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Scary Thoughts about Fukishima, Haitian Earthquakes

COMMENT: A fright­en­ing aspect of the Fukushi­ma earthquake/tsunami and the resul­tant nuclear cat­a­stro­phe con­cerns the heat­ing of the ionos­phere just before the giant quake.

Whether this phe­nom­e­non is indica­tive of the pos­si­ble appli­ca­tion of HAARP weapon­ry [1] is a thought that can keep one up at night.

For the record, so to speak, I am NOT say­ing, nec­es­sar­i­ly, that HAARP was involved in the Japan quake. As dis­cussed in FTR #272 [2], oth­er nations are devel­op­ing or have devel­oped such sys­tems.

Anoth­er thing to con­sid­er is just WHO is con­trol­ling HAARP? Might Under­ground Reich ele­ments have access to the tech­nol­o­gy?

“Atmos­phere Above Japan Heat­ed Rapid­ly before M9 Quake”; Tech­nol­o­gy Review; 5/18/2011. [3]

EXCERPT: . . . Today, Dim­i­tar Ouzounov at the NASA God­dard Space Flight Cen­tre in Mary­land and a few bud­dies present the data from the Great Tohoku earth­quake which dev­as­tat­ed Japan on 11 March. Their results, although pre­lim­i­nary, are eye-open­ing.

They say that before the M9 earth­quake, the total elec­tron con­tent of the ionos­phere increased dra­mat­i­cal­ly over the epi­cen­tre, reach­ing a max­i­mum three days before the quake struck.

At the same time, satel­lite obser­va­tions showed a big increase in infrared emis­sions from above the epi­cen­tre, which peaked in the hours before the quake. In oth­er words, the atmos­phere was heat­ing up. . . .

COMMENT: Expert observers also felt that the Hait­ian earth­quake of 2010 was “strange,” although the Nation­al Geo­graph­ic arti­cle excerpt­ed below does not devel­op that theme beyond a point.

“Haiti Earth­quake ‘Strange,’ Strongest in 200 Years”; Nation­al Geo­graph­ic; 1/13/2010. [4]

EXCERPT: While earth­quakes are not uncom­mon in the Caribbean island coun­try, the recent Haiti earth­quake’s inten­si­ty sur­prised experts.

“It’s quite strange” from a his­tor­i­cal per­spec­tive, said Julie Det­ton, a geo­physi­cist with the U.S. Geo­log­i­cal Sur­vey. . . .