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View Full Version : Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation funding research into bracelets that track mental, emotional respons


baja
06-13-2012, 11:12 PM
(NaturalNews) Pushing vaccines on the entire world is apparently not the only goal of the infamous Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which is reportedly now funding research into human tracking bracelets capable of gauging both emotional and physical responses to various stimuli. According to The Washington Post (WP), the Gates Foundation has already quietly spent more than $1 million on research into the biometric bracelets, which could forever alter the way students learn and teachers teach.

In a controversial move that was only recently brought to light, the Gates Foundation allegedly forked over about half a million dollars to South Carolina's Clemson University late last fall, and another more than $600,000 to the National Center on Time and Learning (NCTL), a group dedicated to improving student achievement. Both grants were intended to fund test studies on the effectiveness of the "galvanic skin response" bracelets, which assess the physiological responses of students to learning material.

The idea is that when a student, for instance, is exposed to new lesson plans from his teacher, the bracelet will detect electrical changes on his skin and inside his body which can be used to assess how well he is learning the information. The bracelet may also detect various cognitive responses in that student's brain which indicate whether or not a particular teaching style is effectively engaging him according to his learning abilities and types.

Tracking bracelets could further dehumanize American education

On the surface, the bracelet concept may appear as though it could actually help improve the quality of education in America. After all, what bad could come of monitoring innate emotional and cognitive responses to external stimuli for the purpose of improving the methods by which teachers educate their students?

On the other hand, tracking students in this way could open the door for an even more dehumanized approach to education. Standardized testing, numbers-based teacher assessments, and various other outcome-based educational formats have already largely eroded the human element that used to play an integral role in American education.

The bracelets could also further thwart the educational environment to cater specifically to what students want rather than what they need. Using students' emotional responses to various learning material as a metric of how well a teacher is performing is a flawed approach that could send many quality, veteran educators packing their bags.

What is the real agenda behind tracking bracelets?

When controversy about the tracking bracelets, and particularly the Gates Foundation's research funding, first began to arise, supporters of the technology denied that their use would affect the learning environment negatively. Deborah Veney Robinson, a Senior Communications Officer at the Gates Foundation, for instance, is quoted in a recent Forbes piece as saying that the bracelets would not be used to evaluate teacher performance, a claim made by the bracelets' opponents.

But if they are not intended to evaluate teacher performance, then what, exactly, are they for? This is a valid question that many educators and education researchers are now asking. Surely the Gates Foundation has some type of agenda with the program that it is not fully disclosing.

"Why do they want bracelets with wireless sensors for children and teachers that can gauge physiological reactions?" asked Diane Ravitch, an education expert and Research Professor of Education at New York University (NYU), who is skeptical of the Gates Foundation's intent with the research. "What's the purpose of this research? I don't understand what those bracelets are for. Still don't."

Based on the Gates Foundation's other agendas, it is not too far of a stretch to assume that tracking bracelets could one day be used to weed out students or teachers that do not buy into the vaccine agenda, for instance, or those that oppose phony environmental hoaxes such as global warming. By monitoring what is being taught and how students respond to it, Big Brother could theoretically read the human mind in real time, which has some fairly disturbing implications.

How long will it be before schools begin requiring that students link up to the system via tracking bracelets so that authorities can essentially monitor and control human thought? Will the bracelets one day be modified to deliver an electric zap to students that get out of line, or that diverge from the information being taught to them? There truly is a brave, new world before us, and the Gates Foundation is helping to pave the way directly to it.

Link;

http://www.naturalnews.com/036171_Bill_Gates_bracelets_monitoring.html

Sources for this article include:

http://www.washingtonpost.com

http://www.forbes.com

http://dianeravitch.net

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/036171_Bill_Gates_bracelets_monitoring.html#ixzz1x kH2eFsI

Fedaykin
06-13-2012, 11:28 PM
NaturalNews is almost as funny as The Onion.

Oh wait, you mean it's not a joke site?

"Galvonic Skin Response" (aka measuring the electrical conductivity of your skin) -- which does, at best, a piss poor job of determining metabolic output (what it is used for) is now supposed to be part of a human mind control device to be unleashed by the "infamous" B&MG Foundation?

Hilarious!

Fedaykin
06-13-2012, 11:29 PM
What goes around really does come around. Bill Gates, the master of FUD for so many years, being the target of FUD from a bunch of child killing anti-vaxx cranks.

Fedaykin
06-13-2012, 11:30 PM
Oh Look, there's already a prototype disguised as a weight loss tool!

http://www.bodybugg.com/

cutthemdown
06-14-2012, 01:07 AM
It's his money. Let me guess you all want to tax him more since he obviously has too much money.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 08:58 AM
It's his money. Let me guess you all want to tax him more since he obviously has too much money.

So in one of our residents kooks thread's, non-sequitur boy decides to drop in?

cutthemdown
06-14-2012, 10:42 AM
It's not a non-sequitur when it logically follows.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 10:52 AM
It's not a non-sequitur when it logically follows.

You think talk about taxes logically follows from kooky FUD about mind control devices?

cutthemdown
06-14-2012, 11:12 AM
You think talk about taxes logically follows from kooky FUD about mind control devices?

around here? yeah I do.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 11:29 AM
around here? yeah I do.


weak

cutthemdown
06-14-2012, 11:39 AM
Besides the main point of my post, as evidenced by being first, was the point it is his money. So in essence my divergent thought becomes only anecdotal in its nature.

baja
06-14-2012, 11:50 AM
Have you boys sufficiently impressed one another yet?

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 12:15 PM
Besides the main point of my post, as evidenced by being first, was the point it is his money. So in essence my divergent thought becomes only anecdotal in its nature.

still weak

Blart
06-14-2012, 12:42 PM
That's quite a leap in logic to take a study on "galvanic skin response" and assume full-blown 1984 tracking bracelets are the result.

snowspot66
06-14-2012, 02:17 PM
Doe the author of this article really take a jab at the Gates Foundation for working to eliminate polio? They've helped to nearly eradicate a terrible and debilitating disease and the author takes offense? Really?

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 02:48 PM
Doe the author of this article really take a jab at the Gates Foundation for working to eliminate polio? They've helped to nearly eradicate a terrible and debilitating disease and the author takes offense? Really?

The owner of that site is an ignorant, rabid anti-vaxxer. Willing to commit any lie, slander, etc. to further his cause.

According to him, vaccines are an evil plot to subjugate humanity (or some such wackiness) and that all you need to fight any disease (including polio, Cancer, etc.) is vitamins (particularly vitamin C) .

El Jué
06-14-2012, 07:03 PM
You guys are losing sleep because they're working on a mood ring?

baja
06-14-2012, 07:08 PM
emotion reading transmitter

baja
06-14-2012, 07:12 PM
Imagine a world where there is absolutely no place to be alone.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 07:12 PM
emotion reading transmitter

Device that tests the electrical resistance of your skin and tries to infer something useful from that.

No different whatsoever than the device I posted (which tests galvanic skin response to determine if you are being active or not). The only difference being what you try to pretend to know from the data.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 07:15 PM
This is the kind of paranoia that is only birthed through extreme ignorance.

Ooooh. Galvanic. That's a fancy word. Must be super high tech mind reading for sure!

baja
06-14-2012, 08:08 PM
You have no idea the level of technology that is under raps.

You are so sure of yourself, I bet you are young.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 08:17 PM
You have no idea the level of technology that is under raps.

You are so sure of yourself, I bet you are young.

:rofl:

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 08:26 PM
You have no idea the level of technology that is under raps.

You are so sure of yourself, I bet you are young.

Can't really reply, so you go to the ad hominems. Typical, and entirely unsurprising.

baja
06-14-2012, 08:29 PM
Maybe I should have said I hope you are young because if you are not your reality has become solidified. You will not have a thought to call your own for the rest of your life.

You are like the flat earth guy that back when ridiculed the guy who suggested the earth was round.

Why would you ridicule him? Because someone told you the earth was flat and you never allowed yourself to consider the possibility that might be wrong.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 08:41 PM
Maybe I should have said I hope you are young because if you are not your reality has become solidified. You will not have a thought to call your own for the rest of your life.


More BS. You're so predictable.

Believing anything and everything you read on the intertubes does not constitute "thought".


You are like the flat earth guy that back when ridiculed the guy who suggested the earth was round.

Why would you ridicule him? Because someone told you the earth was flat and you never allowed yourself to consider the possibility that might be wrong.

Typical and popular ad hominem argument from a multitude of sources: creationists, godbots, alt-meds, etc.

All that's required to persuade is objective evidence. But like all kooks, you can never provide any. If anything you claim (vitamin c the cure all to cancer, earthing, homeopathy, etc.) was true, it would be straightforward to provide.

You know how people were convinced the earth was spherical? The people who figured it out provided objective scientific evidence for it.

baja
06-14-2012, 08:57 PM
So when you are completely controlled THEN you will believe it. Got it.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 08:59 PM
So when you are completely controlled THEN you will believe it. Got it.

WTF? How did you leap from "pony up some objective evidence" to "completely controlled"?

baja
06-14-2012, 09:08 PM
WTF? How did you leap from "pony up some objective evidence" to "completely controlled"?


No I'm asking you to consider that not everything is as it seems.

Proof is not always easy to demonstrate.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 09:20 PM
No I'm asking you to consider that not everything is as it seems.



That's exactly the purpose of the scientific process. Human perception cannot be trusted, and indeed things aren't always as they seem. That's why we have developed a process (and continue to refine it) that is designed to remove human perception from the equation. Double blind tests, control groups, etc. are ALL methods to combat flawed perception and bias.


Proof is not always easy to demonstrate.

True, but you can't hide behind that and keep making clearly deterministic claims like "Vitamin C cures cancer" and pretending they aren't straightforward to test.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 09:28 PM
What's totally hilarious is that you and other kooks like you embrace flawed perception. It's the only tactic you have. The evidence doesn't support you, so you rely on "testimonials", placebo effects, correlation fallacies, etc.

The irony inherent in you telling me "No I'm asking you to consider that not everything is as it seems" is palpable.

baja
06-14-2012, 09:48 PM
Ha ha you remind me of me forty years ago.

Then I woke up one day and realized I didn't know everything


A few years later I realized I really didn't know much of anything


It was several years later that I realized that life is completely subjective. Crated by the individual for the individual.

I'm confident you will arrive at the same conclusions in time. Until then we won't have much to talk about. ;D

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 09:57 PM
Ha ha you remind me of me forty years ago.

Then I woke up one day and realized I didn't know everything.


Never claimed to know everything. That's your thing. You know the earth is round, and all the rest of us are just flat earthers.

If irony had a smell, you'd be absolutely rancid.


A few years later I realized I really didn't know much of anything


It was several years later that I realized that life is completely subjective. Crated by the individual for the individual.

I'm confident you will arrive at the same conclusions in time. Until then we won't have much to talk about. ;D

More empty and meaningless claims.

baja
06-14-2012, 10:02 PM
I'm sure.

Fedaykin
06-14-2012, 10:11 PM
I'm sure.

:oyvey: