https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/05/musk-calls-brain-chips-jesus-level-tech-as/

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Elon Musk sparked global headlines
when he referred to his company's
latest brain-implant developments
as “Jesus-level technologies”.
He isn't actually building a single
device called the "Jesus chip".
Instead, he used that phrase as a
metaphor to describe the "miraculous"
medical breakthroughs Neuralink is
aiming for—specifically, making the
blind see and allowing paralyzed
individuals to walk again.
The synopsis of what Neuralink is
developing under this banner centers
on two primary projects:
1. The "Blindsight" Project
(Restoring Sight)
This is the specific chip breakthrough
Musk was highlighting when he made
the comparison.
- How it Works: Instead of trying to
fix a damaged eye or optic nerve,
Blindsight bypasses the eyes entirely.
It uses an external video camera (like
on a pair of glasses) to capture the
surroundings, and wirelessly transmits
that visual data directly to an
implant in the brain’s visual cortex.
- The Goal: Musk claims this could grant
basic visual perception to people who
have lost their sight, or even those
who have been blind from birth,
provided their brain's visual pathways
are intact. Over time, he claims
it could even lead to "superhuman
vision".
- Current Status: The FDA granted
Blindsight "Breakthrough Device" status
to speed up its development, and
Neuralink is aiming to perform its
very first human implant for this
project by the end of 2026.
2. The "Telepathy" Project
(Restoring Mobility & Speech)
This is Neuralink's core Brain-
Computer Interface (BCI) that is
already actively being tested in
human clinical trials.
- How it Works: A chip about the size
of a coin replaces a small piece
of the skull. It is embedded with
64 ultra-thin threads containing
over 1,000 electrodes that fan out
into the motor cortex of the brain
to read neural signals.
- The Goal: It decodes the user's
intent to move. For patients with
severe paralysis (quadriplegia),
it allows them to control
smartphones, computer cursors, and
video games using only their
thoughts. Musk’s next goal is
to hook this interface up to spinal
implants to bridge the gap over
damaged nerves, theoretically
enabling paralyzed individuals to
regain physical mobility.
The Big Picture Debate: While tech
optimists view this as a historic
leap forward for medicine, critics
and ethicists point out that peer-
reviewed data on the long-term safety
of brain implants is still very
limited. There is also sharp
pushback against Musk’s frequent
claims that the technology will
eventually be used to give healthy
humans "cybernetic superpowers".