Bottom line - Bluetooth signals themselves are very unlikel…
Bottom line
- Bluetooth signals themselves are very unlikely to be the cause of negative thoughts or harmful “brain programming.” If headphones make you feel off, it’s far more likely due to loudness, ANC sensations, fit/ear issues, or the content and context of listening—things you can adjust. If you want, tell me the model you use, how long and how loud you listen, and what symptoms you notice; I can help tailor changes.
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They do offer an aperture through which nonlocal signals may be introduced to the mind the likes of MK-Ultra &c.—e.g. voices, LFO/HFO & power of suggestion. Wonder if on-board band pass filters (noise gates such as limiters/compressors for low/mid/high signal filtration/attenuation—either-or-both virtual & physical) would help mitigate interference & questionable practices nonlocal. We know, & we know the establishment knows.
This stuff has ramifications from the sound wars if any of you are familiar, they have condition us away from ratio proportioned sonics in the form of smooth curved sinusoidal waves to sawtooth-square wave simulacra. These decisions have cumulative effects on our stress & mental clarity. Their exist studies from all directions, and I'm sure there is suppressed data as well same as the question about Bluetooth and any of these lower intensity sonic devices that there's this attitude like you don't have effects of buildup and residue from mental accumulation from the parts and pieces vibrating in your ears and small bones the likes of anything over exposed like eating too much food or drinking too much water overtime. They don't want to discuss if our devices create plaque buildup around our neurons effecting synapses.
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