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Over the years we have been contemplating a website of our own; we have assembled information regarding dozens and dozens of other sites which might be of interest to our visitors. But now that it comes right down to suggesting a few of them, we are puzzled about where to send you next.

In our efforts to join forces with other organizations interested in classified human experiments, we have been told repeatedly that the ICOMW is the only NGO which has such experiments on its agenda. In fact, we have been told that the public usually learns of such programs when someone on the inside steps forward to disclose the improprieties taking place in a program with which they have been associated. Of course, since the declaration of a Global War on Terrorism, the chances of that happening are just about zero.

What we call the Electronic Concentration Camp System (ECCS) has been up and running for at least ten years, and before then the various actors had their own classified programs employing the same weapons and protocols. Isn't it time for some of the other NGOs advocating human rights to step in and lend us a hand?

Two non-governmental organizations with which we've always enjoyed a respectful relationship are Morton Sklar's World Organization for Human Rights U.S.A. whose website is at:

www.humanrightsusa.org

and Cheryl Welsh's Mind Justice, Inc., whose website is at:

bwww.mindjustice.orgob

Then there is a brand new foundation, the Lay Institute on Technology, which is especially interested in the moral dimensions of new technologies like torture by remote, electronic means. We have over many years enjoyed a respectful relationship with Nick Begich, Jr. its Executive Director. We met Nick in 1994 while he was writing his best seller, "Angels Don't Play this HAARP", which incorporated many documents we had collected. Nick's latest contribution to our common cause is "Controlling the Human Mind", which is expected to be on sale by September 2006.

www.layinstitute.org

There are a number of excellent and little known NGOs which deal with old fashioned torture, as it has been practiced for centuries. One of these is the Coalition of International Non-Governmental Organizations Against Torture whose website is at:

www.cinat.org

Another is a newcomer called the National Religious Campaign Against Torture at:

www.nrcat.org

As mentioned in the section on the Marine Corps' announcement of their offensive microwave weapon (VMADS), the only honest forum on the non-thermal effects (i.e., the biological and health effects) of electromagnetic radiation is run on the Internet by Klaus Rudolph from Germany. In years past, Klaus published a daily, English language newsletter as well as one in his native, German language. In either language, it was the truth unvarnished by the military-industrial-intelligence complex's need to keep its Nazi-style human experiments in the ECCS a deep dark secret. Persons wishing the truth on the non-thermal affects of EMR may subscribe to Klaus' now weekly forum in English by sending a blank email to:

emf-omega-news-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

He also maintains an archive of past newsletters at:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/emf-omega-news/

There are a number of sites to which prisoners in the ECCS, wishing to tell the world of their misery, gravitate. The stories you will find there are so implausible that no unaffected person would believe them. The prisoners are subjected to a daily brainwashing via synthetic telepathy so aggressive that they can't resist the carefully crafted disinformation they are fed. Combine this with sensory deprivation and torture, and fear of being tortured, threats of murder and an amazing ignorance of basic science shared with the general public, and you have the anecdotal accounts you may have read at these sites. Frankly, if you delight in human misery, you will have to find these sites for yourself.

Under your noses, the United States has built and operates an Electronic Concentration Camp System (ECCS) in which guiltless persons can be confined and observed and tortured into submission, so that the government agencies and defense contractors concerned can eventually build synthetic humans and cyborg slaves to man the war machine of the not-so-distant future. But of course, then they will need few of the unpredictable human race around, who demand rights and wages and vacations and pensions, and consume their dwindling resources while producing too much global warming. It is this dystopian fantasy of the ruling class which we are battling.

Another organization battling dystopian fantasies is, of course, the United Nations; but it battles on across so many different cultures and so many climates and so many impoverished communities that it is a miracle that it exists at all. We like the United Nations, truly a utopian dream come true, and suggest you may be interested in visiting and appreciating the website of its High Commissioner for Human Rights at:

www.un.org/rights/

Another utopian fantasy at last come true is the International Criminal Court. Although conceived of at the founding of the United Nations, the dream got lost in post war reconstruction and the Cold War. In 1994, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, some brilliant minds drafted a statute for an International Criminal Court which, after years of give and take, was accepted by the leading nations of the world at Rome on July 17, 2001. The treaty required ratification by the exceptionally large number of 60 nations because the United States believed it would be difficult, if not impossible, for the Court to ever receive that many ratifications. All the rest is history, as we say, and that history and much more may be read at the court's excellent website at:

www.icc-cpi.int

The ICOMW is proud to have played a tiny part in the formation of the ICC through its membership since 1996 in the Coalition for an International Criminal Court. Since the United States has never ratified the Statute of Rome and shows no willingness to do so in the foreseeable future, the ICOMW has also become a member of AMICC, an association of American NGOs. AMICC deserves the support of all American NGOs. Their utopian website may be visited at:

www.amicc.org

In constructing a brand new website, one never knows who will come to visit and what their interests are. So, in closing, let us suggest several websites where persons are hard at work trying to make the dystopian fantasy of the ruling class a reality!

First, the 'global war on terrorism' has resulted in the military websites being stripped bare of the information which once made them interesting to visit. For instance, the last time we attempted to visit the site of the Marine Corps' Joint Non-lethal Weapons Directorate, we found only an announcement that "the page cannot be displayed".

www.jnlwd.usmc.mil

The one government site which is still accessible and informative is that of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Since it will take hours to navigate the entire site, may we suggest you use the link below to bring up papers from a conference held in 2000 to set the course for neuroscience research, in a follow on to the Decade of the Brain. If any problem is encountered, try Googling "Biofutures". Among Google's list of responses you will be able to find a link to the DARPA conference in 2000.

www.darpa.mil/focus2000/index.htm

Some people believe that United States is governed by one or another of several supra-national organizations such as the Bilderbergers. We say these people ought to scrutinize a purely American institution called the Council on Foreign Relations, which is responsible for there being a Marine Corps Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate. In 1994, 1999 and 2004, the CFR sponsored "independent" task forces to assess the government's development of non-lethals, every time calling for lots of money to be thrown in that direction. As far as we are concerned, the term 'non-lethal weapons' is only a cover for the highly classified weapons used to operate the human organism by remote electronic means. See especially the 1999 Task Force Report, pages 6 and 12 (particularly footnote 2) by using the search engine on the CFR home page at:

www.cfr.org

Someone once remarked that the government should not be trying to build computers which think like humans do (the synthetic humans program is one approach to this objective) but that we should be trying to build computers which can think better than human beings do. Of course, it is necessary to figure out how we humans think at all before we build machines which can do it better. That problem was alluded to at DARPA's Biofutures Conference, but another point of view is being pursued at the Center for Consciousness Studies, The University of Arizona.

www.consciousness.arizona.edu

This center has close connections with a very low profile government think-tank known as the Santa Fe Institute.

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