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Neocons Salivating Over Their Next Great Exaggerated "Threat": Electromagnetic Pulse Attack

By Robert Farley, Right Web. Posted October 22, 2009.


A diverse array of rightwing factions have united behind the effort to promote the EMP threat thesis.
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Last month, Christian conservatives’ favorite presidential hopeful, Mike Huckabee, headlined a national conference in Niagara, New York, titled “Protecting America Against Permanent Continental Shutdown From Electromagnetic Pulse.”

Sponsored by EMPACT America, an organization allied with several leading rightwing advocacy groups, the conference drew some 800 people who came to hear about what organizers regard as a growing threat to the United States: an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack that allegedly could destroy much of the country’s infrastructure and send it back to the 19th century. The conference represents the latest step in the effort to hype the supposed menace of EMP, as well as yet another angle on the purportedly diverse array of threats posed by “rogue” states like Iran and North Korea and transnational terrorist groups.

Also addressing the conference via video feed were Republican heavyhitter Newt Gingrich and conservative Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R-MD), who has been one of Congress’ loudest advocates of EMP awareness.

Despite the conference’s association with prominent Republicans, however, this quixotic threat-mongering project has yet to gain traction with the broader public.

Origins of the EMP Campaign

Electromagnetic pulse results from a nuclear detonation, and under certain conditions, it can damage electronic equipment in a wide radius from the blast. The EMP effect was first discovered in 1962, when an aerial nuclear weapon test over the Pacific Ocean affected electronic equipment in Hawaii. High-altitude nuclear detonations release gamma rays, which interact with air molecules to create an energy field that disrupts electronic equipment. At a high enough altitude, an EMP could affect a wide area. The resultant damage, it was believed, might in wartime sever command and communication links between military assets, as well as do significant harm to the civilian infrastructure and economy. The U.S. military took the threat of EMP seriously, and began in the 1960s to harden and shield its electronic equipment from such a blast.

Along with their Soviet and Chinese counterparts, U.S. military planners and scientists studied the potential dangers—and opportunities—presented by EMP. However, since only one nation, the United States, has ever attacked another country with an atomic bomb, the precise extent of EMP’s power to damage electronic-dependent infrastructures is not fully understood. Testing bans have also prevented the established nuclear powers from fully investigating the EMP effect (prompting some EMP awareness activists to argue for a resumption of nuclear testing).

Attention to EMPs waned with the end of the Cold War, and the apparent reduction of the Soviet nuclear threat. However, some influential figures still tried to keep the flame alive. In 1997, Rep. Curt Weldon (R-PA) convened a Congressional hearing on the threat that an EMP attack presented to the United States. Minimal action resulted, but the 9/11 attacks helped spark a new wave of interest, and in 2001 Rep. Bartlett led a Congressional effort to create the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse Attack. In 2004, the commission’s first report on EMP preparedness concluded that the United States was vulnerable, and that the government should take steps to protect commercial electronics and expand missile defense.

A Network of Hawks

The EMPACT conference revealed the diverse array of rightwing factions that have united behind the effort to promote the EMP threat thesis. For example, several panels at the conference were led by missile-defense enthusiasts closely associated with neoconservatism, notably Cliff May of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD) and Frank Gaffney of the Center for Security Policy. Other presenters with a rightist ideological bent included Brigitte Gabriel and Guy Rodgers from Act for America, a hardline advocacy group preoccupied with “Islamofascism”; and Larry Greenfield from the rightwing Claremont Institute, which promotes “multi-layered” missile defense via a website called MissileThreat.com.


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See more stories tagged with: neocons, huckabee, emp, fearmongering

Robert Farley is an assistant professor at the University of Kentucky’s Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce and a contributor to PRA’s Right Web (http://rightweb.irc-online.org/).

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right on the ball, again, fellas
Posted by: wrinklemomma on Oct 22, 2009 6:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If there is a chance to misuse, misquote, or just plain make up science, our boys on the right are on the job. It amazes me the lengths that they will go to in order to scare, baffle, or just plain LIE to America. Shame that they cut science class to read their flat-earth, 6000 year-old planet, evolution denier crap- and missed out on logic, too. Why do they hate America and regular Americans so much?

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At least they're not "fighting the last war".
Posted by: rational_moderate on Oct 22, 2009 10:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It sounds like there might still be some valid debate about the potential threat. At least they're no longer so entirely fixated about plane hijackings. It seemed like the security rules on airplanes got a little carried away for a while.

I'm more worried about cyber-attacks. And thankfully Obama is ramping up efforts to defend against that.

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Just in case something actually happens . . .
Posted by: countingdaisies on Oct 24, 2009 12:04 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I suggest looking first into our own government for the perpetrator.

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EMP's - Nuclear Deterrent?
Posted by: Gaubladt on Oct 24, 2009 1:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
EMP has been a day-tripper fantasy of every high school physics class since the 1950's.
No wonder it was picked up by Newt.
The effect may have been a deterrent to nuclear war since most of our air force used transistors. But, the USSR used vacuum tubes, I believe.

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Been done.
Posted by: leTerrassier on Oct 25, 2009 1:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just a regurgitation of the plot-line of Escape from L.A. BORING!

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Suppose that EMP worked
Posted by: geometeer on Nov 3, 2009 2:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Suppose that EMP worked, as a single-device attack on the whole USA. The range would be in the thousands of miles, so the couple of hundred miles up to Low Earth Orbit would make little difference. Therefore, it could work from a satellite, which would not reveal its nature until detonated. Therefore, the only complete defense for the USA would be orbital hegemony, barring any satellites not US-approved from travelling over the US (or, by the nature of orbits, over Europe, China, Russia, Argentina, ...). Trying to enforce that would unite the world against the US, and fail.

Also, a device could be smuggled at ground level.

Today's devices are very different from the ones disrupted by long ago bombs: maybe more vulnerable, maybe less. But if there is a real threat, it should be handled by EMP-proof tech (shielding, optics instead of electronics, etc.), not by vain ttempts to make it impossible.

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» Tesla didn't create any death rays Posted by: strahlungsamt
Anything
Posted by: Revolutionary (Direct) Democracy on Nov 3, 2009 3:54 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To keep us looking at distant horizons, into space, over our shoulders.

Anything to keep us from looking at the real problem, the real enemy. The crooks that have taken over the White House, Congress and the Federal judiciary.


FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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EMP IS NOT A THREAT
Posted by: strahlungsamt on Nov 3, 2009 4:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't let yourself be fooled. There are Electro Magnetic Pulses going on all the time and you would never know about them. I have heard many threats before of one being detonated in Wall Street and how it would take out the entire economy. Why hasn't it happened? Because it's nearly impossible to do.

Whenever a pulse is emitted by an antenna (or whatever object functions as one) it disperses rapidly. The decrease in power is proportional to the square of the distance from the bomb. In other words, a person 2 meters away would get 1/4 the blast of the person 1 meter away. The person 20 meters away would get 1/1,000,000th of the blast. Hardly a significant threat. Any equipment would have to be very close to "ground zero" to have any effect at all. Most equipment is protected by fuses, surge-protectors and anti-static diodes which would more than suffice in about 99% of cases. Also, financial data is backed up in multiple data centers so if one bank is destroyed, the data can be recovered elsewhere.

You might get better results with dynamite.

The only way to create a significant EMP blast is with a nuclear bomb. The gamma rays interact with atoms to release electrons thus generating the EMP. Without a nuke the power is too small to consider. And with a nuke we will be too busy glowing in the dark to worry about Wall Street.

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» RE: MP IS NOT A THREAT Posted by: shannonwhite
» RE: MP IS NOT A THREAT Posted by: 1jakbird
Haven't the Reich-Wing Conservatives already destroyed our infrastructure?
Posted by: Karlh on Nov 3, 2009 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Decaying Schools, collapsing bridges, crumbling roadways, the recent derailment of the DC metro; these are just a few of the examples of how the right wing have destroyed this country all so the top 1% can have their tax cuts and control 90% of the wealth leaving the other 297 million of us to fight over the remaining 10%.

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OH JESUS F. CHRIST!!!
Posted by: IRIQUOIS227 on Nov 3, 2009 6:37 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An EMP? The world isn't in danger of an EMP!! Isn't it clear to people yet that the republican cabal knows NO depth beneath which they will not stoop for money and power?!! What in HELL is the matter with you idiots?!! These lamebrains committed two, count 'em, TWO COUPS DE 'ETAT, BACK TO BACK right under your noses!!! They have declared a DESIRE TO SEE THE CURRENT PRESIDENT FAIL, CLEARLY THEY WILL DO ANYTHING THEY CAN TO INSURE THAT OUTCOME!! They have violated the law to the point that every sentient being on this planet knows without doubt they are worse than ANY TERRORIST GROUP KNOWN TO MAN EXCEPT THEMSELVES. They know they can terrorize coward americans easily and they well know it. They've WRECKED THE ECONOMY, STARTED TWO WARS AND INSTIGATING TWO MORE! When!!WHEN will we put and end to this goddamned unflushed bus station toilet "government?!!" WHEN!!

ps - no, bill clinton and jimmy carter didn't do it.

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» RE: OH JESUS F. CHRIST!!! Posted by: deepseas
What? Me Worry?
Posted by: peppylapew on Nov 3, 2009 6:37 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dr Goebbels was right, and the terrorists (the real ones, not the phony Islamic strawmen) have won.

The American public has been Balkanized, to the point that NO ONE believes ANYTHING said by someone on the opposite side of the Great Divide. Every issue is parsed for its political correctness, facts by damned, and dissenters are smeared with ad hominem attacks.

The inevitable result of this apparently irreconcilable schism is policy paralysis. Think France, 1940.

Was Gingrich exaggerating when he said 9 of 10 would die if there were a complete failure of the electrical/transportation grids? Probably not by much. Is he exaggerating the EMP threat? I don't know; what I do know is that this debate is not about real science, it's about political science.

By the way, what the writer doesn't dwell on is the experience in pre-transistorized Hawaii --- fuses were melted, car ignitions destroyed, telephone and radio communications interrupted --- all caused by a blast almost a thousand miles away and only about 200 miles up. Russian EMP tests using smaller bombs destroyed analog telephone equipment, even when deeply buried. Transistors are millions of times more sensitive than the vacuum tubes in use then. There isn't enough surplus electrical transmission equipment on the whole planet to rebuild the US grid, assuming anyone were left to do so. (I don't know about you but I doubt I could live more than a few weeks without food.) It does not console me at all that the military may be able to withstand such an attack.

Building a "seawall" against a potential electronic Katrina seems simply prudent, doncha think, in a world where potential enemies could engineer a devastating, anonymous sneak attack? Why would anyone, Right or Left, object to that? (See 2nd graf.)

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» Idiot/moron Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: What? Me Worry? Posted by: Birdland
» RE: What? Me Worry? Posted by: peppylapew
» This article isn't about EMP Posted by: eddie torres
» RE: This article isn't about EMP Posted by: peppylapew
» I. Am. Paid. To. See. Danger. Posted by: eddie torres
» RE: I. Am. Paid. To. See. Danger. Posted by: peppylapew
Being a neocon means never having to admit you're wrong
Posted by: leafsong1 on Nov 3, 2009 6:40 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Remember, some people didn't think islamofascism was a threat. And some people didn't think there would be WMD's in Iraq."

Only an idiot would not see through this attempt to sell expensive and useless weapons and provoke bloodthirsty aggression. Only a moron would consider that neocons in general have the sort of credibility that comes from a record of being right. Unfortunately, the American people include many idiots and morons in their number.

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Hot Air
Posted by: Gravitas on Nov 3, 2009 7:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even EMPs could not penetrate all of Huckabee's hot air!

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AHA!! I found the truth about them
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Nov 3, 2009 7:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
MIKEY MING THE MERCILESS

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I Think The Threat Is Real - And The Only Solution is Nuclear Disarmament
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Nov 3, 2009 7:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The longer all these nuclear weapons exist, the more certain at least one will go off by accident or design.

Whilst The Military could almost certainly be able to continue functioning and probably rapidly escalate the devastation, the civilian infrastructure could be completely disabled. All Business is now computerised, and all business would collapse and be unable to function if their computer systems were lost. Some may survive if they have geographically well dispersed data centres - or underground ones - but most don't.

The only solution is to get rid of all these useless bombs - they are no defence against anything - just an enormous threat to our existence

Tony

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This is completely absurd arguement.
Posted by: kungfoofighterx on Nov 3, 2009 8:01 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You want to consider something. Read about ground bursting nuclear weapons. Who cares about stupid EMP. Big freaking deal if your iphone wont work because the cell towers are broken. They can be fixed. Ill a very high altitude air burst over a ground burst any day any time.

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study more
Posted by: jstepp590 on Nov 3, 2009 8:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Uh, for the writer you apparently need to study this subject a little more. It doesn't take a nuclear charge to create an EMP. All you need is a large amount of explosives and wrap it in copper wire. They test these out in Nevada all the time.

While I highly doubt the 90% kill theory, if a determined group of about 50 people went black ops they really could create havoc by making their own explosives from homegrown components. They would shut down everything with a computer chip in it all at once in 50 major cities at a time, areas about 1-10 square miles in circumference. The damage to our infrastructure would be in the hundreds of billions if not trillions of dollars.

I have often commented that I was surprised we hadn't been hit with one or more already because EMP's and oil are the Achilles heels of our economy. Between that and importing invasive species deliberately it would be a very effective and cost effective attack.

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I believe
Posted by: Archie1954 on Nov 3, 2009 10:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
scientists have postualted a potential for EMP which is not the result of active terrorism or enemies but a natural phenomenon from the death of a nearby star. Of course in such a scenario the whole world might be affected equally.

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» RE: I believe Posted by: RoffleTheWaffle
Alright Article, But...
Posted by: RoffleTheWaffle on Nov 3, 2009 10:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... It's not like an EMP is harmless.

http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/News/Loborev.txt

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_K_Project

The effects of EMP attacks actually are understood, because the Soviets had the balls and the requisite lack of sanity to conduct high altitude nuclear tests over populated land. Our Starfish Prime was conducted over water instead, and only registered relatively minor effects in Hawaii. The K-Project detonations were conducted over land - Kazakhstan, to be exact - which changes how the pulse behaves and also provides many, many more potential targets which can be affected. The damage in Karaganda was especially bad.

We'd be in deep doo-doo if this happened here, and some regions could easily be without power and telecommunication service for weeks or longer, if other major power outages in recent years have been any indication. You'd have line workers toiling around the clock to replace fuses, repair damaged wires, the potential for loads of electrical fires... It'd be a terrible mess, especially for anything connected to big, long wires. I doubt we'd be 'back in the stone age' but it wouldn't be a fun time, either. Definitely not business as usual.

EMPACT might be full of shit, but downplaying what an EMP would actually do and claiming that it's completely unknown is just hogwash. Fortunately, for the many reasons provided, it's highly unlikely that any country would be dumb enough to spend their precious few nukes launching EMP attacks knowing that they'd be committing suicide in the process, and any potential nuclear terrorist would have an extremely difficult time executing a high altitude detonation of any kind.

Just nitpicking, see.

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» RE: Alright Article, But... Posted by: keystone999
This author doesn't know what a neocon is, apparently...
Posted by: james108 on Nov 3, 2009 12:24 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Neoconservatism is "a political philosophy that emerged in the United States of America, and which supports using American economic and military power to bring liberalism, democracy, and human rights to other countries." That's a pretty good definition, in practical terms of just what Bush and the republicans do in wars, and the democratic party's rationalizations as well.

We are pretending to be about weapons of mass destruction to force Iran in a corner, while ignoring Israel's refusal to comply with the same standards. Pretending to protect the world from weapons of mass destruction, threatening Iran with sanctions or arms, in a hypocritical dance is right in line with the best neocon.

Neocons use military and economic threats and might to enforce American delusions of democracy on other countries, usually as a cover to do what JFK once called "economic imperialism" in regards to Cuba. Neoconservativism, in other words, reflects the policies of the democrat and republican parties, and their strangle-hold on the political debate and options, restricting things to what big money corporations agree to argue about, is as fascist as they come.

Saying a white republican is a neocon is like saying all Arab Muslims are terrorist. It has nothing to do with race, religion or the thin line between democrat and republican neocons. If you murder or make threats of force to get your way, you are a terrorist. That's what terrorism is. It doesn't matter if it's an Arab, Jew or African American. Dead is dead, making people live in terror to get your way is just that. Using the American mantras of liberalism, democracy and protectionism to justify covert insurgencies or just plain old military might to proxy foreign governments for economic imperative is what neocons do. If it quacks, walks and poops like a duck...

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My Your Tin Hat is Exquisite
Posted by: Purple Girl on Nov 3, 2009 12:29 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Concern over EMP is far down my list of shit to worry about.
After 25 yrs of worrying about when the economy would collapse under weight of all the wealth retained (and siphoned) at the top- and only releasing it in 'trickles' to the other 95%. Now that it has come to fruitrition, I'm a lil' more concerned with my immediate loses.
But this version of Apocalpytic fantasy does have it's allure. Undoubtedly the big financial firms have 'gone paperless', so destroying the computerized record system would benefit those they've screwed over the last few decades.
I'm not going to just oppose anything be done to address this 'threat', I'm going to pray for that particular 'apocalypse'. That's a paranoid delusion I might like to relish for a moment or two.
Revenge a Dish best Served cold.

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Forget Iran...
Posted by: jimmyaj on Nov 3, 2009 3:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and North Korea and any terrorist "organization" you can think of.

I'm worried about the REAL terrosists: multinational corporations who have resources to do things like this somewhere on the side. It would be difficult but it could be done. Somebody try to hijack the world for ransom?

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Still Worthwhile Worrying About Electromagnetic Disruption, But Not Due To Terrorists
Posted by: bcgirl125 on Nov 3, 2009 6:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A huge solar storm occurred in 1859 that knocked out telegraph lines, started fires in telegraph offices and basically destroyed every primitive electric device operating in this era. Northern lights were seen as far south as Hawaii.

Nature works in cycles, and we're overdue for a repeat of this event. It is certainly worthwhile to look at shielding against this phenomenon. Another storm like this today, and it's Instant Amish. It would take about a year (yes, A YEAR) to replace all the industrial transformers that would be melted down in this scenario in order to get the electrical grid operating again. Our electricity-dependant society will not survive a year off the grid, the total damage will be immense.

If infrastructure upgrades to safeguard the grid get done in the name of "anti-terrorism", who cares, as long as they happen. As for the waste of military money, that will happen anyway, it always does under some pretext.

http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/
mystery_monday_031027.html

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MzAnony
Posted by: miz on Nov 4, 2009 11:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WOW! EXCELLENT commentaries all! Was very encouraged not only by the intelligence of these citizens but their obvious interest in this issue. Book: THE CYCLES OF HEAVEN (1971)?co-authors (fluent in several languages) was a compilation of the latest in EM research at that time, but even by today's standards is a very informative read. As for myself, in 1985, lived near the navy base in Norfolk, VA, and once experienced several physiological effects. Our bodies are composed of numerous bodily channels, air spaces (i.e., sinuses, GI tract, ears, nose) and liquid filled cavities that all resonate at different frequencies, whether the source be electrical, mechanical or acoustic. That said, what I experienced (in 1985?) when digital watches used to flash every second at the colon between the hour and minutes - but no longer do so), watched in amazement that every 7 seconds, some part of my body would be impacted by an indescribable sensation or definite vibration that would last exactly 7 seconds then stop. Made note of each bodily part affected, and also noted hearing a distinct series of beeps, clicks and even the same sound (in WWII movies) the scope makes when the Capt says "up scope or down scope" could be heard INSIDE my head, all with the precise 7 second cycle alternating with those beeps, clicks and that "up/down" scope sound. Immediately called Old Dominion Univ and asked to speak to a prof in the physics dept, described what my body was experiencing, and in outrage, he literally screamed into the phone "I know exactly what is going on here, and I am going to make sure it does not continue!" then slammed the receiver down so hard, it hurt my ear. Prior to my own personal bodily parts being affected, had noticed the birds in my Ocean View neighborhood behaving strangely and because nobody watches birds anymore, no one could corrorborate my observations. Nevertheless, after my phone conversation with this ODU prof, about 2 weeks later was an article in the Va Pilot about electromagnetic testing being done (obviously without the public's knowledge or consent) SIMULATING THE INTENSITY OF A NUCLEAR DETONATION FOR 1/BILLIONTH OF A SECOND USING ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSATIONS. I knew this to be a LIE because watching my body being impacted precisely every 7 seconds with a constantly repeating series of various sounds for over 15 minutes -- the military prolonged that pulse for a HELL OF A LOT LONGER THAN 1/BILLIONTH OF A SECOND. Also, read the comments by navy divers exposed to and expected to perform tasks while in the water being subjected to that new sonar; their testimonies are proof positive the military does not give a rat's ass about their men especially when they do realize how negatively they are being impacted - they just want to "prolong the effects irregardless - to determine the extremes". These invaluable divers are just as expendible as civilians when it comes to testing cleaner more efficient ways to KILL organisms yet not affect structures.

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» RE: MzAnony Posted by: RoffleTheWaffle
Nice
Posted by: jasonsunero on Nov 13, 2009 7:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nice story.

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