/ 12 January 2005

Weather, warfare and gimps

There’s a lot of disinformation that is deliberately being spread around at the moment. Every whisper suggesting that the Asian tsunami was not natural, or was due to something other than an earthquake, is being systematically debunked quite thoroughly in the mass media.

Just to widen what you may think you “know” about reality, I thought a few sites with hard evidence, and some clearly visible smoking guns, would be useful — so that you can decide for yourself just what the truth is. I personally don’t believe that the seismic event and resulting tsunami were either “natural” or simply an “accident”. Let me prove it to you, step by step.

Let’s start with the little known fact that on December 17 2004, United States President George Bush issued an executive order, giving the US universal control over the world’s oceans for “security or development purposes”. Then, just nine days later, in the oil-rich region of Aceh, a cataclysmic ocean-based event occurred. Here’s that executive order, taking control of the world’s oceans, which was almost totally ignored by the global media. Read Executive Order on Ocean Policy Dec 17 2004.

Next, the epicentre of the seismic event just “happened” to occur in the area where the oil giant Exxon has been very active, working with the brutal local government to ensure its oil supplies continue. Read this report from Labour Rights: Exxon’s Abuses in Aceh.

Now, thanks to the “humanitarian deployment” of US forces, guess which oil production region is going to be militarily “rebuilt” and, more importantly, totally secured. Here’s the official US navy spin on the story: US Seventh Fleet First to Provide Support to Aceh Province.

To get a better understanding of the atrocities sanctioned and committed by the increasingly vicious oil companies and their local thugs, you might also want to read the transcript of an interview, at Democracy Now, about Exxon-Mobil, Aceh and the Tsunami.

To see how important that area is to US oil interests, read Nightmare in Indonesia: The Roots of the Bush-Cheney’s Oil Government. Then, from way back in 2002, there’s Oily Diplomacy: How the US Is Protecting Oil Companies in Aceh.

Now consider this under-reported item from the Telegraph in Calcutta, showing the strange power struggle between US forces supposedly just moving in to “help” and the local governments. Read US-India Struggle for Control in Disaster Zone.

This next article goes into the interesting and suspiciously small amount that the US offered in terms of “humanitarian aid” (compared with the financial costs of the Iraq war per killed Iraqi), and indirectly points out that the tsunami was a very “cheap killer”. Read US Undercuts UN with Insufficient Aid to Victims.

(You might also, to sidetrack slightly, want to consider the implications and totally different view of reality to the one you thought was in place, via the very well-researched article called United Nations, Foreign Aid and Terrorism.)

But back to the so-called “earthquake”.

Yes, it’s a strange coincidence, you say. That it happened in an area where a frenzied and brutal oil-grab war against the local population has been steadily increasing. But it was an earthquake. That’s got nothing to do with any nation or army.

Really? Stay with me, and let’s go back to 1997, when the US secretary of defence quietly revealed that weaponry to create earthquakes and trigger volcanic eruptions is not only possible, but potentially within the reach of terrorists. The Memory Hole has the archived mention. Read US Secretary of Defence Mentions Earthquake and Volcano Weapons.

And just to prove that weapons to trigger earthquakes are not only known, they’re even listed among the so-called “forbidden weapons” among nations. Go look at the official Bill known as the Space Preservation Act of 2001, signed into law by the US Congress. You’ll notice that, among the weapons listed as being banned for use, are “tectonic weapons”. (In other words, weapons that can cause earthquakes.) Go to this page and search for the word “tectonic” in the official Bill: Tectonic Weapons Mention in 2001 Space Bill.

Here’s a five-meg downloadable excellent animated video clip, showing the seismic event and the tidal ripples that spread out across the Indian Ocean. Get it Here.

To show you a different mindset, needed to comprehend the magnitude and insanity of the Powers That Be, this next item comes off a military website (.au.af.mil), and is a research paper by the military, for the military, that clearly demonstrates that the weather itself is viewed as a military weapon. Read Weather as a Force Multiplier: Owning the Weather in 2025.

The idea that the weather or nature itself can be used as weapons goes back a long time. Here’s a page with two news clips (Taipei Times and AFP New Zealand back in 2000) talking about declassified military documents, referring to a “tidal wave bomb” that was created as far back as 1944, and which was considered to be almost as potentially effective as a nuclear weapon. Read Declassified Tidal Wave Bomb Document.

Now that you’re getting the idea that the weather itself has been recognised as a militarily useful tool, and that earthquakes and tidal waves have been officially mentioned as being able to be “weaponised”, here’s the mother lode — and it roughly mirrors what my initial thought was about the “earthquake”. It provided a damn good excuse for US forces to move in and secure various oil-rich areas, under the smokescreen of providing humanitarian aid. Take the time to slowly read and digest this large article, with its many links to verifiable news items. Read The Bush Regime’s Oil Grab Disguised as Rescue Mission.

Here’s yet another layer of information, suggesting that weather warfare and experimentation have perhaps been used before. Ignore the mention of “Zionists” in Joe Viall’s otherwise very interesting and reasonably lucid article, with photographs, detailing the truly strange behaviour and effects of Cyclone Zoe. Read Natural Event or Weather Warfare?.

The concept of electromagnetic warfare is something that rarely appears in the media. The powers that be prefer the public to believe inherently the idea that warfare is all about more-or-less “conventional” weaponry. However, as I’ve shown above, you can see that this is perhaps an illusion, and that the truth is far more unpleasant and stranger than you have been led to believe.

Now for some light relief. So you’re an S&M freak, with your own private sex-slave to play with. What do you buy the gimp in your life? Here’s something our president can buy his friend Robert Mugabe, so they can really have fun when they meet in private. Go stare thoughtfully at the charming gimp-gift known as The Humiliator!.

For something also in the fetish range, so jaw-droppingly tacky it is almost cute, go stare at this gentleman standing proudly in his kitchen: The Kitchen Leatherman!.

For a genuinely cute moment (and part of the ongoing “things to make you go awwwwww” series), try this totally cutesy pic of a little Chihuahua with a Broken Leg.

Found a strange-looking item of food? A potato chip that resembles something else? Take a picture and submit it to this site, which collects weird and strange-looking food. No eating the exhibits as you amble through the Museum of Food Anomalies.

Let’s move sideways into revisionist history. Science likes us to think that we appeared somehow as a species, eventually reached cave dweller status, became farmers and then relatively recently began what is called recorded history, a mere few thousand years back. A nice, easy-to-absorb straight line from “primitive” to “now”.

Unfortunately, there is a lot of hard evidence showing that this is simply not true, and rather stupidly, science chooses to ignore the evidence of a much stranger past. Take a look at these objects, many of which simply can only be aircraft designs, dating back thousands of years, at Strange Artefacts.

Those interested in looking at the past without any preconceived ideas and filters have known for a long time about the various flying machines (and what sound suspiciously like nuclear weaponry) written about in ancient Indian texts. These flying craft were called vimanas and, unlike the airy euphemisms used in the Bible about “chariots of fire”, the Indian texts are quite clear about these flying machines as being a totally earthly working craft.

That bit of background aside, there’s a growing interest in the Indian scientific community, with this ancient information in various manuscripts — which have detailed instructions on how to create the metals and engines for these flying craft. Put your prejudices about history aside, note the funding from the Aeronautics Research and Development Board and read Ancient Indian Works.

To remove any remaining doubts, and to show clearly that what we believe regarding the originality of modern technology is merely a rehash of something that was commonplace thousands of years ago, look at the drawings made from old texts and read the information at A Tribute to Hinduism: Vimanas.

The trick is to get away from both the idea that the past equals “primitive”, and to face up to the rather unpleasant concept that — like the slum dwellers now living around the Great Pyramids, who are unable to equal the architectural and engineering feat of building another pyramid — we as a species are probably the slum-dweller descendants of a much more advanced past ourselves.

India may yet scare the world on a variety of fronts. Note this recent editorial article from the India Daily : India to Release UFO Information?.

Staying in the “everything you know is wrong” region, you may not have known that gravity itself can be altered — or “shielded” — with some bizarre results at which mainstream science gets rather grumpy. (Actually, science suggests it’s an “ion wind” that causes the floating effect of these easy-to-build devices.) To start with, as a crash course into the field of a floating-in-mid-air device that you can make at home, go read the excellent first-person account of a journalist trying out one of the available “antigravity” devices, at Wired magazine: The Antigravity Underground.

Then, if you know of any happy DIY-ers — or stupid science teachers, for that matter — go look at the plans for making your own Lifter, watch the videos of antigravity in action, and listen to the various radio interviews (including the BBC) at American Antigravity.

For a page with precise information on how to build an inexpensive device that floats in the air and behaves in a way that is — according to mainstream science — completely impossible, go to Lifter Design Page.

Gear change. Let’s go local, and stay with this week’s theme of “reality isn’t what you think”. Forget the colonial and Marxist revisionist historians and anthropologists, and settle in for a wild ride as you read this very cool interview with local (and world-renowned) shaman Credo Mutwa on Alien Abductions.

Time to get your real war news. In the oil grab and occupation known as “the Iraq war”, things are getting even more brutal — if that is possible. First off, to give an idea of how much the US forces are struggling, read this MSNBC article about a memo sent from a lieutenant general to the army chief of staff, stating US Army Reserves ‘Almost Broken’.

Then, showing that desperate times call for desperate measures, the so-called “Salvador option” is being looked at by the US military in Iraq. Read the decidedly ugly picture painted in Pentagon Considers Using Death Squads in Iraq.

Here’s a revealing article from the United Kingdom Telegraph, detailing an aspect of the situation that is almost certainly not being covered much in the US media — read US Deserters Flee to Canada to Avoid Iraq Service.

Given that we’re only getting the US point of view on the unfolding events in Iraq, to see the war from the “other side”, read the very interesting article from Jihad Unspun, titled US Pulls Back from Parts of Fallujah. And then consider US Troops Use Children as Human Shields.

Here’s another view, also from the “other side”, looking at the changing nature of exactly what the US military is now doing on the global stage. Read The US Military Oil Protection Service.

To see what happens when you’re bored out of your mind, Canadian, and decide to throw two cans of butane on a fire, download and watch the clip known as ButaneZilla!. (Be advised that it does contain a few rude words.)

If you happen to live in the same house as a health freak who has one of those water-filter thingies, why not conduct your own experiment like these folks did, and see what happens taste-wise, if you try to filter lousy, cheap vodka through a water filter. Go read and stare at the pix at The Vodka Water-Filter Experiment.

Cool! You made it to the bottom of the column! You shall be rewarded. Now, I have to warn you that this week’s “morally regrettable bottom of the column” site is extremely gory. Like … very, very, very gory. As I’m used to watching zombie movies, the gore made me howl with laughter, picturing the wet faces of the people who had this accident.

Before you get upset, let me explain and paint the picture. Take one stupid (and now very dead) deer. Add one very fast-moving car. Combine the two at high speed, and have them meet in the windscreen of said car. Now go stare at the collection of utterly frightening, gore-filled pictures known as Deer God!.

Until the next time, if animal-rights activists don’t get me.

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