Page 63 - Nick Begich - Angels Don't Play This Haarp Advances in Tesla Technology
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"The last package we did, with Clare, went to a writer in New York who was
from a national environmental news service. Said he could do a good job. I drove all
the way into town and sent this stuff out to him FedEx. Yeah, its' a seven or eight
hour round trip. How do you determine the cost of our time?"
As he casually steered through waves of snow drifting across the road, Wally
recalled the meeting which he and Ed had in the city of Fairbanks with Paul Brodeur,
the author of books such as The Zapping of America. "He told us about a situation
where a community put up a stand against a proposed project, but (their protest) never
panned out. The people even got injunctions, but the Air Force never gave in. It was
about a similar type of system, where it could be increased incrementally...He told us
about the hazards involved in HAARP."
Wally abruptly steered off the road and onto a plowed driveway. The locked
gate of a fence stopped the truck, and signs hung on the wire mesh warned that the
three were looking at a "Controlled area. It is unlawful to enter this area
without permission of the Installation Commander. Sec. 21 Internal
Security Act of 1950 USC 797. While on this Installation all
personnel and the property under their control are subject to
search." A black "No Trespassing" sign hung beside one of the warnings.
The trio jumped out of the truck to survey the site from which antennae
would zap the upper reaches of the sky with more power than the human race had
previously been able to throw. Beyond a line of spruce, a box like building,
appearing to be about the size of an industrial warehouse or grain elevator, loomed
between them and the gravel pad base for the antennae. Manning remembered that
Clare Zickuhr once came up with a melodramatic name for this innocuous appearing
installation - the Monster in the Wilderness. She also recalled that a scientist from
Princeton, New Jersey, Dr. Richard Williams of the David Samoff research
laboratory, coined a simpler name for HAARP type ionospheric heaters - skybusters.
He said high energy experiments pose a danger to the upper atmosphere and could
cause irreversible damage in a short time. Effects could spread around the globe.
"What we do know," the physicist had added, "is that secrecy always lowers the
standards of environmental accountability."
In the cautious manner of a scientist, Williams had taken his concerns to me
journal Physics and Society instead of to the mass media. An equally polite reply
printed in the next issue came from Caroline Herzenberg of Argonne National
Laboratory who wrote as a private individual, in 1988 and again in April of 1994. She
warned that the advanced type of ionospheric heater could be used as a weapons
system, and its use might violate the Environmental Modification Convention
ratified by the United States in 1979. The atmosphere, ionosphere and near-Earth
space are included in the convention. Herzenberg called on the physics community to
closely critique the HAARP technology. The analysis hasn't been done.
Manning shot a photograph of Nick shivering in the February wind, but
Wally did not want to be photographed. They joked half-heartedly about climbing