Aerial spraying is a type of pharmacological modulation of emotions which have been used for decades on humanity

“Talking about the spraying that’s been going on, and I’ve been talking to so many people over the years and I get a good sense daily of what’s happening to them psychologically and you find so many callers are tired, very tired when they’re getting heavily sprayed from all over the U.S. and Canada. Other days they’re rather calm, laid-back and almost tranquillized. Here’s a piece here that was sent to me by Robbie in Scotland and it’s from the Defense Technology International, November 2007 issue and it says:

‘Researchers say drugs could sap an enemy’s will to fight.’ Interesting little blurb this.

‘About 90 minutes’ drive from the medieval spires of Prague doctors and 20 macaque rhuses monkeys are hard at work at seemingly the most exhaustive study into the weaponization of the rave drug ketamine. While Russian, Chinese and American scientists may have similar lines of study, the Czechs are brazen enough to go on scientific record. Aggressiveness and violence are spreading throughout the world. This is comparable to the epidemic of infections diseases in the Middle Ages..’

They’re equating aggressions now with a disease. That’s the one part. Again, psycholinguistics.

‘says Ladislav Hess, a scientist at the Institute of Experimental Medicine in Prague. Hess, with researchers Jitka Schreiberova, Jiri Malek, Martin Votava, and Josef Fusek, is looking for a medical solution. Pharmacological modulation of emotions…’ Pharmacological of emotions. ‘has been used for decades.’

There it is right there, okay, and then they go on about the different types they’ve used on us in the past with the Valium groups and so on. Remember the aerosolized Valium that was mentioned by one of our top guys after the 9/11 incident he said they could spray over large cities? It says:

‘Ways for pharmacological suppression of aggressors threatening victims are sought. The drugs used for these purposes are called calmatives.’

They’re calling it calmatives now. It’s sounds very nice as a drug and dopes you. ‘calmatives, producing calm, non-violent behaviour.’ He goes through what these guys are doing and all the drugs they’re using, but later on, it goes on to say in the same article that they’re also calling it anti-calmative and anti-bellicosity agents. Anti-bellicosity agents that they’re admitting later in the paper. This is old stuff and the west is way ahead of them.

‘The first I heard about anti-bellicosity agents was late in 1950’s, half a century ago says Julian Perry Robinson, a former chemist and an expert on chemical weapons law at the University of Sussex…’

Did you know there was a chemical weapons law organization? Did they ask the public? No.

‘.,.Science and Technology policy research wing of ligands which can interfere with receptors, how those receptors affect behavior—a vast amount of knowledge is popping up.’ No kidding. ‘The use of such agents in combat is generally prohibited. But riot control agents like tear gas, for example, are permitted during police actions. What constitutes a police action, or a chemical weapon, is becoming fuzzy.’

Hmm, really. That’s because they’re spraying us, we can’t see for all the spray. It’s getting fuzzy.

‘Robinson and others think the Chemical Weapons Convention needs to be clear about banning behavioral agents and monitoring compliance. He’s drafting such a proposal. The CWC which includes the U.S. has its 10-year anniversary review conference next spring.’

I’m going to skip over all the other stuff that they talk about that they’ve admitted they got and all the compounds of drugs they have already to go. I’m sure they’re using it. It says:

‘What the Pentagon has at its disposal is extensive archives as well as robust research into airbust munitions…’ Airbust munitions. ‘…and other delivery systems.’ That’s the air, folks.

‘General Dynamics has even worked on a 155.mm non-lethal artillery projectile. When an agent comes along its ride will be waiting.’

Further down is says:

‘Revolutionary advances in psychopharmacology and neurology promise wonders in treating mental ailments and nervous disorders says Steve Wright, an ethics lecturer at Leeds University (UK). He’s just worried about the dark side. The goals behind artificially changing human behavior matter as much as the ability to do it.’

Very good article. It’s hiding a lot, exposing a little and that’s how it’s leaked out to you, under the guise that they’re just getting into it at the very beginning of the story and then there’s admissions throughout the story they’ve been doing this for about 50 years and they’re way ahead
of anything we’re told. That’s November 2007, Defense Technology International. Look it up for yourselves and have a read with it. It’s quite, quite interesting.”

[Alan Watt, Cutting through the Matrix, 2007]

https://archive.org/stream/alan-watt-cttm-transcripts-51-75/Alan_Watt_CTTM_Transcripts_26-50_djvu.txt


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