and Air Force have joined with the University of Alaska,
Fairbanks, to build a prototype for a ground based "Star
Wars" weapon system located in the remote bush country
of Alaska.
The individuals who are demanding answers about HAARP
are scattered around the planet. As well as bush dwellers
in Alaska, they include: a physician in Finland; a scientist
in Holland; an anti-nuclear protester in Australia; independent
physicists in the United States; a grandmother in Canada,
and countless others.
Unlike the protests of the 1960s the objections to HAARP
have been registered using the tools of the 1990s. From
the Internet, fax machines, syndicated talk radio and
a number of alternative print mediums the word is getting
out and people are waking up to this new intrusion by
an over zealous United States government.
The research team put together to gather the materials
which eventually found their way into the book never held
a formal meeting, never formed a formal organization.
Each person acted like a node on a planetary info-spirit-net
with one goal held by all — to keep this controversial
new science in the public eye. The result of the team’s
effort was a book which describes the science and the
political ramifications of this technology.
That book, Angels Don’t Play this HAARP: Advances
in Tesla Technology, has 230 pages. This article
will only give the highlights. Despite the amount of research
(350 footnoted sources), at its heart it is a story about
ordinary people who took on an extraordinary challenge
in bringing their research forward.
HAARP
Boils the Upper Atmosphere
HAARP will zap the upper atmosphere with a focused and
steerable electromagnetic beam. It is an advanced model
of an "ionospheric heater." (The ionosphere
is the electrically-charged sphere surrounding Earth’s
upper atmosphere. It ranges between 40 to 60 miles above
the surface of the Earth.)
Put simply, the apparatus for HAARP is a reversal of a
radio telescope; antenna send out signals instead of receiving.
HAARP is the test run for a super-powerful radiowave-beaming
technology that lifts areas of the ionosphere by focusing
a beam and heating those areas. Electromagnetic waves
then bounce back onto earth and penetrate everything –
living and dead.
HAARP
publicity gives the impression that the High-frequency
Active Auroral Research Program is mainly an academic
project with the goal of changing the ionosphere to improve
communications for our own good. However, other U.S. military
documents put it more clearly — HAARP aims to learn how
to "exploit the ionosphere for Department of Defense
purposes." Communicating with submarines is only
one of those purposes.
Press releases and other information from the military
on HAARP continually downplay what it could do. Publicity
documents insist that the HAARP project is no different
than other ionospheric heaters operating safely throughout
the world in places such as Arecibo, Puerto Rico, Tromso,
Norway, and the former Soviet Union. However, a 1990 government
document indicates that the radio-frequency (RF) power
zap will drive the ionosphere to unnatural activities.
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