…According to Monday’s New York Times, outgunned Mexican officials spent more than $10 million to purchase high-tech dowsing rods to detect caches of drugs, or weapons or anything else you have in mind. (The first application [of these dowsing rods] was as a golf-ball finder sold in Golf-Pro shops.)ALSO: No smelly fish at new Russian market (Lake Forest)
The Mexican army says the devices are extremely helpful. Made in the UK by Global Technologies Ltd., the GT 200 has no sensors. Priced at more than $20,000, it’s a plastic rod attached to a hand grip by a swivel, allowing the rod to point in any direction depending on the orientation of the handle.
That also describes the ADE 650 sold by ATSC Ltd., another UK company, which recently sold 1,500 imaginary detectors to the Iraqis to search for explosives at checkpoints.
Could Global Technologies and ATSC be the same company, switching names and locations to avoid exposure?
The British government [has notified] Mexico and other countries that the GT 200 "may not work."
Of course it "works"; it just doesn't detect anything. That's not its purpose[!]
Human Rights Watch is worried that people are actually being arrested and charged solely on the basis of readings from the device…. ([I]n the United States…, local law enforcement agencies use these devices to justify probable-cause for searches.)
. . .
The British government is said to be considering legislation to stop exports of the GT 200 and similar devices, but a British diplomat in Mexico said of the GT 200, "It's now up to the Mexican authorities."
Why is it that the people who market imaginary science never seem to go to jail? I served several State Attorneys General as a expert witness in cases involving charges of fraudulent science.
Every case ended with a consent decree in which the perpetrator agreed to stop cheating residents of that state.
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Friday, March 19, 2010
Of course these devices work; the government relies on them!
Today, Bob Park of “What’s New” zeroes in on the role that phony detecting devices have in the ongoing bloody drug “war” for control of the Mexico/U.S. border:
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