Peam
Jedi Council Member
Re: Sudden frequency-like ringing in ears
This reminded me of something I read in a book many years ago, about some exposed psi and telepathy scams.
One of the stories was about two young brothers who were tested by researchers using those cards which have 25 in a pack, using 5 different symbols. Wavey lines, circles etc.
If I remember it right, the two brothers were each sat at a table with a large screen between them so they couldn’t see each other, and no talking or noise was allowed.
Then the cards were shuffled and given to one of the lads to turn over one at a time, while the other lad had to say what he thought the card was. Test after test gave nearly 100% accuracy.
Well, the researchers were amazed at the accuracy. They couldn’t believe their luck at finding such a pair of telepaths after so many months of testing loads of student voluneers. But someone eventually thought of searching the lads.
They found the lad who was turning the cards had a rubber squeezy bulb in his pocket connected to a rubber tube running down his trouser leg with a sort of dog whistle on the end which gave a frequency that teenagers can hear but older people can’t. When the pre-arranged code number of whistles was blown by squeezing the bulb, once for a circle card, two for wavy lines etc. the boys could hear but the older researchers couldn’t.
Pinkerton said:One piece of information that is relevant to the thread is that students in high school or college are able to use a specific tone on their cellphones while they are texting messages to each other which is inaudible to the teacher, called the Mosquito Tone or TeenBuzz - _http://journal.plasticmind.com/ears/mosquito-tone-or-how-to-tell-youre-a-youngun/ - which allows them to use their cells to communicate undetected by the teacher.
This reminded me of something I read in a book many years ago, about some exposed psi and telepathy scams.
One of the stories was about two young brothers who were tested by researchers using those cards which have 25 in a pack, using 5 different symbols. Wavey lines, circles etc.
If I remember it right, the two brothers were each sat at a table with a large screen between them so they couldn’t see each other, and no talking or noise was allowed.
Then the cards were shuffled and given to one of the lads to turn over one at a time, while the other lad had to say what he thought the card was. Test after test gave nearly 100% accuracy.
Well, the researchers were amazed at the accuracy. They couldn’t believe their luck at finding such a pair of telepaths after so many months of testing loads of student voluneers. But someone eventually thought of searching the lads.
They found the lad who was turning the cards had a rubber squeezy bulb in his pocket connected to a rubber tube running down his trouser leg with a sort of dog whistle on the end which gave a frequency that teenagers can hear but older people can’t. When the pre-arranged code number of whistles was blown by squeezing the bulb, once for a circle card, two for wavy lines etc. the boys could hear but the older researchers couldn’t.