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Sep 6, 2023Liked by Prof. Fred Nazar

๐Ÿ”Š

A few days ago, I was awake by 3 o'clock in the morning reading stuff on the internet, when I noticed a ringing in my ears, more like a faint howling. The sound was coming from outside. I turned off everything and listened to it.

It went on for โ— โ—ก 10 minutes, then paused for less than a minute, then started again. I recorded it at 88.2 kHz/24bit, capturing quite clearly the moment it stopped. The signal is peaking at 350Hz, not outside the audible spectrum. I used an equalizer to dampen the other noises. I have no idea what purpose this noise may have or who/where/why generates it and it is not very often that I'm awake at that time, but I'll see if it happens again.

Location South London, UK.

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Sep 6, 2023ยทedited Sep 6, 2023Author

Good data! I'll quote you! Could you please check if your phone and led lights are generating ultrasound? Thank you!

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Sep 6, 2023Liked by Prof. Fred Nazar

๐Ÿ”Š

At 350 Hz, it is on the opposite side of the spectrum from ultrasound and I turned everything off, just to make sure. I listened to it going on and off regularly for more than 20 minutes, until I thought of recording it just to see if it's not something wrong with my hearing.

The phone was in airplane mode anyway and I checked that the sound was coming from outside by closing and opening the window. Very flat, no discernable modulation, but I'll have to do a more thorough check on it when I'll get some time...

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Sep 6, 2023ยทedited Sep 6, 2023Author

Infrasound is also detected by other apps. Hearing range for humans is 20 to 20,000 Hz: so 350 is pretty audible. Please keep us informed. Thank you!

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โ˜•

Absolutely true, but the range narrows with age and I am towards the end of my wild trip on this planet, so any sound outside 70Hz-11.2kHz does not exist for me...

It could be a simple explanation for what I heard, but I don't have it. And why at 3-4 AM ? There is no factory for miles around and the sound - although faint - seemed to fill the air, I could not pinpoint even an approximate direction.

If it happens again I'll be better prepared.

Link to the uploaded audio file :

https://we.tl/t-3H5pBrhWOk

At 02.14 it stops.

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Sep 7, 2023Liked by Prof. Fred Nazar

I would like to listen to this but I'd rather not, because something about it seems like it may kind of ominous to me. Maybe it is a simple explanation for what it really is but who knows what it is at this time, right? Thank you for posting it because I am fascinated by what it could be...

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ใƒ„

I am still alive, so it cannot be that bad.

It was just enough long lasting, annoying, out of place and - at 3-4 a.m. - out of time too, to draw my attention.

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I can barely listen to a hum. Is that the recording?

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Yes. I recorded it on an Olympus LS10, and the recording level was set on "manual". I checked the recording level only at 02.03, just in time before the noise stopped - early hours, slow reactions ใƒ„

I was listening clasic rock on some internet radio and at first I thought the wailing comes from the station, then I turned it off but the noise was still in the air, so I worried for a short while that I have tinnitus, so I closed the window and opened it again, to see if I notice a change in amplitude, which to my relief I did. After that, I cut the power off to all devices, placed the recorder on the window frame and started recording.

So, although the noise was faint and I don't have the best ears on this planet, I noticed the wailing while listening to a music genre which can be quite noisy at times. Perhaps because it is so annoying. And listening to it again, especially when it stopped, think it sounds mechanical, like a heavy flywheel, it has a bit of inertia to it...

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Isnโ€™t it fascinating that these scientists seem to know what occurs in the deepest recesses of the brain and yet have no answer to how to cure motor neuron disease, MS, Parkinsonโ€™s disease, glioblastoma or Alzheimerโ€™s. I for one think they are full of beans, fakes.

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Or raging tinnitus !

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๐Ÿ’–๐Ÿ’–๐Ÿ’–

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I use a land line only.

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I also only use a hardline landline phone. But I do have a flip phone cell phone to carry with me when I am driving, for emergencies.

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Couple more things: halogen bulbs should NEVER be used in the house. They can explode. The shards are extremely hot, and can ignite anything combustible within range they strike, such as curtains. My friend's house was totaled by fire because a halogen bulb exploded near drapes. I warned a restaurant owner about a halogen lamp near a beautiful tapestry. He scoffed. The restaurant burned a few months later (coincidence?) and seriously damaged the restaurant next door (close to the lamp). And the other thing: the GEL used for ultrasound of unborn babies is TOXIC. And the worst ingredients are the ones that serve no other purpose than to color the gel blue.

I don't have a problem using LED light bulbs, but I do wear blue blocking glasses. Other than that, my home is virtually RF-free. I have 2' thick earth walls, live behind a ridge miles from the nearest cell tower, all wiring is in conduit, I have a dirty electricity filter on my electrical system. There are only a couple of places in my home where I can get a cell phone signal. I measured in my home with a meter.

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Wow! didn't know that! You surely are well informed smart Nomad! An engineer reported ultrasounds coming from the LED bulbs. Also stroboscopy (I've heard there are apps). Could you help confirm that?

Also, could you please confirm with your meter if you find a difference between ElectroSmart free Android app with respect to this:

https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/satattack

Unless you wish anonymity, I'd be honored to quote you =)

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Feel free to quote me re halogen bulbs.

Incidentally, the Soft Lights Campaign is fighting against LED car headlights. It's like having a laser directed at your eyes when you drive at night. My experience is that I am unable to see the road at all with such an approaching car (although my night vision generally is excellent). I maintain safety by MEMORIZING the road before the car is too close, and making sure I drive to the right of the oncoming car. https://www.softlights.org/ . They have a Change.org petition.

https://www.change.org/p/u-s-dot-ban-blinding-headlights-and-save-lives

I don't have an Android, nor an app, so I cannot answer your question. I also don't have a way of testing for strobe effect. Any strobe effect would be caused by the fact we have AC current, but given that (my understanding) the LED excites a phosphor on the inside of the lamp shell, it would not be pronounced. In an incandescent bulb, it takes time for the filament to cool, so it also would not be pronounced.

Oh, and by the way, if you want specifics about the gel used in ultrasound during pregnancy, let me know. I have to look it up again, and I will do that. I checked each ingredient with the Skin Deep Database of the Environmental Working Group.

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Thank you again so much! Very interesting how we all complement each other! We need a freedom wiki! To avoid being dazzled look to the right line in the road.

I'd appreciate links about the gel. Blessings! Fred

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I couldn't find EMF shielding by earth walls, only this, but doesn't give data for high frequency 5/6/7G

https://emfadvice.com/building-materials-block-emf/

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Thank you for the warning about halogen bulbs, though I don't have any. I will never use any! And the gel used for ultrasound of unborn babies? That is really bad news, why do 'they' have so many unnecessary toxic ingredients in things that have no reason or purpose for being there? Things that could be made with other, safer ingredients instead, that is. And your home sounds great, I use to wish I could have a home like that. I would think it is nice and warm in the winter and very cool in the summer with walls like that!

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If you look closely at pharmaceutical products, they are LOADED with toxic substances. The active ingredient is usually toxic. They give it in very small doses to suppress a bodily function that doesn't fit their idea of normal.Almost ubiquitous in drugs is magnesium stearate, an ingredient I avoid like the plague. We found sodium lauryl sulfate in a drug the patient needed for a skin condition. Sodium lauryl sulfate is a skin irritant. It is used in mice when testing skin products to see how effective they are. First they irritate the skin, and then they try the product.

I got a few ultrasound treatments for a skin problem, and I used coconut oil instead of their gel. It is claimed that coconut oil doesn't work well enough for imaging. I don't know one way or the other, but I would take that claim with a grain of salt. The important thing is that the substance used does not form bubbles when ultrasound is applied.

As for my home, it isn't perfect; it tends to be an average of daytime and nighttime temperatures. In the desert, the temperature can drop as many as 40 degrees at night. It is possible to skew inside temperature downward in summer by opening up at night, and upward in winter by opening during the day. Still, my home has no AC or active heat, though it has a mass wall down the middle to collect heat from clerestory windows. Covering these in summer would help. The low temperature of my home in winter tends to be around 65 degrees, and summer temperature can get as high as 95 degrees. Not particularly comfortable, but something you can live with. I keep a room AC in the bedroom.

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Sep 6, 2023Liked by Prof. Fred Nazar

Is there an app on the I phone that can check this? Thank you

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There are a lot of apps related to ultrasound baby monitoring. I had a hard time but I found this, but it's $20 and requires a special ultrasonic mic. Maybe Apple Store suggest other similar apps

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/ultrasonic-analyzer/id851069926

There you read:

Macbook air m1 caused headaches due to ultrasound (lamenick67 , 07/27/2021)

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Thank you Iโ€™ll check that out

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Interestingly I have begun to notice in recent weeks hearing more high-pitched tones. It happens at all times of the day and night.

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same with me... - left ear mainly

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OK. Let's get some facts to back up conjecture. In relation to LEDs and smartphones in our homes, how are they being activated, who is activating them under whose command, how targeted are they to an individual person or location, and all this for what purpose?

In relation to directed energy weapons, in relation to the Australian, Californian, and Hawaiian fires, where are these weapons located, what do they look like, then all the same questions as for LEDs and SMART phones, how are the being activated, who is activating them under whose command, how targeted are they to an individual person or location, and all this for what purpose?

I am personally not doubting that there is some kind of nefarious agenda, but if I can't get a fix on it, I can't protect myself from it.

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This might be helpful:

โ€œWhat is the Hum???โ€

https://strangesounds.org/the-hum

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Prof Nazar - are you doing research on tinnitus? Iโ€™m getting it more and more. Do you know if apple knows the ear buds cause it?

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I didn't have time to research it yet. More paying subscribers would allow me to hire a part time assistant with the adapting of the scientific literature for the general public. Search in Telegram groups for tinnitus. Many are reporting successful solutions. If you find any that worked for you please reply here. I read all comments (though not able to answer each one).

There are a number of causes, ultrasound is one for sure (just found a macbook was producing them), but also, maybe the spike protein or whatever injected affecting the brain. One thing for sure: there's an epidemic and physicians are clueless.

Try the ones I wrote in the article:

โ€ข Use ear-plugs and headset audio protection (like when going into an MRI scanner).

โ€ข Turn off as much as possible (airplane mode doesnโ€™t stop ultrasonic emissions) and charge phones and tablets far from your bed/room.

โ€ข At night, unplug or, if not possible, at least switch off all electronic devices (TVs) and led lights. Even better: kill everything in the switch box (or just leave the heating if it uses an electric pump).

โ€ข Plug headphone/earphones in your phone but donโ€™t place them in your ears: some are incapable of generating ultrasounds, and if they are, itโ€™s muffled. You can just cut the wire of an old earphone and use the mini-plug constantly, lifting it only for speaker phone calls or hearing audios. Leave a little ire tail to stick it to the phone case so you donโ€™t lose it when unplugged for listening when you need.

โ€ข There are several apps to switch from the speakers to the earphones or bluetooth phones, but none worked without the phonejack plugged or the bluetooth working. If you find any with such solution, even rooting, please report in comments.

โ€ข Avoid earphones but if you canโ€™t, never ever use Bluetooth earphones / airpods, replace the wired earphones by the air tube ones.

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That incorrect mid-word capital 'S' in 'ultrasound' is clever. That's how readers know this here is some super sciencey material.

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