Something More
      to Haarp About
      by DOUG FIEDOR
      fiedor19@eos.net
      Heads Up
            Nikola Tesla, father of radio and
      holder of 700 patents, had the idea before 1930: We can use a powerful electronic
      transmitter to both transmit communications and control the weather. Did Tesla control the
      weather? Many say he did, and he published the idea back in 1930s.
            Anyway, in 1997, a U.S. Patent was
      issued for a "Method and apparatus for altering a region in the earth's atmosphere,
      ionosphere, and/or magnetosphere." The inventor claims (this is heavy) the purpose of
      the device is:
      
        
               
          "A method and apparatus for altering at least one selected region which normally
          exists above the earth's surface. The region is excited by electron cyclotron resonance
          heating to thereby increase its charged particle density. In one embodiment, circularly
          polarized electromagnetic radiation is transmitted upward in a direction substantially
          parallel to and along a field line which extends through the region of plasma to be
          altered. The radiation is transmitted at a frequency which excites electron cyclotron
          resonance to heat and accelerate the charged particles. This increase in energy can cause
          ionization of neutral particles which are then absorbed as part of the region thereby
          increasing the charged particle density of the region."
        
      
      http://patent.womplex.ibm.com/details?pn=US04686605__&s_clms=1
            Now comes the Navy and Air Force project called
      HAARP. The acronym HAARP stands for: High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program.
            HAARP was built near
      Gakona,
      Alaska, by the Air Force and the Navy.The installation consists of several sections, the
      most prominent being the Ionospheric Research Instrument (IRI).
            The IRI is the largest
      high-frequency radio transmitter ever built. Using a huge antenna system, IRI can
      concentrate several million watts of energy into a focused ray of very high intensity. In
      effect, the IRI is an ionospheric heater. Its ultra-high-power emissions cause the
      targeted region in the atmosphere to be electrically charged and vibrate. The targeted
      area will then heat dramatically.
            The official line is:
      "The purpose of the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program is to use active
      probing techniques to study the physics of the ionosphere."
            In reality, there's just a wee bit
      more to it than what our government will admit. At some frequencies, the device will
      provide a type of electrical umbrella, or mirror, in the ionosphere. This
      "mirror" may then be used to bounce other radio signals to receivers over the
      horizon. By exciting the ionosphere above a given region, HAARP will also be able to
      disrupt enemy communications. In time of war, both of the above functions
      would be
      a very useful to the military.
            At other frequencies, HAARP is
      also being used for weather modification.
            The military has been interested
      in predicting and controlling the weather for many years. Back in the early 1970s, the Air
      Force used very fine carbon powder and/or chemicals, depending, for airborne cloud
      generation and seeding. The idea was to cause rain downwind. Today, as many Americans in
      certain areas of the country are noticing, they are experimenting with various types of
      chemicals to cause desired weather changes.
            When completed, HAARP will beam in
      excess of one gigawatt (1 billion watts) of radiated power into the Earth's ionosphere.
      And, as the old saying goes, what goes up must come down -- in this case, 80-90% of that
      power would be reflected back to earth somewhere.
            What will be the effect on humans?
      Just as with the chemical weather control experiments currently in progress, no one really
      knows exactly. However, as someone with more than just a couple years invested in studying
      electrical affects on human physiology, I know we can start with a list that would
      (depending on exposure) include fatigue, irritability, memory loss, cataracts, leukemia,
      birth defects, and cancer. High power levels, at any frequency, insure some of these
      problems.
            Furthermore, if they ever get that
      thing focused properly at the gigawatt level, they would be able to make a real mess out
      of a small city block in a very short time.
            Or, if we don't all behave to
      government's specifications, perhaps they could lower the frequency, open up the width of
      the transmitted signal, and push that Arctic Stream down to around Miami. That would put
      the country in a deep freeze and tend to keep people indoors.
            As one Air Force report puts it:
      "The number of specific intervention methodologies is limited only by the
      imagination, but with few exceptions they involve infusing either energy or chemicals into
      the meteorological process in the right way, at the right place and time. The intervention
      could be designed to modify the weather in a number of ways, such as influencing clouds
      and precipitation, storm intensity, climate, space, or fog." http://www.au.af.mil/au/2025/volume3/chap15/v3c15-1.htm
              
            The problem is, however they do it
      will have some element of danger to us humans living on the ground. Personally, I liked it
      better when only Mother Nature controlled the weather.
            For background information and
      references, go to: http://www.uhuh.com/sky/list-sky.htm