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Seeing Color in the Night

Roland Piquepaille writes "In 'Things that show color in the night,' the Boston Globe reports that a company named Tenebraex is helping color blind people to travel. But it's also developing goggles to help soldiers and physicians to see all colors at night, and not only the green color of current night vision systems. These goggles, which should become available this summer, will be sold for about $6,000 to the Army. But as states one of the founders of the company, with monochrome night vision, 'blood is the same color as water.' So these expensive night vision devices might be more targeted to Army physicians than to regular soldiers."

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  1. Re:Depth perception by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 0, Troll
    Great way to weasel out of a question there slicky McWannabe.

    So far, you are the only one who has actually given any tax advice in this thread, thus the question, as you have framed it, only applies to you.

    Instead of forking over tax money & being worried about what it gets spent on, then bitching about your own mistake, why don't you donate that money to causes you're happy with, or better yet start your own cause, then in either scenario, write it off on your taxes at the end of the year