HAARP and the conspiracy theories behind it

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May 9, 2002
37,066
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#1
I am going t be honest, i am new to this one and there is a shit ton out there, but one focus is the woman, who is a reverend pastor. She is a bit of a nut, but she brings up something that is very strange. Go to the 2:57 mark of the video below and see the island with no name (its actually Trindade Island). She talks about the clouds being strategically put there by Google via someone else. The video is form 2012. (Also, there is a 1958 UFO sighting on that island, hoax or not).



No big deal, right? Well. Check out the Google Maps image 3 years later:

https://www.google.com/maps/@-20.5082679,-29.3217255,6051m/data=!3m1!1e3

Hmmmmm....

Rasan @Rasan
 

Rasan

Producer
May 17, 2002
19,730
24,632
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Chula Vista, South Bay, San Diego, California
#2
ya know i saw a video years back, of a scientist pushing up tons of water to the sky to create clouds. right then i knew that if some random scientist was doing this imagine what our government can do.
some of the conspriacy theorists out there are nuts. however, its good to keep an open mind and use your own judgment.
everything is being controlled and manipulated these days.
 
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Rasan

Producer
May 17, 2002
19,730
24,632
113
44
Chula Vista, South Bay, San Diego, California
#3
i had to watch a documentary for school about google and they did not want to reveal how many inquiries they get a day from law enforcement or delve into their relationship with the government. but logic tells me if that is a secret military base that they hit up google to pencil in some clouds to hide the good shit lol
 
Mar 6, 2014
1,118
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#6
I am going t be honest, i am new to this one and there is a shit ton out there, but one focus is the woman, who is a reverend pastor. She is a bit of a nut, but she brings up something that is very strange. Go to the 2:57 mark of the video below and see the island with no name (its actually Trindade Island). She talks about the clouds being strategically put there by Google via someone else. The video is form 2012. (Also, there is a 1958 UFO sighting on that island, hoax or not).



No big deal, right? Well. Check out the Google Maps image 3 years later:

https://www.google.com/maps/@-20.5082679,-29.3217255,6051m/data=!3m1!1e3

Hmmmmm....

Rasan @Rasan
one old white bitch talking in a youtube video with no sources has shown me all I need to know about HAAAAARP!

 
May 7, 2013
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33°
www.hoescantstopme.biz
#8
Instead of falling to the dozer blade, the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program has new life.

In mid-August, U.S. Air Force General Tom Masiello shook hands with UAF's Brian Rogers and Bob McCoy, transferring the powerful upper-atmosphere research facility from the military to the university.

You may have heard of HAARP. Nick Begich wrote a book about it. Jesse Ventura tried to bully his way past the Gakona gate during a TV episode of Conspiracy Theory. Muse recorded a live album, HAARP, at Wembley Stadium from a stage filled with antennas meant to resemble those standing on a gravel pad off the Tok Cutoff Road.

The science-fiction assertions of caribou walking backwards, human mind control and HAARP's ability to change the weather have made researchers wince. It’s hard to describe a complicated instrument that sends invisible energy into a zone no one can see.

HAARP is a group of high-frequency radio transmitters powered by four diesel tugboat generators and one from a locomotive. The transmitters send a focused beam of radio-wave energy into the aurora zone. There, that energy can stimulate a speck of the electrical sun-Earth connection about 100 miles above our heads.

Why did university higher-ups swing the door back open for the conspiracy theorists? Why not let HAARP go quietly back to boreal forest?

"Even though it's esoteric and hard to understand, it's the best," said Bob McCoy, head of UAF's Geophysical Institute, which now has the keys to the complex, located off mile 11.3 of the Tok Cutoff Road.

The facility is the best tool to study a region above Earth we know little about, McCoy said. Of three such ionospheric heaters in the world — in Norway, Russia and soon-to-be in Puerto Rico — HAARP is the "most powerful and agile of the three," according to Craig Heinselman, director of the facility in Norway.

At an interview in his office on the UAF campus, McCoy said meetings with others in the space physics community convinced him HAARP was worth saving. During a 2013 workshop with potential users who study the shell of ionized plasma that coats the planet from 40 to 600 miles over our heads, researchers said they would use HAARP if the university took it over.

"(With HAARP), it is now possible to conduct controlled experiments, versus simply watching and waiting for the sun to perturb space and attempting to learn from studying its response," Herbert Carlson of Utah State University said at the workshop.

What's to be gained from perturbing space? The ionosphere carries satellite and radio signals that are disturbed during solar storms.

"With heat, we can create a disturbance and watch how quickly it dissipates," said Bill Bristow, a space physicist and the Geophysical Institute's point man on HAARP. "We can generate irregularities to test the effects on satellite to ground radio systems. We don't have to wait for Mother Nature to generate conditions."

Since it opened in 2003 with funding the late Ted Stevens helped secure, HAARP hosted many scientists doing applied research for the military. One such study was using the antenna array to heat a part of the ionosphere that in turn acted as a low frequency antenna that could send an ocean-penetrating signal to a submarine. That ping could tell a submarine captain to surface in order to receive conventional radio communications.

"The military had specific objectives, now we can do more basic science," Bristow said. "It will help us with general ionospheric/thermospheric modeling, like how do ions and neutrons couple in the upper atmosphere?"

HAARP is now open, but the transmitters have been cool since spring of 2014. With the transfer from the military to the university, Bristow and McCoy are now looking for customers — scientists funded to travel to central Alaska on two-week campaigns in which they fire the transmitters for 10 hours each day.

There are no customers yet. But McCoy and Bristow are confident they will be able to pay back a $2 million loan from the University of Alaska statewide office. That money is now keeping the lights on at HAARP and funding other costs of operation.

Bristow said the worst-case scenario is that few or no researchers step forward and they are forced to sell HAARP instruments to recover the loan cost. Best-case: scientists use it, a national entity sponsors the cost of operating HAARP (as NASA does for the institute's Poker Flat Research Range) and "we run it as a research facility indefinitely."

The clock is ticking to repay the loan, said McCoy.

"I've got three years to find customers," he said. "We're sticking our necks out here, but it is the best in the world and somebody spent $300 million to build it."
 
Nov 27, 2014
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#10
It's no conspiracy theory it's the natural progresion to Revilations. Satan has his secret society pawns in place and always has. Now he has technology and and all seeing eye (cameras : iPhones) he is going to use an alien invasion as a way to unite the world under one government and he will put a computer chip in all humans using the false flag alien invasion as the reason. Satan will rile the world with the anti-crist for many years then GOD will come down and exterminate all evil and the ones worthy of saving will live eternity in a world without sin
 
May 7, 2013
13,464
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www.hoescantstopme.biz
#18
Introduction to HAARP

The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) facility is located in Gakona, Alaska at 62.39 degrees N, 145.15 degrees W, near mile 11 of the Tok Cutoff Highway. The facility houses many diagnostic instruments for studying the ionosphere, but the highlight is the HF transmitter array. This array consists of 15x12 crossed dipole antennas, which together can transmit a total of 3600kW of RF power at frequencies from 2.8 - 10 MHz (HF, high frequency range). This power is partially absorbed by the ionosphere, and though only a tiny fraction of the power it naturally receives from the sun, can still produce subtle changes that can be detected with sensitive instruments.

The VLF group focuses on using HAARP to generate ELF and VLF waves through a process called modulated heating. Such experiments have been conducted since 1999 and include Milikh et al. (1999); Cohen et al. (2008); Rodriguez et al. (1999). HAARP is located in a region where large natural currents, known as the auroral electrojet flow through the ionosphere. By turning the HF array on and off (i.e. modulating the HF power) at ELF frequencies, we can also modulate the conductivity of the ionosphere at those frequencies (Ferraro et al., 1982; Stubbe and Kopka, 1977; Tomko et al., 1980). When combined with the electric field that drives the auroral electrojet, the result is a current that oscillates and thus radiates at the modulation frequency: a ELF antenna in the ionosphere. These signals can then be detected with nearby receivers, shown in the map in Figure 1.



Figure 1: Map showing HAARP's location along with the Alaska ELF/VLF receiver network