Governments have confirmed existence of weather modification...

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    Governments have confirmed existence of weather modification technologies

    Jones breaks down CNN’s claim that coordinated tech censorship is a “conspiracy theory,” and an Infowars interview on government weather weapons.

    https://www.real.video/5827522276001



    https://www.infowars.com/pentagon-c...powerful-energy-beams-to-control-the-weather/

    Just another conspiracy theory right. Well check the data.

    A new Chinese radar facility could become a weapon hiding in plain sight
    IN A coastal town in the South China Sea, just 4200km from Darwin, China is building a research facility. It might come with a catch.
    IN A small coastal town in the South China Sea, just 4200 kilometres from Darwin, China is building a facility designed to shoot radio waves into Earth’s upper atmosphere.
    China says it’s for scientific purposes. But critics aren’t entirely convinced.
    Researcher in the field of ionospheric science are excited about the prospect of learning more about the electrified edge of our atmosphere but when the site is up and running it could also give China a sizeable military advantage in the strategically important region.
    The infrastructure project — to be built later this year on the island of Hainan, China’s southernmost point — will consist of radio equipment, antennas and various measuring equipment designed to interact with the ionosphere, a distinguished layer of Earth’s atmosphere because it is ionised by extreme solar radiation.
    Sitting above us at about 85km to 600km altitude, scientists have long been interested in the ionosphere because it plays an important role in atmospheric electricity and reflects and modifies radio waves used for communication and navigation. In fact, before we were launching satellites, in order to have over the horizon communication we would bounce radio waves off the ionosphere.
    In recent decades, researchers have sought to learn more about it by shooting pulsed energy beams at it and measuring how the highly charged particles react. That is what China is planning on doing as it sets out to build a facility that will feature a device known as a High-powered Incoherent Scatter Radar.
    Such technology has long caught the imagination of conspiracy theorists who claim it can be used to control the weather and even cause natural disasters.
    While those ideas have been continually debunked, the technology could theoretically be used to detect nano satellites, enhance underwater communication with submarines and disrupt rival communication networks by creating an atmospheric “black hole”.
    Incoherent scatter radars are tremendously valuable for understanding how the space environment on the other side of the ionosphere interacts with our atmosphere.
    Incoherent scatter radars are tremendously valuable for understanding how the space environment on the other side of the ionosphere interacts with our atmosphere.Source:Supplied
    Dr Brett Carter, from the School of Science and SPACE Research Centre at RMIT University, is an ionospheric scientist and is excited about the prospect of a new radar facility in China to help study the ionosphere.

    “An incoherent scatter radar actually allows you to detect a bunch of characteristics of the atmosphere and its plasma that no other technique allows you to do, except launching rockets through it,” he told news.com.au.
    “In terms of military use, my understanding is that these facilities for the most part are used for scientific research. I don’t think they’re used for surveillance or anything like that,” he said.
    “They are tremendously valuable for understanding how the space environment interacts with our atmosphere, because (the ionosphere) is effectively the interface between the Earth’s atmosphere and space.”
    China is certainly not the first to build such a facility, but the location in the highly strategic South China Sea has raised some eyebrows.
    The US Navy and DARPA, the US military’s science and research wing, have been very interested in the technology in recent years.
    The US government previously controlled a similar facility in a remote part of Alaska called the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, or HAARP, that consisted of 40 acres of radar equipment and antennas to study the ionosphere.
    While smaller, the new Chinese facility is expected to be similar to HAARP in many ways. There are also other similar radar facilities in parts of Europe and South America.
    After years of research, HAARP is now owned and operated by a university in Alaska.
    After years of research, HAARP is now owned and operated by a university in Alaska.Source:Supplied
    According to the US government, the purpose of HAARP was to conduct basic research and to investigate the potential for developing ionospheric enhancement technology for radio communications and surveillance.
    The research also reportedly involved experiments that sought to investigate how the ionosphere could be used to possibly enhance subaquatic communication that could be useful for submarine fleets.
    Ideas like this have led London-based freelance journalist David Hambling to refer to China’s new radar project in the South China Sea as “a defence system masquerading as science”.
    He points to recent scientific papers coming out of China that have looked at low frequency radar for investigating underground features, finding natural resources and locating pipelines. Hambling believes China is interested in the potential to adapt such technology to detect submarines.
    “As long as US submarines operate in this part of the world, China has no chance of dominating it,” he said.
    “But a system which could blank out ELF (extremely low frequency) communications and selectively interfere with other satellite communications would severely affect any submarine operations in the South China Sea,” Hambling argued in Popular Mechanics.
    The island where China is building the radar site also happens to be home to the country’s main naval base and houses a fleet of nuclear submarines.
    However, Dr Carter said incoherent scatter radars “tend to be on the high frequency end” and questioned the use of such a device in submarine operations.
    While the idea is a bit far fetched, Hambling is not alone in his assessment that the motivation of the project is as much political as it is scientific.
    Stephen Chen, a Chinese journalist for the South China Morning Post, who spoke with people working on the project back in June, said he had no doubt that the Hainan radar was primarily a military project.
    “The available information strongly suggested the facility’s role and function to help China strengthen its grip on the South China Sea,” he said.
    The site of the radar facility has led some to speculate about its purpose.

    In his reporting, Chen suggested the facility could be used to disrupt other countries’ communications networks by creating an atmospheric “black hole” over surrounding areas. While HAARP — now controlled by a university in Alaska — was in a remote region, the China facility will be in the middle of important air traffic lanes.
    Such facilities are very expensive to operate so few governments have access to such radar capabilities for private research and development.
    “In terms of ionospheric science, I think they’re among the most expensive instruments that we use. They are expensive to build and expensive to operate so we don’t have many of them,” Dr Carter said.
    So it certainly makes sense China would be building it with an eye towards reaping all the benefits it can.
    Officials at the Chinese Academy of Science leading the project reportedly urged Chinese scientists to use the facility to serve China’s “strategic needs” and pursue “frontier issues” in space.
    From a scientific point of view, Dr Carter said researchers will welcome the data obtained via the facility when it is built.
    “Having this incoherent scatter radio is going to be very beneficial for the whole field … We also don’t have any of them in the South East Asian region to study the equatorial ionosphere,” he said.
    “Many of us inside the field are actually quite excited about the prospect of having an incoherent scatter radar facility placed in south East Asia.”

    https://www.news.com.au/technology/...t/news-story/acbe423f03b2e1d042723892bb080bb8

    Our friendly communist regime to the north would not keep any secrets from us right?
 
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