The entire public conversation on neurotechnology—every WEF article, UNESCO report, OECD recommendation, and Davos panel—runs on three tracks:Medical legitimacy (paralysis, epilepsy, Parkinson’s—genuine cases of suffering where these technologies have improved lives, and which the industry uses to anchor the entire category). For the minority of cases where biology has already broken, targeted tools can be compassionate—provided they remain temporary scaffolds and the patient, rather than the vendor or the state, holds the off-switch.Ethics and governance (privacy, consent, neurorights—how to regulate it, never whether it should exist).Enhancement enthusiasm (“technologies will become part of us,” “preempt undesired emotional reactions to new information”).That last promise landed in my body like a home invasion. Someone slips into your house while you’re sleeping, administers a quiet cocktail of emotional depressants laced with just enough artificial warmth (think MDMA tint), then gently wakes you hours later to deliver the news: you’re being evicted — the land is being turned into higher-yield rental units. The raw, accurate protest your nervous system would have mounted has already been neutralized. The developers win before the fight even begins.https://constructamiracle.com/p/why-are-you-building-overrides-for