Sizwe SikaMusi
Sizwe SikaMusi

@SizweLo

18 Tweets 26 reads Jan 05, 2023
In 1994, the United States deployed a mind control “experiment” in Rwanda, causing the “Rwandan genocide” and resulting in the current minority government. The operation was named Crimson Mist.
On 6 April 1994, a plane carrying presidents Juvenal Habyarimana of Rwanda and Cyprien Ntaryamira of Burundi was shot down over central Rwanda, killing both leaders and most of their senior government officials.
Meanwhile, as the plane was being gunned down, a small group of American agents waited in a nearby gravel airstrip a few miles from the Rwandan capital, Kigali. They had arrived in three unmarked cargo planes. All crew members carried fake credentials.
The agents’ documents identified them as “atmospheric researchers”. However, these IDs were only for emergencies if they were forced to land in unfriendly territory. Outside of this, they and their three large aircraft were not in Rwanda.
When news of the presidential crash came in, an eventuality they had been waiting for, they quickly prepared one plane for takeoff. The preparations included fine-tuning a large silent microwave dish mounted to the aircraft’s rear. The dish was the killer piece of equipment.
As the mission plane was taking off, American agents on the ground in Kigali went to work alongside local civil servants and members of the Rwandan security service to spread rumours that the Tutsi people were responsible for the presidential plane crash.
Next, the government and intelligence officials egged on a small angry mob of Hutu men to throw rocks at some Tutsi people. At first, it was a minor scuffle with a few injuries. Then the American cargo plane took to the skies.
As part of the “experiment”, the plane flew directly over the advancing Hutu, and the mob suddenly became deranged. Eyes glazed, the mood of the Hutu crowd went from slight anger to uncontrollable rage, and within minutes, the confrontation had turned into a massacre.
What happened here was something scientists have known for decades, that every human feeling has a specific brain wave and that they can externally manipulate them. Only recently, with modern microprocessors, did the precise control of such brain waves become practical.
Important to note that the Americans did not emit microwaves to plant ideas in the minds of their subjects. Instead, they amplified the rage that was already there. Anger that they, along with security service personnel, created through propaganda and then by arming the people.
In the 1970s, Elizabeth Rauscher-Bise, a physicist and parapsychologist who worked for NASA and the US Navy as a research consultant, identified specific frequencies she could tap into and induce nausea, happiness and more. She was quoted saying:
“Give me the money and three months and I’ll be able to affect the behavior of 80% of the people in this town without their knowing it. Make them happy—or at least they’ll think they’re happy. Or aggressive.”
The narrow band in which these waves operate makes it difficult to deliver brain wave control, making them challenging to direct through standard radio transmitters. It would help to have an “amplitude-modulated” high-frequency microwave beam. The Americans used this on Rwandans.
In 2003, European security analysts concluded that the US had deployed Crimson Mist in Iraq. The US did it to reinforce the Western media propaganda line that Iraqis are reckless savages who could not be left alone and thus needed direct supervision by the American military.
Evidence suggests that the US used Crimson Mist to instigate the Baghdad museum’s looting and some local hospitals around the city. Events leading to the museum looting point to the psychological manipulation of the people.
If ever masses of people in your country start behaving irrationally, looting and burning things and the US military is around (even if they're not there. They were “not” in Rwanda in 1994, after all), just maybe there's a hand of a monkey.
Naturally, American authorities will dispute and dismiss anything they find inconvenient as rubbish and “conspiracy theories.” They were already doing it 50 years ago. No one should take their denials seriously anymore.

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