July 14, 2010
Scientists question, come out with hypotheses and experiment to prove what they want to prove. They got trained to do that at school.
As soon as they get out of this factory, they hope to end up with a well-paying job and continue to do more of the same.
Lest losing their jobs, few will ever dare to go against the elite´s main grain.
So, it is not surprising that some of them, those that went along the physics bandwagon, are carrying out experiments that have to do with the Earth´s ionosphere, using microwave heaters constructed for that particular purpose (e.g., HAARP).
In a nutshell, these scientists are playing God. Also, they are playing with fire. It would be the equivalent of messing up with a human foetus within the mother´s uterus by shooting with microwaves the placenta here and there, day and night, for a long time. Excited and busy, rubbing their hands thinking about their future publications, hoping to gain a lot of recognition and admiration with such experimention in their own tribe of peers, the researchers by doing so continuosly, one day they realised that they had ended up with a dead body: They killed the unborn child.
For the time being, using microwave facilities, excited by exciting the ionospheric plasma around the Earth and which acts as a reflector for radio waves in the HF frequency range, thus enabling long-distance radio communications, over-the-horizon radar, along with other technologies of importance for national security and counterterrorism purposes (McNamara, 1991), poked by economic and military interests emanating from satanic global elites, these scientists will go on experimenting with the ionosphere.
Considering that the ionosphere is an extremely important shield that protects all life on Earth from solar radiation, as well as interacting actively on the planet´s weather patterns, there should be an immediate moratorium on this kind of experimentation.
Otherwise, one of these days we all might wake up completely fried in our beds.
References
McNamara, L. F. (1991). The Ionosphere: Communications, Surveillance, and Direction Finding. Krieger Publishing Company,
Malabar, FL, USA. 237 pp.