Image: Actroid robot manufactured by Kokoro Company of Japan, 2006.

Female robots are ready for sale at retailers in Japan and will be priced at $20,000 [See: Actroid Timeline, Wikipedia, Actroid].

A YouTube video of an actroid featured at WIRED Magazine's Nextfest 2006.



























Note from Mary Jo [3/17/10]
Title: Life-Like Sirian Bots and Self-Replicating Implants

***

I have had a brutal couple of days dealing with invisible attackers who I believe are synthetic robots or "bots." If a genetically modified being is mostly synthetic -- is he/she really an alien being? Aliens and human alien hybrids are specified in the Prayers and totally synthetic "bots" would be included in the following request [Prayer 3]:

Please Blot Out alien technology left on Earth.

Note: After re-reading the research for this note, I realized that Earth is being converted into programmable synthetic material -- through genetic engineering, nano technology -- and most recently, new forms of humans who have been "robotized" [in addition to "synths" who are made as human-like "bots"]. My work on this article helped me realize that changes are needed in Prayers 2 and 3. [See: Note, March 20, 2010].

Life-Like "Actroids" About to Be Sold in Japan
The female image in the upper left corner of this page is an artificial robot created by a Japanese manufacturer. The picture was taken in 2006 at an International Robot Exhibition.

If you click on the YouTube link in the last paragraph under the photo, you may be surprised at the life-like characteristics of an android featured at WIRED Magazine's Next Fest 2006. If human robotics technology has progressed to the point where androids are "actroids" -- the Sirians most likely have androids who equal Star Trek's Commander Data.

Note: Wikipedia's article on Star Trek's Commander Data says:

Data is physically the strongest, and information /calculation-wise, the most intelligent member of the Enterprise crew. He is able to survive in atmospheres which most carbon based life forms would consider inhospitable, as well as in the lack of an atmosphere in the vacuum of space.

If the Sirians "placed" human-like androids on Earth in the last five years to achieve an Earth takeover -- would we know?

Leaps and Bounds in Robotics
The imaginary robot in 1965's Lost in Space TV show had arms that looked like coiled air-conditioning ducts, and R2D2 in George Lucas' 1977 film Star Wars looked like a kitchen appliance. SONY's store on Madison Avenue in New York City has a robot greeter that looks much less sophisticated than the robot in Short Circuit, a comedy science fiction film starring Ally Sheedy and Steve Guttenberg [photo at right]. Could robotics have advanced by leaps and bounds without help?

Lightweight 4th Dimensional Attackers
For the last several weeks, I have heard what sounds like footsteps along the floor above me -- when no one is home.

My building is 25 years old with wooden subflooring that creeks when human beings walk across the room [I live on the first floor]. Strangely, the footsteps I've heard when no one is home -- sound faint -- as though the sound belongs to a child or very small human. I also hear the same light weight footsteps directly overhead in the middle of the night. They are the footsteps of an attacker [day and night] because I always feel physical pain shortly after I hear footsteps creeping around.

Leaps in Robotics May Be Desensitization to "Synths"
There are very serious issues related to synthetic life -- which is the direction that Earth is headed -- due to genetic engineering and the creation of android bots.

Humans are so far along in robotics development [most likely due to manipulation], there are news stories covering topics such as human and robots' sex and marriage as well as robots' rights:

  • Sex and Marriage Story
    "Why People Will Soon Be Marrying And Having Sex - With Robots," Daily Mail, London, October 12, 2007

    The scientist in this story is David Levy from the Netherlands who has written two books about intimate relationships with robots. Robots Unlimited: Life in the Virtual Age [2005] as well as Love and Sex with Robots: The Evolution of Human-Robot Relationships [2007]. Levy has a Ph.D. from the Netherlands' University of Maastricht on the subject of human-robot relationships.

    Levy's second book was published by Britain's HarperCollins, part of a worldwide News Corp conglomerate owned by billionaire Rupert Murdoch [Note: my clients self-publish their books because they cannot get a book about natural therapies published -- yet, one of the world's largest publishers has taken an interest in a book about sex between humans and robots].

  • Robots' Rights Story
    "Forget robot rights, experts say, use them for public safety," UK's Guardian, April 2007, by James Randerson.

    This story was written in response to a 2007 report published by Britain's Office of Science and Innovation's Horizon Scanning Centre called, "Robo-rights: Utopian dream or rise of the machines?"

    The scientists who James Randerson mentions in his opening line have been critical of the following point made in the report:

    If artificial intelligence is achieved and widely deployed (or if they can reproduce and improve themselves) calls may be made for human rights to be extended to robots.

    Widely deployed? Reproduce and improve themselves? [this sounds like the 2004 science fiction film called I, Robot starring Will Smith set in Earth, 2035 A.D.].

    Maybe Britain's Office of Science and Innovation's Horizon Scanning Centre has some bots on staff who brought up the issue of "robo-rights."

    Note: I checked the Web site of Britain's Office of Science and Innovation to find out what service they provide. The "About" page says that they discover trends within society and currently known technologies -- and identify a range of possible outcomes. The page says that the purpose is to assist decision makers on how their decisions might affect the future.

Earth's Self-Replicating Nanotechnology
Earth already has self-replicating nanotechnology that has alarmed many scientists. In 2002, an New Zealand academic named Brent Silby wrote an article called "Nanomachines: Nanotechnology's Big Promise in a Small Package" citing a few terrifying examples of how self-replicating "nanomachines" could permanently harm the planet.

Based on what has felt like a flood of implants in my environment in the past few days, I believe that Earth's invaders are using self-replicating technology to manufacture implants.

"Nano" Muscle For Robots is "Stronger Than Steel"
A materials scientist at the University of Texas, Dallas, has developed artificial muscle for robots from nanotube material that is "stronger than steel, stiffer than diamond, and weighs little more than its volume in air."

Scientist Ray Baughman says that collections of nano ribbons could act as artificial muscle fibers to move the limbs of a walking robot.

Baughman also says nanotube fiber is extremely stiff and strong in the "long" direction but stretchy as rubber across its width. The fiber also maintains its properties over an extreme range of temperatures: from -196 degrees C, at which temperature nitrogen is liquid, to 1538 degres C, above the melting point of iron.

Note: The images at right are frames from a video created for a March, 2009 New Scientist Magazine article titled, "Robots Could Flex Muscles That Are Stronger Than Steel."

Nano Particles: Earth's Newest Toxin
Nano particles or buckyballs have been compared to soccer balls made of carbon atoms. They are microscopic particles that are one-billionth of a meter in diameter. As of 2009, 24,442 U.S. Patents have been granted that reference either nano or nanotube [over 49,000 are pending]. The National Science Foundation has said that it will be one of the fastest growing industries in history with a market worth more than $1 trillion by 2015.

To understand why nano-particles are potential toxins, here is a description of how they're being used in food:

Kraft, Nestli, Unilever and others are employing nanotech to change the structure of food - creating interactive drinks containing nanocapsules that can change colour and flavor (Kraft) as well as spreads and ice creams with nanoparticle emulsions (Unilever, Nestli) to improve texture. Others are inventing small nanocapsules that will smuggle nutrients and flavors into the body (what one company calls nanoceuticals).

The nanotechproject.org Web site has a downloadable report (PDF file) called "Nanotechnology in Agriculture and Food Production: Anticpated Applications." The page where the report is located says the Helmut Kaiser Consultancy has estimates that the worldwide nanotech food market may total $20.4 billion by 2010.

Corporations Are Rushing to Use Nanoparticles
Worldwide, corporations are rushing to use nanoparticles in medical diagnostics, drug delivery, tissue engineering, energy systems, information and communication, optics, computers and consumer goods that include food, household goods, textiles and cosmetics.

The Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies, established in April 2005, has called nanotechnologies the next industrial revolution promising to change everything from the cars we drive to the clothes we wear, from the medical treatments our doctors can offer to our energy sources and workplaces.

The Dangers of Nanoparticles
The March 10, 2006 issue of M.I.T.'s Technology Review Magazine reported that six Germans were hospitalized after using a nano product sold as a protective sealant for glass and ceramics. Seventy-nine people who used the spray reported having breathing problems and coughing.

Scientists describe nanoparticles as dangerous - both medically and environmentally because of their high surface to volume ratio that can make the particles very reactive. Their small size may also allow them to pass through cell walls in organisms, and their interactions in the body are unknown. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, animal studies have shown that some nanoparticles can penetrate cells and tissues, move through the body and brain and cause biochemical damage.

Dr. Eva Oberdörster’s Studies With Fish
In December 2004, an environmental toxicologist named
Dr. Eva Oberdorster presented her nanoparticle research at the American Chemical Society's annual meeting in Anaheim California.

When Dr. Oberdorster exposed nine largemouth bass to water containing buckyballs at concentrations of 500 parts per billion (the concentration level that is comparable to pollutant levels commonly found in port waters), she found severe damage in brain tissue of the aquatic species after 48 hours.

The brain tissue damage was in the form of lipid peroxidation, a condition leading to the destruction of cell membranes, which has been linked, in humans, to illnesses such as Alzheimer's disease. She also found chemical markers in the liver indicating inflammation, which she said suggests a full-body response to the buckyball exposure.

We Need God's Help
If I am right about life-like alien bots and self-replicating implants, Prayer requests that ask God's help are our only hope.

If you feel that the details on this site may be true, please recommend this Web site to others and help by saying the Prayers [the Home page contains instructions for using an ancient Prayer System].

Mary Jo