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Excerpts
From Chapter One
Disappointments
Are Great!
(Follow
The Money, the
Internet)
- Brain
Fingerprinting
"Pinpointing the Culprit"
By Troy
Cory-Stubblefield /
Josie
Cory
"Disappointment
stalks like a mange ridden feline
ready to disembowel little
Susie's birthday soirée,
Mrs. Jones's mah jong trist or
Nikola Tesla's 60 cycle
generator."-- says,
GoodTime.
-----Josie
Cory, also the transparent voice
of Amber, the pragmatist of
Ddiaries says, "The theory behind
"brain fingerprinting" makes it
essential that there's a clear
cut motive behind the crime. To
disembowel little Susie's
birthday soirée, the
perpetrator must have had the
motive and image of the cake
stored in his/her memory.
-----
The
same with Tesla's generator.
Someone must have had a reason to
turn it into an electro healing
machine. In 1986, the Chinese
called this technology Zygomatic
VATS
Synchronization.
-----Dr.
Lawrence Farwell, calls this
technology "brain
fingerprinting," which Josie
prefers, because it's more to the
point and is the name generically
used by law enforcement and our
court system in their quest to
prove up forensic science by
utilizing evidence such as,
finger printing, DNA and "brain
fingerprinting".
-----
"Do
you get the
picture?"
-----Our
five senses, vision, audio,
taste, touch and even smells can
detect pictorial memories stored
in the human brain even if the
subject doesn't want to recall
them. No matter what you call the
technology, the fact is, by
affixing to a suspect's facial
zygomatic/temple area, sensors
that record brain waves, then
having a suspect watch a
time-line "video/audio packet"
taken at the time of the crime --
the scan will clear-up the
matter. ("Happy Birthday" in
Susie's birthday soirée
case).
-----For
as long as he can remember, Troy
has been deeply enamored of and
has been affected by music and
its control over his own
social/political/ romantic
adventures. "The singer with the
voice that sings the song and
words of sadness, despair or
disappointments will usually last
longer than one that sings a song
of happiness", says Troy.
-----
Our
most recent political,
socio-economic and cultural
changes in America's way of life
are often times called, "social
engineering", a method to change
attitudes by mass media
assimilation. They are easy to
spot. "Say it often enough and
people will believe they are part
of
it".
-----The
changes first come in the form of
new trends in music, movies,
dress and the introduction of new
"bandwagon" drugs, (Prozac,
Valiums and crack in the 80s,
90s, Lipitor, methamphetamines
and Viagra in 2000s).
-----
One
major Hollywood motion picture
release, like the first of the
"Star Wars" in the 80s, followed
by disambiguated television
programing financed by quasi
government production studios
will trendy out in about 20
years. "The Holocaust",
"Frontline", Adolf Hitler, the
19th Century Victorian period
epics of 2003, and BBC RadioPlay
or TelePlay programs are pure
examples.
-----Because
of Troy's experience in dealing
with Communist China in the arts
and communications, he uses the
Cultural Revolution of China in
Ddiaries to exemplify a nation's
way to rid itself of bad habits.
-----
The
Chinese population had little or
no access to their own religion,
ethnic languages and/or to the
American, or European way of life
for over 30 years. Only a few
Chinese officials close to the
Russians, took a chance to eat
with silverware and collect a few
classical recordings or works of
fine art for
themselves.
-----During
Troy's post Culture Revolution
adventures into China, he recalls
many an afternoon spent in the
winter of 1988, savoring with the
Chinese locals in the 1,000 seat
theater at the original Shanghai
Jin Jiang Hotel, in a state of
near-rapture, watching him
rehearsing his music.
-----
"I
couldn't quite understand it, but
listening to my own music in
their presence, I was eluviated
into a receptive depth of
adventure," says Troy. The young
Chinese fans tagged Troy's music
as "Rock'n Roll", it struck them
as being somehow more spiritual
than their own traditional
Chinese music.
-----
"Looking
back", says Troy, "maybe it was
the Henry Kissinger good luck,
the ghosts of Ming, or the big
audio speakers hanging in the
rehearsal hall that charged them
up." The rehearsal hall was the
same place where President Nixon
and China Premier, Chou En-lai
signed the historic "Shanghai
Communiqué", in 1972."
*(See Footnote.) Shanghai
Communiqué
*
-----Whatever
you'd like to call it, the luck
of China rubbed off on everyone
who was on stage that opening
night. Troy, Joey Adams, of the
Brooke Sisters and even on Jiang
Zemin, and Zhu Rongji. From the
first beat of the drum from the
"West Side Boys" -- to the
closing number, "Isn't It A
Shame", the national televised
show from the 20,000 seat Olympic
fingered Troy into one of China's
most respective performers,
Links
to other similar stories about
the
life and times of Nathan
Stubblefield
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