Thursday, September 19, 2013

Washington Yard shooter: What is Microwave hearing?


On Tuesday, the Washington Navy Yard shooter's stepfather Frank Calderon said that Aaron Alexis was walking out of the World Trade Center subway stop on 9/11 when the first tower collapsed, and that he stayed to help pull bodies from the rubble.

"Aaron said he was on the escalator coming up from the subway station when he saw the building come down. It was right in front of him, and he said he saw it collapse,"

"That day was traumatic for everyone involved. He did not talk much about it, but he said he helped out. He was a strong young man, so he would have done what he could."

But was Aaron Alexis really that strong?


Following the Washington Yard shooting, police reports from around the country showed that Aaron Alexis exhibited a pattern of angry outbursts and disturbing behavior during the past decade. .

Aaron Alexis tried to tell friends, police, and mental health care professionals that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder because of his work at the 9/11 World Trade Center attack.

A police report in August from Rhode Island stated that Alexis had called police to say that three men were following him and they were sending vibrations through his body. Alexis also said he was hearing voices.

The Washington Yard shooter also told the police that the people behind the strange voices were using “some sort of microwave machine” to send vibrations into his body, preventing him from falling asleep.

Naval programs use low frequencies, such as the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP), a joint effort with the Air Force which is often cited by conspiracy theorists.

Before Aaron Alexis went on his Navy Yard shooting rampage, he reportedly carved the words "Better Off This Way," into his shotgun. He also carved the phrase, "My E-L-F Weapon" onto the stock of the gun. Is there a missing letter "S" before "E-L-F" indicating that Aaron Alexis knew that he was going to die or was he using "ELF," to stand for "extremely low frequency."

When Aaron Alexis told police that he was hearing voices from "some sort of microwave machine," he might have been referring to "Microwave hearing."

Microwave hearing is the hearing of voices in the head from an outside source, but nobody else can hear the voices except the targeted individual.

Microwave hearing symptoms typically include the following:

1. Microwave hearing
2. Transmission of specific commands into the subconscious
3. Visual disturbances, visual hallucinations
4. Inject words, numbers into brain via electromagnetic radiation waves
5. Manipulation of emotions
6. Reading thoughts remotely
7. Causing pain to any nerve of the body.
8. Remote manipulation of human behavior from space
9. Harassment, stress symptoms such as helicopters flying overhead
10. Seeing, as in a camera, through your eyes, i.e. to see what you see exactly
11. Control of sleep patterns.
12. Computer-brain interface, control and communication
13. Complex control of the brain such as retrieving memories, implanting personalities

A report by Educate-Yourself The Freedom of Knowledge, The Power of Thought elaborates on each one of the above symptoms of Microwave hearing and provides literature.

Whether Washington Yard shooter Aaron Alexis was affected by Microwave hearing, schizophrenia, PTSD, depression, or mere anger issues, it has certainly been established by several reports that he tried to reach out and ask for help.

What makes Aaron Alexis' story worth following is the fact that is appears to be inconceivable that in today's world someone is looking for help and there is no one who actually takes action to help.

If this is how society takes care of its members, it will only be a matter of time until the next Aaron Alexis, Adam Lanza, or other .... shooter will be in the news.