*
News articles concerning radiation health issues:
1. A U.S. patent, United States Patent 5,952,600
Herr September 14, 1999 which completely explains
in detail how two intersecting lasers are
used to stun & electrocute people and cars.
The full details of the patent is on line at the US Patent and
Trade Mark Office at http://www.uspto.gov/patft/index.html:
The engine disabling patent is:
http://patents.uspto.gov/cgi-bin/ifetch4?ENG+PATBIB-
ALL+0+971730+0+7+107894+OF+1+1+1+PN%2f5952600
Excerpts from above patent.
2.The following link is a European Parliament report regarding the use and proposed action
to ban the use of nonlethal weapons such as radio waves, sound waves, HAARP
technologies on the environment and people which is taken from a report from
the European Parliament. The report was found at :
<http://www.europarl.eu.int/plenary/en/default.htm.> Reference A4-0005/99 or
specifically at
http://www2.europarl.eu.int/omk/OM-Europarl?PROG=REPORT&L=EN&PUBREF=-
//EP//TEXT+REPORT+A4-1999-0005+0+DOC+SGML+V0//EN&LEVEL=3
Excerpts from the above European Union report.
3. There is a U.S. patent, 5,159,703 number , which completely explains in detail how silent sounds
may be used in electronic harassment:
"A silent communications system in which nonaural carriers, in the very low or very high audio frequency
range or in the adjacent ultrasonic frequency spectrum, are amplitude or frequency modulated with the desired
intelligence and propagated acoustically or vibrationally, for inducement into the brain, typically through the
use of loudspeakers, earphones or piezoelectric transducers. The modulated carriers may be transmitted directly
in real time or may be conveniently recorded and stored on mechanical, magnetic or optical media for delayed or
repeated transmission to the listener. "
Frequencies used are the following:
"FIG. 1 represents the block diagram of a suitable system which will generate a frequency
modulated (FM) signal at 14,500 Hz.
FIG. 2 represents an approximation of the frequency response curve of the human ear and
the signal decoding process.
FIG. 3 represents the block diagram of a suitable system which will generate a single
sideband, suppressed carrier, amplitude modulated (AM) signal at 14,500 Hz. "
"An audio signal in the upper frequency region of the audio spectrum (for example,
14,500 Hz) is modulated with the desired information. The type of modulation may be
any type suitable for subliminal applications; frequency modulation (FM), phase
modulation (PM), upper single sideband with suppressed carrier, amplitude modulation
(AM), tone modulation, etc.
The desired subliminal information is spoken into microphone 31. This signal is
amplified by speech amplifier 32 and injected into one port of balanced modulator 33. A
continuous wave signal of 455 KHz is generated by carrier oscillator 34 and is injected
into the second port of balanced modulator 33. The output of balanced modulator 33 is a
double sideband, suppressed carrier signal at 455 KHz. This signal is fed through filter
35, causing one of the two sidebands to be removed. This signal is fed into one port of
mixer 36. A continuous wave signal at a frequency of 469.5 KHz from hetrodyne
oscillator 37 is fed into the other port of mixer 36, resulting in an output of the original
subliminal audio information but translated 14,500 Hz higher in frequency. The bandpass
filter 38 attenuates signals and noise outside of the frequencies of interest. The amplitude
modulated audio output signal is shown as output 39. "
The full details of the patent is on line at the US Patent and
Trade Mark Office at http://www.uspto.gov/patft/index.html:
The silent subliminal presentation system patent U.S. Patent 5,159,703 is located at:
http://164.195.100.11/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=/netahtml/
srchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1='5159703'.WKU.&OS=PN/5159703&RS=PN/5159703
4. Cold Plasma Force Fields see Force Fields.
Also please see U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,414,324, 5,387,842, and 5,456,972
at http://www.uspto.gov/patft/index.html, which show how to use radio-frequency waves
to energise a gas such as air to create a plasma, which could be used as a force field
to absorb or deflect directed energies and radiations.
5."Source: Michigan State University (http://www.msu.edu)
Date: Posted 10/16/2000
Electromagnetic Fields Affect Human Cells
Found at http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2000/10/001016073704.htm
Electromagnetic fields, similar to those found in overhead power lines, can have a
biological effect on human cells, an effect that could contribute to the complex cellular
process that leads to cancer, research at Michigan State University shows.
The work of James E. Trosko, a professor of pediatrics and human development, and
colleagues is published in the October issue of Environmental Health Perspectives, the
journal of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
"Our studies have contributed to what many other studies have shown, and that is that
there is a biological effect of the energy imparted by extremely low frequency EMF
(ELF-EMF) on living systems," Trosko said.
Until now, he said, most studies on the biological and health effects of ELF-EMF had
been "inconclusive or contradictory."
"Until now, the weight of the theoretical and experimental evidence has suggested that
ELF-EMF did not have the ability to interact with genetic material to damage it, thereby
causing mutations, which we know can lead to cancer," Trosko said.
Trosko and his colleagues studied the effects of ELF-EMF on mouse leukemia cells that
had the potential to mature into cells producing hemoglobin after exposure to a chemical.
Hemoglobin is the substance which is needed to bind oxygen in blood. They found that
electromagnetic fields of 60 hertz and of strengths ranging from .05 to 10 gauss
interfered with the chemically induced maturation process in the mouse cells and allowed
the cells to continue to proliferate.
After four days of exposure, about 35 percent of the chemically treated cells that were
exposed to ELF-EMF showed these effects.
What Trosko and his colleagues found is that ELF/EMF is not a tumor initiator, but rather
a potential tumor promoter.
"ELF-EMF doesn't seem to mutate genes, which could convert a normal cell to an
'initiated' cell," he said. "But it can turn them on and off at inappropriate times, causing
these initiated cells to proliferate when normally they would just sit there quietly doing
nothing."
"The whole point of our study was not to see if extremely low frequency EMF causes
cancer, but if it changes gene expression," Trosko said. "The bottom line is we showed
there is a biological effect of EMF as measured by altering the expression of the
hemoglobin-producing gene.
"I think it's important to note that there is a distinction between a biological effect and a
health effect. Just because I sit under a high power transmission line, and just because
that exposure might alter some biological activity in my body, that doesn't automatically
mean I'm going to get cancer. And even if I should get cancer, it does not mean ELF-EMF
had anything to do with the production of that particular cancer."
Trosko pointed out that the process in which a cell changes from a regular, healthy cell to
a cancerous one is long and complex, involving different molecular/biochemical steps.
"These initiated cells need promoting agents to bring about cancer," he said. "They could
be natural, such as hormones or chemicals in the food we eat. Or they could be man-
made chemicals, drugs or pollutants.
"Most importantly, in order to act as a tumor promoter, many conditions must be met,
including the ability of the promoter to overcome natural suppressing effects on cell
proliferation, timing of the exposure to the promoter, absence of anti-promoters, and
exposure for regular and long periods of time."
Other members of Trosko's research team were Gang Chen, Brad L. Upham, Wei Sun,
Chia-Cheng Chang, all of the MSU Department of Pediatrics and Human Development;
Edward J. Rothwell and Kun-Mu Chen, of MSU's Department of Electrical Engineering;
and Hiroshi Yamasaki of the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon,
France.
The work was funded by a grant from the Electrical Power Research Institute.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Michigan State
University for journalists and other members of the public. If you wish to quote from any
part of this story, please credit Michigan State University as the original source. You may
also wish to include the following link in any citation:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2000/10/001016073704.htm
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