Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Havana Syndrome
Episode Date: August 31, 2021We’ve got a real mystery for you on Sawbones this week: Havana Syndrome. It’s either a secret beam being blasted at American diplomats . . . or a mass psychogenic illness . . . or a complete fab...rication. Or anything in between?Yep, it’s a weird one. Hang in there.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers
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Alright, talk is about books.
One, two, one, Sawboats, a marital tour of Miss Guided Medicine. for the mouth. Wow.
Hello everybody, welcome to SawBoats,
a marital tour of Miss Guy to Medicine.
I'm your co-host, Justin McAroy.
And I'm Sydney McAroy.
Sydney, what do you got on the docket for me today?
What do you got?
I'm ready to learn.
I got my thinking cap on.
I got my stinking cap off.
I don't even know why I bought it.
Honestly, it seems like you're going to get a lot of use
out of a stinking cap, but I didn't even think through it.
Well, when you go into Spencer's, you hate to leave empty handed.
Yeah, that's true.
And my drinking cap, that's my back pocket, because the week kid is just around the quarter.
But for right now, my stinking cap is on.
And my shrinking cap has not been invented yet.
I have some diagrams.
I'd like to say here.
Okay.
Let's just...
Dr. Zelensky and I have made a lot of progress on the shrinking gap.
Let's just do this episode of sobbing.
That sounds like a good start.
Let's do that.
So there's a lot of stuff going on currently,
event-wise related to medicine.
But we've done episodes on most of that stuff.
So I know, we got some emails like you should talk
about Ivermectin. There is an episode on Iver Mecton. If you'd like to listen to that, it does not
treat or cure COVID. Please do not take it for COVID. Please do not take a horse medicines
ever for anything ever. So that's covered in another episode. Masks should be worn and are great,
and we did that in another episode.
We put that in a book.
Been banging on that one for a while.
But that's out there.
So I found something else in the news
that there were some recent reports about
that I didn't know anything about.
It has nothing to do with COVID,
not that it's not important to keep talking about COVID,
but we'll take a break this week.
And thank you, Paige, for sending us an email to bring it to my attention that like, hey,
this might make a good episode because I read an article about it and it didn't occur to
me immediately.
But Justin, have you heard of Havana syndrome?
When you do this, it's always a little bit tricky because like, you know, before I asked
you the other day, have you heard of a Vanna Syndrome?
Never.
Okay.
And first of all, I don't really want to keep calling it that even though like, I wanted
to put that name out there because if you've heard of this, that is what it's most well-known
as.
And so, I want context, you know.
And that is what, if you read, if you read any of the recent news articles about it, reports about it,
that's what they are calling it, not the articles. So this is what they're talking about.
We should probably try to call them anomalous health incidents, but that seems...
It's all little, you know that's less catchy though.
Well, they didn't, first of all, they didn't have it all happened in Havana.
So even though the first ones I'll talk to you about happened in Havana.
They did not all happen in Havana. And second, I just don't think it's nice to name diseases
after places.
That's true.
You know, like, are you ever going to take a vacation to the Ebola river?
No.
Right? That's not fair.
No.
But, you know, the river is saddled with that forever.
I probably wouldn't do that anyway. I mean, I don't travel much right now at all Sydney.
I don't know if you've heard, but...
I don't mean now.
I just mean generally.
Like, you try and you shouldn't, if you can,
don't name things after places.
It's just nice.
It's hard to trust them more at all.
Right, because in the place gets that connotation forever
and it might not be something that, you know,
that you want.
Got it.
Right.
So anyway, um...
Can we keep calling it that with the understanding that we shouldn't be
calling it that because I know I'm a normal.
I don't have a better.
I was how a normal, no health incidents.
Well, anomalous health incident also isn't specific to this.
You could say a lot of things are anomalous health incidents.
This is my problem with it.
The language is the specific and I don't have like a better name. Did it started? For it.
Maybe we can just start with Havana's syndrome
and then move from there.
I already called it that.
My apologies to Havana.
Recently, it was reported that vice president,
Kamala Harris had her, she had a,
she was doing an overseas trip
and it was briefly delayed.
Just like there was a pause.
It was like a couple hours, so not a big incident in the grand scheme of things for the
vice president.
But the reason that it was delayed is a little more interesting.
There were some, what were reported as anomalous health incidents that occurred in a annoy,
which is where she was headed from Singapore.
And so because of these incidents, they paused the trip, decided there was no concern for
the vice president or any of her staff.
It did not affect anyone associated with the vice president.
And so she continued on her trip.
But because of that, Havana Syndrome was putting the news and trending, and now here we are.
Because I had no idea what it was.
I'd never heard of it.
I'd never heard of the phrase.
So it only dates back to 2016.
That's why I feel weird.
It feels weird to me that I'm not more aware of this
because it has all happened in recent years.
And there was a lot of, I think media coverage
of it initially, perhaps, it seems like.
So in 2016, there was a diplomat at the American Embassy in Cuba who had an
odd health incident. Okay. It occurred when she was actually in her home, not in the embassy itself,
but in her home there in Havana. And she was standing in her kitchen. and she began to experience this severe headache and
pressure in her head. A lot of these descriptions will sound like waves of
pressure. She didn't think much of it, tried to, it's a headache, I'll sleep it
off, but the next morning it was still there and she also began to have some
memory issues, some vertigo, balance type issues,
some trouble walking, and processing information.
She mentioned she couldn't read a cereal box that morning, like the back of a cereal box.
These sorts of nonspecific, very upsetting symptoms, but not really pointing to one specific thing. The symptoms persisted,
but she didn't tell anybody at first because she didn't, she liked her job. Yeah, she didn't want
to get to home. But she would eventually learn that she was not alone, because around this same
time period, three CIA officers in Cuba would have similar symptoms. And this is
all towards the end of 2016 and into 2017. And they would send actually a couple people would
go back to the US and they sent a couple of replacements, CIA officers, who also had
these symptoms, right? Many tended to describe this in a similar sort of progression.
You have some sort of pressure, like I said, some people said it was like waves of pressure
in your head or just an intense pressure in your head.
But many said that right before that started, they also had an auditory symptom, meaning
they heard something.
They heard a very strange sound. And the sound was described sometimes like machine-like,
like a grinding type of sound, a coarse sound,
a rough sound.
Other people described it like a buzzing, like cicadas.
It was compared to like a bunch of crickets or cicadas
or something like that several times.
Like that horrible bird you showed me.
What does that sound like? Remember it, it's not a kind of machine gun, like that. That does horrible bird you showed me. What does that sound like?
Remember that sound kind of like machine gun?
That does sound machine gun like.
What was it called?
The shoe bill.
Oh god.
Oh god, don't Google that one.
The shoe bill.
Stork.
It's too bad. Don't look.
You should look at it.
That's a tricky bird.
I like this bird.
This bird has personality.
This bird's going to places.
This bird has a point of view.
Anyway, back to Havana Center.
So they would have this sound, and then they would have this pressure.
And then some of these neurological symptoms that I described are pretty similar, although
some had more severe issues than others, and for some it persisted much longer, whereas
for others it was very transient, right?
So like kind of a range in terms of that.
The CIA and the State Department, as these individuals started coming forward and kind of reporting
to their bosses, their spear officers, whatever, like this is happening.
They started trying to put together what is this, what do we need to investigate, where
could this be coming from?
Is this something someone's doing?
Is it some sort of espionage attack type thing, like poison, toxin?
Yeah, is this something someone's doing
or is this just some weird random illness?
The prank is that the Joker, you know,
this one kind of sounds like the Joker.
And what's the thing is that's really interesting
about this is that at the same time
this sort of mysterious thing was happening in Havana, you have to
understand like, this is the end of 2016 and 2017.
Trump has just been elected president and then assumes the president.
With this guy again.
Yeah.
I'll read down talking about this.
It's going to be a long time before we get over all that.
Plus Castro had just died in late 2016, right?
Soon after the American election.
Mm-hmm. I wasn't aware that it happened.
There's a heck of a way to break it to you, but go ahead.
You didn't know that happened back in 2016?
One big, great class of cinch and had our own problems. Home front, didn't we?
Mm-hmm. Well, yeah.
Didn't notice all Castro.
A lot of time has elapsed since then for you to.
Shut it off.
Anyway, so...
Is there a new Castro? didn't notice all castra a lot of time is a lap since then for you know anyway so uh is there
new castra there was for a while and then I are you really asking me about the
sorry I mean that I don't want to get to in the leans anyway so nobody knew what this meant
for Cuban-American relationships relation like at that time. Which is intense for quite some time. Yes. And had changed, hopefully, in a positive direction, many thought under the Obama presidency.
And then with Trump assuming the presidency, there was a lot of thought.
Like, I think like, there was one quote I read in an article where they, um, the last meeting
between representatives from the Obama administration with officials from Cuba were like, listen,
these new people are nothing like us.
So we, we don't know.
Good luck.
Godspeed.
We don't know.
There was a lot was up in the air at the point.
And I am not an expert on international affairs, but I think it is fair to say that like this
was a very tenuous relationship anyway.
Nobody knew exactly where it was going to go and this shifted a lot.
And in the middle of all this, all of the sudden we have all of these CIA and State Department people from the US who are in Havana who are having
these weird debilitating symptoms. Okay. So they brought an ENT specialist from the US to evaluate
the victims. They didn't want to go with anybody who was in Havana because they didn't,
they didn't trust anybody. I mean, it's the CIA. They don't, they didn't trust anybody there.
They wanted somebody from the US who was a specialist
to come in.
They, he evaluated them and he said like,
I think I am seeing some degree of brain damage
in these individuals.
It was called at one point and this phrase
would kind of stick with it,
a concussion without a concussion.
The results of a concussion without any concussion
having occurred, right?
Cause they didn't experience any head trauma.
Throughout the spring and summer of that year of 2017, the number of cases kept climbing
as they're trying to like figure out what do we do about this, what sort of treatments
or therapy, what can happen, what's causing it.
Nobody really knew, and there were more people experiencing these, depending on who
you asked, either symptoms or attacks is what some began to refer to them as.
Right.
When they talked to, when they briefed agents and diplomats as to what to do about this,
here's what's going on, and here's what you can do, they would tell them things like,
quote, get off the X,
meaning we think you are standing in a targeted spot,
so move and get away from whatever is attacking you.
Right, right?
This is a wild story.
This does not, this sounds like a movie.
This does not sound like real.
This is not real.
One was told like try to get behind a concrete wall.
Because we don't know where it's coming.
Maybe that'll stop it.
Yes.
Obviously, they were being instructed as if this was some sort of attacking mechanism of
some sort that was targeting them, not necessarily that it was an illness that was already, you
know, like it was something outside external that you could get away from as opposed to something already in their
body, like a toxin or a poison or some other sort of illness of some sort.
So anyway, as the symptoms persisted and for some progress to things like hearing loss,
there was one victim of this that had to use a hearing aid eventually. The decision was made that we need to take these people out of Havana,
send them somewhere to get like comprehensive evaluations, testing, and put together, like,
from a team of doctors, what the heck is happening. So they were all sent to the Center for
Brain Injury and Repair at the University of Pennsylvania. And a team of doctors, what the heck is happening. So they were all sent to the Center for Brain,
Injury, and Repair at the University of Pennsylvania.
And a team of doctors was tasked with like,
analyze that, get all the data, analyze it,
come up with like, what in the world could cause this,
whatever this syndrome is,
whatever is happening in these individuals.
Meanwhile, the number of attacks grew to 21.
And first, like, they're beginning to develop,
and this is sort of other than the fact
that it is, you know, when there is an illness,
it's important to figure out what it is
and what's causing it and how do we treat or prevent it,
or whatever.
On the other part of this is like the international situation.
As these attack numbers were growing,
the US sort of retaliated in a sense,
although against who I don't know or for what, they kind of would retaliate by ordering Cuban
officials out of their embassy in the US. So like, well, there were two more attacks.
So we're sending two more Cuban diplomats back to Cuba., well, there were two more attacks. So we're sending two more Cuban
diplomats back to Cuba. And oh, there were even more attacks. So we just, we're going
to order 15 of your Cuban officials back to Cuba. You know what I mean? Like this was
sort of the US policy of the way of showing like, if this continues, there will be repercussions
and these were the repercussions. There were also in the same time,
and this story is like a slower burn,
it took a while to develop.
There were 12 Canadian officials
who also, according to the US at the time,
experienced symptoms.
Initially, Canada was kinda like,
hey, we're actually pretty cool with Cuba.
Like, we don't have beef.
I know you guys have beef, but we're
not trying to be part of that. We don't really want any of this mess. Later, these Canadian
officials would be evaluated, and there would be financial reimbursement for their pain
and suffering and
stuff. So like there was stuff going on, but like initially it was very much an
America Cuba thing. But there were some Canadians caught in the proverbial
crossfire. Yeah, there were Canadian to experience the
sender. I understand targeting Americans for sure. But like Canadians now
they've gone too far. Have you seen their flavors of KD?
Have you seen all the different flavors of KD
that these people have?
Have you even seen Martin Short?
You know, Shenai Twain.
I know.
I love Canada.
You don't have to convince me.
Which maybe that was part of the initial reaction
from Canada, like everybody loves us.
Nobody would do this.
This can't be right.
This can't be right. This can't be right.
Start be aliens.
But it wasn't just American officials.
It was also Canadian officials.
Then on top of all that, an American official working in China at the American Consulate
there reported similar symptoms.
And then everybody really started becoming concerned.
It led to the examination of like 15 individuals in China who may have
been affected.
And so that really people started to sort of freak out over what was going on.
Eventually the team in Pennsylvania, the team of doctors that was examining all the original
victims of the symptoms, would publish their findings in the journal of the American Medical Association,
JAMA, so respected medical journal. And they concluded that not everybody they evaluated did have
symptoms. Like, for instance, of the 15 individuals in China, they said only one, they really thought
fit the same syndrome. So, like, some of these people were having something like that,
but didn't fall within the umbrella of what they considered
what anomalous health incident,
Havana syndrome, whatever you want to call it.
It's anomalous, but not anomalous enough.
Not anomalous in this way,
anomalous in a different way.
But that they had suffered somehow,
some sort of traumatic brain injury, some sort of concussion.
It affected their neural pathways.
They called it a brain network disorder.
And there was a lot of theorizing at that point from them and other medical entities and government
entities as to what might cause that specific pattern of brain network disorder.
But nobody, like they didn't give a definitive reason, right? And you have to also know like in this
evaluation, they looked for toxins, they looked for poisons, they looked for other sorts of like
contagious illnesses, all those other things that you might try to rule out. They looked for all that stuff and they couldn't find a distinct,
causative agent, you know,
that they could conclusively blame it on, right?
But there were a lot of theories.
And that's what I wanna tell you about next.
But first, let's go to the building.
I was just kidding.
Let's go.
The medicines, the medicines
that I skill in my cards for the mouth.
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Alright, Sid, you invited me into your parlour room and you were just about to crack this null wide open.
I'm not.
Oh.
Spoilers.
I'm not.
No one has.
I'll try to relax a little bit.
But there were a lot of interesting.
And again, like none of this, this all sounds like science fiction.
Yeah, none of this sounds real.
But these were the theories that people started coming up with.
Okay.
A directed beam of microwave radiation was the first thought. So
there was some sort of device. People thought it could be small enough that it could be in
a van, maybe parked outside the places where individuals were. And I should say, as far
as where were people when this happened, they were either in their homes, in the embassy
or in hotels in the area.
There were a couple hotels specifically that had like repeated attacks at those hotels.
And it's important to note that like all the other people around them, generally speaking,
I'll give you one example where this wasn't true, but generally speaking, all the other
people around them did not experience any symptoms.
It was just that one person. So it would have to be a very
targeted beam of microwave radiation. Also radio frequency slash microwave
radiation was another theory. So different kinds of, you know, this is the physics
stuff. Different kinds of beams that can be pointed at people and cause some sort
of brain damage, basically.
There were also some people who were like, well, I still think it was like a toxin, like
an organophosphate poisoning kind of thing, although that was thought to be pretty unlikely
because they should have found, they did extensive testing on all these individuals and never
found any evidence of that.
There was an argument made that some pieces of the puzzle that like we're putting
together as the constellation of symptoms should not be included, specifically the sound. So
this really through people, like what is this sound they're hearing this, whether it's
a machine light or the cicada type or whatever, there was one paper published that said, actually,
it is, they're just crickets. There's a specific type of,
it was either a Jamaican field cricket
or an indie short-tailed cricket
that was in the area at the time
and makes a very loud distinctive noise
and they thought this is what they were hearing.
Like, they just happened to hear that
and then had those symptoms and connected the two
when if they had just asked somebody else in the room,
like, are you hearing that?
They would have said, oh yeah, I hear that.
I know.
And the people who wrote the paper said,
now we don't know what the rest of this is all about.
We're just saying that we think the sound
actually was crickets.
That is a mile.
Somebody proposed some sort of sonic weapon
or an ultrasound signal.
There was the idea that maybe this is a mass
psychogenic illness, which we've talked about examples of those on the show before, but
it is true as they pointed out. And there's a whole book written from like an expert on
mass psychogenic illness and an expert in neurology who like make their case in an entire book that this is a mass-psychogenic illness
and this is not an attack of any kind.
You've covered things like that.
I'll give you remember like the dancing plague.
That's one of those, or we have that.
The laughing epidemic or laughing plague,
they call it yes.
There are some of these where,
especially considering that like,
their argument is as this progressed, a lot of the agents who experienced it and officials who experienced it had been
briefed on it prior to experiencing it.
And the thought is that, and again, this is not, and I don't know the answer, and when
you suggest this, there are people who get very angry.
So I'm just putting that out there.
This is an incredibly controversial point because
the doctors from the University of Pennsylvania said absolutely not. It is not mass-sacrogen
economics. It is absolutely not that. It is something physical. We just don't know what
it is. But these other professionals said, no, no, we really do think that's what it is.
And these people are experiencing these symptoms.
Their description is real.
They are feeling this way.
They are having these symptoms.
We just see a different cause.
And you know, it's psychogenic in nature.
So this is not to say that anybody is lying.
It's very different than malanguering.
These are not people who are intentionally trying to lie and get out of work.
Many of these people love their jobs and were veterans of many years in that job
and had no reason to want to leave it.
Because of all this, the CDC was instructed by Congress to investigate in 2018.
The report that followed, which was called the Cuba unexplained events investigation
final report, which you can find now because...
I was hoping for an acronym and get it.
Nothing good.
There was like a FOIA request that I found the result of eventually that unearth the entire
report, but they really didn't arrive at a final conclusion.
What they said was like the symptoms, the history, it's also spread out,
because a lot of people didn't come forward right after they experienced the symptoms at first.
They would hear about other people having similar symptoms and then come forward. And say,
actually, I had that three months ago or whatever. So it became very difficult to,
when you start doing what you'd want to do in this case is a retrospective
case study, right?
Right.
You have these things that happen in the past and you do a case study where you just explain
each kind of report on it and try to draw conclusions based on that.
The problem with that is that there's a lot of bias in those.
Our memories are not perfect.
Trying to put together when you knew what and when you experienced what,
and do you think it sounded just like a cicada because you later heard somebody else say that?
And then, you know, I mean, that's just the...
I'm sure, like you said, you're being briefed on these things.
You're probably like pretty vigilant for that, right?
Hyper-vigilant for that.
Yes, exactly.
And so, they said, you know, we can't identify a mechanism.
We don't know.
They did put a case definition together.
We do think we know whatever this is, what it looks like.
There are two phases they felt.
The first had headache, pressure, confusion, the auditory symptom, whatever it is.
Vision, issues, balance issues, nausea.
And then at some point later on, you would continue to have some of the balance issues,
and maybe they would worsen or inner ear type issues, and then some cognitive effects,
like memory issues or processing issues, that kind of thing.
They said, they went over everybody and said, not everybody who has reported these symptoms actually fits
this definition, but some of them do.
Then they shrugged and said, I mean, we need more data.
We could set up a prospective case study where if new cases come in, we could study them
as they come in, but we don't really know what to do.
As you may know, is this doing permanent sort of of damage or is this more of a transient thing?
It it was different for different individuals for some it was transient for some they continued.
Even if the majority of their symptoms ease, they continued to have like occasional headaches or fatigue or
hearing problems forever. So it was variable. After the like after the initial cases in Havana,
the US government finally decided to reduce its diplomatic presence in Havana.
So we were sending Cuban diplomats back to Cuba at this point.
The government decides in August of 2017,
we need to pull our people out of the embassy there, not all of them,
but a lot of them.
So they greatly reduced the number of diplomats there.
And Trump even made a statement at that point that he thought Cuba was responsible for the
attacks in October.
Now, was that the opinion of the US government?
Well researched by some of our top people?
Or was it just Trump on the toilet?
Just fired one off.
We could have been tweeting, yeah, for all I know.
And then the Canadian diplomats would then eventually be evaluated and have evidence of
some of these same sorts of things, and they actually reduced their diplomatic presence
there in 2019.
And a lot of the reason that this was happening, and again, it's a very complicated time
because I don't think anybody would say the Trump administration had the same views as
the Obama administration on will anything, and definitely not Cuba and what to do next.
But because of this, there was this argument, this sort of like theme, our people aren't
safe there.
And if we can't protect them, what are we doing there?
And if we're getting harmed, get our people out of there.
That, that, that became like a recurring theme through a lot of these, especially like
with Rex Tillerson.
That was a lot of Rex Tillerson's argument was, well, let's just get him out of there.
Why are we even there?
Just bring him all home.
Forget it.
Forget it.
We need to get out of Havana.
As this is happening, cases are going to continue to occur outside of Havana.
So, American diplomats, members of the intelligence community, members of the US military,
are beginning to report attacks starting in late 2017, all over the world.
Moscow, Poland, Georgia, Taiwan, Australia, Columbia,
Kersikstan, Uzbekistan, Austria, all over the place.
Okay.
So, which is why Havana Syndrome is not completely accurate.
Right.
So, we have all of these reports from all over the place.
The most worrisome in terms of the U.S. government came in 2019 when a White House official experienced similar symptoms
when they were walking their dog where they lived in their Virginia suburb of DC.
And then in November of 2020, another incident occurred very close on the ellipse, the lawn
that's like to the south of the White House. Another incident occurred there.
And so this became very concerning, right, to US officials.
Like, now we're having people experiencing these symptoms that, I mean, at least the Trump
administration felt was an attack of some sort, with some sort of weapon that we don't
know about, that close to the White House.
Obviously, at that point, there was a lot of concern. There was this one, too, like,
anonymous account of a military official in some country that was not identified, but it was a
country that was noted to have a strong, like, Russian intelligence presence as well.
This is where that connection will come.
Where he claims that he pulled into an intersection,
and while he was waiting at a red light,
he began to experience these symptoms very intensely,
like the pressure and the pain.
It all hit him all at once,
and his two-year-old was in the back seat,
it just started screaming.
And he sped out of the intersection
and all the symptoms went away and his two-year-old was fine.
That's weird
This is also weird
This past year we have noted like in 2021 there have been several different incidents in Vienna
So it seems to be that was the new hot spot so to speak
But then even more recently there were a couple cases in Berlin and now
Hanoi just this past week.
So, what is happening? Obviously, Trump blamed Cuba.
Cuba adamantly denied that they were doing any of this.
And a lot of people at the time sort of said like,
this isn't, I guess, and I don't, again,
this is not my area of expertise,
but I guess the idea of them like attacking American officials
and diplomats to harm them was less common,
like that is a less common thing.
Like there's definitely, I guess all the spies spy
on each other, like everybody's listening
to each other, everybody's watching each other,
like collecting info on each other is just sort of accepted
within the espionage. There are are always either paying someone to the scorpion
straight wins of change or they are spying on each other. But the idea that
they were like targeting with this sort of intent to harm, I guess, seemed less
common. And so a lot of people weren't convinced that Cuba was doing anything and the Cuban officials
that absolutely were not doing anything. There was also Cuba helped the US for a while try
to investigate whether there was like a third party involved, like another country who was
coming into Havana and harming American diplomats
and officials.
You mean the Russians right?
Because it's definitely the Russians.
So Russia was, everyone's leading, initially the Russian, China were thrown out as the
two possible perpetrators.
Russia was what everybody seemed to think.
Yeah, they like to get a little spice here.
Well, in terms of like why they thought it was Russia,
I can't find anybody who's arguing anything more than,
well, it just seems like Russia.
It feels like Russia.
Like it feels like Russia.
I mean, like that was really what it seems like a lot of people
in the intelligence community were saying, like,
well, I mean, it kind of feels like Russia.
But there's no evidence of any of this
because we don't even know that it was a thing being done, right?
Like, we don't have a weapon that we're looking for,
a device, there were all these theories of like,
well, maybe it was like a listening device
that is malfunctioning and causing problems.
So maybe that's why nobody knows about it
because like, well, yeah, we got bugs all over the place
but we're not trying to hurt you
but maybe it's a bug that also hurts you,
but you didn't know this all seems like a stretch.
But like it's being,
all these countries are being accused of doing something
when we don't even know 100% that something was done, right?
Last December, the CIA had an official task force created to investigate
the incidents in response largely to the ones that happened in, you know, DC, because that
was so upsetting to everybody. And this has been, sorry, I just saw the acronym.
The, the act. Yeah. That was passed. So, uh... so the cia has a task force this
past December was created this has been expanded since then people have been
added from the state but department and other federal agencies to help
biden has made this one of his priorities to
uh... and in june the helping american victims afflicted by neurological
attacks
have a lot
was passing congress Havana. Act. Was passing Congress.
No, he gets it.
The Havana syndrome is not a reference to the Cuban capital, rather A.
The act that was passed, yes, to provide financial assistance to those affected by it.
And I think this was like bipartisan, full support, like past unanimously or some of them,
like huge support.
Anyway. past unanimously or something, I'm like huge support. Anyway, so, you know, I don't know what
I, you know, I tried to read this as like a physician with like a, from that medical,
like medical standpoint, what does this sound like? Yeah.
Um, I am not familiar with any of these kinds of devices or weapons or whatever you'd want to call them that could cause that.
I'm not saying that's impossible because it's outside my area, but certainly I've never
read or seen that.
There were, I should mention that a lot of the doctors who felt like there was like some
sort of damage that had occurred,
like actual, like you could see, they did these functional MRIs and saw these changes.
And that's how they based it.
They said, well, I mean, we're seeing like damaged neural pathways on these MRIs.
So this isn't, you know, we know something happened because we can see it, right?
That was a lot of the basis.
What's tough is that the people who wrote the book about mass-seicogenic illness, that
their argument was very much that, well, you can see those changes, though, after trauma,
like after emotional trauma, after psychological trauma, people who experience mass-seicogenic
illness also have these changes on MRI
because the brain is really complex,
really complicated.
And if you are experiencing these symptoms
and especially if you become convinced
that you have been attacked by something.
You have a traumatic effect on you.
It has a traumatic effect on the brain.
I mean, like that, it's all linked, right?
Like the way we feel and our mental health
and our physical health and the things we experience physically as well as emotionally, it's all connected. And so to tease
it out with one imaging study or I mean, it's very difficult. It's so it's tough. And
that's not me arguing that it is my mass-seccogenic illness because I don't know. I don't know.
I will say that from the accounts of the individuals who had these experiences, and I think the vast
majority are anonymous because some of them might still be working in those super secret
jobs.
They are really experiencing something.
They are really having something, they really did have symptoms or really continue to have
some sorts of symptoms.
That I do not doubt.
Now, what caused them, I have no, it's a mystery.
It's a very strange mystery,
but it's this weird mysterious thing that happened
and it's continuing to happen and has hugely impacted
American foreign policy.
Yeah, we don't know.
And we don't have a medical explanation for it.
Maybe something will come from all these investigations that are happening this year,
but I don't know.
That's so strange.
It's very strange.
And I would say that we have more pressing matters to attend to what with the pandemic.
Yeah, but like, I don't know.
Maybe this laser is like the scariest thing.
Who knows?
Are you scared now?
Did I come to you?
I'm scared, I only make a blast to this thing.
I don't think.
This is a van beam.
I read, I read like one article where it was like a civilian saying that they had had
some symptoms and that they called like the government to say like, hey, I had those
two and they were like, we're not really interested in any civilians who are.
So like, I don't know.
And I wanted to catch, well, I mean,
then you could start to get into like,
then the waters would get truly muddy, right?
Because then you could, maybe you could have a hybrid
where it is like a real thing that is happening
and also a mass psychogenic illness.
Like, well, but I mean, it was really weird
because it seems to be very targeted
at intelligence officials, military officers. It was like, it was really weird because it seems to be very targeted at intelligence officials military officers
It was like a one was a doctor, but he was also employed by I
Don't the embassy or the CIA somebody he was associated so like everybody who is part of these studies is affiliated somehow with the government
but
There may be accounts of people who aren't.
Oh, well, and some were family members.
I should say, that's not entirely true.
Some were the family members
who were in the area of people who were affected.
But like, I don't know, it's a very,
obviously we have a lot more questions than answers
with this, but that is what that is.
That's why it's in the news.
It was something to think about.
There's something to think about and talk about
and discuss that isn't COVID for a little bit.
How about that?
Hey, thanks so much for listening to our podcast.
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Thanks to Taxpayers for the use of their own medicines
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I congratulate you and I encourage you to keep up the hard work.
I talk to people into the vaccine yesterday.
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Till then, my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Sydney McRoy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. Alright!
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