Page 75 - Elana Freeland - Under an Ionized Sky
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intelligence complex agendas dependent upon the unregulated use of nanotechnology.


                     “Nanotechnology  is  a  novel  technology  that  poses  unique  risks  unlike  anything  we’ve  seen  before,”  said  Jaydee
                     Hanson, policy director at the International Center for Technology Assessment. “Scientists agree that nanomaterials
                     create novel risks that require new forms of toxicity testing. EPA’s use of a conditional registration could not be more
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                     inappropriate in this context.”

























                                           MEMS – Microelectromechanical Sensors or Systems
                                         GEMS – Global Environmental MEMS Sensors or Systems
                                           NEMS – Nanoelectromechanical Sensors or Systems
                   Electron micrograph of NEMS objects fabricated in single-crystal silicon by using electron beam lithography and surface
                micromachining. A torsional oscillator, a compound torsional oscillator, a series of silicon nanowires, and an oscillating silicon
                   mesh mirror. – H.G. Craighead, “Nanoelectromechanical Systems,” Science, Vol. 290, Issue 5496, 24 November 2000.

                   Neither lawsuit takes into account the electromagnetically charged nanoparticles that have
               been  aerially  spread  throughout  the  atmosphere  for  the  past  two  decades.  Whatever  the
               “reasonable” rationale, the truth is that we are being heavily dosed inside and out with ionized
               nanoparticles we have yet to learn the effects of.
                   Then there’s the PM2.5 atmospheric particulate matter safety measure set in 1997 for the
               National  Ambient  Air  Quality  Standard.  The  science  behind  this  “safety  measure,”  like  the
               science behind other national standards, appears to have been set by the military: the EPA bribed
               researchers working for the Clean Air Scientific Air Advisory Committee with $190+ million in
               grants.


                     EPA began regulating PM2.5 in the early 1990s, and today says there’s no safe level of exposure to the air pollutant. .
                     .These small particles can get into people’s respiratory system and can harm human health and even lead to death after
                     just  short-term  exposure,  according  to  EPA.  In  2011,  former  EPA  Administrator  Lisa  Jackson  told  Congress  that
                     PM2.5 “causes premature death. It doesn’t make you sick. It’s directly causal to dying sooner than you should,” she
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                     said.

                   Look  up  and  you  may  see  camouflaged  DC-10  tankers  or  ghostlike  low-flying  drones
               compressing  and  releasing  classified  chemical  compounds  in  which  swarms  of  smart  nano-
               machines are self-adjusting their size, temperature, and polarity to enhance their dispersal rate
               and  refine  their  buoyancy  as  they  seed  storm  fronts  and  hurricanes,  communicate  weather
               patterns  to  supercomputers,  and  increase  or  decrease  the  storm’s  size  and  intensity  as  radio
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