August 6, 2012 – DCMX Radio: Another Mass Shooting, Related News, Drones, Surveillance & Skynet Artificial Intelligence, Do it Yourself Hobby & Research Benefits

Aug 6, 2012 | DCMX Radio

Drones & Skynet: Global Surveillance State and the reality of weaponized ‘Eagle Eye’ Artificial Intelligence, The Dangers to Privacy & the Violation of inherent Constitutional Rights, Do-it-Yourself Remote Control Drones for Hobby & Research, Beneficial Uses Explained


Show Transcript

Another Mass Shooting: Sikh Temple and James Holmes Connections

Welcome back to another week of Decrypted Matrix with your host Max on Revealing Talk Radio. It’s Monday, August sixth, a lot happened over the weekend. It’s important you do something positive with this information. It’s important that you take some action and make something happen with this information. Get out there and make a difference. Break down someone’s control mechanisms that we find ourselves in every day.

Tonight we’ve got some news — another shooting unfortunately. We’ve got about an hour on drones in the second and third segments, and then how all of these will affect you, how they will start impacting your life, what they will know about you, and how drones will become a daily occurrence. We’ll talk about what drones are all about, where they come from, how they were developed, what to look out for, some of the technologies used, who’s deploying them, and who’s killing innocent civilians with them.

So this army specialist, Wade Michael Page — again we see three names, just like Lee Harvey Oswald — he was a US Army officer in psychological operations, and prior to that he was a missile system repair man. Given the level of intelligence needed for either of these jobs, we’re supposed to believe that he couldn’t tell the difference between Muslims and Sikhs. These are completely different religions. The only thing they might have in common is that some members are dark-skinned. We’re supposed to believe that this incredibly smart guy mistook a Sikh temple for a Muslim target. Unlikely. There’s definitely something else going on here.

This is a good segue into the James Holmes case. We’ve got the police logs transcribed on Decrypted Matrix dot com. There were no arrests in those police scanner logs — not one person was arrested. There’s no chatter on the police scanners about anyone being arrested. There’s a lot of talk about other suspects, a lot of talk of somebody in a planned operation. When you look at the yearbook photo of James Holmes versus the arrested James Holmes in his jumpsuit, never do we see him in a full black outfit. There’s no mention of arresting James Holmes — he somehow goes from shooter to the courtroom without ever being photographed in his original gear. So many things about the James Holmes case don’t add up, and now they’re distracting us again with another shooting that has the same signatures: army specialist, mind control links.

Mars Rover and Hidden Technology

First thing in the news is the little rover situation on Mars. While I appreciate the effort, honestly — yawn. We know that this technology has existed for some time to make space travel easy and quite possible. Ben Rich, the former head of Lockheed Skunk Works, said before he passed that they have everything you could possibly imagine already designed and developed. They have the means to travel among the stars, but that technology is locked away in secret programs. It’s a shame that it will never see the light of day to benefit humanity. Those were his parting words, folks.

So we know this technology is out there. They want to sell us on this distraction of a robot landing on Mars, but it’s an insult to the whistleblowers out there like John Lear, Bob Lazar, and others who have been talking about our space age being millennia ahead of where we are at a consumer level. And then you look at it from another perspective — great, we can put a robot on Mars and drive it around and send pictures back in real time, but the electric car situation? We still haven’t figured out how to mass produce an electric car. So hang on — we can drive a robot around Mars but we still can’t figure out the electric car situation? Weird how that works out.

Drones: Origins, Capabilities, and NSA Spy Technology

Drones, ladies and gentlemen. These things can look at you six ways from Sunday. It’s NSA spy technology, folks. They have sensor machines that from a hundred and sixty feet away can almost crack your DNA from a distance. Drones that can know what you ate, know if you came in contact with any chemicals or illegal substances. We’ve got the same NSA spy technology now flying around overhead.

The drones started in research and development in the nineteen nineties through colleges and universities, well funded by the military-industrial complex. They took the brightest minds and moved them into labs like those at Boeing, Lockheed, General Dynamics, and Northrop Grumman. By the time we got into the two thousands, these companies were full speed ahead. Then the legislation came to make it all possible for domestic use. After nine-eleven, the Patriot Act was conveniently ready and waiting — this massive document passed through the House and Senate like three or four weeks after nine-eleven happened, drafted without anybody reading it.

Afghanistan became police state one point oh — the beta test. They deployed drones, they deployed surveillance systems, they deployed DNA signature databases, they deployed fingerprinting. The US Air Force was talking about how all their drones were soaking up so much information they couldn’t even evaluate it all — so of course they needed more money for storage space and artificial intelligence to analyze it and tell them what’s important, what’s a threat and what’s not.

Skynet, Artificial Intelligence, and Drone Surveillance Capabilities

Think about Skynet from the Terminator series — the artificial intelligence and the ability for remotely piloted drones to be connected to artificial intelligence definitely exists. The idea of hunter-killer robots that work for the Skynet artificial intelligence system was shown to us in the Terminator series, which James Cameron created. We’ve also seen it in the movie Stealth, about the first artificially intelligent fighter aircraft that turns on its creators. The idea that artificial intelligence is going to go live and start treating the public as the enemy — it doesn’t want the public questioning what the system is doing.

Not only can these drones see in infrared, they can see in multiple frequencies. They will be able to read heartbeats from a distance. They can sense acoustics and vocal signatures to identify your voice. They can use long-range directed energy sound technology that can drop you to your knees — they have this technology and are using it right now on protesters. They have taser technology that can hit you from a distance. They will be able to watch crimes in progress and track perpetrators. They can snap your DNA from a distance using bio-signature technology. They can hack your Wi-Fi network from a distance. And all of this is being recorded in real time forever — not just visual, but night vision, acoustic sensors, bio-signatures. Every human being has a biological frequency signature that they can tap into.

Drone Statistics: Countries, Costs, and Casualties

Let’s talk about the countries using them and how much they cost. We’ve got different classes of drones: nano drones that can navigate and get inside buildings, micro drones that can get in your clothes and cars, small drones with a wingspan of about a meter, and then larger tactical systems like the Raven and the Switchblade for close-in situational combat. Who’s manufacturing these things? We’ve got Boeing, Lockheed, Northrop, General Dynamics, the CIA, US Navy, US Air Force, Marines, Royal Air Force, US Customs, and the Department of Defense. Currently they have one crew operating up to four planes that can hit thirty-two targets in a very short period. In the not-so-distant future, they want swarms of autonomous robots that one mission commander can deploy against unlimited targets.

As for which countries have them: Belgium has thirteen, Australia an unknown number, Egypt has about fifty, Finland has six, France twenty-three, India sixty-five, Iran unknown, Israel at least twenty-two but probably more, Italy six, Jordan six, Mexico two, Netherlands fourteen, Singapore forty-two, Spain four, Sweden two, Switzerland four, Turkey about forty, and the USA has approximately three hundred and seventy-five between the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Drone strike deaths in Pakistan alone increased from about thirty-seven in 2007 to seventy-three in 2008, five hundred and sixty in 2009, and nine hundred and nine in 2010. These things cost about eleven million dollars apiece, can carry about one point seven tons of missiles and bombs, have a range of three thousand kilometers — about nineteen hundred miles — and a maximum flight time of thirty-six hours.

A Pakistani filmmaker named Madiha Tahir was denied a US visa. He released a short film titled “The Other Side,” a twenty-minute narrative about the social and economic effects of drones on people in the tribal areas of Pakistan. He couldn’t accept his award at a film festival because he was denied entry. Absolutely disgusting that a filmmaker drawing attention to this subject can’t even accept his award.

Public Approval, Privacy Concerns, and Fighting Back

The way they’ll sell drones to us is that we can solve violent crimes, find missing kids, monitor chronic conditions, secure our borders, and even issue speeding tickets remotely. In September polls, forty-four percent of people in Britain approved of drones for things like search and rescue, tracking fugitives, and monitoring borders. Sixty-two percent of people in the USA approved. France came in at twenty-seven percent, Spain at six percent, Egypt at six percent, Jordan a surprising low number, China twenty-five percent, Russia seventeen percent, and Japan twenty-one percent.

The USA at sixty-two percent — people are not saying no to drones or standing up for their privacy. It’s a guaranteed negative because everything about your existence will be known and monitored. Think about the movie Demolition Man from the early nineties — they joked about technology in the future issuing fines for swearing. They will have the technology to monitor everything you say at all times, and the nearest drone will spit out a ticket because you swore. They’ll use your bio-signature for lie detection, know where you were, have a recording, and send you an email with a fine attached.

We’ve got people out there taking action though. In Baltimore, the Pledge of Resistance and the National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance called out a Congress person who received a hundred and ninety thousand dollars in campaign contributions from drone makers and related businesses. They challenged that person to reallocate those funds to the children killed in US drone strike zones and Baltimore city schools. People are out there making a difference.

Do It Yourself: Consumer Drone Technology and Hobby Benefits

Now let’s flip the script. If you can’t beat them, join them. How do we use this technology to our advantage? You can check on your property, inspect your house, get up on the roof without a ladder, look at the gutters — consumer technology allows you to do that now for a fraction of the cost. There are micro park flyers available now that are just a couple of pieces of foam made into an airplane, super light. The battery technology has come so far to make this possible — lithium polymer batteries that create vast amounts of power in small, very light packages.

You can get these at hobby shops — Hobby Lobby makes the ParkZone series, which are all less than a hundred bucks and come with the controller. Start flying, get the feel for it. It’s pretty easy once you’ve done it a few times. If you crash the little ones into the ground, it’s no big deal — they’re so light they don’t get damaged. Then you can turn this into drone technology pretty easily. Get one of the smaller RC planes, attach a small camera to the bottom with velcro or tape, find the balance point and center of gravity on the plane so you can properly affix the camera. Throw it up, fly it around as far as the eye can see, bring it back and watch the footage.

As you get better, some guys are using similar technology flying off mountain ridges and soaring back and forth. A few have taken the extra step and put head-mounted displays on, with a camera mounted on the plane as well. They have a symbiotic relationship with the flying machine — wherever they look, the camera turret looks. So this drone technology and instant real-time insight into target locations and objectives is something that consumers can access too, for about a hundred bucks. Do something good out there. Tomorrow night, exciting show on Decrypted Matrix, same time, same place on Revealing Talk Radio.

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