2024 Author: Adelina Croftoon | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-17 02:07
Among a certain kind of people, a tin foil hat is considered an ideal means of protection against the zombie effects of secret satellites to control people. However, a study by a group of witty MIT students disproves its effectiveness.
For quite a long time there have been "theories" that governments and special services of some countries use powerful satellites to monitor citizens of interest from orbit, and, if necessary, read their thoughts, and even instill the necessary ones, control behavior
The most recognized antidote to this vicious practice is a hat made of at least two layers of thin aluminum foil. It (it seems) should reflect all the control radio signals of secret satellites.
However, the work carried out according to all the rules of scientific research by a group of MIT students led them to the opposite conclusion: foil hats, on the contrary, amplify radio waves of certain frequencies and thereby only facilitate the work of an insidious government. On the other hand, none of the three models of caps tested by them was able to screen signals with sufficient efficiency. However, first things first.
The authors tested the three most popular models of foil hats, which they conditionally called "Classic", "Fez" and "Centurion" (see illustration). All caps were folded from two layers of Reynolds household aluminum foil. The radio signal from 10 kHz to 3 GHz was generated by an omnidirectional antenna connected to the generator of an Agilent 8714ET circuit analyzer. The same analyzer and directional antenna were used to detect and record the signal.
At different stages of the experiment, the receiving antenna was installed in 4 areas of the volunteers' heads - in the region of the frontal, occipital, and temporal lobes of the brain. The signal was recorded both in a foil hat and without it.
Brave researchers have shown that for all models of caps, there is not an attenuation, but a significant increase in the signal at frequencies of 2, 6, 1, 2 and about 1.5 GHz, regardless of where the receiving antenna is located.
It is instructive that these frequencies are by no means assigned to harmless radio stations. According to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), frequencies in the region of 1, 2 and 1.5 GHz are reserved in the United States for the needs of radio navigation and communication with satellites, and 2, 6 GHz - for mobile communications. It doesn't take much imagination to draw the obvious conclusion: wearing foil hats not only does not impede, but even helps the United States government to control and zombie citizens. Perhaps it is his hand that should be seen behind the myth that such caps protect against signals from satellites. A myth that science has once again brilliantly refuted.
Recommended:
Conspiracy Theory Links U.S. Disappearance To Underground Cave System
This conspiracy theory originated years ago, but recently became very popular on social media when a picture went viral (see below) comparing the disappearance of people in the United States to the location of underground caves. The upper part of the picture is where people disappeared from, the lower one is underground cave tunnels. It is assumed that all these missing people, whose circumstances of disappearance were rather strange and who have not yet been found dead or alive, on the very
The Strange Death Of Conspiracy Theorist Jim Keith. Conspiracy Or Coincidence?
Gene Keith was a well-known American conspiracy writer. During his lifetime, he managed to publish the books "Black helicopters over America" and "Octopus", which are still popular among ufologists, which dealt with the themes of the Secret World Government, the Illuminati, the Men in Black phenomenon and other conspiracy theories. He was also a supporter of the theory that UFOs are of terrestrial origin and come from an alternative reality, where technological development has gone far into
Researchers Have Found That Conspiracy Theorists Are Not "crazy In Foil Hats"
In the media, the images of such people are usually extremely exaggerated: they are always either some kind of eccentric out of this world, or frightening fanatics in the notorious foil hats. In fact, everything turned out to be much more ordinary and people who are carried away by conspiracy theories, who sincerely believe in the Illuminati and the "grays", these are the most ordinary people who do not stand out in society from the rest. And they are usually completely normal from a mental point of view (which is especially pleasing). The study the Australians carried out on the very bottom
Strange Rat Conspiracy Theory: Roswell And The Plague Bombs
What is common between the Japanese development of the "plague bomb" during World War II and the incident in the American Roswell in 1947 with the fall of an unknown object? It is possible that these are rats. American ufologist Lance Oliver, head of the Denton Area Paranormal Society, said that he once met with a certain man who, in July 1947, witnessed how American soldiers cleaned up the aftermath of the Neo-op crash in Roswell
Denver Airport And Conspiracy Theory
Denver International Airport (DEN) is one of the iconic places in the theory of a secret world government, a new world order and all that. A few bizarre facts about the design and construction process of DIA (Denver International Airport) lead some people to believe that this airport is a key element of the conspiracy theory