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Augmented Reality Holograms


Augmented Reality will change to way we use information in the future. You can meet your friends while walking through the street, your virtual buddy walking next to you. You can shop online and try out your favorite products (e.g. furnitures) in your living room before buying them.

Augmented Reality Encyclopedia, from "nothrust" at youtube.com

As you can see from the video, what is commercially available in the augmented and mixed reality field is quite advanced.  Imagine the same technology but life-size in dimension and not a video but real-time and "live."  Life-sized, talking, interactive, virtual beings could be broadcast into your living room. Or, holograms and holographic movies could be streamed to the eyes or to optic nerve implants, and these holograms could appear to be life-like and in proportion to the environment. The technology could even block one's vision of real objects. There could be two soda-pop cans on a counter in front of a person, but they might only see one soda-pop can.  Deadly, if one is driving on a highway.  These are some of the experiences that targets of this technology say are happening to them.  


Below are some examples of possible military uses of this kind of augmented-reality technology.


Holographic image projection, cloaking devices, and multispectral camouflage will provide enhanced military deception capability, but the most promising technology is the creation of synthetic environments that an adversary thinks are real. One of the most innovative methods for psychological operations to influence a target is to use holographic image projection with messages conveying the desired effect. The electronic warfare battlefield of the future will include dynamic high-speed neural processors, autonomous adaptive processing systems, and precision-guided cyber munitions that launch information attack weapons into an adversary's system. Trusted systems, trusted software agents, and secure communications provide promising means of protection against information attacks. ("Air Force 2025, Executive Summary, White Paper Summaries: Power And Influence,  Information StrikeKnowledge Warfare: Shattering the Information War-Paradigm," Chapter 9, p. 53,  prepared by 2025 Support Office, Air University, Air Education and Training Command, November 1996, developed by Air University Press, Educational Services Directorate, College of Aerospace Doctrine, Research, and Education, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, August 1996,  (csat.au.af.mil/2025/index.htm, italics mine, ed.)


holographic projector

freepressinternational.com/aforce.html (picture from the mirror citation of the original Air Force section)

5.6 Airborne Holographic Projector
A projector system that displays a three-dimensional visual image in a desired location, removed from the display generator. The projector can be used for psychological operations and strategic perception management. It is also useful for optical deception and cloaking, providing a momentary distraction when engaging an unsophisticated (emphasis mine, ed.) adversary.

"NONLETHAL WEAPONS: TERMS AND REFERENCES"  Check out page 15 on the military use of holograms for psyops and scaring people to death.

Hologram, Death . Hologram used to scare a target individual to death. Example, a drug lord with a weak heart sees the ghost of his dead rival appearing at his bedside and dies of fright [149:4].

Hologram, Prophet . The projection of the image of an ancient god over an enemy capitol whose public communications have been seized and used against it in a massive psychological operation [609].

Hologram, Soldiers-Forces . The projection of soldier-force images which make an opponent think more allied forces exist than actually do, make an opponent believe that allied forces are located in a region where none actually exist, and/or provide false targets for his weapons to fire upon. New concept developed in this document.  

Lt. Col. Michael Aquino's, "Mind War,"  xeper.org/pub/lib.  Look for the library building button at the top of the page.  Co-authored with Colonel Paul Vallely (a member of a shadowy group known as The Aviary).

Psychotronic research is in its infancy, but the U.S. Army already possesses an operational weapons systems designed to do what LTC Alexander (LTC John B. Alexander, famous for working on non-lethal weapons at Los Alamos, ed.) would like ESP to do - except that this weapons system uses existing communications media.  It seeks to map the minds of neutral and enemy individuals and then to change them in accordance with U.S. national interests.  It does this on a wide scale, embracing military units. regions, nations, and blocs.  In its present form it is called Psychological Operations (PSYOP).  (italics, ed.)

Ok, so this noted satanist and psychological operations expert says that the U.S. Army has a system that seeks to map and change the minds of the people in whole nations in an ESP-like manner using existing communications media.  Which nations is it being used on? Who determines what constitutes U.S. national interests?  Is it being used in the U.S.?  Valid questions.

                                     
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