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ANGELS DON‘T PLAY THIS HAARP Advances in Tesla Technology

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Chapter Two<br />

TRAIL FROM TESLA TO STAR WARS<br />

After she returned home to Vancouver, Canada, Mann<strong>in</strong>g reported to a new friend who<br />

wanted to hear about the <strong>Tesla</strong> conference. He was John Hutchison, an <strong>in</strong>ventor who had<br />

discovered an anomalous ―anti-gravity‖ effect some years earlier while he had been restor<strong>in</strong>g<br />

antique electrical equipment and build<strong>in</strong>g <strong>Tesla</strong> coils. Dur<strong>in</strong>g the previous years, unofficial<br />

delegations from Canadian and United States military groups had visited his laboratory to<br />

see the ―Hutchison effect‖.<br />

Now he was work<strong>in</strong>g alone; the visitors had apparently learned all that they came to<br />

learn. His requests for copies of the videos they filmed <strong>in</strong> his laboratory were met with<br />

―sorry; we destroyed all those videos because there wasn't anyth<strong>in</strong>g on them‖.<br />

He didn‘t believe it.<br />

John Hutchison told Mann<strong>in</strong>g some of the amus<strong>in</strong>g twists of his search for reports about<br />

his experiments.<br />

―I was phon<strong>in</strong>g the Pentagon and ask<strong>in</strong>g for ‗John South‘, because I was told that was the<br />

name of one of the guys who were here <strong>in</strong> my lab. By chance a secretary put me through to<br />

the man I described, and it turns out his name was Col. John Alexander‖.<br />

The name would come up aga<strong>in</strong> more than five years later, as Mann<strong>in</strong>g gradually found<br />

out what else could be done with ―<strong>Tesla</strong> technology‖ - so-called nonlethal weaponry. John<br />

Hutchison described Col. Alexander as a handsome, personable man who was a fun guy to be<br />

around throughout the days of the ―anti-gravity‖ experiments <strong>in</strong> the ―Vancouver laboratory‖.<br />

Hutchison had leisure time to chat with Mann<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a now-silent laboratory. He shared<br />

<strong>Tesla</strong> lore about beamed weaponry, and told her that the Soviet Union was mysteriously<br />

experiment<strong>in</strong>g with radio-frequency signals, beam<strong>in</strong>g them toward North America.<br />

Beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> late 1976 he had been one of many ham radio operators who began pick<strong>in</strong>g up<br />

the 10-Hertz (cycles, "beats" or pulses per second) frequencies on radio receivers.<br />

Hams called these signals ―the Soviets' Woodpecker‖ because of the sharp tapp<strong>in</strong>g they<br />

heard from the extremely low frequency (ELF) waves. Some researchers speculated that the<br />

Woodpecker signal was a <strong>Tesla</strong>-type weapon for m<strong>in</strong>d control, because the ELF was at a<br />

frequency which could resonate with neurons <strong>in</strong> the human bra<strong>in</strong>, and the transmission<br />

could be a carrier wave that was modulated (varied <strong>in</strong> amplitude, frequency or phase) to<br />

carry a hidden effect.<br />

―Spoo-kyyy‖, she joked, dismiss<strong>in</strong>g what seemed to be a paranoid speculation.<br />

Mann<strong>in</strong>g learned more about Nikola Testa two years later, after another symposium <strong>in</strong><br />

Colorado Spr<strong>in</strong>gs. One of the papers <strong>in</strong> the proceed<strong>in</strong>gs of that meet<strong>in</strong>g was by a historian<br />

and psychology professor, Dr. Marc Seifer. She would recall it years later when learn<strong>in</strong>g<br />

about unpublicized experiments <strong>in</strong> light<strong>in</strong>g up the upper atmosphere.<br />

Seifer gave <strong>Tesla</strong> credit for <strong>in</strong>vent<strong>in</strong>g fluorescent lights, just as the revered American<br />

<strong>in</strong>ventor Thomas Edison is the <strong>in</strong>ventor of the <strong>in</strong>candescent light bulb. The biographer notes<br />

that <strong>Tesla</strong> and Edison clashed over Edison‘s <strong>in</strong>sistence that the country should stick to his<br />

direct current (DC) technologies for electrical light<strong>in</strong>g and power distribution. <strong>Tesla</strong>'s AC<br />

system was better because AC electricity can travel hundreds of miles over power l<strong>in</strong>es at<br />

high voltages, while a wire carry<strong>in</strong>g DC would be unable to light bulbs a mile away from the<br />

generat<strong>in</strong>g plant.<br />

Strangely, Edison was the one who was lionized <strong>in</strong> American history books. One of the<br />

stories that is told and retold, for example, is how he sent men to the Amazon to look for<br />

materials for the best filament for his light bulb. Edison‘s persistence is highly praised.<br />

However, most people today are unaware that <strong>Tesla</strong>'s demonstrations showed the filament to

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