Kim Kardashian is secretly pushing brain chip implants on unsuspecting Americans, conspiracy theorists claim

Kim Kardashian recently opened up to the world about the holes in her brain, but her terrifying ordeal has the internet sparking up new theories that the star is in the works to begin selling brain chips. Kardashian, 45, was accused by conspiracy theorists of setting up a deal with the Tesla billionaire Elon Musk to promote Neuralink, a brain chip implant, after she was revealed to have 'holes' in her brain. In the rebooted seventh season of the Kardashian's reality tv show, the star's celebrity psychologist Dr Daniel Amen told her that initial scans determined 'low activity' in parts of her brain. Kardashian said on the show that it 'just can't be...not accepting,' and that she had to 'get on a plan to really figure this out I have s*** to do this summer.' Following the news of what Amen described as 'holes' in her frontal lobe, which he ascribed to being likely caused by chronic stress, she encouraged viewers to tune in to the reality show. Kardashian, who has notably been looking to pass the California Bar exam, told Good Morning America that 'everything works out.'But the star, who has previously endorsed and promoted numerous health and wellness products including non-FDA approved drugs and controversial full-body MRI scans, came under fire from the internet. 'Kim Kardashian is about to attempt to sell us at the most sinister end of the spectrum brain chips/neuralink at the least sinister some sort of ashwagandha gummy. All this "I'm so stupid my brain don't work good me can't pass no bar," is a roll out I can't be fooled,' one user wrote on X.  Kardashian has been accused of setting up a deal with Tesla billionaire Elon Musk to promote Neuralink after she was revealed a brain health scare In the rebooted seventh season of the Kardashian reality tv show, Kardashian revealed she had 'holes' in her brain as she prepares to pass the California Bar Exam  Kardashian's celebrity psychologist Dr Daniel Amen told the star that initial scans determined 'low activity' in parts of her brain'Ok hear me out. Showing this, combined with failing the bar, is all part of a plan. The Kardashians are masters at this,' another wrote. 'My money is on her using this to set the stage for getting a NeuroLink, telling everyone how much better she is, and then immediately passing the bar to “prove” it works.''[I] think Kim Kardashian is going to go; Failed bar exam -> low brain activity -> neuralink -> pass bar exam -> ads for neuralink/normalization of neuralink,' one user wrote. 'I also think it’s imperative that we bully neuralink into nonexistence.'Even YouTube star Tyler Oakley chimed in and asked: 'Is she laying the groundwork for a neuralink deal?'Neuralink was co-founded by Musk in 2016 with a group of experts in the fields of neuroscience, engineering, and robotics.There goal was to merge human intelligence with AI, treat brain disorders, and potentially enhance human ability in the future.In 2019, Musk revealed the N1 implant, the small device placed on the brain to read and translate electrical signals into actions, like moving a cursor on a computer screen. The device, the size of a coin, is implanted into the skull with hair-thin threads placed inside specific parts of the brain to form a so-called 'working brain-computer interface,' according to Health and Me.  In July, Audrey Crews became the ninth person to receive an implant and revealed that she was able to write her name on a computer screen. Crews has been fully paralyzed for at least 20 years, and posted on X while showing the world her first attempt at a signature since 2005: 'I tried writing my name for the first time in 20 years. I'm working on it. Lol.'Using the brain-computer interface (BCI), the implant recipient chose a purple-colored cursor pen to write the name 'Audrey' on the screen in cursive script. The Neuralink patient has been able to draw hearts, flowers, rainbows, and even some faces while pushing the cursor with her thoughts sent to the N1 implant. Crews' surgery at University of Miami Health Center involved drilling a hole into her skull, so surgeons could place 128 threads smaller than a human hair into her motor cortex.The implant is powered by a small battery that charges wirelessly. It sends the neuron spikes to a computer or smartphone running Neuralink's software via Bluetooth, which is then translated into commands on the computer. The N1 implant is still in early trials and its long-term safety and effectiveness are being tested. Neuralink was co-founded by Elon Musk in 2016 Audrey Crews (pictured) has been paralyzed since she was in a car accident at the age of 16 Using a purple-colored pen on the computer screen, Crews wrote her name for the first time since 2005The first person to use the N1 implant, Noland Arbaugh, saw the threads to his motor cortex retract, requiring Neuralink to adjust the device in order for it to maintain connection with the quadriplegic patient's brain.At the moment, Musk's dream of these implants enhancing human ability is still in the planning phase.They can't 'read thoughts' beyond specific movement tasks, like moving the cursor on a screen.For Crews and the other eight patients so far, however, it's given them back a piece of their independence they thought was lost forever.The Daily Mail has reached out to Kim Kardashian for comment.  
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