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in San Antonio, Texas. Today, SAM, the Human Effects Center of Excellence, and the Air Force
               Research  Laboratory  continue  to  research  nonlethal  weapons  like  lasers,  masers,  microwave
               hearing, synthetic telepathy / voice-to-skull (V2K), brain-machine interface (BMI), etc. In fact,
               AFSPC at Peterson Air Force Base may be the military hub of artificial telepathy operations:
               “It’s the ‘mission control’ center where rocket scientists, AFRL, HAARP, spy satellites, radar
               dishes,  microwave  towers,  beam  weapons,  human  experimentation  and  spooky  intelligence
               agencies like NSA, NRO and DIA all come together.”  23
                   Now let’s move on to the control over the poles that plays heavily in Space Fence operation.
               The Nazis studied the poles but not necessarily for the mythical reasons disseminated after the
               Nuremberg show trials.



                                              MAGNETIC NORTH & SOUTH

               [NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory senior research scientist Surendra Adhikari:] The pole used to
                be heading along ~75 degrees west longitude, toward Canada, during the 20th century. It is now
                  heading along the central meridian, i.e. 0 degrees longitude, toward the UK. So this shift in
                      direction would roughly be about 75 degrees to the east, from Canada to the UK. 24


               In  November  2013,  The  European  Space  Agency  (ESA)  launched  three  9-meter  SWARM
               satellites to monitor and map the magnetosphere from 300–530 km (186–330 miles) above the
               planet.  It  was  SWARM  that  scientifically  confirmed  the  North  Pole  drift  which  Inuit  Indian
               shamans  had  discerned  years  before,  and  SWARM  that  provides  data  regarding  the  South
               Atlantic Anomaly, an indicator of a possible geomagnetic pole reversal. 25
                   The  North  and  South  Poles  are  moving,  as  is  our  magnetosphere.  If  the  Earth’s  axis  is
               shifting,  the  passive  sounding  “climate  change”  (melting  ice  sheets,  loss  of  water  mass  in
               Eurasia, etc.) makes what is going on at the poles worthy of headlines. It may even be time to
               reconsider the Earth axis deviating considerably from its current position in the only extant map
               of an ancient sky we have, the Dendera Zodiac on display at the Musée du Louvre in Paris. 26
                   Given the state of the art fifth-generation EISCAT 3D ionospheric heater with its 100,000
               simultaneous antennas, and four previous generation heaters are located in the Arctic region—
               EISCAT in Norway, HAARP Gakona, HIPAS Fairbanks in Alaska, and Brookhaven National
               Laboratory  on  Long  Island,  New  York—and  myriad  “space  trails”  of  chemical  and  metal
               nanoparticles being spewed from rockets launched in the Northern Hemisphere (like Poker Flat
               Research Range and NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility), it is safe to say that the poles remain a big
               military concern and play heavily into Space Fence “space situational awareness.”
                   If you were to believe retired U.S. Army Colonel David Hunt, it’s Russian saber-rattling that
               U.S. interest in the Arctic is about, given that Russia shares the Arctic Sea with NATO nations
               under a USUK thumb (Greenland, Canada, Sweden, Norway, and Finland):

                     Recently, Russia submitted a claim to the United States for 1.2 million square kilometers of Arctic sea shelf, including
                     the North Pole. The territory could hold about 5 billion tons of oil and gas resources. Above its northern coastline,
                     they’ve also asserted ownership of the emerging Northern Sea Route, the Arctic’s fastest-growing shipping route.
                        This comes after Russia spent years militarizing the region unabated and without challenge. Not only have the
                     Russians placed a flag via submarine on the seabed of the North Pole and rehabilitated a Soviet-era military base,
                     they’ve  also  launched  a  full-alert  combat  readiness  exercise  with  38,000  troops,  110  aircraft,  41  ships,  and  15
                     submarines.  They’ve  added  a  6,000-soldier  permanent  military  force  in  the  Arctic’s  northwest  Murmansk  region,
                     equipped with new radar and guidance system capabilities and coastal defense missile systems. Russia currently has a
                     fleet of six nuclear-powered icebreakers and at least a dozen diesel-powered icebreakers, and three more nuclear-
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