They've been researching this stuff for some time and want to use them on us if they already haven't. There was a good sci-fi film on this I saw recently on the Universal HD channel which was probably either on Sci-Fi originally or the USA channel. It is called "Control Factor" and you may be able to rent it on DVD. Their interesting solution in the movie was to make "stylish" tin-foil hats by taking the copper scrubbers you can buy at the grocery store and lining your baseball cap with it. That blocked the signals.
Whoever the asuras are that want to control humanity they need to be destroyed and sent back to the dark realms from which they came. Robert Gimbel wrote: > >Pentagon deploys array of non-lethal weapons >( Released only 6 months after willthomas.net World Exclusive ) >http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2005-07-24-nonlethal-weapons_x.htm > > MICROWAVING IRAQ >“ Pacifying” Rays Pose New Hazards To Iraqis >By William Thomas 01/24/05 ( World Exclusive ) > Preface > Desperate to improve images of civilian carnage, US commanders are using > portable electromagnetic-frequency weapons in Fallujah and other “hot spots” > in the Sunni Triangle to pacify restive neighborhoods with invisible EM > radiation. “Active Denial” antenna arrays mounted on Humvees are also being > deployed to panic and disperse hostile crowds by flash-burning exposed flesh > with microwaves. But unintended side effects from the hidden rooftop > transmitters are reportedly triggering violent attacks by exposed > insurgents—while leading to AWOL rates of up to 15% among US forces > disoriented by these same weapons, as well as the electromagnetic emanations > from high-power radars, radios and “jammers”. > On the rooftop of a shrapnel-pocked building in the ruins of Fallujah, a > team of GI’s stealthily sets up a gray plastic dome about two-feet in > diameter. Keeping well back from the sight lines of the street and nearby > buildings, they plug the cable connectors on the side of the “popper” into a > power unit. The grunts have no clue what the device does. They are just > following orders. > >“ Most of the worker-bees that are placing these do not even know what is >inside the ‘domes’, just that they were told where to place them by Intel >weenies with usually no nametag,” reports my source, a very well informed >combat veteran I will call “Hank”. > >“ Intel” stands for “intelligence” officers who target the most restive >neighborhoods in a country gripped by anarchy and chaos. The lack of nametags >indicates membership in a spooky “alphabet agency”, either within or outside >the military chain of command. Similar “black: teams removed “Made In The USA” >chemical weapons from Iraqi trenches after Desert Storm. [Bringing The War >Home by William Thomas] > >The grunts call the plastic devices “poppers” or “domes”. Once activated, each >hidden transmitter emits a widening circle of invisible energy capable of >passing through metal, concrete and human skulls up to half a mile away. “They >are saturating the area with ULF, VLF and UHF freqs,” Hanks says, with >equipment derived from US Navy undersea sonar and communications. > >But its not being used to locate and talk to submarines under Baghdad. > >After powering up the unit, the grunts quickly exit the area. It is their >commanders’ fervent hope that any male survivors enraged by brutal American >bombardments that damaged virtually every building in this once thriving “City >of Mosques”, displacing a quarter-million residents while murdering thousands >of children, women and elders in their homes—will lose all incentive for >further resistance and revenge. > A dedicated former soldier, whose experiences during and after Desert Storm > are chronicled in my book, Bringing The War Home, Hank stays in close touch > with his unit serving “in theater” in Iraq. When I asked how many “poppers” > are being used to irradiate Iraqi neighborhoods, he checked and got back to > me. There are “at least 25 of these that have been deployed to theater, and > used. Some have conked out and been removed, so I do not know how many are > currently active and broadcasting.” > >As a patriotic American, Hank believes that wars must be fought by the rules >he was taught and the principles his country stands for. Like many Desert >Storm veterans, he would like to get his hands on retired General Norman >Schwartzkopf, who covered up combat log reports of confirmed chemical weapons >exposures during that 1990-‘91 conflict. Veterans say Schwartzkopf’s >“treason”—to use their word—was largely responsible for more than the >officially admitted 12,000 deaths, and 200,000 Gulf War Illness casualties >among returning GIs. [Bringing The War Home by William Thomas] > >Now Hank wants to warn his comrades that they are again at grave risk from >radioactive heavy metal particles inhaled form microscopic depleted uranium >debris. Be careful around Najaf, he adds, where mustard agents from Desert >Storm and Saddam’s post-war repression still linger. Having been there, Hank >concurs with historians who concluded that the Shia and Kurdish revolts would >have brought down Saddam’s regime if Bush Sr. had not allowed the dictator’s >gunships to fly against the uprisings he encouraged. > >Hank is still losing friends in Iraq, where front-line soldiers put their >current casualty figures from all causes—combat, accidents, psychological >crackups and suicides—at 5,000 dead and 22,000 to 30,000 injured. > > But these GIs volunteered to extract “payback” against a country many were > falsely told was responsible for the 9/11 attacks. Iraq’s traumatized > children want only to grow up with their families and play with their friends > in the suburbs. Hank blames those at the top for hospital counts of upwards > of 65,000 children killed since the 2003 invasion. > >He is also concerned that innocent Iraqi families and unsuspecting GIs alike >are being used as test subjects for a new generation of “psychotronic” weapons >using invisible beams across the entire electromagnetic spectrum to >selectively alter moods, behavior and bodily processes. “Bottom line,” Hanks >says about the poppers, “they are very powerful transmitters, have >multi-channel/frequency send/receive multi-task capabilities, are being placed >inside the area(s) where people live without their knowing it “ > >The Air Force and Navy have been working for decades on beam weapons that can >just as easily be turned against Americans at home. > >“ The ‘poppers’ are capable of using a combo of ULF, VLF, UHF and EHF >wavelengths in any combination at the same time, sometimes using one as a >carrier wave for the others,” Hank explains, in a process called >superheterodyning. The silent frequencies daily sweeping Fallujah and other >trouble spots are the same Navy “freqs that drove whales nuts and made them go >astray onto beaches.” > > >MICROWAVING IRAQ > The Gulf War veteran observes that occupied Iraq has become a “saturation > environment” of electromagnetic radiation. Potentially lethal electromagnetic > smog from high-power US military electronics and experimental beam weapons is > placing already hard-hit local populations–-particularly children—at even > higher risk of experiencing serious illness, suicidal depression, impaired > cognitive ability, even death. > >American troops constantly exposed “up close” to their own microwave >transmitters, battlefield radars and RF weapons are also seeing their health >eroded by electromagnetic sickness. It’s common, Hank recalls, for GIs to warm >themselves on cold desert nights by basking in the microwaves radiating from >their QUEEMS communications and RATT radar rigs > > According to Army manual TM 11-5820-890-10-1, SINGARS voice and text > messaging radios have a range up to 22 kilometers when mounted on a Humvee. > Operating in the microwave bands between 30 MHz to 87.975 MHz, each 2320 > channel transceiver radiates electromagnetic energy from base stations > employing a pair of antennas placed at least 75-feet apart. > >But even this is not enough to defeat the tyranny of distance. As an Army >“after action” report revealed after Desert Storm, “With a front of nearly 350 >miles and a operating depth of 200-400 miles long range communications became >imperative.” > >But the AN/VRC 46 SINGARS—essentially a military version of a mobile phone >network—did not work well. “Because of the great distances involved teams were >not able to maintain communications in order to relay information, request >support, or be notified of additional incidents,” the report states. “The >operations also saw a total break down in the ability + or all types of >Communications Army wide…between the CP [Command Post] and unit teams.” >[ARCENT Unit: 22D SUPCOM Box ID: BX005554] > >The same communications breakdowns occurred between units during the long >drive to Baghdad along “ambush alley”. The solution is to use up to 50 Humvees >scattered in line-of-sight across the flat desert sands as “retransmit” >stations to relay messages to distant units. Humvee and backpack-mounted >SINGARS are also used extensively in Iraq’s urban areas. The result: constant >and pervasive electromagnetic pollution that interferes with cellular >processes in human brains and bodies. > >Constant microwave emissions from ground-sweeping RATT rigs and SINGARS mobile >microwave networks are much more powerful than civilian microwave cell phone >nets linked in many clinical studies to maladies ranging from asthma, >cataracts, headaches, memory loss, early Alzheimer’s, bad dreams and cancer. > >Even more powerful US military radars, radios and “jammers” blasting from >ground bases and overflying aircraft add to this electromagnetic din. > >Like ocean waves “piggy-backing” into rogue giants, harmonic waves from this >storm of randomly intersecting frequencies cause unintended power spikes, >while creating new wavelengths of woe never before encountered by anyone on >Earth. > >This is bad enough. But this is also Iraq, Hank says, where ever-present sand >acts as miniature quartz reflectors, unpredictably amplifying the ricocheting >electronic smog so thick that if it were visible, every vehicle in Baghdad and >the surrounding Sunni Triangle would be driving blind with their headlights >on. > >THE GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GIVING >This is grim news to friend and foe alike—already overloaded by constant >adrenal stress, waterborne pollutants, infectious sand fleas, dehydration, >pharmaceutical drugs and exposure to radioactive Uranium-238 fired in “hose >‘em down” exuberance by US ground and air cannons and cruise missiles. > >As Hank puts it, DU is “the gift that keeps on giving.” For the next four >billion years, medical investigators say, large populated expanses of Kosovo, >Afghanistan, Puerto Rico and Iraq will remain lethally radioactive from Made >In America depleted uranium dust. > >What kind of people would do this? > >Clinical tests have repeatedly shown how microwaves “rev up” incipient cancer >cells several hundred times. Triggered by nuclear radiation, and turned rogue >by electromagnetic warfare unleashed by US forces, human cancer cells have >been found to continue proliferating wildly—even after the power source is >turned off. [Scorched Earth by William Thomas] > >Another wild card is radon, Hank reckons. Typically found wherever oil pools >underground, pockets of this invisible, odorless and potentially deadly gas >tend to concentrate in natural bowls between dunes and other niches out of the >desert wind. > >Ordered to “dig in”, grunts typically scrape a 300 to 1000-foot diameter >position to a depth of five feet, Hank explained. They then spray the ground >with diesel fuel, adding to the toxic effects of any radon they’ve just >released. Hank claimed that during Desert Storm, his unit’s radon detectors >went off even more often than the constant ringing of chemical warfare >exposure detectors. [Bringing The War Home by William Thomas] > >Just standing around a QUEEMS or RATT rig, “makes you stupid,” this combat >veteran added. Which is precisely the intent behind that transmitting dish on >Fallujah roofs. > >“ It’s basic stun weaponry,” Hank explains during an interview filled with >revelations that later check out. The idea behind microwaving Iraq’s more >restive cities, he says, is to keep them “so agitated they cannot coalesce >into a full force” of resistance fighters. > >Overriding subtle bodily processes, selectable frequencies beamed invisibly >through neighborhoods can depress the central nervous systems of everyone >within a half-mile, “destroying their initiative and making them docile and >lethargic.” At least that’s the plan. > >COOKING CLASSES >Details of various directed energy weapons used by US forces in Iraq to knock >out electronics, induce psychological passivity, and possibly even melt people >and vehicles remain under tight military wraps. But world media is reporting >deployment of portable “directed energy” weapons in neighborhoods as >troublesome as any in the USA if foreign troops murdered Americans and >destroyed their homes. > >Dubbed “active-denial”, this supposedly “non-lethal” mobile microwave weapon >was developed through the 1990s at the U S Air Force Research Laboratory at >Kirtland, New Mexico, and the Marine Corps’ Joint Nonlethal Weapons >Directorate. [Daily Telegraph Sept 21/04] > >Researchers soon found that frying flesh at a distance is not easy. With up to >two-thirds of directed microwave energy scattered through transmission, the >only way to heat skin painfully enough to encourage its owner to flee the area >is to hit her with frequencies much higher than the microwave ovens linked to >pathological changes in human blood chemistry. [Journal Franz Weber #19; >Electromagnetic Fields by B. Blake Levitt] > > A triumph of misdirected talents and treasure, a microwave array mounted on > a Humvee can heat water molecules in the skin at a distance. But what makes > this microwave weapon so appealing, say its PR-conscious boosters, is that > projected agony equivalent to grasping a hot light bulb leaves no visible > wounds—and stops instantly when the beam is avoided or removed. [Daily > Telegraph Sept 21/04; [India Telegraph Sept 19/04] > >Just how enthusiastically the rest of the world greets illegal gadgets wielded >during an illegal occupation remains to be seen. International treaties signed >by the United States ban directed energy weapons. > Legalities and morality aside, the numbers for the Pentagon’s latest > energy weapon are impressive: 95-GHz transmitted energy tuned to penetrate > flesh to depth of 1/64 of an inch at an officially admitted range beyond > 1,000 yards. > By contrast, cell phones and portable phones have been shown to emit > hazardous microwaves at “just” 2 to 6 GHz. > Despite an “earliest estimated” deployment in 2009, “heat ray” prototypes > have been rushed to Iraq by a military desperate to improve the images of > carnage being beamed into hundreds of millions of Muslim homes by an even > more powerful beam weapon: satellite TV. > BRINGING THE WAR HOME >Hank, whose contacts also extend into Congress and the Pentagon, claims that >the Humvee-portable microwave “crowd control” system was unveiled in September >2004 against some 400,000 Americans protesting genocide in Iraq at the >Republican National Convention in New York City. It is not known if the >microwave weapons were actually used to augment chemical agents dispensed >along with beatings by police. [www.veteransforpeace.org; EE Times June 6/01] > > > >--------------------------------- >Get amazing travel prices for air and hotel in one click on Yahoo! FareChase > > ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> Get to your groups with one click. Know instantly when new email arrives http://us.click.yahoo.com/.7bhrC/MGxNAA/yQLSAA/UlWolB/TM --------------------------------------------------------------------~-> To subscribe, send a message to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Or go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/ and click 'Join This Group!' Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
