Page 51 - Nick Begich - Angels Don't Play This Haarp Advances in Tesla Technology
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           The  only  way  there  could  be  amplification  of  the  electromagnetic  waves
           once they reach the ionosphere, in his opinion, would be with a special experiment
           using two transmitters beaming onto the same spot. The interactions of the radio
           waves can cause amplifications, said Koustov. Such highly energetic reactions can
           even create so-called gravity waves, he said. That is getting into an area of advanced
           science which is beyond the scope of this book.

                  Co-author of Angels Don't Play This HAARP Dr. Nick Begich discovered
           recently that HAARP planners intend to fire up more than one ionospheric heater at a
           time and operate them in concert. This test is to be conducted between September 11,
           1995 and September 22, 1995 using HIPAS and HAARP at low power settings. What
           will happen even at these low levels of power is unknown and unclear.

                              A HISTORY OF MAD SCIENCE

                  Begich's home state of Alaska has met ambitious scientists in the past. One
           may have had more academic credentials, clout and charm than common sense. Dr.
           Edward Teller, known as the "Father of the H-bomb", traveled to Alaska in 1958 with
           a proposal to blast a chunk of that state's coastline off the map. As spokesman for the
           nuclear  establishment,  he  wanted  to  prove  that  nuclear  explosions  were  a  tool  for
           geographical  engineering. Teller  was  widely  quoted  as  telling  Alaskans  "If  your
           mountain isn't in the right place, drop us a card."

                  Teller's colleagues at Lawrence Radiation Laboratory came up with Project
           Chariot as part of Project Plowshare. Their plan was to explode six thermonuclear
           bombs underground at Cape Thompson, Alaska, to dig a harbor.
           Uncritical technophiles almost bought the plan.

                  The Firecracker Boys, by Dan O'Neill reveals common threads that run
           through  the  history  of  proposals  for  questionable  megaprojects.  For  one,  the
           promoter sold it as an economic development opportunity - jobs for the people. That
           pitch convinced legislators, business groups and the media. Another supporter, as
           with HAARP, was the University of Alaska administration. Again, the appeal was the
           prospect of money and jobs for the state's residents.

                  O'Neill points out that during the planning stage the scientists ignored the
           Inupiat people who lived nearest to the site of the proposed nuclear bomb blasts - 30
           miles from Ground Zero. A review of The Firecracker Boys said "O'Neill still marvels
           at  the determination of  the Eskimos  who  saw  through  the  government's  empty
           promises and outright lies."59
                  In the end they didn't blast that hole in the coast. Between the native
           peoples' stubborn opposition, and three heroic scientists who stood up and said it
           was a bad idea, it didn't happen.


           59 Marilee Enge, "Blowing the Lid off a Nuclear Tale", Anchorage Daily News, Dec. 25, 1994.
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