GLOBAL WEATHER CONTROL SYSTEM:
FLURRY OF NEWS STORIES JUST RELEASED
By Toni Thayer
Web Site: http://www.spirithelps.com
"but they’ve pulled all of the valid links that are in it":
Thayer 2014
13 December 2004
Envision this -- a plan by a private group of universities and
colleges to control the global weather on command, supposedly,
only for the benefit of mankind. Does this sound too farfetched
to believe? Well, start believing, because it is here today, and
the future is now.
A flurry of magazine and news articles cropped up in October on
Dr. Ross N. Hoffman's vision to design and implement a central
command post for the world's weather control activities. His
vision is "within the next 30 years there will be a Global
Weather Control System that could influence the weather through
the use of contrails (condensed water vapour produced at high
altitudes by aircraft), a fleet of solar reflectors orbiting the
Earth, wind turbines and microwave energy from satellites," so
says an article by Explorations TV, BBC Worldwide. (http://www.explorations.tv/human_6.html)
Hoffman seems to have the credentials to fulfill his dream with
an undergraduate geology degree from Brown University, a master
degree in mathematics from Boston University, and a Ph.D. in
meteorology from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After
graduation, he was employed at the Goddard Laboratory for
Atmospheric Sciences, and he's also served on the National
Research Council Committee on the Status and Future Directions
in U.S. Weather Modification Research and Operations.
Today, Hoffman works for Atmospheric Environmental Research,
Inc. (AER), a research and development firm in Lexington,
Massachusetts. Some of their clients are the U.S. Dept. of
Defense, Dept. of Energy and Environmental Protection Agency,
and private industry leaders of Boeing Satellite Systems, Ball
Aerospace and Technologies Corp., Allied Signal, American
Petroleum Institute, Dupont and American Chemistry Council. (http://www.aer.com/home/home/html)
"Objective analysis and assimilation methods, atmospheric
dynamics, climate theory and atmospheric radiation" are
Hoffman's primary interests. He's also been involved in Rapid
Climate Change (RAPID), "a $20 million, six-year (2001-2007)
programme of the Natural Environment Research Council" from the
United Kingdom.
The October articles released on Hoffman center around his
recent project for the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC),
"Controlling the Global Weather". The NIAC is an arm of the
Universities Space Research Association (USRA), a nonprofit
incorporated in the District of Columbia in 1969 "under the
auspices of the National Academy of Sciences." (http://www.niac.usra.edu)
The USRA website lists 95 institutional members in 2004, all
colleges and universities with "graduate programs in space
sciences or aerospace engineering" with 88 members from the
United States, two from Canada, three from Europe, and two from
Israel. The group's charter is "grand, revolutionary concepts
for architectures and systems." (http://www.usra.edu/hq/ur/coi.html)
NIAC contracted with Hoffman to design a weather controller, "a
feedback control system to control the global atmosphere, and
the components of such a system . . . providing a scientific
basis and system architecture to actually implement global
weather control."
Presumably, the need for such a system stems from the chaos
theory on the Earth's atmosphere, a view held by many
scientists. "A chaotic system is one that appears to behave
randomly, but is, in fact, governed by rules. It is also highly
sensitive to initial conditions, so that seemingly
insignificant, arbitrary inputs can have profound effects that
lead quickly to unpredictable consequences," according to
Hoffman in his October 2004 article in Scientific American,
Controlling Hurricanes. (http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa006&colID=1&articleID=000593AE-704B-1151-B57F83414B7F0000)
This chaotic behavior of the atmosphere is exactly what enables
it to be controlled. "It is the very instability of the
atmosphere's dynamics that makes global weather control a
possibility. Extreme sensitivity to initial conditions implies
that small perturbations to the atmosphere can effectively
control the evolution of the atmosphere, if the atmosphere is
observed and modeled sufficiently well," Hoffman explains in the
NIAC contract award. (http://www.niac.usra.edu/files/studies/abstract/589Hoffman.html)
In an October 2004 Red Cross Disaster Relief article by
Christina Ward, Controlling the Weather: Disaster Prevention of
the Future?, Hoffman goes more in-depth, "Humans could
theoretically create small changes in the atmosphere, and these
changes could make big differences in the behavior of weather
systems. . . The implications would be major . . . Just imagine:
no droughts, no tornadoes, no snowstorms during rush hour . . .
Could we control the path of a hurricane to prevent it from
striking the most populated coastal areas? If we could, should
we?" (http://www.disasterrelief.org/Disasters/020228influence)
Although many weather control projects by numerous countries
have been performed and documented, the early experiments in the
1960s focused on "cloud seeding techniques - then the only
practical way to try to affect the weather . . . with silver
iodide particles dispersed by aircraft."
Hoffman's goal is different because it coordinates the Global
Weather Control System into one network and uses sci-fi
techniques. An "array of earth-orbiting solar power stations"
would beam the Sun's energy to Earth via "microwave receivers on
the ground" to generate the huge amount of energy that's
required to change the global weather.
"For weather control, however, tuning the microwave downlink to
frequencies better absorbed by water vapor could heat different
levels in the atmosphere as desired." Hoffman notes, "Raindrops
strongly absorb microwaves . . ."
To begin the process of making alterations to the Earth's
climate, Hoffman recommends changing some everyday activities,
"such as directing aircraft flight plans to precisely position
contrails and thus increase cloud cover or varying crop
irrigation practices to enhance or decrease evaporation."
He identified "some tools" still needed before it can be fully
operational: 1) worldwide weather data collecting, 2) better
numerical models portraying the physics of the universe, and 3)
more developed computer power.
NASA seems to have additional interests in the project other
than just weather control, although, not all of these were
identified in the news stories, "Many of the technologies
involved in our proposed system are areas of interest to NASA
that will be developed for other reasons. These include
atmospheric science, remote sensing, aviation systems, fleets of
low-cost satellites, solar power satellites, advanced
computational systems, mega-systems engineering, and more."
Hoffman admits the downside of weather control, "The nation that
controls its own weather will perforce control the weather of
other nations. Weather 'wars' are conceivable. An international
treaty may be required to ensure that weather control technology
be used for the good of all." He says with success,
"larger-scale weather control using space-based heating may
become a reasonable goal that nations around the globe could
agree to pursue."
The Global Weather Control System appears to be the first step
by a self-appointed group of scientists to assimilate a master
global plan for manipulating the Earth's natural processes. Do
they really have adequate fore knowledge to take on such an
ambitious project for the entire planet? Can the Earth's
inhabitants always count on their morals, standards and actions
to work in their best interests? Isn't it downright ludicrous to
play with Earth's interconnected systems of humans, wildlife,
plants, and atmosphere? In other words, who made these people
God?
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