon Go was created by Niantic, which was formed by John Hanke. Now, Hanke also just so happened to help found Keyhole. What does Keyhole do, you ask? Id tell you to go to Keyholes websitebut you cant. It just takes you straight to Google Earth. Thats because Keyhole was acquired by Google back in 2004. Before that, though, Keyhole received funding from a firm called In-Q-Tel, a government-controlled venture capital firm that invests in companies that will help beef up Big Brothers tool belt. Whats more, the funds In-Q-Tel gave Keyhole mostly came from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), whose primary mission is collecting, analyzing, and distributing geospatial intelligence. As Reddit user fight_for_anything explains, the government is likely using the Pokemon players as pawns to make detailed maps from inside private homes, buildings, and other places that Google cars cannot go. Obviously intelligence agencies have gained a lot of info from google maps and its street view, but this data was collected easily with driving cars. intel agencies may see google maps and street view as just an outline or a skeleton of the whole picture. getting more data, particularly that off the street and inside buildings, requires tons of man hours and foot work. a logistical nightmare. enter Pokemon GO, where if you are an intel agency and you want photos of the inside of a home or business, you just spawn desirable pokemon or related objects there, and let totally unaware and distracted citizens take the photos for you, with devices they paid for, and those citizens pay for the experience. imagine all these photos going back to some database (with the augmented Pokemon removed obviously. all these photos are probably GPS tagged, as well as having the phones internal gyro embed x/y/z orientation of the camera angle in the phone. these photos could be put together, much like google street view. The government has come a long way after their attempts at weaponizing the cartoon 19 years ago. Perhaps even more insidious than a seizure inducing ray gun, however, is an app that citizens pay for to unwittingly spy on themselves for the state all while having fun. As James Corbett notes, Aldous Huxley would be proud. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Deckard (#0)
Wow! How did you discover this secret??? Oh, yeah. The makers of the application told you, in writing, what they are allowed to do IF YOU CHOOSE to download their game, and you must accept these terms IF YOU CHOOSE to play. Yeah. I'm really concerned that the government may collect iPhone information on a bunch of 12-year-olds.
I remember when Pokemon came out in the mid nineties. Didn't care for it then and still don't care about it now. Great insight you have about this being connected with the intelligence. I'm wondering if with this game they use it to test people's intelligence? Maybe not so. Telepathy is their better research.
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