“GeoPulse Phased Array Rings”

Photo from Wikipedia: 1904 image of Wardenclyffe Tower
By Scott Hamilton
I have been following for a while a group on Facebook called Alaska SkyWatcher. This last week they released an article that I found quite interesting and felt it worth sharing with you. I have written in the past about the HAARP project, which was a U.S. Department of Defense-funded project running experiments on Earth’s Ionosphere. HAARP was accused over several decades of performing weather and atmospheric modification experiments, but there has been very little proof of these facts released by the operators of the program. There have been a recent uptake in the number of posts on Facebook and other social media platforms from professional weather radar operators noticing strange circular “artifacts” on radar images. Alaska Skywatcher’s post was the first reasonable explanation I read for the appearance of these ring shaped artifacts.
These circular artifacts are often referred to as “HAARP rings,” but let me be clear here, according to my research these are only very loosely related to HAARP. What we are seeing, while technically derived from HAARP research, is much more powerful and as a result much more dangerous. These circular artifacts are, in fact, GeoPulse Phased Array Rings (GPARs). These are radar signatures picked up from a Phased-Array Electromagnetic Resonance Signatures (PAERS). I know I threw a bunch of highly technical terms at you with that one, so let me try to simplify it for you.
HAARP blasted the Ionosphere with high frequency electromagnetic radiation, ironically at the same frequencies as 5G cellular towers. These experiments caused an increase in Auras around the antenna sites in Northern Alaska. So over the last several decades much of the Northern Lights may have actually been man-made. The latest research being conducted on the ionosphere is doing basically the same thing, but instead of using a single beam of energy from the ground, GPAR uses geostationary satellites, (think Sky Link satellites here) in conjunction with a tower on the ground to create a phase shifted electromagnetic wave from ground to sky, in order to directly control the electric charge over a specific area of the globe.
To really understand the impact of this research you need to understand a little about how electromagnetic waves work. If you think of a wave like a jump rope held loosely between two people and one person shakes the end of the rope it will create a wave reflecting back from the other person. This is a good representation of a standing electromagnetic wave. Now if the second person shakes their end of the rope at exactly the right time they can either stop the wave from forming, or make the wave taller and stronger, or increase the frequency of the wave, by adding more ripples to the wave. Adding the second person is what we mean by a phased electromagnetic wave. A phased-array requires one or more transmitters pointing at a concentrated point.
There are two places I am aware that we use phased-array technology in everyday life. Blue-ray disks use a phased-array laser to read and write data on the disks, and cat scan machines used phased magnetic arrays to see inside the body. Recent research in weather technology has given us the capability to create concentrated pockets of energy in the ionosphere by using phased-array techniques through two or more satellites and cellular towers to generate super-heated pockets of air in the upper atmosphere. It is these pockets of electromagnetic radiation that create the large circular artifacts on weather radar.
NEXRAD has been blaming these concentric rings as “glitches” and “artifacts” while hiding the research as natural phenomenon. I am sure you have noticed the increase in Aura forecasts dropping farther and farther south and likely have experienced seeing the Northern Lights at least once in the last few months, even in southern Missouri. You have likely noticed that they either appear as nearly complete rings or large curves of bending light. If you pay really close attention you will find that these rings appear along a set radius from the nearest NEXRAD radar tower. The auroras display the bulls-eye, where the two beams from space and the ground converge and the weather radar shows the bulls-eye inside the storms.
The fact that these nearly always align perfectly is not a coincidence. The same grid of electromagnetic signal generators that paints the rings on the radar screens imprints the geometry of its pulse on the upper atmosphere. Some of these rings cover over 600 miles which is much too long of a range to be an artifact of a single radar unit, and the fact that these rings appear all over the world, it begins to become very clear that there is a multinational involvement in the research project. It crosses national boundaries and is no longer just radar, but has expanded to allow for active atmospheric engineering. The technology can be used to increase and decrease rainfall over certain areas. It can create atmospheric instability resulting in unusually strong storms.
I would say what is even worse than the control of weather is the fact that research has also shown that these experiments impact the natural frequency of the upper atmosphere, which has impacts on our health and happiness. When the frequency of the atmosphere around us changes it can cause either tiredness or high energy levels. Once they understand the exact impacts, the technology could be utilized to control our moods as well as the weather around us. I feel about this just like I do Artificial Intelligence research. We are playing around with fundamental building blocks of nature and it is highly risky. Until next week stay safe and learn something new.
Scott Hamilton is an Expert in Emerging Technologies at ATOS and can be reached with questions and comments via email to shamilton@techshepherd.org or through his website at https://www.techshepherd.org.