Page 33 - Nick Begich - Angels Don't Play This Haarp Advances in Tesla Technology
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www.earthpulse.com 26 www.earthpulse.com
There was a third reference, apparently written by Tesla, that Begich could
not obtain. Tesla's ideas in these articles raised more questions in Begich's mind
about the version of a "law and order" likely to rise from any military organization
controlling such technology. He believed that if this technology were to be
implemented anywhere, it should be done so openly and honestly, and only when it
can be safe and worthwhile for improving the human condition. The idea of
unleashing such power into the planet's ionosphere disturbed him deeply.
Begich made telephone calls, did more reading and heard the reaction of a
few independent scientists to the military-funded project in the sky. Their request to
the military could be stated bluntly as: "Back off, Charlie; this is our planet too."
There was another aspect that concerned him besides HAARP's possible
effect on weather or on emergency communications in the Alaskan bush. Over the
years he had seen impressive studies saying that even low power levels of pulsed
radio frequency beaming could affect human physiology, minds and moods. He
decided to find out more, much more, from reputable sources. It would be foolish to hit
the alarm button about HAARP without being certain.
33
One concern was clearly speculative. One of the HAARP documents stated
that "Ionospheric disturbances have been detected and ascribed to earthquakes such as
the Alaska earthquake on March 28, 1964," He wondered if the reverse might be true -
if deliberate ionospheric disturbances could in turn resonate with the materials in the
earth and trigger an earthquake.
The earthquake question was only one of the questions nagging at the
independent researchers. Begich did not know it at the time, but the research would
focus his energies in a way that would attract additional similar minded people.
Eventually their directed energies would "perturb" something bigger than themselves.
Perhaps his life had led up to this.
Nick Begich, Jr. was raised in a political family where "making a difference"
was a way of life. His father, Nick Begich, Sr., served as a state senator and later a
representative in the United States Congress, and his mother Pegge was politically
active in Alaska for more than 30 years.
After the disappearance of the airplane carrying his father and U.S. House
Majority Leader Hale Boggs in 1972 when Nick Jr. was a teenager, his life changed
irrevocably. However, the theme instilled by his parents was one of service and
persistence. He and his five siblings between themselves also chalked up a lifetime of
political experience.
But an equally strong thread in Nick's life was an interest in science. His
early investigations led to an invitation to the 1978 International Biorhythm
Research Association conference in Atlanta, as a youthful science "outsider" among
33 National Telecommunications and Information Administration Preliminary Assessment of Air
Force Ionospheric Research Instrument, Stage 2, Oct. 1,1993.