GWEN Waves and Chemtrails
Ground Wave Emergency Network
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Ground Wave Emergency Network (GWEN)[1] was a command and control communications system intended for use by the United States government to facilitate military communications before, during and after a nuclear war. Specifically, GWEN was constructed to survive the effects of a high-altitude nuclear explosion electromagnetic pulse to insure that the United States President can give a launching order to strategic nuclear bombers.[2][3]
Overview
GWEN was part of the Strategic Modernization Program designed to upgrade the nation's strategic communication system, thereby strengthening the value of nuclear deterrence. The GWEN communication system, established in the late 1980s, was designed to transmit critical messages (i.e. Emergency Action Messages (EAMs)) to United States nuclear forces. EMP, over a large area, can produce a sudden power surge that would overload unprotected electronic equipment and render it inoperable. In addition, EMP would interfere with transmissions that use the ionosphere for propagation. GWEN would use a ground-hugging wave for propagation, being unaffected by the EMP.[4]
The network was conceived as an array of approximately 300 radio transceivers distributed across the continental USA which operated in the Low Frequency (LF) radio band. Later revised for 126 towers, plans again changed to included 56 radio towers linking 38 terminals; it was later expanded to 96 towers linking 49 terminals. Final network towers numbered 58.[5]
Operations
In the GWEN system, originating stations send ultra high frequency (UHF) signals by broadcast towers for line-of-site receipt at Relay Nodes (RNs). The RNs form an unmanned network throughout the US, with individual RNs at spacings of approximately 150 to 200 miles (240 to 320 km). The RNs transmit received messages via LF signals for ultimate receipt by receive-only terminals at existing military communication buildings. By utilizing LF ground transmission the GWEN system minimizes the potential effect of HEMP on military communications.
The network had three types of stations: input/output stations (I/Os), receive-only stations (ROs), and relay nodes (RNs). I/O stations could send and receive messages. ROs only received messages transmitted through I/Os. Dispersed and unmanned RNs, would provide continuous relay links between I/Os and ROs. The I/Os and ROs would reside at locations with strategic military forces, and the RNs would be scattered throughout the country on government or privately leased land. Distance between the relay nodes were determined by the ground wave transmission wavelength, at intervals of approximately 150–200 miles.[7]
During initial operations, the towers would receive and relay brief test messages every 20 minutes.[8] The system had built-in redundancy, using packet switching techniques for reconstruction of connectivity if system damage occurs.[9]
Problems
Early in its lifetime, electrical interference problems caused by GWEN system operation began to surface. Since the stations were using LF, the chosen frequency was within 1 kHz of the operating frequency of nearby electrical carrier current systems. With GWEN handling constant voice, teletype and other data traffic, interference was noticed by local power companies on a diagnostic two kilohertz side carrier tone – if the carrier disappeared, the power grid would interpret that as a system fault.[10]
GWEN site locations
Broadcast
Site |
Frequency |
Power |
Field
Strength |
Latitude |
Longitude |
ILC |
Notes |
Goodland, Kansas |
286 |
300 |
82.6 |
39 49 39 |
100 39 49 |
SEZQ |
Also called Oberlin Comms Site/GWEN 843 |
Ronan, Montana |
287 |
170 |
80.1 |
47 34 47 |
114 06 50 |
|
|
Penobscot, Maine |
290 |
13 |
68.9 |
44 26 07 |
068 47 22 |
|
|
Kirtland, New Mexico |
291 |
300 |
82.6 |
34 57 26 |
106 29 32 |
|
|
Appleton, Washington |
300 |
300 |
82.6 |
45 46 55 |
121 19 34 |
|
|
Macon, Georgia |
301 |
300 |
82.6 |
34 41 39 |
083 33 38 |
|
|
Medora, North Dakota |
306 |
100 |
77.8 |
46 54 22 |
103 16 29 |
|
|
Edinburg, North Dakota |
307 |
300 |
82.6 |
48 33 31 |
097 47 04 |
|
|
Clark, South Dakota |
309 |
300 |
82.6 |
44 56 03 |
097 57 38 |
|
|
Whitney, Nebraska |
310 |
300 |
82.6 |
42 30 00 |
102 00 00 |
|
|
Austin, Nevada |
312 |
300 |
82.6 |
39 30 00 |
117 30 00 |
|
|
Billings, MT |
313 |
300 |
82.6 |
45 58 19 |
107 59 47 |
|
|
Flagstaff, AZ |
319 |
300 |
82.6 |
35 13 18 |
111 49 06 |
|
|
Hudson Falls, NY |
324 |
300 |
82.6 |
43 16 13 |
073 32 19 |
|
|
Pueblo, CO |
325 |
300 |
82.6 |
38 51 54 |
104 34 31 |
|
|
Savanna, GA |
285 |
300 |
82.6 |
32 08 22 |
081 41 49 |
|
|
Kensington, SC |
292 |
300 |
82.6 |
33 28 51 |
079 20 35 |
|
|
Egg Harbor, NJ |
311 |
300 |
82.6 |
39 36 12 |
074 22 16 |
|
|
Great Falls, MT |
314 |
300 |
82.6 |
47 18 13 |
111 10 19 |
|
|
Goldwein, VA |
315 |
300 |
82.6 |
38 37 09 |
076 52 51 |
|
|
Spokane, WA |
316 |
300 |
82.6 |
47 31 10 |
117 25 21 |
|
|
Summerfield, TX |
318 |
300 |
82.6 |
34 49 28 |
102 30 43 |
|
|
Tuckerton, NJ |
318 |
300 |
82.6 |
34 49 28 |
102 30 43 |
|
|
Controversies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_Wave_Emergency_Network
Original url : http://omega.twoday.net/stories/312227/ |
Published: August 25, 2004 by Carole Smith |
The Ground-Wave Emergency Network
(GWEN )
300 Towers, 300-500 Feet High,
Spread Across the United States
Able to alter moods and thoughts en masse |
|
Extract from Matrix III Volume One:
The Ground-Wave Emergency Network (GWEN) is a communications system that the military is in the process of constructing as we speak. It operates in the very-low-frequency (VLF) range, with transmissions between 150 and 175 kHz.
This range was selected because its signals travel by means of waves that have a tendency to hug the ground rather than by radiating into the atmosphere. This signal drops off sharply with distance - a single GWEN stations transmits in a 360 circle to a distance of 250 to 300 miles. The entire GWEN system consists of approximately 300 such stations spread across the United States, each with a tower 300-500 feet high. The stations are from 200 to 250 miles apart, so that a signal can go from coast to coast from one station to another. When the system is completed around 1993 , the entire civilian population of the United States will be exposed to the GWEN Transmissions .
APPLICATION OF MILITARY FREQUENCY WEAPONRY :
According to a 1982 Air Force review of biotechnology, ELF has a number of potential military uses, including "dealing with terrorist groups, crowd control, controlling breaches of security at military installations, and antipersonnel techniques in tactical warfare."
"Electromagnetic systems would be used to produce mild to severe physiological disruption or perceptual distortion or disorientation. They are silent, and counter measures to them may be difficult to develop."
http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Shadowlands/6583/project032.html
Cases of Deliberate Experimentation on Individuals for Military Purposes
In one study over 100 Washington and Oregon state prisoners (recall the discussion of Phase II drug testing in Chapter 5) between 1963 and 1971 had their testicles dosed with radiation to discover what doses would sterilize them. The project was funded by the Atomic Energy Commission at a cost of $1.5 million.
From 1945 to 1947, 18 hospital patients, one of them only five years old, were injected with plutonium to measure how much the body would retain. The injections were represented as "experimental treatments" for the patients' illnesses. This appalling scheme was reviewed in the British Medical Journal in 1987, where it said that the "redeeming feature of the test was that the results were made available to other countries for their use."
ADVANCED MIND CONTROL APPLICATIONS
Cross-Referencing
By now you have acquired quite a bit of background knowledg e - it is knowledge that you will need to draw upon to properly understand and evaluate the information in this second section of Chapter 7.
The Psychology Behind Mind Control and Psychic Warfare
Body identification gives rise to a host of sociological phenomena, the least of which is the mechanistic view that consciousness is a product of the brain, and secondarily that the mind is centered in the brain. Dr. Jose Delgado was one of the chief proponents of this viewpoint. Delgado was the author of the book "Physical Control of the Mind: Toward a Psychocivilized Society".
For Delgado, the mind existed only in the brain; to postulate its existence as an independent entity was to him sheer nonsense. He rejected the concept of free will, and proposed that the mind was a functional entity produced by the electrical operations of the brain, and as such should be manipulated and controlled in order to control the behavior of the population. This was a view that seems to be shared by proponents of the New World Order.
Delgado, since the mid-1970's, was the director of the Spanish neurophysio- logical laboratory Centro Ramony Cajal. As time went on, his interests shifted from direct stimulation of the brain to the broader area of the biological effects of electromagnetic fields, an area that has been eagerly embraced by the military and political system as a means to achieve their goal of absolute control of the population.
There are several psychological schools of thought that have been adopted by government psycho-scientists and the military to justify mind control. All of them relate to the idea of psychic energy as originating in the human psyche, typified by the work of Carl Jung. The energy originating in the human psyche consists of thoughts, feelings, emotions, and neuro-physiological stimuli and responses. It consists of a physical component that can be measured and an etheric hyper- spacial component that can only be measured by specialized equipment.
GWEN Towers , HAARP & Satellite GPS-EMF Control Grid
http://www.mindcontrolforums.com/gwen-haarp-satellite-gps-emf-control-grid.htm
"GWEN is a superb system, in combination with cyclotron resonance, for producing behavioural alterations in the civilian population. The average strength of the steady geomagnetic field varies from place to place across the United States. Therefore, if one wished to resonate a specific ion in living things in a specific locality, one would require a specific frequency for that location. The spacing of GWEN transmitters 200 miles apart across the United States would allow such specific frequencies to be 'tailored' to the geomagnetic-field strength in each GWEN area. "
- Robert O. Becker, M.D., in "Crosscurrents: The Perils of Electropollution"
"Russian satellites, controlled by advanced computers, can send voices in one's own language interweaving into natural thoughts to the population of choice to form diffused artificial thought . The chemistry and electricity of the human brain can be manipulated by satellite and even suicide can be induced. Through ferocious anti-humanitarian means, the extremist groups are fabricated, the troubles and bloody disturbances are instigated by advanced tele-means via Russian satellites, in many countries in Asia, Africa, Europe and Latin America."
Dr Nassim Abd El-Aziz Neweigy, March 21, 1983, Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Agriculture, Moshtohor Tukh-Kalubia, Egypt, writing in The Sydney Morning Herald
"Specifically, this agreement establishes the overall policies, relationships, and responsibilities guiding interagency activities necessary to establish, operate, and manage the NDGPS as authorized by Section 346 of Public Law 105-66 of October 27, 1997 (Attachment A) including for the temporary and permanent transfer of mutually selected USAF Ground Wave Emergency Network (GWEN) sites and equipment to USDOT for use to establish the NDGPS radionavigation service as authorized under Public Law 105-66, Section 346 (Attachment (C))."
http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/ndgps/Appendix%20A.pdf
The agreement also establishes USACE, FRA, FHWA, USCG, and NOAA responsibilities for the funding, installation, operation, and eventual decommissioning of Nationwide DGPS sites.
In Presidential Decision Directive (PDD) NSTC-6 of March 28, 1996 , the President designated the Department of Transportation as the "lead agency for all Federal civil GPS matters." In addition, the President directed the USDOT to "develop and implement U.S. Government augmentations to the basic GPS for transportation applications."
In January 1997 the USDOT formed an interagency DGPS Executive Steering Group and a DGPS Policy and Implementation Team to investigate the development of a nationwide differential service to comply with Presidential direction. The findings of the Executive Steering Group determined that building upon existing infrastructure and resources - Coast Guard Maritime Differential Global Positioning System (DGPS) sites and conversion of existing US Air Force Ground Wave Emergency Network (GWEN) sites - was the most practical method available to adequately fulfill the PDD and meet the user agency operational and technical needs.
Section 346 of Public Law 105-66, dated October 27, 1997, (Attachment A) grants authority to the USDOT to "take receipt of such equipment and sites of the Ground Wave Emergency Network ... as ... necessary for the establishment of a nationwide system to be known as the 'Nationwide Differential Global Positioning System .'"
In November, 1998, the NDGPS MOA was signed, identifying the general responsibilities of the seven Federal Agencies involved in the planning and proposed implementation of the NDGPS service.
http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/ndgps/Appendix%20A.pdf
Each site would consist of a 299 foot tower (presumably to get around automatic imposition of the National Environmental Policy Act requirement for an environmental impact statement for any federally-funded 300 foot tower), a concrete building, and a series of fences on a 700 foot square site. Underground, a "ground screen" of copper wire would radiate to 330 feet at regular intervals. Physically unimpressive, the towers are presented to the public by the Air Force as radio towers for "emergency communications."
Each tower will cost $1.4 million, the entire system a billion dollars. Other systems such as AFSATCOM, Milstar, Green Pine, and Giant Talk are designed to provide nuclear war communications at other electromagnetic frequencies and with the same or other weapons systems. Because of GWEN's relatively simplistic technology, the Air Force presumes that GWEN will be replaced in 15 years by a satellite system.
http://www.totse.com/en/politics/us_military/gwen.htm