Intrusive Brain
Reading
Surveillance Technology:
Hacking the
Mind

Picture added to article
by GLF
Global Research,
December 13, 2007
Dissent Magazine, Australia, Summer
2007/2008
"We need
a program of psychosurgery for political control of our society.
The purpose is physical control of the mind. Everyone who
deviates from the given norm can be surgically mutilated.
The
individual may think that the most important reality is his own
existence, but this is only his personal point of view. This
lacks historical perspective. Man does not have the right to
develop his own mind. This kind of liberal orientation has great
appeal. We must electronically control the brain. Someday armies
and generals will be controlled by electric stimulation of the
brain.
Dr José Delgado. Director of Neuropsychiatry, Yale University
Medical School Congressional Record, No. 26, Vol. 118 February
24, 1974.
The
Guardian newspaper, that defender of truth in the
United Kingdom, published an article by the Science
Correspondent, Ian Sample, on 9 February 2007 entitled:
‘The Brain
Scan that can read people’s intentions’, with the sub-heading: ‘Call
for ethical debate over possible use of new technology in
interrogation".
"Using the
scanner, we could look around the brain for this information and
read out something that from the outside there's no way you could
possibly tell is in there. It's like shining a torch around, looking
for writing on a wall", the scientists were reported as saying.
At the same
time,
London’s Science Museum was holding an exhibition entitled
‘Neurobotics: The Future of Thinking’. This venue had been chosen
for the launch in October 2006 of the news that human thoughts could
be read using a scanner. Dr Geraint Rees’ smiling face could be seen
in a photograph at the Neurobotics website, under the heading "The
Mind Reader". Dr Rees is one of the scientists who have apparently
cracked the problem which has preoccupied philosophers and
scientists since before Plato: they had made entry into the
conscious mind. Such a reversal of human historical evolution,
announced in such a pedestrian fashion, makes one wonder what
factors have been in play, and what omissions made, in getting
together this show, at once banal and extraordinary. The
announcement arrives as if out of a vacuum. The neuroscientist -
modern-style hunter-gatherer of information and darling of the "Need
to Know" policies of modern government - does little to explain how
he achieved this goal of entering the conscious mind, nor does he
put his work into any historical context. Instead, we are asked in
the Science Museum’s programme notes:
How
would you feel if someone could read your innermost
thoughts? Geraint Rees of UCL says he can. By using
brain-imaging technology he's beginning to decode thought
and explore the difference between the conscious and
unconscious mind. But how far will it go? And shouldn’t your
thoughts remain your personal business?
If Dr Rees
has decoded the mind sufficiently for such an announcement to be
made in an exhibition devoted to it, presumably somewhere is the
mind which has been, and is continuing to be, decoded. He is not
merely continuing his experiments using functional magnetic
resolution scanning (fMRI) in the way neuroscientists have been
observing their subjects under scanning devices for years, asking
them to explain what they feel or think while the scientists watch
to see which area lights up, and what the cerebral flow in the brain
indicates for various brain areas. Dr Rees is decoding the mind in
terms of conscious and unconscious processes. For that, one must
have accessed consciousness itself. Whose consciousness? Where is
the owner of that consciousness – and unconsciousness? How did
he/she feel? Why not ask them to tell us how it feels, instead of
asking us.
The
Neurobotics Exhibition was clearly set up to make these exciting new
discoveries an occasion for family fun, and there were lots of games
for visitors to play. One gets the distinct impression that we are
being softened up for the introduction of radical new technology
which will, perhaps, make the mind a communal pool rather than an
individual possession. Information technology seeks to connect us
all to each other in as many ways as possible, but also, presumably,
to those vast data banks which allow government control not only to
access all information about our lives, but now also to our
thoughts, even to our unconscious processing. Does anyone care?
One of the
most popular exhibits was the ‘Mindball’ game, which required two
players to go literally head-to-head in a battle for brainpower, and
used ‘brainpower’ alone. Strapped up with headbands which pick up
brain waves, the game uses neurofeedback, but the person who is calm
and relaxed wins the game. One received the impression that this
calmness was the spirit that the organisers wished to reinforce, to
deflect any undue public panic that might arise from the news that
private thoughts could now be read with a scanner. The ingress into
the mind as a private place was primarily an event to be enjoyed
with the family on an afternoon out:
Imagine being able to control a computer with only the power
of your mind. Or read people’s thoughts and know if they’re
lying. And what if a magnetic shock to the brain could make
you more creative…but should we be able to engineer our
minds?
Think your thoughts are private? Ever told a lie and been
caught red-handed? Using brain-scanning technology,
scientists are beginning to probe our minds and tell if
we’re lying. Other scientists are decoding our desires and
exploring the difference between our conscious and
unconscious mind. But can you really trust the technology?
Other
searching questions are raised in the program notes, and more games:
Find
out if you’ve got what it takes to be a modern-day spy in
this new interactive family exhibition. After being
recruited as a trainee spy, explore the skills and abilities
required by real agents and use some of the latest
technologies that help spies gather and analyse information.
Later go on and discover what it’s like to be spied upon.
Uncover a secret store of prototype gadgets that give you a
glimpse into the future of spy technologies and finally use
everything you’ve learnt to escape before qualifying as a
fully-fledged agent!
There were
also demonstrations of grateful paraplegics and quadriplegics
showing how the gods of science have so unselfishly liberated them
from their prisons: this was the serious
Nobel Prize side of the show. But there was no-one
representing Her Majesty’s government to demonstrate how these very
same devices can be used quite freely, and with relative ease, in
our wireless age, to conduct experiments on free-ranging civilians
tracked anywhere in the world, and using an infinitely extendable
form of electrode which doesn’t require visible contact with the
scalp at all. Electrodes, like electricity, can also take an
invisible form – an electrode is a terminal of an electric source
through which electrical energy or current may flow in or out. The
brain itself is an electrical circuit. Every brain has its own
unique resonating frequency. The brain is an infinitely more
sensitive receiver and transmitter than the computer, and even in
the wireless age, the comprehension of how wireless networks operate
appears not to extend to the workings of the brain. The monotonous
demonstration of scalps with electrodes attached to them, in order
to demonstrate the contained conduction of electrical charges, is a
scientific fatuity, in so far as it is intended to demonstrate
comprehensively the capability of conveying charges to the brain, or
for that matter, to any nerve in the body, as a form of invisible
torture.
As
Neurobotics claims: ‘Your brain is amazing’, but the power and
control over brains and nervous systems achieved by targeting brain
frequencies with radiowaves must have been secretly amazing
government scientists for many years. The problem that now arises,
at the point of readiness when so much has been achieved, is how to
put the technology into action in such a way, as it will be
acceptable in the public domain. This requires getting it through
wider government and legal bodies, and for that, it must be seen to
spring from the unbiased scientific investigations into the workings
of the brain, in the best tradition of the leading universities. It
is given over to Dr Rees and his colleague, Professor Haynes,
endowed with the disclosure for weightier Guardian readers,
to carry the torch for the government. Those involved may also have
noted the need to show the neuroscientist in a more responsible
light, following US neuroengineer for government sponsored
Lockheed Martin, John Norseen’s, ingenuous comment, in 2000,
about his belief about the consequences of his work in fMRI:
‘If this
research pans out’, said Norseen, ‘you can begin to manipulate what
someone is thinking even before they know it.’ And added: "The
ethics don’t concern me, but they should concern someone else."
While the
neuroscientists report their discovery (without even so much as the
specific frequency of the light employed by this scanner/torch),
issuing ethical warnings while incongruously continuing with their
mind-blowing work, the government which sponsors them, remains
absolutely mute. The present probing of people’s intentions, minds,
background thoughts, hopes and emotions is being expanded into the
more complex and subtle aspects of thinking and feeling. We have,
however, next to no technical information about their methods. The
description of ‘shining a torch around the brain’ is as absurd a
report as one could read of a scientific endeavour, especially one
that carries such enormous implications for the future of mankind.
What is this announcement, with its technical obfuscation, preparing
us for?
Writing in
Wired contributing editor Steve Silberman points out that the
lie-detection capability of fMRI is ‘poised to transform the
security system, the judicial system, and our fundamental notions of
privacy’. He quotes Cephos founder, Steven Laken, whose company
plans to market the new technology for lie detection. Laken cites
detainees held without charge at
Guantanamo Bay as a potential example. ‘If these detainees
have information we haven’t been able to extract that could prevent
another 9/11, I think most Americans would agree that we should be
doing whatever it takes to extract it’. Silberman also quotes Paul
Root Wolpe, a senior fellow at the Center for Bioethics at the
University of Pennsylvania, who describes the accelerated
advances in fMRI as ‘ a textbook example of how something can be
pushed forward by the convergence of basic science, the government
directing research through funding, and special interests who desire
a particular technology’. Are we to believe that with the implied
capability to scan jurors’ brains, the judiciary, the accused and
the defendant alike, influencing one at the expense of the other,
that the legal implications alone of mind-accessing scanners on
university campuses, would not rouse the Minister for Justice from
his bench to say a few words about these potential mind weapons?
So what of
the ethical debate called for by the busy scientists and the
Guardian’s science reporter? Can this technology- more powerful
in subverting thought itself than anything in prior history – really
be confined to deciding whether the ubiquitously invoked terrorist
has had the serious intention of blowing up the train, or whether it
was perhaps a foolish prank to make a bomb out of chapatti flour? We
can assume that the government would certainly not give the go-ahead
to the Science Museum Exhibition, linked to Imperial College, a
major government-sponsored institution in laser-physics, if it was
detrimental to surveillance programs. It is salutary to bear in mind
that government intelligence research is at least ten years ahead of
any public disclosure. It is implicit from history that whatever
affords the undetectable entry by the gatekeepers of society into
the brain and mind, will not only be sanctioned, but funded and
employed by the State, more specifically by trained operatives in
the security forces, given powers over defenceless citizens, and
unaccountable to them.
The actual
technology which is now said to be honing the technique ‘to
distinguish between passing thoughts and genuine intentions’ is
described by Professor John-Dylan Haynes in the Guardian in
the most disarmingly untechnical language which must surely not have
been intended to enlighten.
The
Guardian piece ran as follows:
A
team of world-leading neuroscientists has developed a
powerful technique that allows them to look deep inside a
person’s brain and read their intentions before they act.
The
research breaks controversial new ground in scientists’
ability to probe people’s minds and eavesdrop on their
thoughts, and raises serious ethical issues over how
brain-reading technology may be used in the future.
‘Using the scanner, we could look around the brain for this
information and read out something that from the outside
there's no way you could possibly tell is in there. It's
like shining a torch around, looking for writing on a wall,’
said John-Dylan Haynes at the Max Planck Institute for Human
Cognitive and Brain Sciences in
Germany, who led the study with colleagues at
University College
London and
Oxford University.
We know
therefore that they are using light, but fMRI has been used for many
years to attempt the unravelling of neuronal activity, and while
there have been many efforts to record conscious and unconscious
processes, with particular emphasis on the visual cortex, there has
been no progress into consciousness itself. We can be sure that we
are not being told the real story.
Just as rats
and chimpanzees have been used to demonstrate findings from remote
experiments on humans, electrode implants used on cockroaches to
remotely control them, lasers used to steer fruit-flies , and worms
engineered so that their nerves and muscles can be controlled with
pinpricks of light, the information and techniques that have been
ruthlessly forged using opportunistic onslaughts on defenceless
humans as guinea pigs - used for myriad purposes from creating 3D
haptic gloves in
computer games to creating artificial intelligence to send
visual processing into outer space - require appropriate replication
for peer group approval and to meet ethical demands for scientific
and public probity.
The use of
light to peer into the brain is almost certainly that of terahertz,
which occurs in the wavelengths which lie between 30mm and 1mm of
the electromagnetic spectrum. Terahertz has the ability to penetrate
deep into organic materials, without (it is said) the damage
associated with ionising radiation such as x-rays. It can
distinguish between materials with varying water content – for
example fat versus lean meat. These properties lend themselves to
applications in process and quality control as well as biomedical
imaging. Terahertz can penetrate bricks, and also human skulls.
Other applications can be learnt from the major developer of
terahertz in the
UK, Teraview, which is in
Cambridge, and partially owned by Toshiba.
Efforts to
alert human rights’ groups about the loss of the mind as a place to
call your own, have met with little discernible reaction, in spite
of reports about over decades of the dangers of remote manipulation
using technology to access the mind, Dr Nick Begich’s book,
Controlling the human mind, being an important recent
contribution. A different approach did in fact, elicit a response.
When informed of the use of terahertz at
Heathrow and Luton airports in the
UK to scan passengers, the news that passengers would be
revealed naked by a machine which looked directly through their
clothes produced a small, but highly indignant, article in the
spring 2007 edition of the leading human rights organisation,
Liberty. If the reading of the mind met with no protest, seeing
through one’s clothes certainly did. It seems humans’ assumption of
the mind as a private place has been so secured by evolution that it
will take a sustained battle to convince the public that, through
events of which we are not yet fully informed, such former innocence
has been lost.
Trained
light, targeted atomic spectroscopy, the use of powerful magnets to
absorb moisture from human tissues, the transfer of radiative energy
– these have replaced the microwave harassment which was used to
transmit auditory messages directly into the hearing. With the
discovery of light to disentangle thousands of neurons and encode
signals from the complex circuitry of the brain, present programs
will not even present the symptoms which simulated schizoid states.
Medically, even if terahertz does not ionise, we do not yet know how
the sustained application of intense light will affect the delicate
workings of the brain and how cells might be damaged, dehydrated,
stretched, obliterated.
This year,
2007, has also brought the news that terahertz lasers small enough
to incorporate into portable devices had been developed.
Sandia
National Laboratories in the US in collaboration with MIT have
produced a transmitter-receiver (transceiver) that enables a number
of applications. In addition to scanning for explosives, we may also
assume their integration into hand-held communication systems.
‘These semiconductor devices have output powers which previously
could only be obtained by molecular gas lasers occupying cubic
meters and weighing more than 100kg, or free electron lasers
weighing tons and occupying buildings.’ As far back as 1996 the US
Air Force Scientific Advisory Board predicted that the development
of electromagnetic energy sources would ‘open the door for the
development of some novel capabilities that can be used in armed
conflict, in terrorist/hostage situations, and in training’ and ‘new
weapons that offer the opportunity of control of an adversary … can
be developed around this concept’.
The
surveillance technology of today is the surveillance of the human
mind and, through access to the brain and nervous system, the
control of behaviour and the body’s functions. The messaging of
auditory hallucinations has given way to silent techniques of
influencing and implanting thoughts. The development of the
terahertz technologies has illuminated the workings of the brain,
facilitated the capture of emitted photons which are derived from
the visual cortex which processes picture formation in the brain,
and enabled the microelectronic receiver which has, in turn, been
developed by growing unique semi-conductor crystals. In this way,
the technology is now in place for the detection and reading of
spectral ‘signatures’ of gases. All humans emit gases. Humans, like
explosives, emit their own spectral signature in the form of a gas.
With the reading of the brain’s electrical frequency, and of the
spectral gas signature, the systems have been established for the
control of populations – and with the necessary technology
integrated into a cell-phone.
‘We
are very optimistic about working in the terahertz
electromagnetic spectrum,’ says the principal investigator
of the Terahertz Microelectronics Transceiver at
Sandia: ‘This is an unexplored area, and a lot of
science can come out of it. We are just beginning to scratch
the surface of what THz can do to improve national
security’.
Carole
Smith was born and educated in
Australia, where she gained a Bachelor of Arts degree at
Sydney University. She trained as a psychoanalyst in
London where she has had a private practice. In recent years
she has been a researcher into the invasive methods of accessing
minds using technological means, and has published papers on the
subject.
She has written the first draft of a book entitled: "The Controlled
Society".The
ethical implications of building machines to read people's minds, DISSENT,
Issue 25, http://www.dissent.com.au/index.htm
From
Carole Smith
newcriteria@blueyonder.co.uk
Dec 12/07. The Canberra-based magazine DISSENT is sold at selected
bookshops and by subscription.
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© Copyright Carole Smith, Dissent Magazine, Australia, Summer
2007/2008, 2007
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