Wednesday, April 4, 2012

What is H.A.A.R.P.?

HAARP, or High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Project, is a phased array antenna system (a large field of antennas focused and working in unison to transmit radiofrequency energy to manipulate the ionosphere). It  is a radio telescope working in reverse. After "cooking" the ionosphere, the radiation returns in long wave form, penetrating our bodies, the sea, and the earth. The Ionosphere, which resides somewhere between 40 and 600 miles above the Earth, is prone to catalytic reactions, and is very sensitive. This means that if 1 gigawatt of RF energy is beamed upward, it mimics the effect of a 1,000 gigawatt blast. A 1:1000 ratio. Like I said, sensitive.

What are some possible uses/effects of this technology?

- Jamming all other communications systems not affiliated with HAARP.
- Changing weather patterns over large areas.
- Earth-Penetrating Tomography (Mapping the underground).
- Disrupting human mental processes

There are more, but there's no way I'm going to tackle them all.

Let's talk about the weather.
Let's say you boot up the old 1.7 gigawatt atmospheric boiler (known as HAARP), and you direct the energy skyward.
As the Earth rotates, in a matter of minutes, a large area  of the atmosphere has been "cooked" and raised upward, interfering with the Earth's natural jet streams. Like a hot knife through butter. If that picture isn't clear enough, imagine someone spinning the Wheel of Fortune while someone else  jams a chainsaw through it as it turned. Same basic concept.

Let's talk weather manipulation and the government.
In the 1970's, the CIA reported that national governments were already capable of manipulating weather for military uses.

Makes one wonder which extreme climate events were natural and which were anthropogenic in nature.

The DoD tinkered with lightning and hurricane manipulation in Project Skyfire and Project Stormfury during Vietnam.


Air Force Chief of Staff General Merrill McPeak told the U.S. Space Foundation that "those opposing a larger military role in space must reconsider" their viewpoint. Apparently, developing new space toys was a necessity.

This falls in direct opposition to the agreements prohibiting  the manipulation of weather for military means. It caused some reconsideration of these agreements.

The following excerpt from "Angels Don't Play This HAARP" is most telling.

"Wally pointed to a section about a strange "How to Lie" manual, and read aloud: 'The U.S. Air Force's credibility is further undermined by the fact that the DoD explicity authorizes the dissemination of misleading information in order to protect classified programs. In a  supplement to the National Industrial Security Program manual, released in draft form in March 1992, the DoD told contractors how to draft cover stories that 'must be believable' and cannot reveal any information regarding the true nature of the contract...

 Wally pointed out that the next paragraph contained a comment by Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists.
'Once we knew that the DoD practices this type of deception, it becomes harder to discern what's real and what's not."

John Katsufrakis and Dr. Robert Helliwell of Stanford's radio science lab did some research in 1974 using a 20 km antenna and a 5 kilohertz transmitter, showing that very low frequency radio waves can cause vibrations in the magnetosphere. This causes high-energy particles to descend into the atmosphere at the poles. This effect can be induced or shut off with the flick of a switch.

According to Frederic Jueneman, "The theoretical implication suggested by their work is that global weather control can be attained by the injection of relatively small 'signals' into the Van Allen Belts- something like a super-transistor effect."

The potential for manipulation is evident, and it doesn't require much effort.

A columnist of Industrial Research Magazine posited that "If Tesla's resonance effects, as shown by the Stanford team, can control energies by miniscule triggering signals, then by an extension of this principle, we should be able to affect the field environment of the very stars in the sky...with godlike arrogance, we someday may yet direct the stars in their courses."

As you can see, two things these people do not lack are the ambition and the gall to try just about anything. 

Allow me to bounce over to EPT (Earth Penetrating Tomography).
Sounds nifty, huh?
Beam up RF frequencies, bounce them off the ionosphere, and let them penetrate the ground and everything around.

It's not so simple.
The frequencies used for EPT match those of the normal, functioning human brain.
This can alter the thinking or character of the person involved.
I guess they forgot to mention that.

I'll close with a quote from the 1977 Saturday Review.

"If the world is in for a long spell of crippling weather, then we are fools and monsters if we don't get together for the purpose of mounting a response as though our lives depended on it- as indeed it does."

Have we already done too much damage?
Is there any way to stop it?

It's our atmosphere, too.

Angels Don't Play This HAARP (Documentary).

I suggest the book, too.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Fluff.

You're not going to get any here.

Sure, I'll cite someone else's work from time to time, but that's usually when an important point needs to be made. It quite effective in this position.

But other than that, I write only when I feel truly inspired to do so.

I could write fluff stories about things happening every day, but what's the point of that?
Everyone knows what's going on with Trayvon Martin and George Zimmerman. I'm not going to sit here and bore you to death with things that are being rehashed and rehashed on a constant basis.

I like to keep things interesting.

I have other responsibilities to attend to. I write when I have the time and energy.
Writing is not my top priority.

I'm not a stenographer or kid sitting in at the meeting with a notepad in the corner anymore.
I'm seated in a leather chair at the table.
Yes, my job has changed.

I'll still do my best to keep you informed on major developments, but not day-to-day "fluff."
In the meantime, let me do my thing the way I've been doing my thing.
It's been working, no?

It's more effective to tell a story or get a point across rather than saying it outright sometimes.
You're bright people.
I'm sure you've figured that out.

Most writers only have one job.
I'm sure you've also figured out that other people get to worry about nothing but writing and research.

I'm stretched in 14 different directions.

That's it in a nutshell.
Writing is not my top priority, but I'll have goodies for you every now and then.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Let it be known...

Abigail Van Buren, a.k.a "Dear Abby," is a lying, paid-off shill of the Democratic Party who has taken to telling outright lies to score political points for her team.

Not little white lies.
Whoppers.

How pathetic.
She has 0 credibility left.
Just ignore her.

That's all.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

It was worth posting.

This isn't just a disgruntled employee's sour grapes.

Letter of resignation from a senior Goldman Sachs employee, Greg Smith.

Reminds me of my current taxi gig at times.
It's funny.

My boss calls people "jokers" and gouges prices.
Gives me extra work beyond our agreement and refuses to compensate me for it.
Any dissent or calling him out?
He threatens to tell you to park the car and go home.

Do you think this thinking is isolated to just Goldman Sachs?

Friday, March 16, 2012

Must I go there?




The above also applies when I am exhausted.

As long as I am not exhausted or depressed, I keep myself in decent shape.

I keep my fingernails trimmed. I use the hottest water I can stand and soap when I wash my hands.

Sometimes, I fall asleep from exhaustion in my street clothes and fail to shower.
Oops.

Other than that, I get in at least one shower a day, and always after I exercise.

The past few months, I've taken a renewed zeal in caring for my teeth (even during depression), taking care to brush twice daily, as well as floss and use mouthwash. I've had enough needles stuck in my gums.

Ever have to recycle a worn piece of clothing because you couldn't afford to go to the laundromat?
I know I've done it. I know I'm not the only one who's cheated.

Ever wear pajama pants in public because you just didn't care?
Guilty.

Other than that, I smell like roses and petunias.
I'm on my game when it matters, even when depressed.

I guess you could say I suffer from "Bacheloritis" at times.
The cure for that is "Woman."

That tends to nip that stuff right in the bud.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Operation Fast & Furious

The DOJ had all the control, power, and ability at any time step in to make sure that this operation was not compromised, and to make sure that every reasonable precaution was taken.

What surprises me the most is that the DOJ hasn't magically found some way to blame Brian Terry for his own death.

"He shouldn't have signed up for the job," or something ridiculous like that.

The blame, as usual, rests near the top.
Those actually signing off on the decisions.

Brian Terry wasn't reckless.
He was a Border Patrol agent just doing his job to the best of his ability with the cards he was dealt.
Unfortunately, he was faced with preventable circumstances that were beyond his control.

Border Patrol isn't under the DOJ, but it's the DOJ who has been reckless, irresponsive to the needs of its federal agents, and even culpable in compromising sensitive materials and details involved in missions, potentially leading to their premature "conclusions."

Deflecting the blame all along.

Running on a false "Do-Nothing Congress" (I have called and visited more times than I can remember. I have never received a phone call back) narrative and a false "Blame Brian Terry" narrative isn't going to win anything but a moving van.