Page 197 - Elana Freeland - Under an Ionized Sky
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hack around a bit to find out more about Project Aerosol research, as all of this technology was new to me. Around
                     that time, my manager was transferred to the physics department after the U.S. Navy brought in a lieutenant dressed in
                     civilian clothes to manage the IT department. He made my life hell, moving me out of my capacity and taking me off
                     all  the  projects  I  was  involved  with  on  the  RHIC  and  the  cluster  server,  then  banishing  me  to  do  departmental
                     backups. I knew it was because of my hacking around. Subsequently, I left BNL. Much of the IT department was
                     outsourced after a new director arrived.
                        I can definitely testify that BNL has intranet access to CERN. I did an upgrade on BNL’s cluster server and had to
                     log in and test the link to make sure that our CERN link was back up and online. BNL also has a supercomputer that
                     was built in-house with a proprietary link to both CERN and Japan’s ILC (International Linear Collider) and the
                     KEKB accelerator. I knew this for a fact as one weekend I worked on upgrading storage arrays on BNL’s cluster
                     while a physicist and a hardware technician I knew were doing a hardware upgrade on the BNL supercomputer. I
                     remember  they  were  quite  concerned  about  the  proprietary  intranet  links  when  they  failed  to  come  up  after  the
                     upgrade. 7

                   How many particle accelerator labs are still active and how many are proof of concept labs
               receiving data from LHC particle detectors for number-crunching and computer modeling is hard
               to say. Wikipedia (notoriously unreliable) lists many as having been shut down—or did they just
               “go  black”?  The  site  “Particle  Accelerators  Around  the  World”  (www-elsa.physik.uni-
               bonn.de/accelerator_list.html) seems accurate, though again, who knows, given that most of the
               programs are geared to researching kinetic weapons and not physics per se?
                   Take  the  eight-hundred-foot  “Desertron”  Superconducting  Super-Collider  (SSC)  in
               Waxahachie, Texas near Dallas, a fifty-four-mile-long tunnel 250 feet under the Earth’s surface
                                                                                      8
               with a “ring” circumference of 87.1 kilometers and an energy of 20 TeV  per beam of protons—
               3X that of the LHC (7 TeV per beam). Protons hurtling at the speed of light (harmonic 16944),
               antimatter  collisions  shattering  quantums  of  energy.  The  Desertron  was  to  build  and  test
               superconducting magnets for other super-colliders (plus magnetic-levitation trains or maglevs,
               motors, energy storage, low-loss power distribution, etc.). Construction began in 1991 but by
               1993 the story was that the Desertron was hopelessly over budget with just 22.5 km of tunnel and
               seventeen shafts completed, so it was shut down. In 2006, the Department of Energy purportedly
               sold it to Arkansas multimillionaire Johnnie Bryan Hunt whose dream was to build the Collider
               Data Center.


                     Hunt’s  unique  selling  point  for  Collider  Data  Center  was  its  location  and  infrastructure.  The  collider  sits  on  an
                     independent power grid capable of delivering 10 megawatts of power (and up to 100 megawatts if needed), and it has
                     its own dedicated fiber optic line. Its two warehouses can support floor loads of 500 pounds per square foot, perfect
                     for the enormous servers that Hunt intended to buy. The entire complex is clear of flight paths and out of hurricane,
                                                9
                     tsunami, earthquake and flood zones.

                   But then Hunt “slipped on ice” and died, so the half-dug underground facility again sat idle—
               or did it?
                   Earlier, I stressed that HAARP experiments have damaged the ionosphere and weakened the
               magnetosphere.  CERN,  in  tandem  with  scalar  interferometers  like  HAARP,  is  no  doubt
               complicit,  as  well,  but  could  also  offset  impact  on  the  magnetosphere.  “Ripples”  in  the
               magnetosphere  can  cause  airplanes  to  literally  drop  from  the  sky.  Rumors  about  CERN  flew
               when on March 24, 2015, Germanwings Airbus A320 went from a cruising altitude of 38,000
               feet to a rapid descent over the French Alps 127 miles from CERN. Only 10 percent of airplane
               crashes occur after a plane reaches cruising altitude.
                   On April 23, 2016, the magnetosphere collapsed (“disappeared”) for two hours. While it is
               tempting to blame the LHC superconducting magnets, CERN watcher Anthony Patch insists that
               at that time the LHC was running at low luminosity and producing corresponding low-duration
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