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Saturday, 16 November 2013

Dutchsinse video prompts Filipino scientist to deny geophysics and HAARP technology


Activist Post

When avid weather watcher Michael Janitch (aka Dutchsinse) uploaded a video showing that microwave pulses preceded the formation of Typhoon Yolanda-Haiyan before it hit the Philippines, the video went viral, prompting several Filipinos to send it to local news stations asking for an explanation.


Reputable news sites covered Janitch’s information, which must have really bunched up the tighty whities of military figures, because within days the same news sites called out this ‘conspiracy theorist’ and denied basic physics that microwaves can and do impact weather.

The Philippines’ top hazard assessment scientist denies that electromagnetic waves can influence weather or cause earthquakes. Take cover, Filipinos, because the Executive Director of Project NOAH (Nationwide Operational Assessment of Hazards), Dr. Alfredo Mahar Francisco A. Lagmay, is woefully mistaken or deliberately lying to you.

Not only do EM waves impact weather and earthquakes, but scientists have learned how to use these waves to do just that. Since the mid-1990s, with the creation of HAARP, the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Project, this technology has been developed and deployed. HAARP manipulates the ionosphere with directed radio waves that then target an area in ways that interfere with electronic communications, prompt earthquakes and yes, direct and enhance storms.


There are some two-dozen known HAARP-like stations around the planet capable of interacting with the ionosphere. If the technology didn’t work, would they have built these additional stations? Governments have long been studying the ionosphere. At least as early as the 1970s, ionospheric labs were (and are) stationed in Boulder, Colorado; Juliusruh, Germany; Průhonice, Czech Republic; Akita, Japan; Vasilsursk, Russia; and Rome, Italy, among others.


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See also:  Chemtrails? Contrails? Strange Skies



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