June 3, 2008
from
MilkHouse-Mouse Website
Constructed by the US Navy and Army in
Alaska's bush country during the early 80s, the Pentagon's widely
acknowledged high-tech "sky zapper" also can rattle the earth's
substructure.
But while the Defense Department acknowledges the
program's existence, officials are keeping the "pandora's box" that
is HAARP
- High Frequency Active Auroral Research
Program - classified.
Nonetheless, some remarkably eerie circumstantial evidence compiled
below from diverse, reputable sources suggest politically flaccid
Democrat congressional leaders should investigate if the
Bush White
House and Pentagon has perpetrated humankind's deadliest terrorist
attack last month on China.
In 1996, a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation telecast reported the
US Defense Department was then in the initial stages of developing
"geophysical warfare"; YouTube now hosts the broadcast in two
parts, excerpted below.
Part 1, 7:13 minutes
Part 2, 7:13 minutes
Though I cannot expertly assess the
geo-political entanglements outlined in the next clip by Jeff
Steinberg, an media analyst for the political action committee
representing perennial presidential candidate (and staunch Bush
opponent) Lyndon LaRouche, the 10-minute excerpt of his 7 April 2008
podcast alleges escalating hostilities among
Though he does not mentions
eco- or weather weapons, Steinberg claims "World War III" is
imminent.
Those observations are followed by experts observations about
HAARP's likely expanded military applications: weather modification
and, yes, earthquakes.
Around the 6-minute mark, listen closely to
"radio tomographer" Brooks Agnew cite his remarkable success during
the early 80s in using directed 30-watt radio energy to find
twenty-six untapped oil fields beneath the earth's surface
He then
effectively illustrates the impact of HAARP's one billion-watts if
it were directed into the earth's substructure instead of the
ionosphere.
Supporting Evidence
from Japan
Before stomping off in a dither, declaring the evidence is yet
another bucketful of barking conspiracy insanity, consider a claim
about Japan's financial system recently made in the next clip by
Benjamin Fulford.
Formerly a well-traveled Far East correspondent for Forbes magazine,
Fulford, fluent in Japanese, is hosting What is This?, his weekly
podcast from Tokyo, and alleges "Hazel" Takana, Japan's finance
minister, told him in 2007 "a group of American and European
oligarchs" threatened to strike the country with manufactured
earthquakes unless he ceded control of the Japanese banking system.
Hosted by YouTube, Fulford's allegation is accompanied by an
critical explanatory note in the webpage's "more info"
option; it
cites similarities in Japan's 2007 'quakes with those more recently
striking China:
"Benjamin Fulford reports from Tokyo on a mysterious
plasma weapon seen prior to the Niigata earthquake
[...
on 16] July,
2007 and red, white and blue lights seen prior to the recent
earthquake in China. Both quakes targeted nuclear facilities...
coincidence?"
This clarification suggests Japan was first subjected to earthquakes
before Tanaka allegedly ceded control of Japan's banks to US and
European financial leaders.
Can this possibly be true?
US Defense
Department Sought Eco- and Weather Weapons Since 1950s
Consider this provocative military historical note by American
physicist Neil Begich's coauthored book
Angels Don't Play this HAARP: Advances in
Tesla Technology, (1995, 233pp.) excerpted here:
As far back as 1958, the chief White
House advisor on weather modification, Captain Howard T.
Orville, said the U.S. defense department was studying "ways to
manipulate the charges of the earth and sky and so affect the
weather" by using an electronic beam to ionize or de-ionize the
atmosphere over a given area.
In 1966, Professor Gordon J.F. MacDonald was associate director
of the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at the
University of California, Los Angeles, was a member of the
President's Science Advisory Committee, and later a member of
the President's Council on Environmental Quality.
He published papers on the use of environmental-control
technologies for military purposes. MacDonald made a revealing
comment:
"The key to geophysical warfare is the identification
of environmental instabilities to which the addition of a small
amount of energy would release vastly greater amounts of energy.
"
World-recognized scientist MacDonald had a number of ideas for
using the environment as a weapon system and he contributed to
what was, at the time, the dream of a futurist.
When he wrote
his chapter, "How To Wreck The Environment," for the book
Unless
Peace Comes, he was not kidding around. In it he describes the
use of weather manipulation, climate modification, polar ice cap
melting or destabilization, ozone depletion techniques,
earthquake engineering, ocean wave control and brain wave
manipulation using the planet's energy fields.
On 28 April 1997, Senator Sam Nunn of
George organized a counterterrorism conference in Atlanta.
During
the Q&A session after US Defense Secretary William S. Cohen's
presentation, Cohen indicates at least two - individuals? groups?
countries? - have succeeded in creating HAARP-like weaponry:
"Others
are engaging even in an eco-type of terrorism whereby they can alter
the climate, set off earthquakes, volcanoes remotely through the usnetic waves."
Until recently, Cohen's alarming revelation appeared online in a DoD
News Briefing of the Conference on Terrorism, Weapons of Mass
Destruction, and U.S. Strategy, University of Georgia, Athens, 29
April 1997.
Check out this
empty page: "http//www.defenselink.mil/news/Apr1997/t042897_t0428coh.html;"
the coded dates in the url address certainly coincide with Cohen's
appearance at Senator Nunn's Atlanta conference.
HAARP lecturer and author Jerry Smith has archived part of Cohen's
disclosure
here, further incorporating it in his own writing and
speaking.
And finally, this related angle to military use of directed energy
on citizens around the world, to include the US:
In February,
Milkhouse Mouse referenced a Washington Post
article,
buried deep in the folds of a 2007 Sunday edition, about - and I
quote
WaPo staff write Sharon Weinberger,
"a community of people
who believe the government is beaming voices into their minds. They
may be crazy, but the Pentagon has pursued a weapon that can do just
that."
Though Weinberger never mentions HAARP
per se, she sought
an interview with Rich Garcia, the HAARP
spokesman appearing in part 1 of the CBC clip.
While in 1996 he talked to the Canadian
media about HAARP, by 2007 Garcia "declined to discuss that patent
or current or related research in the field, citing the lab's policy
not to comment on its microwave work."
[A researcher and Targeted Individual
(TI) Weinberger interviewed] came across references to the CIA
seeking to influence the mind with electromagnetic fields.
Then
he found references in an academic research book to work that
military researchers at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
had done in the 1970s with pulsed microwaves to transmit words
that a subject would hear in his head.
Elsewhere, he came across
references to attempts to use electromagnetic energy, sound
waves or microwave beams to cause non-lethal pain to the body.
For every symptom he experienced, he believed he found
references to a weapon that could cause it.
How much of the research Girard cites checks out?
Concerns about microwaves and mind control date to the 1960s,
when the U.S. government discovered that its embassy in Moscow
was being bombarded by low-level electromagnetic radiation. In
1965, according to declassified Defense Department documents,
the Pentagon, at the behest of the White House, launched Project
Pandora, top-secret research to explore the behavioral and
biological effects of low-level microwaves.
For approximately
four years, the Pentagon conducted secret research: zapping
monkeys; exposing unwitting sailors to microwave radiation; and
conducting a host of other unusual experiments (a sub-project of
Project Pandora was titled Project Bizarre).
The results were
mixed, and the program was plagued by disagreements and
scientific squabbles. The "Moscow signal," as it was called, was
eventually attributed to eavesdropping, not mind control, and
Pandora ended in 1970. And with it, the military's research into
so-called non-thermal microwave effects seemed to die out, at
least in the unclassified realm.
But there are hints of ongoing research: An academic paper
written for the Air Force in the mid-1990s mentions the idea of
a weapon that would use sound waves to send words into a
person's head.
"The signal can be a 'message from God' that can
warn the enemy of impending doom, or encourage the enemy to
surrender," the author concluded.
In 2002, the Air Force Research Laboratory patented precisely
such a technology:
using microwaves to send words into someone's
head.
That work is frequently cited on mind-control Web sites.
Rich Garcia, a spokesman for the research laboratory's directed
energy directorate, declined to discuss that patent or current
or related research in the field, citing the lab's policy not to
comment on its microwave work.
Related
Weinberger later made public
the
FOIA documents obtained from the Air Force Lab Directed Energy
Division she used in writing her remarkable account.
Some may be interested in this 2005 discussion -
hosted by Mind
Justice, a group lobbying to have government mind control
experimentation investigated and halted - among four literary and
journalist honorees who respective writings track mind control
developments and government abuses.
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