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over the fence and getting arrested. Clambering back into the cab of the pickup felt
like a better idea.
On the drive back, Wally said he doubted if there would be the vaunted
economic benefits to locals, from money spent by contractors who come in to
complete the site. "It's a short term deal - one summer, two summers and the
construction jobs are out of here, We were sold a bill of goods; they said there would
be u lot of spinoffs. Visiting scientists. But in the contract it states that this facility
is built to be remotely operated. 'Remotely operated'? The only person that's going to
make out here is the fuel oil dealer, from the millions of gallons of fuel that'll be
burnt there. They sold us a lot of bullshit."
There were long silences on the ride back, as if all three were reflecting on
how down to earth concerns of life in the Alaskan bush contrasted with the
multi-gigawatt beam which will rise from that desolate site. The high energy beam
could have global consequences, according to a few independent scientists.
As if sensing that his companions in the wind buffeted truck needed a hearty
laugh, Nick told about a telephone call from a reporter for a major newspaper who had
heard that Nick was researching HAARP. "(The reporter) said he had talked to the
people at E-Systems (the defense-contracting corporation that bought APTI), and
they had heard there were rumors in Alaska about black helicopters and aliens
and
black cars harassing people...guys being beat up by men in black! I said 'You know,
it's funny you would hear those rumors in Washington, D.C., when I've never heard
any of that in Alaska. And I live here.
'I laughed at him; I wasn't going to feed into that."
Nick shrugged off the memory of the reporter's attempts to elicit rural
paranoia to quote. "He was playing games, when I look back on it."
When the reporter's article was printed, the Alaskan researchers were
outraged to see what the leading sentences said;
"The rumors are buzzing across the Internet that a Pentagon physics
experiment on a wind whipped tract of U.S. Air Force land in Alaska has a secret
purpose - digging up bodies of UFO Aliens. Another rumor has it that men in black
suits...are jumping out of a black sedan to beat up Alaskan opponents of the project.
Countering these odd speculations is all in a day's work for Ramy Shanny,.."69
Playing games. The phrase stuck in Manning's mind. Is that what defense
contractors and the military public relations men are doing? The PR man tells a
reporter that nah, we aren't going to do any ambitious tests on the upper atmosphere,
Just some megawatt stuff. If the reporter digs a bit farther, however, he or she would
find a paper from Penn State, for example, It shows a graph of the hierarchy of
thresholds that increasing input of radio frequency (RF) power makes in the
ionosphere. Heating comes first, then "parametric instabilities and stimulated
electromagnetic radiation". Pump in more RF power and you accelerate electrons until
69 John Mintz, "Pentagon Fights Secret Scenario Speculation Over Alaska Antennas", Washington
Post, Apr, 17, 1995, A3.