No it doesn't.
> I worked with this on a government research grant back when it was
> known as Nuclear Magnetic Resonance:
>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_resonance_imaging
>
> It subjects the target to both a strong magnetic field and strong RF
> signals and measures how the spins of atomic nuclei respond.
>
> "..the majority of research shows no genotoxic, or otherwise harmful,
> effects caused by any part of MRI."
>
> The article mentions other effects that have been observed, but not
> what you are claiming without proof.
You may or may not be familiar with the paranormal events that occur in
MRI centers.
And you likely will deny that as well as:
http://www.kurzweilai.net/researchers-demonstrate-direct-brain-to-brain-communication-in-human-subjects
An international team of neuroscientists and robotics engineers have
demonstrated the first direct remote brain-to-brain communication
between two humans located 5,000 miles away from each other and
communicating via the Internet, as reported in a paper recently
published in PLOS ONE (open access).
In India, researchers encoded two words (“hola” and “ciao”) as binary
strings and presented them as a series of cues on a computer monitor.
They recorded the subject’s EEG signals as the subject was instructed to
think about moving his feet (binary 0) or hands (binary 1). They then
sent the recorded series of binary values in an email message to
researchers in France, 5,000 miles away.
MRI image showing location of TMS phosphene generator (credit: Carles
Grau et al./PLoS ONE)
There, the binary strings were converted into a series of transcranial
magnetic stimulation (TMS) pulses applied to a hotspot location in the
right visual occipital cortex that either produced a phosphene
(perceived flash of light) or not.
“We wanted to find out if one could communicate directly between two
people by reading out the brain activity from one person and injecting
brain activity into the second person, and do so across great physical
distances by leveraging existing communication pathways,” explains
coauthor Alvaro Pascual-Leone, MD, PhD, Director of the Berenson-Allen
Center for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation at Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center (BIDMC) and Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School.
A team of researchers from Starlab Barcelona, Spain and Axilum Robotics,
Strasbourg, France conducted the experiment. A second similar experiment
was conducted between individuals in Spain and France.
“We believe these experiments represent an important first step in
exploring the feasibility of complementing or bypassing traditional
language-based or other motor/PNS mediated means in interpersonal
communication,” the researchers say in the paper.
https://sites.google.com/site/mcrais/voices
Back in 1956, geophysicists R. E. Holzer and O. E. Deal, detected
naturally occurring electromagnetic signals in the auditory range that
were produced by thunderstorms. With little variation, most of the
electromagnetic bursts were metered at 25 to 130 cycles per second, with
a very low attenuation rate. In other words, lightning discharges could
be picked up anywhere in the world as “magnetic noise” on the extremely
low frequency (ELF) radio dial.
Hearing “Voices”
RF-mind-control testing became a military priority—a simple, pulsed
microwave beam outperformed drugs, ECT, torture and brain surgery as a
means of behavior modification.
Two years later, Dr. Allan Frey, a bio-physics researcher conducting
studies at General Electric’s Advanced Electronics Center at Cornell
University (and a contractor for the U.S. Office of Naval Research),
published a “technical note” in Aerospace Medicine reporting that the
human auditory system responds “to electromagnetic energy in at least a
portion of the radio frequency (RF) spectrum. Further, this response is
instantaneous and occurs at low-power densities ... well below that
necessary for biological damage.” Frey’s subjects “heard” buzzes and
knocks when exposed to low-frequency radio emissions. In one experiment,
Frey swept a radio beam over a subject. With each sweep, the subject
heard the radio frequency sound for a few seconds and reported it. When
Frey modulated power densities, he discovered that even clinically deaf
subjects perceived RF sounds. Experiments with transmitter settings
proved that radio beams could induce the perception of severe buffeting
of the head or prick the skin like needles.
Frey concluded that the brain is a powerful receiver of electromagnetic
rays, and the “vocabulary” of RF noises could be expanded by modulating
the pulse of the charge, which would be perceived by the subject as
originating from within or slightly behind the head.
Among practical applications of auditory stimulation, Frey proposed
“stimulating the nervous system without the damage caused by
electrodes.” Attracting the attention of CIA and DOD officials, Frey’s
work with microwaves had obvious uses in covert military operations. In
one experiment, for instance, he synchronized pulsed microwaves with the
myocardial rhythm of a frog, whereupon its heart stopped. Stimulating
the hypothalamus of cats and dogs with microwaves powerfully effected
emotions.
Frey was reluctant to experiment on humans for ethical reasons. But
Pandora operatives did not balk at irradiating human subjects. Under CIA
auspices, Dr. Dietrich Beischer exposed approximately 7,000 naval
crewmen to dangerous levels of microwaves at the Naval Aerospace
Research Laboratory in Pensacola, Florida. Data on exposure limits,
Beischer justified, could be obtained in no other way, given the
“exquisitely complex and dynamic nature of the human organism.”
An “official” halt to Pandora was called in 1970, but classified,
RF-mind-control testing had become a military priority. A simple, pulsed
microwave beam outperformed drugs, ECT, torture and brain surgery as a
means of behavior modification. By the late 1960s, CIA scientists had
achieved direct communication between brain and computer, and had
demonstrated in the laboratory that computer-assisted automatic learning
was possible by pinpointing neuron clusters in the brain with radio
signals. Microwaves easily penetrated the brain’s protective shields of
bone, ligament and membrane. Brain waves could be unscrambled and
deciphered, recorded and beamed to another person—creating artificial
two-way mental communication.
“Voices”
At Walter Reed Army Hospital of Research in 1973, Dr. Joseph Sharp,
strapped inside an isolation chamber, heard “words” beamed at him in a
pulsed-microwave audiogram. (An audiogram is a computerized analog of
the spoken voice.) ARPA’s Robert O. Becker foresaw in the experiment
“obvious applications in covert operations.” Becker imagined a barrage
of “voices” driving an enemy insane, and post-hypnotic suggestion
radioed to a programmed assassin, directing him to kill.
According to Naval Captain Paul Tyler in a 1976 essay, “The
Electromagnetic Spectrum in Low-Intensity Conflict,” a “speed-of-light
weapons effect” could be achieved with “the passage of approximately 100
milliamperes [of directed frequency] through the myocardium, [leading]
to cardiac standstill and death.” In other words, electromagnetic
devices with stun or kill settings could theoretically wipe out entire
armies—and cities. The patent for just such a “death-ray” device,
according to officials of the McFarlane Corporation, an independent
research and development firm, was pirated from them in 1965 by NASA.
The theft was reported in hearings before the House subcommittee on DOD
appropriations, chaired by Representative George Mahon (D-Texas).
According to McFarlane company literature, the invention—termed a
Modulated Electron-Gun X-Ray Nuclear Booster—could be adapted to
“communications, remote control and guidance systems, electromagnetic
radiation telemetering and death-ray applications.”
Was the technology tested at home on private citizens? In March 1978,
the city of Eugene, Oregon, found itself inundated with microwave
radiation. The Oregon Journal reported: “Mysterious Radio Signals
Causing Concern in Oregon.” Federal government specialists blamed the
Soviets, but the Federal Communications Commission concluded that the
signal—recorded throughout the state of Oregon—came from a Navy
transmitter in California.
Oregonians statewide complained of headaches, fatigue, inability to
sleep, reddening of the skin, anxiety, “clicks” in the head and a “buzz”
harmonizing with a high-pitched wail. Canadian researcher Andrew
Michrowski wrote to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau on September 19, 1978,
citing a Pacific Northwest Center for Non-Ionizing Radiation study that
found the signals “psychoactive” and “very strongly suggestive of
achieving the objective of brain control.”
*
*
*
Clearly, breaching the ultimate stronghold of privacy—the mind—has been
accomplished. If the U.S. government plans to do the thinking for all
Americans, the days of freedom, liberty and justice—and human identity
itself—appear to be numbered.