An
Explanation of Invincible Defense Technology
At
the heart of Shri Lanka's military is its well-trained, patriotic
and motivated personnel. This is its greatest strength. Invincible
Defense Technology taps into this strength. Part of the Shri Lankan
military would practice a non-religious form of meditation daily,
in groups, as part of their duties. The specific form of meditation
is called Transcendental Meditation (TM) and its more advanced practice
the TM-Sidhi program. This human resource-based technology has been
proven scientifically to reduce social stress and break the cycle
of war. Other militaries have already field-tested Invincible Defense
Technology with good success.
Wait
a minute! What kind of technology is that? Isn't meditation something
only gurus practice in solitude?
No.
Anyone can practice Transcendental Meditation. It requires no changes
in religious beliefs, and has been shown to reduce stress in both
the individual and society.
Protecting
the nation is the military's job, whatever it takes. Shri Lanka
would need to commit less than 1% of its military force to practice
an advanced form of the Transcendental Meditation program in groups
daily, as part of their daily duties.
The
article excerpt below is a complete and simple explantion.
What
is Invincible Defense Technology?
(Excerpted
from an article written by Dr. David and Lee Leffler, published
in a national American magazine called Tikkun.)
We
live in dangerous times. Many nations, states, cities, terrorist
groups, and even individuals have enough wealth to buy weapons of
mass destruction. Lightweight, backback-size nuclear weapons are
allegedly available on the black market. Biological and chemical
weapons can be transported just as easily. Even high levels of security
cannot guarantee total protection, nor can even the most well armed
security force prevent terrorist attacks, but that doesn't stop
the sales of massive amounts of weapons around the world. Those
sales are driven by one thing: fear. Fear is a driving force in
the current defense paradigm. This fear-based model applies to opposing
factions within countries as well as to conflict between countries.
While the cycle of arms build-up enriches arms dealers, it drains
resources that could be used to alleviate environmental, social,
and economic problems.
Is
there a better way? Perhaps. A new defense model is emerging --
one based on prevention rather than fear. Using group meditation,
the technique, known as invincible defense technology, can actually
prevent an enemy from arising by reducing collective stress in society.
Psychologist Dr. David Orme-Johnson, is the Director of Research
at the Institute of Science, Technology, and Public Policy (ISTPP)
at Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa. Orme-Johnson
explains that collective stress is the sum total of individual stress.
The individual is the basic unit of society, he says. When stress,
tension, and fear build up in the individual, the rest of society
is degraded as well.
ISTPP scientists,
including Orme-Johnson, assert that society's collective stress
is the root cause of conflict and terrorism. If collective stress
is high, fear and anger thrive in the population. Ethnic hatreds
flare, old wounds open, and distrust festers. Territorial, political,
cultural, and religious differences become more difficult to resolve
creating seemingly endless chains of conflict.
Orme-Johnson
points out that nothing our government does now addresses the cause.
On the contrary, he says, forceful response to conflict increases
the problem. "Fear in the world spurs arms build up and the development
of arms technology, which only causes more fear," he says. "Disarmament
is not realistic because no one can rationally disarm when facing
an armed aggressor."
To
counteract this fear and promote peace, scientists at ISTPP are
encouraging every country to spend about one percent of the military
budget to implement an invincible defense technology program that
they are calling Prevention Wings of the Military. Soldiers would
be given one additional duty: to practice the Transcendental Meditation
(TM) program daily in large groups. The theory is that this would
result in more peaceful world.
Vedic
scholar and physicist Maharishi Mahesh Yogi revived the TM program
from the ancient tradition of India. Bob Rabinoff, who has a Ph.D.
in physics from the University of Arizona, describes TM as "a simple,
easily learned, non-religious meditation practice." Rabinoff is
a teacher of the TM technique and an independent computer consultant
in the Midwest. He says that over five million people have learned
TM worldwide.
"Everyone
who learns TM is taught the same way throughout the world," says
Rabinoff. Because of this standardization, he says, it is possible
to study the TM program scientifically. Indeed, the benefits of
practicing TM have been well documented. "Over six hundred scientific
studies show that the TM technique can measurably reduce stress
and increase coherence in the individual," Rabinoff says.
According
to Orme-Johnson, the effects of the TM technique on society have
also been extensively studied. "This research has used state-of-the-art
statistical methodology and objective sources of data, including
official government statistics and databases created by independent
researchers," he says. "The researchers have controlled for a wide
range of alternative explanations. Results have been repeatedly
replicated on different populations, and the studies have been published
in leading peer reviewed journals such as Social Indicators Research,
Journal of Conflict Resolution, and Proceedings of the
American Statistical Association." The results include: statistically
significant reductions in war deaths, improvements in economic conditions,
enhanced quality of life, and reductions in crime, violence, accidents,
and illness.
The
research indicates that meditation by one percent of a population
can have an effect. In the 1980s, research showed positive changes
while an organized group of about two hundred meditators practiced
an advanced TM program near Lebanon. War deaths in Lebanon went
down seventy-one percent, war injuries dropped sixty-eight percent,
and the level of conflict fell forty-eight percent. Cooperation
among antagonists rose by sixty-six percent. After the intervention
period, these measures returned to previous levels.
Researchers
theorize that the consciousness of each individual meditator affects
the group, and the group's consciousness radiates into the surrounding
population. In one experiment, when an experienced meditator in
one room practiced TM and began to show increased brainwave coherence,
an individual in a room nearby showed increased brainwave coherence
as well. When the groups are large, similar increases in coherence
are produced in subjects far removed from the group. For example,
an experiment showed an increase in intersubject EEG coherence 1,000
miles from the group. A biochemical study has shown that on days
when large numbers of people meditated, both practitioners and non-practitioners
in the local area exhibited higher availability of serotonin, a
neurochemical associated with feelings of well-being or happiness.
Low levels of serotonin are known to play a role in human aggression,
hostility, and substance abuse.
A study
published last year in Social Indicators Research predicted
that violent crime would plummet while a large group of advanced
TM practitioners meditated in Washington, D.C. The researchers predicted
that during the eight-week study period, the calming influence of
group meditation practice could reduce violent crime in this city
by over twenty percent. A review board of independent scientists
was given the predictions in advance.
The
predictions proved to be accurate: the rate of violent crime --
which included assaults, murders, and rapes -- decreased by 23 percent
during the experimental period. The odds of this result occurring
by chance are less than 2 in 1 billion. Rigorous statistical analyses
ruled out an extensive list of alternative explanations.
Responding
to all the research, David V. Edwards, a professor of government
at the University of Texas at Austin, says, "I think the claim can
be plausibly made that the potential impact of this research exceeds
that of any other ongoing social or psychological research program.
It has survived a broader array of statistical tests than most research
in the field of conflict resolution. This work and the theory that
informs it deserve the most serious consideration by academics and
policy makers alike."
Of
course there are plenty of skeptics. For instance, Robert D. Duval,
a political science professor at West Virginia University, wrote
in 1988 about a study from the Journal of Conflict Resolution,
"This article is of questionable value to mainstream international
politics research because its basic premises are suspect. The fundamental
assumptions of a 'unified field' and a 'collective consciousness'
are not within the paradigm under which most of us operate." Even
Duval, however, admits that "If one will, for the sake of argument,
accept these premises as plausible, then the research conforms quite
well to scientific standards."
The
military has started to take notice of the notion of invincible
defense technology. Readers of military publications including Britain's
Jane's Defence Daily, were recently introduced to the idea by
several full-page advertisements. Along with the usual ads for conventional
weapons -- tanks, bombs, and armored aircraft -- the paper carried
flashy ads promoting invincible defense technology. The ads were
met with skepticism. However, the Londoner's Diary section
of The Evening Standard, published in the United Kingdom,
quoted a Jane's spokesperson about accepting these ads as
saying, "We haven't had a chance to test the system, but spiritual
defence systems could be the next generation of weapons."
The
world has witnessed more than 186 wars since the founding of the
United Nations. If invincible defense technology lives up to its
promise, perhaps we will see the end of fear-based defense in our
lifetime. The late Major General Franklin M. Davis, TM meditator,
futurist, and former commandant of the U.S. Army War College, predicted
in 1973 that the twenty-first century would be the "age of the mind,"
and that the TM program could have a very important place in it.
He may be right. Prevention Wings of the Military could offer hope
of real defense. Militaries that implement invincible defense technology
may finally achieve genuine and lasting world peace.
Dr.
David R. Leffler did his Ph.D. on the topic of Invincible Defense
Technology. His wife, Lee, has a Master of Arts in professional
writing.
Published
in the May/June 2000 issue of Tikkun,
Volume 15, Number 3, pages 58-59 Reprinted with permission ©
2000 David R. Leffler and Lee M. Leffler. All rights reserved.
|