Jun. 10, 2024
From the moment Alma Stonestand heard about Biocybernaut’s 7-Day Alpha Brain Wave Training, she was skeptical.
In early 2014, her 12-year-old daughter, Chyna Gallerneault, came home from class waving a brochure promoting the Prince Albert School Study (PASS). It presented a seemingly life-changing opportunity for an all-expenses-paid trip to Victoria, B.C., for what one of the promoters called “brain school.”
“They promised these kids a better world, a better life,” said Stonestand, noting it was an attractive prospect given that their Prince Albert, Sask., neighbourhood had a high crime rate and lots of poverty.
“Change your brain waves; change your life!” the PASS brochure promised.
Biocybernaut Institute, the Sedona, Ariz.-based company behind the study, presented a series of claims it said were backed by scientific research. They included:
Read More: https://www.cbc.ca/newsinteractives/features/brain-school-study-indigenous-biocybernaut-james-hardt