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BUBBLE OF ELECTRIC PARTICLES
In May of 1995 Dr. Rauscher was asked to comment specifically on HAARP.
"You're pumping tremendous energy into an extremely delicate molecular
configuration that comprises these multi-layers we call the ionosphere," she replied.
The ionosphere is prone to catalytic reactions. In other words, she explained, if a
small part is changed, a major change in the ionosphere can happen.77
In describing the ionosphere as a delicately balanced system, Dr. Rauscher
shared her mental picture of it - a soap bubble like sphere surrounding Earth's
atmosphere, with movements swirling over the surface of the bubble.
"If you've ever watched a large bubble closely, you see these rainbow-like
patterns flowing over it. Then you see a black spot where the wavelengths of light are
so short that they can't show the bubble. But it hasn't burst yet. Then a hole forms,
and then it pops."
Project planners who experiment with the ionosphere do not agree with her
model of what could happen, Rauscher said. "But I strongly believe the ionosphere
works that way."
When human activities make massive holes in the real ionosphere, the
holes at the north and south poles migrate just like the shapes on the bubble. This is
how a dramatic loss of the ozone layer happens to appear over Australia, for example.
There have even been sun watches (ozone-hole watches) over high altitude states
such as Nevada, where Rauscher and Van Bise live.
"(Decision makers) know the cause - the SST (supersonic transport) and the
space shuttle and its Russian equivalent. I have the Russian report that calculates how
many space shuttles it will take to destroy the ionosphere."
In a corresponding situation at a lower altitude, while anyone who ever
used a spray propellant is made to feel guilty about holes in the ozone layer,
scientists continue to send up rockets and launch satellites to study the ozone layer!
Each bum of rocket fuel destroys another part of a percent of the ozone layer.
BRAGGING ABOUT PUNCTURES
Returning to the higher altitudes, we see that science journals in the early
1980's reported openly on the ionospheric disruption caused by scientists
themselves. But how many outside of their specialty read papers on topics such as the
High-Energy Astrophysical Observatories (HEAO) Hole in the lonosphere78. The
launch of one of NASA's High-Energy Astrophysical Observatories, on Sept. 20,
1979, for example, by an Atlas-Centaur rocket "produced an extraordinary
opportunity to monitor a large scale, artificially induced depletion of the earth'
77 Jeane Manning's May 1995 interviews with Dr. Elizabeth Rauscher and William van Btse.
78 Michael Mendilio, Donald Rote and Paul Bernhardt, "Preliminary Report on the HEAO Hole in the
Ionosphere" The American Geophysical Union, 1980.