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Part II 19 by them. Alien implants are designed not just for remote monitoring purposes, but also remote influencing. Physical implants in the brain can monitor thoughts and produce a disorienting effect when a forbidden line of thinking arises.” They can record one’s thoughts, feelings, and perceptions for periodic analysis by an alien observer. The data retrieved may indicate weaknesses, threatening trends, and useful tendencies to take into account during further manipulations. Etheric implants can be placed anywhere depending on their function, including in the head to interfere with thoughts, the lower torso to jack into the lower chakras and manipulate base emotions, and elsewhere for track- you Another prevalent but little discussed aspect of abductions is mind programming, the insertion of harmful posthypnotic com- mands into an abductee’s subconscious. The command to forget an abduction and remember a screen memory is just one mani- festation of this phenomenon, and it can just as easily be used for ou more insidious purposes. These commands are given while the abductee is in an artifi- cially induced hypnotic trance and can lie dormant in the sub- conscious until triggered hours, days, or weeks later to produce a strong compulsion to carry out the command. They may also work continuously to bias thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and reactions in a predetermined direction. The aim of mind pro- * It is not uncommon for individuals to suddenly get sleepy, fidgety, or brain-fog when reading, watching, or hearing something they are “not supposed to learn.” Such materials tend to center on information helpful to freeing them from manipulation by negative forces. I suspect that brain implants could accomplish this automatically by monitoring for keywords or key-thought-patterns and injecting an electrical or etheric impulse to disrupt the thinking process. Posthypnotic commands could do this as well. these implants, which tend to be the same emotions encouraged toa ing and other purposes.* Mind Programming + The Love Bite (Lorgen, 1999, pp. 199-200)