U.S. Set for Biggest Missile Defense Test in 18 Months --
at stake is the ability of an interceptor to spot -- not necessarily to hit -- its target. By Julian E. Barnes
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer, August 28, 2006
FT. GREELY, Alaska —
DID HAARP
SHOOT DOWN
COLUMBIA?
Satellite Equipment
MISSION PATCH SYMBOLISM
Even the patch for the Columbia's mission symbolically
backs up the HAARP shootdown theory.
CLICK FOR LARGE VERSION
Buried within the mission patch for STS-107
are several symbolic hints indicating the Columbia was going to
be destroyed by HAARP.
The Re-entry Break up trail: The gold/yellow
line indicated the direction of the break up of Columbia; which
was East.
Ionosphere cooked by HAARP: The red line circling
the Earth symbolized the ionosphere being "cooked" or
heated by HAARP.
HAARP Location In Alaska: The orange line circling
the Earth symbolized the surface. The juncture point of the orange,
red and gold lines between "STS" and "107"
symbolized the location of HAARP in Gakona, Alaska.
Morning Sun: Obviously represents the Sun rising
in the East at dawn, the time window of the Columbias break up.
Debris Trails: The three gold lines moving
East symbolize the broken fragments of the Columbia.
Columbia: Symbolized by the star on the STS-107
Mission Patch.
Whoever designed the STS-107 Patch was most
likely influenced by someone who knew Columbia was going to be
shot down.
THE CONCLUSION
The crew of the Space Shuttle Columbia were
murdered with an EM pulse from the HAARP array in Alaska in accordance
to a ritualistic celestial alignment pattern used by two warring
factions of secret societies during the entire history of the
space program as well as during historical world events.
We must honor the brave crew of the Columbia
by finding the truth of what really happened. We owe it to them.
Freeman Dyson of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton is a physicist and was quoted in the Bill Joy article in April 2000 Wired Magazine on the dangers of technology. Dr. Dyson coined the word "radiotelepathy", i.e. "something like a cordless phone inside your head" Dyson wrote this comment. "After the organization of the central nervous system has been explored and understood, the way will be open to develop and use the technology of electromagnetic brain signals." This quote was from International Herald Tribune, Rudy Rucker, April 25, 1997 page 4, book review of Imagined Worlds,
U.S. News and World Report July 7, 1997, Wonder Weapons" , page 38; "Scores of new contracts have been let, and scientists, aided by government research on the "bioeffects" of beamed energy, are searching the electromagnetic and sonic spectrums for wavelengths that can affect human behavior." "...Louis Slesin, editor of the trade journal Microwave News stated "That's because the human body is essentially an electrochemical system, and devices that disrupt the electrical impulses of the nervous system can affect behavior and body functions. But these programs-particularly those involving antipersonnel research-are so well guarded that details are scarce." "People [in the military] go silent on this issue," says Slesin, "more than any other issue. People just do not want to talk about this."
Open Verdict
An account of 25 mysterious deaths in the defense industry
Tony Collins, Sphere Books Ltd., a division of MacDonald & Co. Publishers London, 1990. Twenty five Star Wars Marconi defense workers mysteriously died by suicide and strange accidents in the early 1980s in England. Collins wrote, "This book is about a new type of war, electronic war. ...It is fought by ...research students in universities and electronics engineers working for defense contractors. ...It is a war that must be waged constantly during peacetime to maintain the upper hand.
It is a war that must be waged in secrecy." Tony Collins is executive editor of Computer Weekly. He worked for the BBC and national newspapers, such as Sunday Mirror. The editor of the Collins book, Stephen Arkell described the discrepancies found during his investigation and problems such as the following. "The companies and establishments where they worked are reluctant to give out details of any projects, even those already in the public domain. In addition, there are many other project, so called 'black' projects, which these organizations cannot even officially admit to. The secrecy surrounding the peacetime preparations for a future electronic war ensures that any attempt to prove or disprove a definite work link can be not more than a calculated stab in the dark. ...
In May 1989, for example, eleven Russians and four Czechs were expelled from the UK for allegedly trying to obtain highly sensitive information about powerful microchips, radar, laser technology and advanced materials such as titanium and carbon fibres.
These agents were reported to have approached the executive of defense contractors in a series of 'cash for secrets' deals. ...Another theory ...concerns the investigation into alleged fraud at Marconi. ...This investigation [by the Ministry of Defense Police] has since resulted in charges being brought, ...However there is not one scrap of evidence to suggest that any of the scientists named in the book were involved in fraud. ...the deaths and disappearances of 28 defense workers is one of the most bizarre and enigmatic stories of the past decade."
Hustler Magazine, June 1989, "Who's Killing the Star Wars Scientists"
suggests that "the Russians are using a death ray to drive the scientists to suicide. The British press blames stress.
This wave of suspicious fatalities in the ultrasecret world of sophisticated weaponry has not gone unnoticed by the US government. Late last fall, the American embassy in London publicly requested a full investigation by the British Ministry of Defense. (MoD). ...The Pentagon refuses comment on the deaths. But according to Reagan administration sources, "We cannot ignore it anymore."
Ethicist, Jonathan Moreno wrote Undue Risk Secret State Experiments on Humans, 1999, W.H. Freeman and Co., a book on radiation and other unethical experiments. Moreno named "...microwave weapons as a source of future illegal experimentation . " Moreno stated; "in the next century, as in the past, military-medical research involving human subjects will be dictated by the limits of information available from other sources."
New York Times Magazine, 8-31-97, page 38, stated; "For decades, those who claimed to be victims of clandestine radiation experiments conducted by the United States government were dismissed as paranoid." Recognition of the growing numbers of worldwide human rights abuse cases is important, especially in light of the fact that electromagnetic weapons target the brain and nervous system.