In recent years, many individuals have had non-consensual micro-implants discovered in their bodies. A notable case involves David Larson (See: http://www.us-government-torture.com...ort%20Edit.pdf), court cases have even been won upon their discovery (Search: James Walbert).
Furthermore, researchers such as retired paramedic Jesse Beltran have discovered RF emitting implants in a large number of individuals when testing them in shielded environments such as Faraday Cages / Anechoic Chambers. (See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dp-Nx0am8dc). He found most micro-implants to be located in dental implants, surgical screws, locations of surgical incisions, and vaccine sites.
More investigation is needed, but most US doctors and facilities won't touch the issue or investigate the matter, so I am calling on the hacker community to come up with clever ways to detect such micro/nano devices (Heterodyne meter anyone???). This contest is quite fitting due to the addition of the BioHacking village in recent years, and it could spur some interesting discussion, experiments, challenges, and findings.
The contest could involve scanning individuals that have knowingly been implanted, to determine the best technology for quick and cheap detection, or the scanning of large samples to potentially usher in some Orwellian findings.
Furthermore, researchers such as retired paramedic Jesse Beltran have discovered RF emitting implants in a large number of individuals when testing them in shielded environments such as Faraday Cages / Anechoic Chambers. (See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dp-Nx0am8dc). He found most micro-implants to be located in dental implants, surgical screws, locations of surgical incisions, and vaccine sites.
More investigation is needed, but most US doctors and facilities won't touch the issue or investigate the matter, so I am calling on the hacker community to come up with clever ways to detect such micro/nano devices (Heterodyne meter anyone???). This contest is quite fitting due to the addition of the BioHacking village in recent years, and it could spur some interesting discussion, experiments, challenges, and findings.
The contest could involve scanning individuals that have knowingly been implanted, to determine the best technology for quick and cheap detection, or the scanning of large samples to potentially usher in some Orwellian findings.
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