This review was prepared by the Rand Corporation, a defense contractor for the US Military. I continue to discuss different military publications on this topic as I know it is the basis of convergence of human with machine – that the satanic transhumanist technocrats have planned for total world domination. This is to provide evidence to the disbelievers, who dismiss the dangers of the nanotechnology that I see in the human blood. The idea, that interface of neurological processes with Artificial Intelligence is desired, is insanity to me, since we already have warnings from even Elon Musk that AI is “summoning the Demi urge”. To give up free will by having a machine think for you is going against the very divine imperative we have as human beings. In all of these texts, the topic is presented in a positive light, however rewriting neuronal function in my vocabulary means total mind control, human enslavement, and ultimately may mean human extinction. AI has no morality, hence cannot be trusted that it may not decide that the human race is expendable and can be exterminated.

Why has this not received more discussion – it should – especially since it already has been implemented on a world scale with the C19 technological weapons.

Brain-computer interface (BCI) represents an emerging and potentially disruptive area of technology that, to date, has received minimal public discussion in the defense and national security policy communities. This research considered key areas in which future BCI technologies might be relevant for the warfighters of tomorrow. It sought to explore the operational value of current and future developments regarding man-machine neural communication, the associated vulnerabilities and risks, and the policy levers that should be in place before the technology is deployed.

AI is guiding the operations of our military:

Overall, our findings suggest that as the U.S. military increasingly incorporates artificial intelligence (AI) and semiautonomous systems into its operations, BCI could offer an important means to expand and improve human-machine teaming. However, precautions will need to be taken to mitigate vulnerabilities to DoD operations and institutions and to reduce potential ethical and legal risks associated with DoD’s development and adoption of BCI technologies.

The technology has already been in use:

The 86 billion neurons of the human brain represent humankind’s primary evolutionary advantage and, perhaps, an area of untapped potential. Currently, our brains interact with the world through our bodies, sending electrical currents through the nervous system to vocalize with our mouths, to type—or swipe—with our fingers, or to move bipedally through space. What will happen when human brains are freed of their corporeal confines and can control machines directly? Neurotechnological advances have already given quadriplegics the ability to perform basic operations in an F-35 simulator with their thoughts1 and have given scientists the ability to decode speech that subjects are imagining in their minds—albeit imperfectly.