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by William Hunter
November 24, 2025
from
DailyMail Website
Spanish version

Scientists have
issued an ominous warning
that developments in
neuroscience
could see powerful
'brain weapons'
become a reality.
(stock image)
This
is the state-of-the-art 'Science of Social Engineering'
developed through
Technocracy.
I
have been warning about this for 20 years.
Convergent science (NBIC, 2000) and Obama's
BRAIN Initiative (Brain
Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies,
2013) were pitched as "cures for disease."
In
reality, the military and spook organizations were
lurking in the shadows to scoop up mind-altering
technologies that could be used to control entire
populations.
This article notes,
"The same scientific research that is helping to
treat neurological disorders can also be used to
build weapons which target specific brain
functions."
Oopsie. Too late...
The
horse has left the barn.
Source
Scientists
issue ominous warning
over
mind-altering 'brain weapons'
that can
control your perception, memory
and
behavior...
Mind control weapons may sound like
something from a dystopian science fiction film, but experts now say
they are becoming a reality.
Scientists have issued an ominous warning over mind-altering 'brain
weapons' that can target your perception, memory, and even behavior.
In a newly published book "Preventing
Weaponization of CNS-acting Chemicals - A Holistic Arms Control
Analysis", Dr Michael Crowley and Professor
Malcolm Dando, of Bradford University, argue that recent
scientific advances should be a 'wake-up call'.
Professor Dando says:
'The same knowledge that helps us treat
neurological disorders could be used to disrupt cognition,
induce compliance, or even in the future turn people into
unwitting agents.'
Nations including
the US,
China,
Russia, and
the UK,
have been researching so-called central
nervous system (CNS)-acting weapons since the 1950s.
Now, Dr Crowley and Professor Dando argue that
modern neuroscience has become so advanced that truly terrifying
mind weapons could be created.
Professor Dando says:
'We are entering an era where
the brain itself could become a
battlefield.
'The tools to manipulate the central nervous system - to sedate,
confuse, or even coerce - are becoming more precise, more
accessible, and more attractive to states.'
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, most of the
world's major powers 'actively sought' to develop their own
mind-controlling weapons.
Their goal was to create devices that could incapacitate large
numbers of people through unconsciousness, hallucination,
disorientation, or sedation.
Most famously, the American military developed the
compound 'BZ',
which produces a powerful sense of delirium, hallucinations, and
cognitive dysfunction.
The US manufactured approximately 60,000 kilograms of the potent
drug and used it to create a
340-kilogram (750 lbs) cluster bomb.
Although the bomb was intended to be used in Vietnam, and BZ was
tested intensively on US soldiers, there's no evidence that the
weapon was ever used.
Meanwhile, the Chinese military has developed a 'narcosis gun'
(page 61 of 'Toxin
and Bioregulator Weapons - Preventing the Misuse of the Chemical and
Life Sciences') designed to shoot syringes of
incapacitating chemicals.
However, Dr Crowley and Professor Dando point out,
the only time that a CNS-targeting weapon has
ever been used in combat was by Russian security forces during
the
2002 Moscow theatre siege.
After armed Chechen militants took 900
civilians hostage, security forces used a fentanyl-derived 'incapacitating
chemical agent' to disable the attackers.
While the chemical weapon did break the
siege, the gas killed 120 of the 900 hostages and an
undetermined number more to face long-term health issues and
premature death.
However, since then, the mind-warping potential
of these weapons has extended far beyond simply knocking out
attackers or triggering hallucinations.
The same scientific research that is helping to
treat neurological disorders can
also be used to build weapons which target specific brain functions.
'That's the dual-use dilemma we face,' says
Professor Dando.
For example,
scientists are investigating parts of the
brain's 'survival circuits', which are the neural pathways that
control fear, sleep,
aggression, and decision making.
Understanding how these circuits work is critical for treating
neurological conditions, but also opens the door to weaponising
these regions of the brain.
In fact, Dr Crowley and Professor Dando
are so concerned about this possibility that they are travelling to
the Hague for a key meeting of states to argue the case for urgent
action.
The issue, the researchers warn, is that CNS-targeting weapons
currently sit within a 'loophole' in the rules governing the use of
chemical weapons.

This comes amid
growing concern
that future armies
could be made up of cyborgs
with neurological
enhancements allowing them.
The
Chemical Weapons Convention
prohibits the use of harmful chemicals in war, but there is a grey
area allowing the use of some chemicals in certain circumstances,
such as law enforcement.
That leaves a potential legal justification for the development and
use of powerful mind-control weapons within the current scope of the
law.
Professor Dando says:
'There are dangerous regulatory gaps within
and between these treaties. Unless they are closed, we fear
certain States may be emboldened to exploit them in dedicated
CNS and broader incapacitating agent weapons programs.
'We must act now to protect the integrity of science and the
sanctity of the human mind.'
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