Wednesday, February 22, 2012

October 2, 2012

October 2, 2012


While I agree with the original direction of Project Keres (even though they recognized the need for nontraditional forces to remove the budding dissident leadership in the United States without massive carnage), their methodology was…unsettling.


·         Keres candidates were volunteers from various UFMN special forces: men and women who were undoubtedly qualified for any military assignment.  But they were much too old to undergo genetic augmentation.  Inserted gene sequences led to subminimal target changes, while the immunosuppressants failed in most subjects, causing rampant, irreversible genetic fragmentation and degeneration conditions.

o   Refinement: Next-generation candidates must have more malleable, robust DNA structure/repair enzymes.  With satisfactory testing of the L-DNA hydroxyl re-polymerase, the most suitable candidate would be before maturation.


·         Keres candidates’ genetic screening was wholly inadequate.

o   Refinement: Generation-II genetic selection criteria are astronomically improbable.  Statistically, over thirty-nine billion DNA records are required.

The largest DNA database is currently the CAA’s US vaccination program.  People tend to avoid registering births and deaths, and even paying taxes…but they eagerly milk the free school vaccination program, which regularly catalogues DNA traces from the disposed injectors. 

Deconvolution techniques can now reconstitute the entire base-pair sequence from such a trace, and I intend to recalibrate my selection criteria to look for markers that will expedite the sifting process.


·         Many Keres candidates exhibited post-traumatic stress disorder or repressed insurgent sympathies.  Some in the latter category refused to participate post-augmentation and were incarcerated.

Sympathies of this sort are likely dormant in most US citizens.  On some level we all identify with these people (the CMA relentlessly churns out propaganda about the “noble” pioneers).

More pointedly, these are the very people we are fighting to protect from a nascent war.

o   Refinements: Total indoctrination is required.

 NOT the brainwashing, however, suggested by several of my counterparts in the intelligence community.

This requires persuasion and acclimation – a lifelong training commensurate with the impart of the Generation-II Keres mission.  Our most efficient agents will be those who thoroughly understand and embrace their orders.

To forge a new breed of Keres soldiers into unrivaled human weapons, we must maintain absolute control over them.


v  Summary: Criteria involving genetic flexibility, a statistically improbably set of DNA markers, and a decade of indoctrination and training leads me to one conclusion: the ideal candidates are young adults.


My logic is sound, but ethical and moral ramifications linger.


So much to reflect on.  I need time to think.

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