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Can this technology be used for good & bad, for example, projecting false UFO(s) images, angels, religious people, & advertisement in the sky, or sending ELF waves into some people to make them do things or see things? So, do you think that many people can become fool & mislead by this technology?

Why, I have read this information ~ The Blue Beam Project
http://www.hiddencodes.com/blue-beam.htm

Please read "The Blue Beam Project" before you reply, thanks.

My blog
http://ufopensacola.blogspot.com

2007-05-04 10:04:31 · 7 answers · asked by learning_x 3 in Science & Mathematics Alternative Paranormal Phenomena

7 answers

they are cool!,but don't be anxious about it,not every body
follow a particular religion,so they are not going to be convinced,and so forth,but it shows you have a passion
for UFOS,i saw your blog,its cool!

2007-05-11 20:19:07 · answer #1 · answered by kokopelli 6 · 1 0

Okay, forgetting about technological issues for a moment...

If this became a standard piece of technology, I suppose it could be used in a lot of those ways, except maybe the one about mind-control. But if somebody projected a UFO image, everybody would go, "No that's fake, that is a hologram" and nobody would believe it anyway.

Honestly, this sounds a little like a conspiracy theory to me (I'm talking about the website now). You should look it up in other, more reliable sources before you convince yourself of it. It is possible, but not confirmed, see? And Wikipedia is not the kind of source I have in mind. Don't get me wrong, I love Wikipedia, but still.

This answer does not exist. I mind controlled you to think it does.

2007-05-04 12:54:58 · answer #2 · answered by Mysterious Bob 4 · 1 0

You cannot project a holographic image into the sky, it needs a backdrop to be presented on. it can't materialize in open space as seen in Star Wars. It would require clouds, or fog would do nicely.
As a matter of fact I believe it was in Popular Science where a group of engineers were developing a holographic device that used aerosolized water as a "screen".

2007-05-04 10:37:40 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

visual images 3-D holograms are possible even on a flat surface. I have worked with 3-D sound and have been amazed that if recorded with 8 mics and played back with 8 speaker sources - all in the right location, you can walk up to a Marshall amp or walk through a drum set or stand in front of or behind the singer...

2007-05-10 16:57:59 · answer #4 · answered by RT 6 · 0 0

Holographic projections are very phony looking.... sorry we're not yet in Star Trek. The effects you're worried about are more easily achieved with a slide projector. and.... we really don't have the ability to send ELF waves into people to make them do things. If we did, don't you think Disney would be using it already?

2007-05-08 13:58:59 · answer #5 · answered by squeezie_1999 7 · 0 0

The owner of the hiddencodes site sees Lucifer behind every rock and tree. The reason that person never explains HOW the blue beam works is because it exists only in his paranoid delusional mind.

2007-05-05 15:54:54 · answer #6 · answered by PoppaJ 5 · 0 0

illusions can be propagated in many ways - from mirages to fooling our blind spot with our retinas. Polarized lens filter out photons from entering our eyes on different angles - Fresnel lens change the angle that light is absorbed and sent to our eyes. Even gray gradation plays tricks as well as changing frequencies of photons and our brains play trick such as red / green blindness

2007-05-07 15:51:10 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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