1 00:01:00,000 --> 00:01:10,000 The first time I've ever seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 2 00:01:10,000 --> 00:01:18,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 3 00:01:18,000 --> 00:01:26,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 4 00:01:26,000 --> 00:01:36,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 5 00:01:36,000 --> 00:01:46,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 6 00:01:46,000 --> 00:01:56,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 7 00:01:56,000 --> 00:02:06,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 8 00:02:06,000 --> 00:02:16,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 9 00:02:16,000 --> 00:02:26,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 10 00:02:26,000 --> 00:02:34,000 I've never seen a car in the world, I've never seen a car in the world. 11 00:02:35,000 --> 00:02:37,000 Hello, welcome to my home, I'm Dr. Nick Baggitch. 12 00:02:37,000 --> 00:02:41,000 Today's video that we're producing is heart and beyond. 13 00:02:41,000 --> 00:02:49,000 It's been a long time since we produced a video on harp and really brought out the information in the context of where we are now in 2006. 14 00:02:49,000 --> 00:02:56,000 Versus where we were when we first disclosed this story in the book Angels don't play this harp back in 1995. 15 00:02:56,000 --> 00:03:06,000 So today's topic we'll deal with the various aspects of harp and talk about what's happened since with some of the key players involved in that research, 16 00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:11,000 as well as the political implications and where this technology is going from here. 17 00:03:26,000 --> 00:03:41,000 This may be the first time that you've seen a video or have been gotten familiar with any of our work, so I want to give you a little bit of background on me. 18 00:03:41,000 --> 00:03:45,000 I'm Dr. Nick Baggitch, I have a doctorate in Traditional and Coctalmentary Medicine's. 19 00:03:45,000 --> 00:03:51,000 I come from a political family here in Alaska, second generation of political involvement here. 20 00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:58,000 I also have a background in education being twice selected present of the Alaska Federation of Teachers and the Anchorage Council of Education. 21 00:03:58,000 --> 00:04:12,000 I've written three books co-authored with James Roderick in Gene Manning and in presently the Executive Director of the Lay Foundation on Technologies, which is involved in researching and educating the public on technology issues. 22 00:04:12,000 --> 00:04:22,000 I believe it's providing us a great deal of the research base necessary to produce this video and much of our work into the future. 23 00:04:22,000 --> 00:04:35,000 Welcome to my library. I want to start with a little discussion of the Lay Institute on Technology, which was set up as a Texas nonprofit corporation primarily to educate the public on the impacts of technology. 24 00:04:35,000 --> 00:04:49,000 As a result of that effort in my work with Dorothy Lay, the founder of that foundation, we're able to continue to archive and develop material that useful for research projects like this and many others. 25 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:57,000 In fact, all of that material now is posted on the internet at www.layinstitute.org. 26 00:04:57,000 --> 00:05:05,000 If you go there and you look at the site, there's an area called EPI Search and that is our research index. 27 00:05:05,000 --> 00:05:14,000 If you go there, you can search any keyword, you can look up higher for climate change or radio or microwave or any of the words that are of interest to you. 28 00:05:14,000 --> 00:05:22,000 You'll see every document that we've stored there on those archives available in a way that makes it more useful in researching these issues. 29 00:05:22,000 --> 00:05:27,000 So take a look at that, it's useful in conjunction with this production today. 30 00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:32,000 But let's get back to the harp issue and where that issue began for me. 31 00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:41,000 harp started really with a very short segment, a little article actually in a magazine called Nexus and Australian Journal. 32 00:05:41,000 --> 00:05:46,000 I read the article and it was about a project taking place here in Alaska called harp. 33 00:05:46,000 --> 00:06:07,000 The high frequency active, a rural research project and at that time it was being operated by the US Navy and Air Force in developing what they call the developmental prototype for weapons applications of a very very large radio frequency array or field of antennas located here in Alaska. 34 00:06:07,000 --> 00:06:14,000 So what happened when I read that article is I looked at it and I thought Alaska is a big place geographically. 35 00:06:14,000 --> 00:06:17,000 But when you think about it politically, it's very small. 36 00:06:17,000 --> 00:06:25,000 We have small population, you tend to hear about what's going on, and virtually nothing had been reported in our local media regarding this project. 37 00:06:25,000 --> 00:06:29,000 And I'm kind of a curious person and the article was pretty outrageous in what it was claiming. 38 00:06:29,000 --> 00:06:51,000 So I went and looked at what was available first by searching the sources that were cited in that article at our local library, Lusac, which happens to be one of 78 libraries at that time in the country that were designated as Federal repositories, places where any unclassified federal record or either stored or they have to produce it for you for free. 39 00:06:51,000 --> 00:06:57,000 So it's an incredible research library here in Anchorage and as I said 78 of them around the United States. 40 00:06:57,000 --> 00:07:02,000 As a result, we were able to verify all the sources in that article. That got me pretty concerned. 41 00:07:02,000 --> 00:07:09,000 And I went next to talk to trustees for Alaska, which is one of the larger sort of umbrella environmental groups in Alaska. 42 00:07:09,000 --> 00:07:16,000 And my thought was, you know, with the implications of this system, this group certainly had to be following the issue. 43 00:07:16,000 --> 00:07:22,000 And surprisingly, they weren't. In fact, they said the Autobahn Society was looking at it. 44 00:07:22,000 --> 00:07:28,000 And we went over to the Autobahn Society in Anchorage and talked to them. They had a very short file on the heart project. 45 00:07:28,000 --> 00:07:35,000 And basically what they were concerned about was the few hundred of acres of wetlands that were going to be disturbed. 46 00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:41,000 And they were concerned about the flyway where birds, migratory birds were coming across that particular region. 47 00:07:41,000 --> 00:07:43,000 But those were their only concerns. 48 00:07:43,000 --> 00:07:46,000 There were much, much bigger implications to heart. 49 00:07:46,000 --> 00:07:49,000 Discovering that virtually nobody was following the issue. 50 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:52,000 It seemed like a very, very important issue to me. 51 00:07:52,000 --> 00:08:00,000 And so what I did is I sent a large amount of material including the technical specifications for the array to a friend of mine, 52 00:08:00,000 --> 00:08:07,000 a physicist who had the background to take a look at whether or not the claims on this facility were actually real. 53 00:08:07,000 --> 00:08:09,000 And whether it really was a threat. 54 00:08:09,000 --> 00:08:14,000 The conclusion that he and others made was that it was a very significant issue. 55 00:08:14,000 --> 00:08:16,000 One that needed some public attention. 56 00:08:16,000 --> 00:08:19,000 And they insisted that I write an article about the subject. 57 00:08:19,000 --> 00:08:25,000 And so that began for me a journey that's now lasted 11 years in dealing with this issue. 58 00:08:25,000 --> 00:08:28,000 And those things that came out of it. 59 00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:30,000 But let's talk about what heart can do. 60 00:08:30,000 --> 00:08:34,000 As I said, it's an array of field of antennas. 61 00:08:34,000 --> 00:08:41,000 And what it essentially started as was 48, a six in one direction, eight in another direction. 62 00:08:41,000 --> 00:08:44,000 And these are 72 feet tall with a cross diapole. 63 00:08:44,000 --> 00:08:48,000 So there are a column going up and then a cross diapole going like so. 64 00:08:48,000 --> 00:08:54,000 And by firing these antenna in a very specific order, you can focus the radio frequency energy, 65 00:08:54,000 --> 00:09:01,000 concentrated to a relatively small area up in the area above the surface called the ionosphere. 66 00:09:01,000 --> 00:09:04,000 And let me explain sort of where the ionosphere is. 67 00:09:04,000 --> 00:09:09,000 You've got to look about 30 miles above the surface for the very beginnings of the ionosphere. 68 00:09:09,000 --> 00:09:17,000 And then it stretches out perhaps as far as 400 kilometers out into space and even further in the upper reaches of the ionosphere. 69 00:09:17,000 --> 00:09:24,000 And it acts as an electrical shield, if you will, an energized area of our environment. 70 00:09:24,000 --> 00:09:27,000 So that cosmic radiations coming in from the sun in from space. 71 00:09:27,000 --> 00:09:37,000 Hit this layer, and it acts as a filter filtering out particle streams that would make a life on the planet Earth impossible without without this. 72 00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:45,000 Now people talk about ozone depletion as a major issue and it certainly is and we'll cover that in another video in this series. 73 00:09:45,000 --> 00:09:56,000 But let's talk about a hole in the ionosphere, which would be significantly greater than any problem attributed to ozone depletion by comparison. 74 00:09:56,000 --> 00:10:01,000 Because of the kinds of radiation, it wouldn't be just ultraviolet radiation as is the case with ozone. 75 00:10:01,000 --> 00:10:08,000 This would be very, very dangerous particle streams over literally all of the genetic blueprint of the planet. 76 00:10:08,000 --> 00:10:14,000 So this is the area that the military is targeting as a researcher area in the developments of harp. 77 00:10:14,000 --> 00:10:18,000 And harp was originally invented by a guy named Dr. Bernard Island. 78 00:10:18,000 --> 00:10:25,000 And it was an original concept that he had and he had gone had this idea that you could create a shielding effect. 79 00:10:25,000 --> 00:10:30,000 And let me talk a little bit about what kind of effect that might be. 80 00:10:30,000 --> 00:10:33,000 When you look at the ionosphere, this layer around the earth. 81 00:10:33,000 --> 00:10:41,000 And then if you think of the earth, there's also kind of a giant motor that's spinning around and with that comes magnetic field lines. 82 00:10:41,000 --> 00:10:49,000 And these field lines go from the southern part of the poles all the way up and they wrap around, they come back in at the northern polar regions. 83 00:10:49,000 --> 00:10:58,000 And in these polar regions where those magnetic field lines interact with the atmosphere and oxygen and nitrogen, you get the Aurora borealis or the northern lights. 84 00:10:58,000 --> 00:11:02,000 Or in the southern hemisphere, you get the equivalent of our northern lights. 85 00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:06,000 And it's where this energy is interacting with the atmosphere. 86 00:11:06,000 --> 00:11:18,000 Well, by using these naturally occurring field lines, you can actually manipulate energy coming off the ground, coming off of a field of antennas like what harp has in Gokana last. 87 00:11:18,000 --> 00:11:22,000 Which is just 250 miles northeast of Anchorage. 88 00:11:22,000 --> 00:11:27,000 This facility that was built in the early 1990s has been advanced. 89 00:11:27,000 --> 00:11:30,000 Typically it started with 48 antenna. 90 00:11:30,000 --> 00:11:34,000 They now have 180 in the array, eventually 360. 91 00:11:34,000 --> 00:11:37,000 The idea is again to focus that energy. 92 00:11:37,000 --> 00:11:47,000 By firing this in a sequence, the array, you can create what's called cyclotron resonance, which would be visually seen as sort of a corkscuring motion of the energy. 93 00:11:47,000 --> 00:11:52,000 As it rolls up into the ionists, you're getting more and more concentrated as it goes. 94 00:11:52,000 --> 00:12:01,000 Just the opposite of the way radio frequency energy generally works when it comes off of a broadcast antenna where we hear radio programs. 95 00:12:01,000 --> 00:12:12,000 Today, what happens in that case is the energy starts out concentrated spreads out very, very rapidly in the same way that light from a flashlight spreads out very rapidly. 96 00:12:12,000 --> 00:12:16,000 They follow the same basic principles in physics. 97 00:12:16,000 --> 00:12:24,000 But as with light, it can be concentrated in the form of a laser where that light is concentrated in very, very powerful at far distances. 98 00:12:24,000 --> 00:12:29,000 The same is true by analogy with radio frequency energy and the harp array. 99 00:12:29,000 --> 00:12:33,000 That's what makes it so much different than anything else on the planet. 100 00:12:33,000 --> 00:12:39,000 The upper limits of the array in terms of effective radiated power, which is not the input power, 101 00:12:39,000 --> 00:12:44,000 but it's the effective radiated power, how that energy actually relates in the environment. 102 00:12:44,000 --> 00:12:53,000 In this case, the desired level is one billion watts of effective radiated power, a huge amount of energy. 103 00:12:53,000 --> 00:12:58,000 And being able to manipulate that energy in a variety of ways for weapons applications. 104 00:12:58,000 --> 00:13:03,000 Now, why would they locate a facility like this in Alaska? 105 00:13:03,000 --> 00:13:08,000 You remember when I was talking about those magnetic field lines surrounding the earth? 106 00:13:08,000 --> 00:13:16,000 The idea was that if you could send cyclotron resonance, this energy coming off of the radio frequency array, this radio frequency energy, 107 00:13:16,000 --> 00:13:22,000 and this form up to those magnetic lines of force, they'd corkscrew themselves around them. 108 00:13:22,000 --> 00:13:32,000 And instead of the energy flowing north to south, the energy would be using that as a wave guide to go from north to south, the opposite direction. 109 00:13:32,000 --> 00:13:46,000 So in this case, what then happens is, as you energize these field lines around the planet, any object passing through them would encounter a huge amount of energy that would disrupt the avionics, 110 00:13:46,000 --> 00:13:55,000 the electronics that control the flight path of intercontinental ballistic missiles or anything else in the region, including satellites, low orbiting satellites and the like. 111 00:13:55,000 --> 00:13:59,000 So the idea was to create this shield, that was number one. 112 00:13:59,000 --> 00:14:02,000 The amount of energy that was required was used. 113 00:14:02,000 --> 00:14:11,000 So Dr. Eastland went to Arco at that time Atlantic Ridge field had huge, huge natural gas resources on the north slope of Alaska. 114 00:14:11,000 --> 00:14:27,000 Ideally suited, according to Eastland's patents, for exploitation for this technology, because natural gas supplies would allow the conversion to electrical energy using magnetohydrodynamic generators, called out in Eastland's patents. 115 00:14:27,000 --> 00:14:36,000 And then from there that electrical energy could be fed into this huge array and then sent up to the Aionosphere for the various weapons applications. 116 00:14:36,000 --> 00:14:49,000 So the ideal situation presented itself in the early 90s, and it was location within the boundaries of the United States for a ground-based system that in effect, as we go through the day to day, 117 00:14:49,000 --> 00:14:56,000 you'll see, has all of the ramifications that were being sought in the 80s under the old Star Wars concepts. 118 00:14:56,000 --> 00:15:03,000 The idea of a global missile shield or protection from adversaries using low orbiting space platforms on the like. 119 00:15:03,000 --> 00:15:15,000 So here we had a technology emerging that could solve those things for Atlantic Ridge field, that was great, because there's no gas line presently coming out of Alaska to bring that gas to market. 120 00:15:15,000 --> 00:15:20,000 And we've been producing oil from that field for over 30 years yet we can't get the natural gas. 121 00:15:20,000 --> 00:15:26,000 So for our code to be able to self-agast to the military, right where it is offered tremendous advantage. 122 00:15:26,000 --> 00:15:38,000 So they set up our co-power technology zinc, a subsidiary with 30 employees. They originally bid on the heart project after selling the concept to the military in the early days in the late 80s. 123 00:15:38,000 --> 00:15:45,000 Dr. Eeslen actually put together that original team that became Arco-Power Technologies Inc. 124 00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:53,000 Now what they did as a subsidiary, they had no track record of military contracting, they had really no history at all. 125 00:15:53,000 --> 00:15:59,000 They bid for the heart construction and applications on that project and won. 126 00:15:59,000 --> 00:16:00,000 And who did they bid against? 127 00:16:01,000 --> 00:16:11,000 Raytheon Corporation for one. Raytheon at the time was one of the, what was the 44th largest company in the world according to Forbes magazine. 128 00:16:11,000 --> 00:16:18,000 And they were the adventurers of things like the Patriot Missiles and some of the new active denial systems being promoted today. 129 00:16:18,000 --> 00:16:27,000 In other words, they had real weapons, applications and histories, yet this little subsidy, Arco-Power Technologies won the contract. 130 00:16:27,000 --> 00:16:34,000 Now in public procurement, the way you win those contracts is actually through what's called proprietary information. 131 00:16:34,000 --> 00:16:41,000 Certain companies are given extra points and advantages if they hold the technical knowledge necessary to carry a project out. 132 00:16:41,000 --> 00:16:48,000 In this case, Arco-Power Technologies Inc. own those nine critical patents. 133 00:16:48,000 --> 00:16:58,000 Unassociated with the heart program. And those are cited in the book Angels Don't Play This Heart Along with Over 300 Military Academic and Mainstream Media Reports On Heart. 134 00:16:58,000 --> 00:17:01,000 So that's the place if you really want that detailed source material. 135 00:17:01,000 --> 00:17:07,000 Get the book, take a look at the bibliographical indexes, also look at the lay Institute site. 136 00:17:07,000 --> 00:17:14,000 The fact is what happened in all of this development was this excitement from Arco because here it was. 137 00:17:14,000 --> 00:17:17,000 We're going to make money on gas, they could never make money on before. 138 00:17:17,000 --> 00:17:26,000 But what happened is the company went through some controversies, some changes, company eventually sold, actually Arco's in a longer here. 139 00:17:26,000 --> 00:17:32,000 But the company itself, the subsidiary, was later sold to another organization called E Systems. 140 00:17:32,000 --> 00:17:37,000 And E Systems was the subject of Washington Post reports back in the early 90s. 141 00:17:37,000 --> 00:17:45,000 They predominantly were at that time, were a $2.1 billion company with the vast majority of their income derived from what are called Black Projects. 142 00:17:45,000 --> 00:17:49,000 Projects so secret even the US Congress doesn't know what they're funding. 143 00:17:49,000 --> 00:17:53,000 And the citations regarding that are also in the book Angels Don't Play This Heart. 144 00:17:53,000 --> 00:18:00,000 The point is this company ends up with the patents and the subsidiary. 145 00:18:00,000 --> 00:18:02,000 And what did they do? They sold out. 146 00:18:03,000 --> 00:18:09,000 They sold to none other than Raytheon Corporation, the losing bidder on the first project in the beginning. 147 00:18:09,000 --> 00:18:14,000 So Raytheon ends up with the intellectual property, they end up with that project. 148 00:18:14,000 --> 00:18:22,000 And they later sold to British aerospace, which is an interesting change of events, and that was in 2003. 149 00:18:22,000 --> 00:18:33,000 The project also shifted in 2003 from the Navy and the Air Force over to DARPA, which is the Defense Department's Research Agency, the deals with again, 150 00:18:33,000 --> 00:18:37,000 very, very classified research and projects. 151 00:18:37,000 --> 00:18:41,000 But let's go back to what does harp really do. 152 00:18:41,000 --> 00:18:46,000 So we've talked about how it focuses energy, but what would you do with that energy when you focus it? 153 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:49,000 There were a number of concepts that Dr. Eselin had. 154 00:18:49,000 --> 00:18:52,000 And we've talked about how it all was the issue of communications. 155 00:18:52,000 --> 00:18:58,000 The ionosphere, this layer above the earth, when you think about, if you ever think about shortwave, 156 00:18:58,000 --> 00:19:03,000 how it broadcasts around the earth, it literally strikes the ionosphere in bounces. 157 00:19:03,000 --> 00:19:08,000 And that's what allows shortwave to get around the curvature of the earth and around the horizon. 158 00:19:08,000 --> 00:19:10,000 It uses the ionosphere. 159 00:19:10,000 --> 00:19:18,000 But when the ionosphere is disturbed, say by really active solar activity, communications are also disturbed. 160 00:19:18,000 --> 00:19:27,000 We know that when the ionosphere is active because the sun is active, that communication systems, even power grids across the planet, 161 00:19:27,000 --> 00:19:35,000 can be affected by the way energy is exchanged between the sun and the earth and the systems within the earth. 162 00:19:35,000 --> 00:19:41,000 So knowing about the ionosphere and controlling it becomes extremely important for communications purposes, 163 00:19:41,000 --> 00:19:44,000 and we can all see why the military would be interested in that. 164 00:19:45,000 --> 00:19:55,000 What they found is that they could disturb the ionosphere to such an extent using these kinds of systems that they could deny everyone else access to their communication systems. 165 00:19:55,000 --> 00:20:04,000 But by controlling those modulations and by controlling those pulse frequencies affecting the ionosphere, they could carry their own communications, 166 00:20:04,000 --> 00:20:07,000 while denying everyone else access to theirs. 167 00:20:07,000 --> 00:20:14,000 Now again, if you can communicate with all of your aspects of your military, and you can deny your adversary the ability to do that, 168 00:20:14,000 --> 00:20:18,000 we can certainly see the advantages of exploring that whole area. 169 00:20:18,000 --> 00:20:20,000 And that doesn't even mean to present problems. 170 00:20:20,000 --> 00:20:26,000 What presents the problem is when we start manipulating this very important aspect of our environment, 171 00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:31,000 without really knowing what the long-term consequences of those manipulations might be. 172 00:20:31,000 --> 00:20:39,000 Now let's talk a little bit about some of the other applications, because this is sort of a very versatile instrument in terms of how it can be used. 173 00:20:39,000 --> 00:20:44,000 And it essentially covers according to one study that was done by the University of Maryland. 174 00:20:44,000 --> 00:20:46,000 It was an executive report for the Congress. 175 00:20:46,000 --> 00:20:51,000 And what they did is they looked at sort of what parts of the spectrum could you affect. 176 00:20:51,000 --> 00:20:58,000 And everything from ultra-low frequencies to visible light can be affected, which covers 16 decades of frequency, 177 00:20:58,000 --> 00:21:02,000 huge, huge range for those that are technically oriented. 178 00:21:02,000 --> 00:21:08,000 Now harp actually operates with its primary frequencies in a little narrow band in the middle of that range. 179 00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:13,000 But by manipulating that energy, they can affect this entire range of spectrum. 180 00:21:13,000 --> 00:21:16,000 And that's one of the key elements of harp. 181 00:21:16,000 --> 00:21:25,000 It's not just what it can do in its primary mode of operation, but by pulsing and then modulating the signal on that carrier, 182 00:21:25,000 --> 00:21:27,000 you can create much, much different effects. 183 00:21:27,000 --> 00:21:35,000 One of the other effects that Dr. Eesland pointed out in his patent was the idea of being used for over the horizon radar. 184 00:21:35,000 --> 00:21:45,000 Now this is really interesting because the old technology for over the horizon radar, as things got in close, things would become very distorted, so you couldn't see them. 185 00:21:45,000 --> 00:21:47,000 And you could really only see things at pretty high elevations. 186 00:21:47,000 --> 00:21:53,000 You couldn't see things, for instance, like cruise missiles coming in at those very low ground elevations. 187 00:21:53,000 --> 00:22:05,000 With the ability of harp and over the horizon technology that it offers, you get everything from intercontinental ballistic missiles, those things coming in from literally coming back in from space re entering the atmosphere, 188 00:22:05,000 --> 00:22:14,000 all the way down to cruise missile heights, things coming out at a few hundred feet above the earth surface and following its contours. 189 00:22:14,000 --> 00:22:17,000 And you don't get distortion when it gets close to them. 190 00:22:17,000 --> 00:22:25,000 Again, we can see the advantages of doing that for that application. You actually need two transmitters and Alaska does have two. 191 00:22:25,000 --> 00:22:31,000 High pass located just outside of Fairbanks near the poker-flat rocket range, which is a small array. 192 00:22:31,000 --> 00:22:39,000 And then the larger array at Gokana, Gokana Alaska, which is again 250 miles north east of Anchorage. 193 00:22:39,000 --> 00:22:53,000 Now there, what you can do then is you can literally energize an area of the ionosphere and it creates what's called a cold plasma or layer of energy that acts like a reflective mirror and by moving it around and steering it. 194 00:22:53,000 --> 00:22:59,000 You can then send a signal from the other transmitter and bounce it over the curvature of the earth. 195 00:22:59,000 --> 00:23:01,000 So you get this over the horizon effect. 196 00:23:01,000 --> 00:23:11,000 If you use again one of the other patents in this cluster held by article power technology using is a gamma ray detector designed for satellite based applications. 197 00:23:11,000 --> 00:23:23,000 And utilizing first the harp system to create a unique energy pattern around each of the incoming objects then using gamma ray detectors based on satellite. 198 00:23:23,000 --> 00:23:31,000 They could actually determine which of those incoming objects carry nuclear payloads in which ones are simply decoys. 199 00:23:31,000 --> 00:23:43,000 Extremely important because in all nuclear scenarios except for those by rogue states we envision a hundred thousand incoming objects of which only perhaps a few hundred actually carry nuclear payloads. 200 00:23:43,000 --> 00:23:55,000 Now we don't have the capability of knocking out all of those objects but if we could isolate the real threats those that carry nuclear payloads and obviously an advantage is gained there. 201 00:23:55,000 --> 00:24:08,000 So that over the horizon application and then the idea of detecting by the unique energy signature around all those objects and then the third application in this series was the idea of creating what's called an EMP, 202 00:24:08,000 --> 00:24:20,000 an electromagnetic pulse or a surge of energy so strong that it overrides the electronic circuits those little micro circuits within all of sophisticated electronics and computer systems. 203 00:24:20,000 --> 00:24:26,000 Overrides them causing bit errors and computer error that causes those aircrafts to crash. 204 00:24:26,000 --> 00:24:40,000 In some cases with enough EMP power you can literally melt circuitry. So three phases if you increase the power sufficiently on the harp facility you can create this EMP effect and knock out everything in the sky. 205 00:24:40,000 --> 00:24:52,000 Now obviously in a nuclear scenario we can see the need for something like this but the same time everything else that's in that space or in that range is also going to be knocked out all those civilian aircraft. 206 00:24:52,000 --> 00:25:04,000 That's the collateral damage in such an event and if we were to use such technology. Now Alaska is the place where the new system for missile defenses actually being constructed. 207 00:25:04,000 --> 00:25:13,000 Let's get back to the issue of missile defense for just a moment because this is an extremely important aspect of the whole harp story because this is really where it began. 208 00:25:13,000 --> 00:25:17,000 When you go back to 95 when we were first publishing on the subject you know, 209 00:25:17,000 --> 00:25:25,000 Jean Manning and I wrote the book Angels Don't Play This Harp really as a beginning point to get public debate on the issue. 210 00:25:25,000 --> 00:25:35,000 I've done thousands of radio broadcasts in the last 11 years on this issue as well as traveled to Europe 13 times on related issues. 211 00:25:35,000 --> 00:25:47,000 Now at one point early on in 1997 I got a call from a gentleman Tom Spencer and Tom was at that time the environmental chairman of the European Parliament and he was a conservative from Great Britain. 212 00:25:47,000 --> 00:25:56,000 And Tom asked me a lot about harp one of the information apparently someone here in the United States who had heard us on radio gotten a copy of our book, 213 00:25:56,000 --> 00:26:05,000 it forwarded it on to me and it got as attention. Now when he made inquiries into the British military about harp and related technologies, 214 00:26:05,000 --> 00:26:10,000 the answer he kept getting from them was Tom stay out of this don't get involved. 215 00:26:10,000 --> 00:26:18,000 And for Tom Spencer that was really the wrong answer. In fact it was his ticket to the dance because it got him very involved in this issue. 216 00:26:19,000 --> 00:26:33,000 We began a dialogue and he brought myself and a fenomenal physicist over to actually Brussels where we were able to meet with him and other part of the materials and others involved in military related issues. 217 00:26:33,000 --> 00:26:45,000 And we also were able to form an association between the greens, the social democrats and the conservatives around the harp issue largely because of the work of Tom Spencer. 218 00:26:45,000 --> 00:26:55,000 Now in the interim several things started to happen Tom brought us into a couple of different venues and I want to tell the story because the big part of sort of how this thing started to shape. 219 00:26:55,000 --> 00:27:12,000 He brought us in to a number of venues and the first one was one on Arctic issues by the organization called Globe and this was an organization composed of 200 federally elected or nationally elected legislators from 44 governments from around the world. 220 00:27:12,000 --> 00:27:19,000 dealing primarily with environmental related issues and this was an opportunity to talk about harp within that forum. 221 00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:28,000 Right after our presentation we were approached by members of the Russian Duma. Now this is going back to 1997-98 timeframe. 222 00:27:28,000 --> 00:27:37,000 They approached us were very interested in the issue because Russians actually the Soviets back in the 70s had utilized very similar systems. 223 00:27:37,000 --> 00:27:50,000 In fact, if you go back there was a signal that was reported by short-way broadcasters as the woodpecker signal and it was this irritating noise that they would pick up on short-way broadcast. 224 00:27:50,000 --> 00:27:57,000 They triangulated the positions back to five transmitters in the former Soviet Union that were responsible for creating those signals. 225 00:27:57,000 --> 00:28:02,000 Those were the early predecessors to harp and we'll get back to that in a little bit. 226 00:28:02,000 --> 00:28:11,000 But in the European Parliament, Tom Spencer then became chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, the most powerful committee or one of the most powerful in the European Parliament. 227 00:28:11,000 --> 00:28:21,000 He then was able to bring us back to testify in the Security and Disarmament subcommittee of the Foreign Affairs Committee on the issue of harp. 228 00:28:21,000 --> 00:28:30,000 And what eventually happened is several sections were included in the European Parliament resolution on disarmament specifically addressing the problems associated with harp. 229 00:28:31,000 --> 00:28:44,000 And what we were able to demonstrate there are many of the applications in use by presenting non-classified military documents as well as the planning documents from the facility and in tracing and showing the history of this facility. 230 00:28:44,000 --> 00:28:51,000 The European's acted as did later the Russians in 2002 when they passed their own similar resolution. 231 00:28:52,000 --> 00:29:01,000 The problem going back to that testimony in the European Parliament in February of 1998 was one issue that we raised where they had strong objections. 232 00:29:01,000 --> 00:29:10,000 And we had said in that hearing that the United States would unilaterally abandon the ABM treaty, the Attribalistics Missile Treaty with the former Soviet Union. 233 00:29:10,000 --> 00:29:17,000 Considered one of the anchors in World Peace globally by Europeans and our traditional allies as well as our adversaries. 234 00:29:17,000 --> 00:29:24,000 The idea that we would abrogate that without cluing in our traditional allies and Brussels and throughout Western Europe. 235 00:29:24,000 --> 00:29:26,000 They just couldn't accept. 236 00:29:26,000 --> 00:29:30,000 The fact is we had said it would happen within a year we were off by three months. 237 00:29:30,000 --> 00:29:37,000 It was three months later that the United States began their moves which eventually led to the abandonment of that treaty. 238 00:29:37,000 --> 00:29:42,000 This was done under both the Clinton administrations and the Bush administrations. 239 00:29:42,000 --> 00:29:48,000 Even though Clinton had said he would never support this kind of move he and the end in fact did. 240 00:29:48,000 --> 00:29:57,000 What happened then is a lot of concerns because we were so right on in terms of our predictions of what was going to happen. 241 00:29:57,000 --> 00:30:04,000 We even gave him the rationale that the senior senator from Alaska Ted Stevens would use which was there is no Soviet Union. 242 00:30:04,000 --> 00:30:06,000 Therefore there is no treaty. 243 00:30:06,000 --> 00:30:11,000 That's what he said on the floor of the United States Senate and the prelude to the abandonment of that treaty. 244 00:30:11,000 --> 00:30:21,000 This is a problem and it's been a problem for our European allies and probably was one of the most significant points of. 245 00:30:21,000 --> 00:30:28,000 The D-PARK disembarking from a policy of cooperation because when you think about it they really should have been included. 246 00:30:28,000 --> 00:30:34,000 Part of the material should have been part of a dialogue that involves something so strategically important to them. 247 00:30:34,000 --> 00:30:36,000 Our traditional allies are NATO allies. 248 00:30:36,000 --> 00:30:39,000 The abandonment of a fundamental treaty. 249 00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:46,000 The other issue going back to harp that was raised in the hearings was this whole issue of. 250 00:30:46,000 --> 00:30:50,000 How else would it be used what are the implications environmentally, etc. 251 00:30:50,000 --> 00:30:59,000 And you know we spent we was supposed to have a 15 minute presentation they actually gave me an hour and a half to present on these issues because of the ramifications of harp. 252 00:30:59,000 --> 00:31:07,000 They later issued a report that didn't just include the ramifications of harp but all of these systems associated with it. 253 00:31:07,000 --> 00:31:13,000 And this whole direction in technology that's taking place today of which harp is just a small part. 254 00:31:13,000 --> 00:31:18,000 So let's get back to some of the other applications of harp and some of the other things that it can do. 255 00:31:18,000 --> 00:31:25,000 One of the other applications that came up early on was the idea of what's called earth penetrating tomography. 256 00:31:25,000 --> 00:31:27,000 Let me make that really simple. 257 00:31:27,000 --> 00:31:37,000 By analogy it would be like x-ring the earth or looking into the several kilometers or several miles deep to look at underground structures for mineral deposits, 258 00:31:37,000 --> 00:31:45,000 nuclear facilities, tunnels, mining facilities, all those kinds of things can be detected by earth penetrating tomography. 259 00:31:45,000 --> 00:31:51,000 Now the way that this would work with harp is really unique and this is again going back to Dr. Eesland's patents. 260 00:31:51,000 --> 00:31:58,000 By sending this energy up this focus energy up to the ionosphere what they can do is they can pulse the energies. 261 00:31:58,000 --> 00:32:08,000 So it acts like a punch. So it's punching the ionosphere with this force that causes the ionosphere to vibrate in resonance and harmony with this signal on the ground. 262 00:32:08,000 --> 00:32:21,000 So if for instance in Norway where they have one of these facilities operating they were able to play Wagner in a way that got the ionosphere literally vibrate to Wagner as an example. 263 00:32:21,000 --> 00:32:31,000 The lower frequency range extremely low frequency range the ELF range it sends a signal back to the earth and ELF signals are very long wavelengths. 264 00:32:31,000 --> 00:32:39,000 And what they do is they penetrate the earth and see all the way through the earth and see nothing stops these ELF signals from penetrating. 265 00:32:39,000 --> 00:32:50,000 Unlike the shorter wavelengths the millimeter and centimeter wavelengths of other communication systems micro wave systems and so on these don't penetrate very deep. 266 00:32:50,000 --> 00:33:07,000 So they can't get down to say submarines at depth. So the way we communicate with submarines around the planet is we use 14 to 26 mile long antennas buried into the ground that create these ELF signals during Michigan and Wisconsin and some out on the illusion chain and other locations around the world. 267 00:33:07,000 --> 00:33:22,000 What harp offered was a new technology that would literally change the ionosphere by sending that energy up and pulsing it in the ionosphere then acts as a broadcast antenna sending back energy to the earth in the ELF range. 268 00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:36,000 At fairly low energy concentrations approximately the same as what the earth naturally produces these signals penetrate the earth and their characters measured by instruments on the ground or low flying objects that can then pick up these signals. 269 00:33:36,000 --> 00:33:41,000 And then deduce determine exactly what those underground structures look like. 270 00:33:41,000 --> 00:33:58,000 In MSNBC right after 911 November 27th 2001 there was an MSNBC report where they cited harp as a useful technology to use in Afghanistan for locating all of those underground facilities and the like. 271 00:33:59,000 --> 00:34:08,000 And the reason that they knew it would work in those applications is going back to 1995 in the congressional appropriations under the defense budget in that year. 272 00:34:08,000 --> 00:34:20,000 They appropriated 11 million to harp to test just that application under the caveat that if it didn't work for earth penetrating tomography or they didn't test that application wouldn't get any more funding. 273 00:34:20,000 --> 00:34:29,000 Now they tested the application on a program on the ionosphere on a show called Horizon's aired on BBC TV. 274 00:34:29,000 --> 00:34:36,000 Professor from the University of Maryland Professor Puppet Aquilus actually talked about the results of the earth penetrating tomography tests with harp. 275 00:34:36,000 --> 00:34:51,000 Where they were looking at underground mining facilities in the area surrounding Fairbanks, Alaska and were able to determine with 99% accuracy the location of those tunnels when comparing them to the actual maps and surveys of those underground workings. 276 00:34:51,000 --> 00:34:53,000 So they proved that technology would work. 277 00:34:53,000 --> 00:34:59,000 If you go back to Atlantic Richfield, the oil company that started this whole project you can see why they would be interested. 278 00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:12,000 I mean, if you get a whole profile of the entire Norse slope regions of Alaska, another oil producing regions of the world and know with certainty what's under the ground great things for their perspective and their shareholders could be gained. 279 00:35:12,000 --> 00:35:21,000 In fact, an expert in this area was able to look at that idea of this earth penetrating tomography issue, a guy named Brooks Agnew. 280 00:35:21,000 --> 00:35:34,000 Brooks Agnew is an interesting guy, a specialist in earth penetrating tomography. And actually there's an article by him posted on my website at www.earthpulse.pl.curthpulse.com. 281 00:35:34,000 --> 00:35:45,000 At that site, you can read the article in detail, but basically what he found is back during the 80s and 90s he was doing work in earth penetrating tomography for the oil industry. 282 00:35:45,000 --> 00:35:54,000 And what he was able to do is with 30 watts of power, which is nothing compared to a billion watts of effective radio power with heart. 283 00:35:54,000 --> 00:36:03,000 But with 30 watts of power, he was able to get profiles of ground strata, several kilometers deep. 284 00:36:03,000 --> 00:36:13,000 And he actually used this with a company that's now fairly well known, Halle Burton, he went around to nine states and 26 known drill sites, 285 00:36:13,000 --> 00:36:18,000 and they actually knew exactly what the ground strata was, the oil and gas grades that were there. 286 00:36:18,000 --> 00:36:34,000 And Brooks Agnew with his technology, earth penetrating tomography, was able to determine with 99% accuracy, not only the ground strata differentials, but whether there was oil and gas in the ground and whether in the quality of those oil and gas deposits. 287 00:36:34,000 --> 00:36:45,000 And that is incredible technology considering that the method of use was not disturbing in terms of natural systems at those very low power levels. 288 00:36:45,000 --> 00:36:53,000 Yet, you know, when you think about oil and gas, you know, those are public resources, having certainty about where to drill and what to do. 289 00:36:53,000 --> 00:37:02,000 Would certainly change the dynamics of how the industry competitively fought for those resources and would have huge implications in the economies of the world. 290 00:37:02,000 --> 00:37:08,000 But the point of the matter is that technology is not being used for mineral exploration today. 291 00:37:08,000 --> 00:37:13,000 It's being used primarily for military applications as is the case with heart. 292 00:37:13,000 --> 00:37:18,000 The question in my mind has always been, do you need these guys under any of these transfer agreements? 293 00:37:18,000 --> 00:37:20,000 Did the oil companies retain rights? 294 00:37:20,000 --> 00:37:21,000 Did they keep rights? 295 00:37:21,000 --> 00:37:24,000 So they could utilize that data in the future? 296 00:37:24,000 --> 00:37:31,000 Why isn't the US government utilizing that data for isolating oil fields within the United States and other places? 297 00:37:31,000 --> 00:37:34,000 This is a good question and one that still remains to be answered. 298 00:37:34,000 --> 00:37:47,000 But when you get into earth penetrating tomography, the problem that Brooks Agnew has, another's a voiced, is the idea of the energy concentrations because what he knew is that if you used too much energy in his worst situation, 299 00:37:47,000 --> 00:38:01,000 in his worst case scenario, you could trigger geologic events, earthquakes, those kinds of events could be triggered utilizing high energy densities in the LF range. 300 00:38:01,000 --> 00:38:05,000 In fact, there was a DOD newsbrief briefing. 301 00:38:05,000 --> 00:38:13,000 It goes back to April 27, 1997, and it was a at the University of Georgia, and it was Secretary Defense William Cohen. 302 00:38:13,000 --> 00:38:15,000 He was commenting on weapons of mass destruction. 303 00:38:15,000 --> 00:38:17,000 Remember, that's way before 911. 304 00:38:17,000 --> 00:38:28,000 And one of the weapons of mass destruction he cited were environmental weapons systems utilizing electromagnetic energy for triggering earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and climate alterations. 305 00:38:28,000 --> 00:38:35,000 This is the US Secretary of Defense William Cohen making that statement in a DOD newsbrief in 1997. 306 00:38:35,000 --> 00:38:46,000 The idea of using energy or accidentally triggering these events was the big concern of Brooks Agnew when he started looking at harp as an issue. 307 00:38:46,000 --> 00:38:59,000 The other was what would happen if this energy going up into the ionosphere actually acted as a conductor or formed a shunt connecting to the earth, this energy from the ionosphere. 308 00:38:59,000 --> 00:39:10,000 What he envisioned would then happen is it would form a tap where the energy actually flowed from the ionosphere down to the earth, and it would look like according to Brooks Agnew. 309 00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:16,000 The biggest bolt of lightning you've ever seen in your life striking the earth 40 times a second. 310 00:39:16,000 --> 00:39:23,000 Now granted, the idea of both of lightning, the biggest you've ever seen striking the earth 40 times a second. 311 00:39:23,000 --> 00:39:32,000 Until all that energy was discharged out of the ionosphere, is granted the most extreme of situations, and one that certainly hasn't manifested itself yet. 312 00:39:32,000 --> 00:39:40,000 But these are the kinds of concerns being raised by independent scientists literally around the world and now by some of the governments around the world. 313 00:39:40,000 --> 00:39:44,000 There's a couple of other applications of harp that I want to talk a little bit about. 314 00:39:45,000 --> 00:39:53,000 The first one, and these are the two most probably the most controversial areas of harp, the first one deals with the idea of manipulating weather systems. 315 00:39:53,000 --> 00:40:00,000 And this is a very important issue because again you're dealing with concepts that have been attempted over the years. 316 00:40:00,000 --> 00:40:13,000 In fact these days you've actually got the United States Congress, two bills pending one of the Senate, one of the House, the Creative Commission for Review of Weather Modification Technology, because commercial interest are now advancing them along with. 317 00:40:13,000 --> 00:40:24,000 Other militaries from around the world. So you've got economic interest interested as much as the military and controlling weather outcomes and climate outcomes for obvious advantage and reasons. 318 00:40:24,000 --> 00:40:27,000 But it creates problems and here's what happens with harp. 319 00:40:27,000 --> 00:40:35,000 harp is also capable of, in fact the early versions were called ionosphere keyters because they literally would heat the ionosphere. 320 00:40:35,000 --> 00:40:41,000 And when you think of this area being heated, it's about 30 miles in diameter above the facility itself. 321 00:40:41,000 --> 00:40:47,000 And when you heat the area by affecting this region, you literally push it up. 322 00:40:47,000 --> 00:40:53,000 So it goes up and out into space, perhaps as far as 200 kilometers. 323 00:40:53,000 --> 00:41:02,000 Instead of being 30 miles above the surface, now you're almost a couple hundred miles potentially out into space with this column. 324 00:41:02,000 --> 00:41:08,000 And the lower atmosphere below rushes in to fill that space. Now what happens then? 325 00:41:08,000 --> 00:41:23,000 Firstly, any satellite that was a low orbiting satellite zipping through space hits this area, hits this energized area that's supposed to be that all the sudden hits atmosphere, encounters friction and the satellite burns up and it crashes. 326 00:41:23,000 --> 00:41:31,000 So as an satellite and I satellite technology, the rushes, the strategic studies institute in London reported that they had actually 327 00:41:32,000 --> 00:41:40,000 looked at Russian papers that had a concept for incoming comets and asteroids. You know, most of these things when they come into our atmosphere, they burn up. 328 00:41:40,000 --> 00:41:48,000 Because you've got this 30 miles where these objects coming in at the tribal Aussies, they encounter the friction, they begin to burn up and they break up and nothing ever hits the Earth. 329 00:41:48,000 --> 00:41:53,000 But big objects make it to ground and big problems can occur accordingly. 330 00:41:53,000 --> 00:42:03,000 But think about instead of 30 miles having maybe 210 miles of range and distance of atmosphere to break up those incoming objects. 331 00:42:03,000 --> 00:42:06,000 Much larger objects could be destroyed in that way. 332 00:42:06,000 --> 00:42:12,000 That was some of the research that the Russians had done utilizing the technology of their heaters back in the 70s. 333 00:42:12,000 --> 00:42:22,960 Now that all is is interesting in and of itself. And I satellite technology, the idea of what else happens when you burn that hole in the ionosphere is all of the energy that's going to be 334 00:42:22,960 --> 00:42:39,960 all of those particle screams again come into fill that space. You know, very, very important situation. Now granted it's continually energized by the sun and by the activities of the planet in terms of our geomagnetics. 335 00:42:39,960 --> 00:42:48,960 But how long they leave it open? What occurs? Those are things that are not being looked at by the biological scientists that ought to be affiliated with this program. 336 00:42:48,960 --> 00:43:01,960 So we really understand the implications of what's happening. If you take it a little bit further and you start to look at this whole concept using a system on the ground to aggravate the ionosphere. 337 00:43:01,960 --> 00:43:18,920 Now what else happens when that lower atmosphere rushes in, you also change pressure systems in the immediate region in terms of lows and highs and the way those pressure systems work and the way in which jet streams flow by altering the flow of jet streams by altering 338 00:43:18,920 --> 00:43:30,920 the way the atmosphere is located within an area. That's where you can get these huge huge problems. Back in the 1977 the United States ratified a treaty where we agreed to not use 339 00:43:30,920 --> 00:43:38,920 environmental manipulation as a weapon of war whether it be the creator of quakes or tidal waves or volcanic eruptions or disturbed the weather. 340 00:43:38,920 --> 00:43:46,920 All of these things were restricted under that treaty when they involved national boundaries or crossing national boundaries. Like most US treaties. 341 00:43:46,920 --> 00:44:00,920 The exemption is for domestic use. The treaties we sign with all these other countries have a clause within them that allows use of the technologies that might be forbidden against another country to be used within the boundaries of your own country. 342 00:44:00,920 --> 00:44:15,920 Chemical and biological treaty is a good one as an example. Russia being a signatory to that treaty. Yet they used gases within the conflict with Chetchenia when they had a bunch of people being trapped in a movie theater. 343 00:44:15,920 --> 00:44:23,920 You may remember this. They pumped in a gas that was supposed to knock everyone out so they could go in and take care of the terrorists and free the hostages. 344 00:44:23,920 --> 00:44:33,920 In fact, over 100 people died from the affixiation. That particular gas would have been forbidden in an international conflict across the outside of the sovereignty of Russia. 345 00:44:33,920 --> 00:44:45,920 But again, these treaties do not have parallel legislation that goes up alongside them that says, hey, if this isn't, if this is good enough for our adversaries, it's good enough for us. 346 00:44:45,920 --> 00:44:51,920 And really we need that parallel legislation. Every time we sign a treaty there ought to be a domestic law going right up alongside it. 347 00:44:51,920 --> 00:45:05,920 The environmental modification treaties were no exception. We continued our experimentation within the United States. The idea now that we can modify weather to large degree is something that's not just unique to the United States. 348 00:45:05,920 --> 00:45:18,920 The Russians who private companies have offered according to New York Times articles have offered that service to other governments to help with weather related problems and issues. 349 00:45:19,920 --> 00:45:37,920 The idea also, the last three sectors of defense, including the present one, have all called for the abandonment of that environmental treaty primarily because the technologies have advanced the point where controlling the environment for warfare applications becomes incredibly useful. 350 00:45:37,920 --> 00:45:46,920 The idea of denying a country that's rainfall for a agricultural production at the same time you have an embargo on going. 351 00:45:46,920 --> 00:45:56,920 Would it be the kind of act of war that you could plausibly deny and you have a devastating effect, even a greater effect than the traditional bombs and bullets. 352 00:45:56,920 --> 00:46:11,920 This really gets into the essence of what's behind harp and technologies like harp. It's what the military now calls the revolution military affairs or they refer to it as a revolution military and political affairs because of the way these things in a relate. 353 00:46:11,920 --> 00:46:23,920 What makes governments powerful today in the world is in fact the command of technology. If you look around the world those governments with the highest technology or those to dominate the world scene. 354 00:46:23,920 --> 00:46:33,920 So technology becomes important for all of us. Tally's have conceptual knowledge of some of these projects including harp but harp is just one of many many projects. 355 00:46:33,920 --> 00:46:47,920 And as we took this issue on, there was an underlying problem as well. Some of the things that were developed by the inventor ideas that should be explored were being ignored because military had no interest. 356 00:46:47,920 --> 00:46:57,920 The example was Dr. Eastland had this idea that using radio frequency energy you could actually trigger chemical reactions in the upper atmosphere which in fact you can. 357 00:46:57,920 --> 00:47:04,920 I mean it's well known. But what you can do by triggering these reactions is you could actually create ozone. 358 00:47:04,920 --> 00:47:13,920 In other words if ozone depletion is truly a problem here you have a system that can replenish ozone utilizing known known laws of science. 359 00:47:13,920 --> 00:47:26,920 Likewise knocking out particular pollutants again by understanding their interactions with radio frequency energy to be able to neutralize pollutants in the environment. None of these things are being looked at and yet they offer huge potentials. 360 00:47:26,920 --> 00:47:38,920 I've had lots of conversations with Dr. Eastland over the years and you know he's got a much different view. I mean he's a senior scientist and outstanding physicist on the world scene. 361 00:47:38,920 --> 00:47:48,920 His concepts today for advancing energy systems and ways to really free people and utilize his science not for our destruction before it's enhancement. 362 00:47:48,920 --> 00:47:55,920 And I think that's where lots of science gets misused when those using it are only seeing certain applications. 363 00:47:55,920 --> 00:48:02,920 But let's get down to the most controversial issue dealing with heart which is the physical effects on human health. 364 00:48:03,920 --> 00:48:16,920 And I want to get into the ELF effects because this is extremely important and there's another video in this series on mind control which gets into this idea of being able to be overridden by radio frequency energy from the outside. 365 00:48:16,920 --> 00:48:18,920 And this is what we know from the research. 366 00:48:18,920 --> 00:48:33,920 You go back to the mid 1980s there was a document called low intensity conflict and modern technologies produced at Maxwell Air Force Base and has a section on an electro magnetic weapon systems where it gets into a whole discussion of what was possible. 367 00:48:33,920 --> 00:48:42,920 If you even go back further you got to go back to a book called Unless Peace Cumbs Polish 1969 within that is a chapter called How to Recur Environment. 368 00:48:42,920 --> 00:48:58,920 And the reason is it's an important chapter. It was before or say that was later in the 70s. So you could get away with the chapter like that. But nonetheless the guy that wrote it was a guy named GF Gordon McDonald and he was a full professor at UCLA and a science advisor president Johnson when he was in the presidency. 369 00:48:58,920 --> 00:49:07,920 And he had written back then that if we could ever figure out how to electronically stroke the ionosphere in just the right way we could return a signal to the earth. 370 00:49:07,920 --> 00:49:23,920 That would literally manipulate the behavior of people over huge geographic areas. That was GF Gordon McDonald's ideas going back. But in the 90s, nine, we didn't have a way to electronically stroke the ionosphere and create that kind of returning signal. 371 00:49:23,920 --> 00:49:41,920 Later in a book by Zabignabersinsky, it was a book called Between Two Ages. And in this book is a reiteration of JF Gordon's ideas about again being able to electronically stroke the ionosphere and return a signal to the earth. 372 00:49:41,920 --> 00:49:53,920 And this particular book by Brzinski and Brzinski for those who don't remember he later became national security advisor to President Carter at the time he wrote the book. He was a professor and researcher at CISME Columbia University. 373 00:49:53,920 --> 00:50:03,920 But here's this idea. Now how do you electronically stroke the ionosphere? That's exactly what harped us. But what kind of signal returns is what's relevant. And here's why. 374 00:50:03,920 --> 00:50:27,920 When you think about energy, most energy passes through us and we have huge amounts of radio frequency energy passing through us right today. You know that that nature creates a certain amount of radio frequency energy that has always been here. But man creates 200 million times more radio frequency energy than what nature creates. So that surrounds us. We're literally surrounded that soup. And that's just radio frequency energy. 375 00:50:27,920 --> 00:50:33,920 When you think about whole electromagnetic spectrum, there's a whole lot of other energy that man's create those surrounds us as well. 376 00:50:33,920 --> 00:50:42,920 But the human body is really unique. It's like the ultimate tuner. A most energy passes through us like static between the stations. 377 00:50:42,920 --> 00:50:47,920 You know, when you're going to the radio stations, you're looking for that that favorite channel. 378 00:50:47,920 --> 00:50:54,920 It's when resonance occurs between the receiver and the transmitter. That thing sending the energy, the radio station, to the radio receiver. 379 00:50:54,920 --> 00:51:01,920 When they're in harmony, you get a nice clear signal when you get your station. The same is true by analogy within the human body. 380 00:51:01,920 --> 00:51:08,920 And this is what the military research has shown is that you can affect everything down to a molecular level. 381 00:51:08,920 --> 00:51:15,920 If you understand enough about the physics of the body and the math of radio frequency energy's relationship to it, 382 00:51:15,920 --> 00:51:22,920 you can manipulate radio frequency energy to affect the body. And this is what they did actually in a study sponsored by the Air Force. 383 00:51:22,920 --> 00:51:27,920 The study was at the University of Utah. It was completed in 1985. 384 00:51:27,920 --> 00:51:34,920 It was under the auspices of the Science Advisory Board to the Air Force. And it was produced, what's called the radio frequency, 385 00:51:34,920 --> 00:51:42,920 the DOSOMETRIE Handbook. Simple language is the dosages of radio frequency energy necessary to override every vital organ of the body, 386 00:51:42,920 --> 00:51:51,920 including the brain, whether it be the liver, the kidneys, the heart, the lungs, to interfere with their natural performance as a weapon or weapon application. 387 00:51:51,920 --> 00:51:59,920 Now again, you're talking about energy that is different. We're talking about a whole different view of warfare. We're using energy as the base. 388 00:51:59,920 --> 00:52:07,920 These technologies are now being developed for things like the active denial system, which is using knowledge of microwave millimeter waves 389 00:52:07,920 --> 00:52:13,920 to affect the body to create pain or heat sensations, affecting only the nerve endings on the surface of the body. 390 00:52:13,920 --> 00:52:18,920 But these basic principles apply to the entire living organism. 391 00:52:18,920 --> 00:52:27,920 So Jose Dogato was an interesting guy. He was at Yale University in the mid-60s and began mapping the human brain by planning electrodes and primates and humans to see 392 00:52:27,920 --> 00:52:36,920 how to affect the different parts of the brain. We're affected and affected our health and the way we thought and just sort of how the brain worked. 393 00:52:36,920 --> 00:52:45,920 Mapping it out. Well, by the mid-80s, he had figured out a lot of other things. He found out that not only could you map the brain, but you could stimulate the brain. 394 00:52:46,920 --> 00:52:56,920 And so starting in 1969, he put the implants in and there's a famous image of him with the charging bolini throws the switch of a radio, a transmitter and the bull stops. 395 00:52:56,920 --> 00:53:04,920 Right in its tracks right in front of the guy. And in this case, he used an implant that affected the bull in a way that caused it to stop. 396 00:53:04,920 --> 00:53:14,920 Now, what he found by the mid-80s is he didn't need any implant and technology whatsoever. All he needed was radio frequency energy. 397 00:53:14,920 --> 00:53:31,920 Modulated in pulse to just the right way to carry a signal. And what they found is it took only one 50 of what the Earth's natural radio frequency energy level was to affect us dramatically. 398 00:53:31,920 --> 00:53:43,920 With the case of primates and humans making them look thargic or passive, almost asleep, the highly agitated and awake, back and forth, back and forth, like throwing a light switch on and off on and off. 399 00:53:43,920 --> 00:53:51,920 No implants, no physical contact using radio frequency energy, 150th of what the Earth naturally produces. 400 00:53:51,920 --> 00:54:11,920 In its earth-penish rating tomography mode, we'll produce 50 times more energy than it's necessary to override normal brain function, according to the research at Yale University, and the research conducted by the Air Force and Navy, in all of those projects that we cite within our published work. 401 00:54:11,920 --> 00:54:18,920 Now, when you think about the idea of manipulating brain activity, you can do it for all kinds of different reasons. 402 00:54:18,920 --> 00:54:25,920 I mean, it can be an accidental side effect, which is what the military says is the case with heart. 403 00:54:25,920 --> 00:54:33,920 But the question of side effect or deliberate effect really takes us back to this issue of human manipulation. Is it possible? 404 00:54:33,920 --> 00:54:36,920 And let's talk about that a little bit more in depth. 405 00:54:36,920 --> 00:55:00,920 You know, what happens within the brain? How ELF signals extremely low frequency signals might interact? 406 00:55:00,920 --> 00:55:11,920 If you look at an EEG and what the brain is actually doing, you look at those patterns. What we know is that the brain exhibits predominant brain waves during certain times during certain activities. 407 00:55:11,920 --> 00:55:21,920 In your very deepest states of sleep, for instance, it's one to four hertz or pulses per second of the predominant ELF frequency within the brain. 408 00:55:21,920 --> 00:55:31,920 And that sort of middle stage of sleep where you're actively dreaming, but you're kind of consciously awake at the same time. This is the threat of range approximately four to seven hertz or pulses per second. 409 00:55:31,920 --> 00:55:41,920 A seven to a proximate 11 or 12 hertz is the ELF range. This is where you are when you're in that zone or ideal place for learning and doing art and that kind of activity. 410 00:55:41,920 --> 00:55:47,920 The better ranges get into where you're actively listening and participating all the way up to agitated states. 411 00:55:47,920 --> 00:56:09,920 And what we know is that any external signal, whether it be flickering light, or whether it be by oral beat created by sound, or whether the electromagnetic energy being pulsed through the body, or radial frequency energy, all of these things at the right pulse rates can override normal brain function and change the way our brain chemistry then looks. 412 00:56:09,920 --> 00:56:17,920 Because it starts with the energy interactions that then create the chemical reactions that then create changes in our behaviors. 413 00:56:17,920 --> 00:56:33,920 So the idea of accidentally triggering these kinds of events or deliberately doing it, as was discussed by Zubigny Brzinski and McDonald, the idea that you could literally do this in effect 70 or 80% of the population within a large area. 414 00:56:33,920 --> 00:56:41,920 Heart can do this as a side effect or deliberate effect based on the science and research done by the military and developing these technologies. 415 00:56:41,920 --> 00:56:46,920 It's not one of the stated goals of heart, but it is an issue that needs to be looked at. 416 00:56:46,920 --> 00:56:55,920 And one that Russians and Europeans have begun to raise concerns about because their research also shows exactly what we're saying isn't in fact the case. 417 00:56:55,920 --> 00:57:06,920 The problem with technology and the directions in which it's going when you consider things like heart is we're getting away from the bullets and the bombs and ordinance and going to energy-based technologies. 418 00:57:06,920 --> 00:57:09,920 Now energy-based technologies present some unique challenges. 419 00:57:09,920 --> 00:57:21,920 Firstly, from the standpoint of really looking at the damage that we create, we affect living systems and electronic systems, what we don't affect the basic infrastructure of countries. 420 00:57:21,920 --> 00:57:28,920 You know, we're about to spend $2 trillion in the total expenditures anticipated in Iraq alone. 421 00:57:28,920 --> 00:57:34,920 That is a huge amount of expenditure over the years it's going to take to rebuild it when it's already been spent destroying it. 422 00:57:34,920 --> 00:57:42,920 So these weapons are being developed to keep the infrastructures in place but kill or affect the living people within these regions. 423 00:57:42,920 --> 00:57:53,920 So the idea of heart being turned to these uses in the future as these techniques and technologies are advancing shouldn't be discounted at all. 424 00:57:53,920 --> 00:57:55,920 In fact, it should be expected. 425 00:57:55,920 --> 00:58:02,920 It is one of the reasons that international bodies are beginning to complain about this technology's potential abuses. 426 00:58:02,920 --> 00:58:20,920 So you've got when you look at heart a very versatile instrument from earth penetrating to geography and earth imaging affecting weather systems, affecting communications over the horizon radar, global shielding, all of those applications for obvious reasons, people can see strategic advantage. 427 00:58:20,920 --> 00:58:31,920 However, again, when you're dealing with literally connecting a machine on the ground to a component of the environment with the expressed intention of manipulating the environment for weapons applications. 428 00:58:31,920 --> 00:58:48,920 That concept alone deserves significant international discussion and because it's being generated in this country in the United States, it should have significant public discussion about the ramifications, not just within our own territory but around the world. 429 00:58:48,920 --> 00:58:51,920 And that's what's missing from much of the heart debate. 430 00:58:51,920 --> 00:58:54,920 Let's go back for a minute to the work of Dr. Ben Island. 431 00:58:54,920 --> 00:59:03,920 When he originated this concept, it was a long time ago. You're now going back to the late 1980s and the 1980s through the early 1990s. 432 00:59:03,920 --> 00:59:06,920 You know, technologies advanced dramatically since that. 433 00:59:06,920 --> 00:59:12,920 And Dr. Island hasn't just been sitting around either. He's got other projects he's been working on that are quite interesting. 434 00:59:12,920 --> 00:59:23,920 And one of those recently, in fact, in October of 2005, he presented a paper at Penn State on weather modification utilizing gravitational waves. 435 00:59:23,920 --> 00:59:38,920 Now, what's important about this paper, extremely important about this paper, is that it talks about being able to modify weather using 1600 times less energy than was anticipated for weather modification applications using heart. 436 00:59:38,920 --> 00:59:51,920 In other words, 1600 times less energy than was once thought to be needed. It's now understood by him as a physicist in a major university presentation to be possible. 437 00:59:51,920 --> 01:00:00:07,920 Now, when you think about weather modification, when the other things that happened with Dr. Island, as he was invited by the European Space Agency to do a paper on weather modification utilizing the heart systems, that was completed in 1999 and presented for peer-to-peer. 438 01:00:07,920 --> 01:00:26,920 And he's also invited for peer review at a major space expo in Europe. Coming off of that paper, FEMA, and NASA contracted with Dr. Island for a pair of paper utilizing space-based technologies, satellite-based technologies for weather modification applications. 439 01:00:26,920 --> 01:00:32,920 And one of the things that he saw, that he mentions in both these papers, is for instance being able to affect tornadoes. 440 01:00:32,920 --> 01:00:36,920 You know, you have a warm front coming into contact with a cold front. 441 01:00:36,920 --> 01:00:42,920 And when they come together, you get a shearing force that causes that twisting action where you get the tornado formation. 442 01:00:42,920 --> 01:00:56,920 So the idea of these and was, if you could heat the cold front sufficiently, that when these two fronts connected, you didn't get that energy differential to create that tornado formation, you could essentially knock out tornadoes. 443 01:00:56,920 --> 01:01:04,920 So the problem is of course, if you miss and you heat the already heated area, so that there's even a greater differential when it encounters the cold front. 444 01:01:04,920 --> 01:01:19,920 You have more energy available to create even a more destructive tornado. The fact of the matter is, other governments around the world to take in this very seriously, including our own, is invested a significant amount of money to look at how to infect these things. 445 01:01:19,920 --> 01:01:29,920 Remember a few years ago, back during the Clinton administration actually, there was a tornado that went through Oklahoma City and Clinton showed up and there was a press report to talk about him saying, 446 01:01:29,920 --> 01:01:37,920 Don't worry, eventually we're going to figure out how to knock out the energy of those tornadoes and these one ever hurt civilized cities again. 447 01:01:37,920 --> 01:01:47,920 Well, you know, that was the same city where Benny, slender the University of Oklahoma, did his computer modeling to figure out how to knock out the energy in those tornadoes a few months before. 448 01:01:47,920 --> 01:01:55,920 So what Clinton was actually saying was based on the science that could have it instead of been produced in that very same city just months before. 449 01:01:55,920 --> 01:02:12,920 The idea of weather modification continues to be a major interest again, as we advance this revolution of military affairs, which is this concept of warfare emerging here in the beginning of the 21st century and the end of the last century. 450 01:02:12,920 --> 01:02:22,920 That concept essentially came from a paper written in 1989 by the U.S. Army War College and it was a paper that was called the Revolution of Military Affairs. 451 01:02:22,920 --> 01:02:35,920 And what it said is that the technology was changing so dramatically, they equated it with the change that happened when gunpowder was introduced to Europe in the Middle Ages or when atomic weapons were introduced in the middle of the last century. 452 01:02:35,920 --> 01:02:46,920 That's the kind of revolution taking place today using energy as the base of the science, not bullets and bombs, but speed of light technologies from high powered lasers, 453 01:02:46,920 --> 01:02:53,920 to particle beams, to heart systems. These are the systems of the 21st century and here's what we have to consider. 454 01:02:53,920 --> 01:03:03,920 When you're using energy discharges like for instance in an an eye ballistic missile arrangement where you've got incoming missiles, you know, here in Alaska. 455 01:03:03,920 --> 01:03:11,920 We've become the place where they built the new missile defense system, so they've installed on underground silos, interceptors. 456 01:03:11,920 --> 01:03:23,920 You know, literally bullets to hit other bullets, flying at us at about 30,000 miles an hour in reentry speeds. They're going to try and pick those off and in most of the tests so far conducted, they failed. 457 01:03:23,920 --> 01:03:33,920 The reality is they won't use conventional warheads to knock out these craft they're going to use space-based laser systems that are being developed, other energy-based systems. 458 01:03:33,920 --> 01:03:48,920 And the reason we know this is because you have the ability to number one target with precision. These weapons when they fire a laser or a particle beam, they travel at the speed of light, 186,300 miles per second. 459 01:03:48,920 --> 01:03:54,920 That can literally go around the planet seven times with time left over in less than a second. 460 01:03:54,920 --> 01:04:05,920 So being able to target, say, an intercontinental ballistic missile, you'd literally be able to knock it out of the sky before it ever left the launch pad with this type of technology. 461 01:04:05,920 --> 01:04:12,920 That's where missile defense is going in the 21st century. The interceptors are the party line for the public. 462 01:04:13,920 --> 01:04:20,920 The reality is these other systems are advancing that a part of the energy has owned patents since the late 1980s that are cited in the book, 463 01:04:20,920 --> 01:04:24,920 or authorizing the revolution, which I wrote with James Rodgeric a number of years ago. 464 01:04:24,920 --> 01:04:28,920 The fact is they've had the technology, they're advancing the technology. 465 01:04:28,920 --> 01:04:33,920 The heart is a part of this advancement, this revolution of the literary affairs. 466 01:04:33,920 --> 01:04:40,920 The other thing that's happening and where the heart issue starts to cross over is the idea of affecting our physical bodies, 467 01:04:40,920 --> 01:04:43,920 affecting our health, or our mental states. 468 01:04:43,920 --> 01:04:50,920 That is an area of technology that has raised huge, huge controversies around the world today. 469 01:04:50,920 --> 01:04:55,920 And it's continuing to be raised today because of the implications in 24th century warfare. 470 01:04:55,920 --> 01:05:06,920 Now take the concept of speed of light weapons and overlay that concept on this idea that George Bush's W Bush's introduced 471 01:05:06,920 --> 01:05:10,920 as President of the United States called preemptive warfare. 472 01:05:10,920 --> 01:05:17,920 This is a concept of figuring out who your enemies are before they know your enemies and wife and a mouth. 473 01:05:17,920 --> 01:05:24,920 It works good when you're the top dog, when you own all the technologies that make preemptive warfare effective. 474 01:05:24,920 --> 01:05:35,920 But in the advent of speed of light weapons, weapons that discharge instantly, where there is no time to react, is preemptive warfare a concept we want to introduce to the world scene today. 475 01:05:35,920 --> 01:05:53,920 China, the largest industrial power emerging on the planet, 13% growth per year, consistently, 11 to 13% growth per year, building the largest industrial base, dwarfing the industrial revolution of the West of the last century. 476 01:05:53,920 --> 01:05:57,920 They're going to be capable of developing these very same technologies. 477 01:05:57,920 --> 01:06:06,920 They say, don't worry about the Chinese, they only spend 40 to 44 billion dollars a year on defense, a fraction of what we spend in the United States. 478 01:06:06,920 --> 01:06:10,920 In fact, 10% approximately of what we spend in the United States. 479 01:06:10,920 --> 01:06:19,920 But if you look at what you buy in China for 44 billion dollars, it's significantly more than we get for all the money we spend on defense within this country. 480 01:06:19,920 --> 01:06:22,920 That is a major major issue. 481 01:06:22,920 --> 01:06:32,920 Taking from the brains of a billion citizens in a centralized government like China's and isolating those technologies, those future scientists, those engineers, 482 01:06:32,920 --> 01:06:42,920 that can develop this type of technology, is in fact a major area of Chinese advancement according to things being released by our central intelligence agency today. 483 01:06:43,920 --> 01:06:51,920 Articles that have appeared in Russian military journals and other journals indicate that they are moving along the same path that we are with as much speed as we are. 484 01:06:51,920 --> 01:07:01,920 The problem is, again, the ideologies behind the technologies, whether it's the Chinese, the government, the Chinese, military or whether it's the United States government. 485 01:07:01,920 --> 01:07:09,920 Whatever the value systems that drive our technology they should come from the people and spring forward, that's the nature of democratic republics. 486 01:07:09,920 --> 01:07:19,920 That's the nature of democracies. That's what's missing in the evolution of military technologies around the world today, including the United States. 487 01:07:19,920 --> 01:07:25,920 One of the other applications of the heart technologies, the idea of energy transfer from one place on the planet to another. 488 01:07:25,920 --> 01:07:28,920 And this is really one of the more interesting ones. It's one of the first tests. 489 01:07:28,920 --> 01:07:44,920 In fact, the first test of a small array was to see if you could focus the radio frequency energy in a way where you could take electrical energy, convert it to radio frequency energy, then send it back up into satellite or a low orbiting space platform. 490 01:07:44,920 --> 01:07:50,920 And turn that radio frequency energy back into electrical energy where it can be utilized as a power source. 491 01:07:50,920 --> 01:07:57,920 Now, why this is important as a power source if you think about it, low orbiting space platforms. 492 01:07:57,920 --> 01:08:09,920 If you could put these low orbiting space platforms around the planet to utilize energy-based technologies like space-based lasers, you could get closer to your targets, but you have to have a fuel source. 493 01:08:09,920 --> 01:08:16,920 You can't just keep sending shuttles up there with energy. You have to be able to get the energy to those lower-reaching space platforms. 494 01:08:16,920 --> 01:08:25,920 And what they could do with heart and systems like heart is keep energized space platforms for up to 10,000 hour missions. 495 01:08:25,920 --> 01:08:33,920 So, literally, indefinitely, keeping objects afloat by continually feeding in the necessary energy they need to recharge and maintain their power levels. 496 01:08:33,920 --> 01:08:39,920 The other place where they looked at a low-arbiting space platforms is using the ionosphere itself. 497 01:08:39,920 --> 01:08:52,920 Literally tapping the energy as these space platforms whip through the ionosphere using tethers, long conductors, dragging from below, actually picking up power along the way. 498 01:08:52,920 --> 01:08:57,920 And you remember the shuttle experiment a number of years ago where they did this with a tether hanging from the shuttle. 499 01:08:57,920 --> 01:09:02,920 And such a huge amount of power built up that it almost blew the shuttle out of the sky. 500 01:09:02,920 --> 01:09:10,920 The reality is, these are all ways of looking at energy-based warfare system, something that we haven't had in the past. 501 01:09:10,920 --> 01:09:18,920 In the 1980s during the first of Star Wars, these were discounted because you couldn't stabilize satellites to, for instance, spiral laser. 502 01:09:18,920 --> 01:09:29,920 And if you get just a little bit of wobble from a distance, you know, the further you go, the further out that wobble becomes, if you're a carpenter, you know that we start on one side of a house and you're 16th of an inch out. 503 01:09:29,920 --> 01:09:32,920 By the time you're on the other side of the house, you're an inch out. 504 01:09:32,920 --> 01:09:38,920 Well imagine from space being a 16th of an inch out where you would be. You'd be miles off your target. 505 01:09:38,920 --> 01:09:48,920 So space platforms stabilizing became an issue for the 90s, which they actually figured out how to do it, making that type of technology applicable in this century. 506 01:09:48,920 --> 01:09:51,920 When you look at the combinations, this is pretty remarkable. 507 01:09:51,920 --> 01:09:57,920 One of the other places they looked at an experiment, you remember the shuttle experiment where they unraveled a big mile-hour reflector. 508 01:09:57,920 --> 01:10:01,920 And this is supposed to be going to collect solar energy and reflect it so they could use this energy. 509 01:10:01,920 --> 01:10:07,920 Well, it just so happens within the patent solar reflectors were also needed in case of harp. 510 01:10:07,920 --> 01:10:20,920 Because again, sending energy up, being able to concentrate it to relatively small area and then bounce that energy through these reflectors to other parts of the planet, where the energy can then be converted back to electrical energy. 511 01:10:20,920 --> 01:10:22,920 Now why would that be important? 512 01:10:23,920 --> 01:10:34,920 Anytime you have a war, you need power sources. If you could literally do it wirelessly and get your energy without moving diesel fuel and all of the stuff that you have to move logistically, that becomes pretty advantageous. 513 01:10:34,920 --> 01:10:39,920 So wireless transfer of energy became one of these very concepts. 514 01:10:39,920 --> 01:10:47,920 Interestingly enough, during the Hickle administration when he was governor of Alaska, Glen Ols, one of his, I believe it was a commissioner of commerce at the time, 515 01:10:47,920 --> 01:10:52,920 actually had this concept of wireless transfer of energy for remote places in Alaska. 516 01:10:52,920 --> 01:10:57,920 So these concepts aren't new, they're just being revisited in light of new technology. 517 01:10:57,920 --> 01:11:02,920 Harp happens to present a bit of that technology as well. 518 01:11:02,920 --> 01:11:06,920 Over the years, harp is created quite a lot of controversy. 519 01:11:06,920 --> 01:11:16,920 In fact, when you look on, if you do a search under harp, HAARP on the internet, you'll find thousands and thousands of sources and documents and materials. 520 01:11:16,920 --> 01:11:20,920 Some of it pretty outrageous quite frankly, and some of it right on target. 521 01:11:20,920 --> 01:11:28,920 Like any issue, harp is no exception. It draws a lot of controversy, draws a lot of misinformation to the debate as well. 522 01:11:28,920 --> 01:11:39,920 You know, this video was prepared to give a summation of the technology, but I recommend highly that people take a look, get the book from your local library, angels don't play this harp. 523 01:11:39,920 --> 01:11:46,920 There's over 350 sources cited in that book that validate all the things that we've covered today. 524 01:11:46,920 --> 01:11:52,920 Take a look when you're looking at these kinds of issues, big issues that can literally change the face of the planet. 525 01:11:52,920 --> 01:11:59,920 Look deeper, make sure that the facts are there, make sure the information is there, but then get that information to those that can make a difference. 526 01:11:59,920 --> 01:12:08,920 Whether it's your local political leadership coming out of your own states and your own countries, the fact of the matter is, these technologies have to be 527 01:12:09,920 --> 01:12:19,920 engaged in the true light of day. We can't allow militaries to advance technologies that have these kinds of implications for the planet, for our health, for our environment. 528 01:12:19,920 --> 01:12:24,920 You know, if we're really to be stewards of this planet, it requires real action. 529 01:12:24,920 --> 01:12:37,920 Each of us can do something within our spheres of influence to make a difference. Whether it's this issue or any of the other issues we cover in this series, the fact of the matter is, people make the difference, people make things change. 530 01:12:37,920 --> 01:12:41,920 And we need to engage the processes and do exactly that. 531 01:12:41,920 --> 01:12:52,920 And let's let our technology service in the 21st century as man intends it to do and not create just another situation that we have to clean up in the next century. 532 01:12:52,920 --> 01:12:56,920 Thanks for spending the time with me today. Check out one of our other videos. 533 01:12:56,920 --> 01:13:03,920 We've got the Mind Control video, Technology in the 21st century, and a new video being produced on Earth Changes. 534 01:13:03,920 --> 01:13:04,920 Thanks for being with me. 535 01:13:07,920 --> 01:13:09,920 Thank you. 536 01:13:37,920 --> 01:13:39,920 Thank you. 537 01:14:07,920 --> 01:14:09,920 Thank you. 538 01:14:37,920 --> 01:14:39,920 Thank you. 539 01:15:07,920 --> 01:15:09,920 Thank you. 540 01:15:37,920 --> 01:15:39,920 Thank you. 541 01:16:07,920 --> 01:16:09,920 Thank you. 542 01:16:37,920 --> 01:16:39,920 Thank you. 543 01:17:07,920 --> 01:17:09,920 Thank you. 544 01:17:37,920 --> 01:17:39,920 Thank you.