Pure Energy Systems News
Edited by Mary-Sue
Haliburton
Responding to
- Weather
Modification a Long-Established, Though Secretive, Reality - New
legislation not designed to foster pleasant or productive weather, but
planned as tool of weaponized weather control, already well tested and in
use since 1976. Amateur and hostile weather-makers alike likely to lose
their technology to the military. (PESN; Sept. 6, 2005)
Weather Modification Use: Reported in 1997
Greetings to Mary-Sue Haliburton from a reader in New South Wales, Australia.
I have just read with interest your recent article on weather modification and
understand the serious implications following from the misuse of such power
recently and in the future. You may possibly already have archived articles that
have been published in mainstream media newspapers or an outlet as prominent as
the BBC's website in the U.K.... If not, heres an example.

Grey smoke smothers the Malaysian capital,
Kuala Lumpur
Image Source: BBC |
|
|
Some historical evidence of an actual weather modification that's been used
is on record to back up the speculation. I have been following this topic for a
few years and recently I
came across a suggestion to search on the following headline "Malaysia
to Battle Smog With Cyclones" which I did. The following title appears
in scores of sites. ["NEWS BRIEF: "Malaysia to Battle Smog With
Cyclones", by Chen May Yee, Staff Reporter of the Wall Street Journal, The
Wall Street Journal, Thursday, November 13, 1997, page A19."]
It contained the following revelation; "The plan calls for the use of new
Russian technology to create cyclones -- the giant storms also known as typhoons
and hurricanes -- to cause torrential rains, washing the smoke out of the
air."
Now I have not been able to provide a URL for this item on the Wall Street
Journal website itself, and my local library certainly doesn't have any copies
of back issues of any of their publications archived for me to check the above
mentioned article. However, the full article is archived at many respectable
websites to confirm its accuracy.
What I did find after quite a bit of archive searching at the BBC's website on
the same subject, around the same date, is most definitely corroboration of the
WSJ's article (Ref 1). I have copied the links and the news
articles below. The use of the words "machine" and
"equipment" to describe the technology is understandable I think, but
in two follow-up items (Ref. 2, 3)
only six days after the first (which was on the same day as the WSJ's), I was
surprised to find no mention of the Russian technology at all, even though the
result was delivered as promised. Malaysia isn't mentioned either, but
considering that Indonesia is adjacent to Malaysia, and Singapore is really only
a city of around 4 million in the middle of the target area, one may wonder at
the omission.
Your article gives me plenty of reason to think why the cause of the
smog-washing rain could not be spelled out, nor any connection drawn with the
Russian technology in the weather report. I do hope you can utilize the
following as it does at least point out that weather control has been used, and
reported on msm at that.
Regards from a correspondent in Australia
# # #
References
Ref 1:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/far_east/30828.stm
Thursday, November 13, 1997 Published at 20:21 GMT
World: Far East
Malaysia tries artificial rain to beat haze
Malaysia is to try to generate rain using Russian equipment, in an attempt to
clear the haze which has covered parts of south-east Asia for the past two
months.
The Russian machinery has still to be tested, but the Malaysian authorities say
it creates high winds, which then produce clouds and rainfall. They say they're
confident the artificial cyclones won't damage property or the environment.
Russia has agreed to supply the equipment on the understanding that it will only
be paid if rain comes.
From the newsroom of the BBC World Service
Ref 2
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/far_east/32878.stm
Wednesday, November 19, 1997 Published at 11:58 GMT
World: Far East
Indonesian airports open as haze clears
Indonesian officials say all the country's airports are open for the first time
in four months because heavy rain is dispersing the haze which has been
blanketing the country.
They say the rain is also putting out fires on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra
which caused the smog.
The fires, mainly started by farmers clearing land for plantation, led to a haze
which covered large areas of south-east Asia, and prompted warnings of serious
damage to the environment and to people's health.
Officials in Singapore say they believe the haze has also cleared over their
country.
From the newsroom of the BBC World Service
Ref 3
And later on the same day was this article;
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/33077.stm
Wednesday, November 19, 1997 Published at 19:46 GMT
Haze clears over south-east Asia
The haze is clearing - but it could be back next year
Heavy monsoon rains over south-east Asia have begun to disperse the thick haze
which has blanketed the region for the last four months.
All of Indonesia's airports are now open and for the first time in weeks the
skies over Singapore are blue.
Satellite pictures of the area show that the huge forest fires on the Indonesian
islands of Borneo and Sumatra, which caused most of the smog, have been largely
extinguished.
The fires were lit by logging and plantation companies to clear the land for
cultivation. The pollution made tens of thousands of people ill, as well as
damaging the environment and the tourist industry.
But Indonesia may not yet have seen the last of the haze. Reports suggest that
it is likely to be back again next year because the government has failed to
stop the companies from using fire to clear the land.
Editorial Postscript
I wish to express thanks and appreciation to this correspondent for diligent
observation and research into an actual use of weather-modification technology
that was confirmed in the mainstream media. Though declining credit for
supplying these links, this contributor describes continuing to watch the skies
daily and being fascinated, as is another family member living in about 250 km
to the east. He usually observes a few hours later the march of the same weather
patterns across the continent. The email concludes, We are living in
interesting times indeed.
Even if the Russian technology had been applied, this would not be reported.
Since meteorologists still do not see these technologies as either valid or
relevant, rain putting out fires and clearing smog would be a simple weather
story to them. All weather, once it has occurred, is routinely attributed to
Mother Nature even if it is highly anomalous, and even if technology was
actually reported to be involved, as in this case. (I wonder if the Russians
were ever paid for this successful use of their system.)
It is interesting that the two weather reports suggest slightly different
causes of the forest fires. One article blames farmers clearing land for
plantation an odd use of the word. One would expect this to read for
planting unless of course these farmers were not acting independently but
were indeed doing this under contract (or coercion) to set up a large-scale
operation benefiting corporate shareholders. Yet the use of farmers
implies that its just those ignorant peasants with their traditional methods
causing ecosystem damage.
The other report (Ref 3) explicitly states that logging
and plantation companies were clearing the land, suggesting a corporate
agenda to establish large-scale mechanistic farming on the Western model. Thus
the fires would not be due to local ignorance but to mega-economic planning and
activity without regard for ecosystems or human health consequences.
Which of these contradictory implications was true would have been hard for BBC
readers to determine at the time. By now, eight years later, it would be
possible to see who owns the area that had been burned-over forest; whether
little independent farmers or large plantations will confirm who set the fires
and why.
-- Mary-Sue
Haliburton
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