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www.earthpulse.com 34 www.earthpulse.com
he understood it, the patent office does not keep basic "fundamental information"
secret. "You don't get a patent if you don't describe in enough detail to another person
how to use it," he said. Specifics of military applications of his patent remain
proprietary (secret), he added.
The radio interviewer, Chadwick, confronted Eastlund about aspects which
troubled the interviewer - mainly the enormity of what the inventor claimed his
invention could do. Effects such as changing the planet's atmosphere sounded like
something out of a Jules Verne novel.
Sounding quite proud of his accomplishments, Eastlund replied that nothing
in the patent was science fiction; it is based on combining known technologies.
"Many of the applications in here are aimed at beneficial effects."
Are artificial sunspot-effects beneficial? Chadwick pointed to page eleven
of the patent, where Eastlund claimed that his invention could disrupt
communications all over the world. With a short laugh, the inventor acknowledged
the claim. "And obviously that doesn't sound too beneficial, so I'm contradicting my
answer to the last statement. But in the patent itself is the fact that you can do that.
Sunspots or solar flares will disrupt communications badly. This would do that
through basically the same mechanism."
Eastlund's enthusiasm for planetary-scale engineering came through just as
clearly in an interview with Omni magazine. While acknowledging that many of the
uses of his invention are warlike, he also talked about "more benign" uses. His view
of benign included using the technology to reroute the high-altitude jet stream,
which is a major player in shaping global weather. Another way to control the
weather with his technology would be to build "plumes of atmospheric particles to act
as a lens or focusing device" for sunlight, he told Omni. With this, the people
controlling the antennae could aim in such a way that the return beams would hit a
certain part of the earth. With the heating ability, they could experiment until they
could control wind patterns in a specific place.
The Omni article explained. "What this means, he says, is that by
controlling local weather patterns one could, say, bring rain to Ethiopia or alter the
summer storm pattern in the Caribbean. His device might even help regenerate the
depleted ozone layer, patch the ozone hole over Antarctica, or break up atmospheric
industrial pollutants like carbon monoxide or nitrous oxide."
Not every scientist shared Eastlund's eagerness to experiment with the
ionosphere. Dr. Richard Williams, a physicist with the David Sarnoff Research
Center in Princeton, New Jersey, sent a letter to a scientific journal warning that
Eastlund's invention might become a serious threat to the earth's atmosphere49.
Williams summed up the contents in Eastlund/APTI's patent for altering the
atmosphere, ionosphere and/or magnetosphere:
49 Richard Williams, "Atmospheric Threat", Physics and Society Vol. 17 No. 2 April 1988, page 16.