The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5
The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5
The-Complete-Neruda-Interviews-1-5
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<strong>The</strong> Second Interview of Dr. Jamisson <strong>Neruda</strong><br />
WingmakersTM<br />
Sarah: “On to something else. You said earlier that certain technologies like LERM<br />
and BST weren’t allowed to be used for personal gain by members of the Labyrinth<br />
Group. Yet, if BST did exist, wouldn’t everyone line up and ask to use it I know I<br />
would. <strong>The</strong>re’re a lot of events in my life I’d change if I could. Once the cat’s out of<br />
the bag, how could BST ever be kept under wraps”<br />
Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “Like everything, there are implications and moral and ethical<br />
considerations that have to be weighed. One of the things that Fifteen and more<br />
generally the Labyrinth Group is good at, is to consider these implications in the<br />
broader scope of the social order. Fifteen, from an early age, always felt that the<br />
technologies of BST and LERM would only be granted to those organizations that<br />
would properly honor the ethical considerations that were required by the technology<br />
itself.<br />
“This is one of the fundamental charters of the Labyrinth Group, and all of its<br />
members take it very seriously. As a new technology is being developed, there are<br />
always members of the team who are concerned with the ethical implications of the<br />
technology and are responsible for usage guidelines and deployment rules. This is an<br />
integral part of any project’s development.”<br />
Sarah: “That’s good to hear, but couldn’t such a charter also be used to prevent the<br />
spread of these technologies to a broader audience”<br />
Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “Unquestionably. A technology like BST—once developed and tested—<br />
could, in time, become a consumer technology. But as long as the Labyrinth Group<br />
exists, it would protect BST from any and all outside forces. Within the Labyrinth<br />
Group there is a committee called the Technology Transfer Program or TTP<br />
Committee. This committee has two missions, one, to assess the incoming technologies<br />
that are assimilated from ETs, and two, they’re responsible for which technologies and<br />
in what state of dilution they’re transferred to our private industry partners, NSA, or<br />
the military.<br />
“<strong>The</strong> TTP Committee is in control of the pure-state technologies that are developed by<br />
the Labyrinth Group. <strong>The</strong>se pure-state technologies are virtually never transferred to<br />
outside organizations. Even those staff members in the ACIO who are not part of the<br />
Labyrinth Group are unaware of these pure-state technologies, and when—”<br />
Sarah: “But if I place these interview transcripts on the Internet or some media<br />
publication picks up this story, more than just the ACIO staff members are going to<br />
know about this stuff. Isn’t this going to screw up the Labyrinth Group’s cloak of<br />
secrecy”<br />
Dr. <strong>Neruda</strong>: “No. <strong>The</strong> Labyrinth Group is more than a secret organization. For all<br />
practical purposes, it doesn’t exist. <strong>The</strong> ACIO doesn’t exist. No one will be able to<br />
trace the ACIO let alone the Labyrinth Group. <strong>The</strong>ir security technologies are so vastly<br />
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