Re: Bailey and Worthington's scary paper on HAARP

Will Williams ( willwill@utkux.utcc.utk.edu )
Sun, 13 Dec 1998 08:34:08 -0500

Gary Vesperman wrote:
>
> Dr. Patrick G. Bailey, Nancy C. Worthington, Dr. Nicholas Begich, Jeane
> Manning, Dr. Richard Williams, Paul Kossey, James J. Hurtak, Richard
> Hoagland, Peter Van Tuyn, Jim Padburg, and others are asking disturbing
> questions about the real purposes, secrecy, and possibly frightful dangers
> from the future expanded form of the military's High Frequency Active
> Auroral Research Program (HAARP) in Alaska.
>
> HAARP's original Environmental Impact Statement does not truthfully address
> the implications of easily being able to expand HAARP to a far higher power
> level. Yet the projected power levels apparently would be able to, over
> areas as large as several states, burn holes in the upper atmosphere with
> unknown consequences, cause severe weather changes, numb the minds of ALL
> the people to helpless zombies against their will, harm animals as well as
> people, possibly even induce earthquakes, and disable sensitive electronic
> equipment including computers, modern vehicles, communications switches, and
> heart pacemakers.

Hi everybody , I'm new

All this HAARP info does sound scary, mainly b/c it everywhere.
But what is also scary is correlation between decriptions of HAARP
and its possible dangers, and a movie from New Zealand called "THE
SILENT EARTH." If your local movie rental has this check it out. I've
been wanting to know where these movie makers get there ideas
(especially science fiction) and why they keep ending up on the internet
exposed as real government projects... a couple years down the road.

-william