![]() It was 45-minutes long and spends a lot of time on a strange electromagnetic incident that happened in April 1978 on Bell Island, Newfoundland, Canada, on a quiet Sunday morning. The History Channel documentary, titled “Welcome to the world of electromagnetic warfare”, was written by Barabaa Doran and John Whalen. “The ability to generate precipitation, fog, and storms on earth or to modify space weather … and the production of artificial weather all are a part of an integrated set of technologies which can provide substantial increase in US, or degraded capability in an adversary, to achieve global awareness, reach, and power.”įor the past two weeks, I have talked about three important TV documentaries aired in the past on electromagnetic and geophysical weapons by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, History Channel, and. Two weeks ago, I quoted the Air University of the US Air Force as conceding in a major publication, AF 2025 Final Report, that: “Weather modification will become a part of domestic and international security and could be done unilaterally… It could have offensive and defensive applications and even be used for deterrence purposes. The experiments are therefore principally to weaponise weather systems. This can, and does, produce abnormalities such as weather modification (which is an euphemism for creating artificial weather that produces storms, floods, tornadoes, cyclones, droughts, etc). It is a sea of electrically-charged particles that act as a mirror which reflects radio waves back to the Earth.Įlectromagnetic warfare research involves experiments using high-energy frequencies to fire pulsed, directed energy beams to burn or heat up a limited area of the ionosphere. I explained two weeks ago that the ionosphere is the delicate upper layer of the Earth’s atmosphere which ranges from about 30 miles (50 km) to 600 miles (1,000 km) above the surface of the Earth. According to the History Channel, “the development of electromagnetic and geophysical weapons has been secretive and sound more like science fiction than reality.”Īt the centre of this development is the ionosphere. But Zimbabwe was hit by an earthquake and a devastating cyclone (travelling at an incredible speed of 194 km per hour) almost at the same time, leaving behind massive destruction that the United Nations says is the worst weather-related natural disaster in the Southern Hemisphere. Ironically, it is said that lightning does not hit a place twice.
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