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Deborah
Joined: 30 Jul 2000
Posts: 731
Location: East Coast |
Sat Feb 03, 2001 5:59 am
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This book seems worth a look if only because so much of Bernard Eastlund's work is based on Tesla's concepts, but I have a feeling it will provide some rather unique insight in and of itself. Have ordered it and will be reading it after I finish up with:
Earth Rising: The Revolution
Dr. Nick Begich and James Roderick
http://www.earthpulse.com/
Amazon carries this book as well, but I'm sure Earthpulse would greatly appreciate the support.
And for those researching Directed Energy R&D, here is a compact resource if I ever saw one:
Directed Energy Weapons: A Bibliography
http://web.nps.navy.mil/~library/bibs/dewjourn.htm
A veritable smorgasbord. Bon appetit!
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sedona
Joined: 13 Oct 2000
Posts: 149
Location: Sedona, AZ 86339 |
Sat Feb 03, 2001 6:26 am
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Hic. Some of this is pretty tough leading-edge dinosaur meat: "Laser Focus World", "Armada International", "Journal of Electronic Defense".
I "like" the article in Jane's Defense Weekly (interesting to subscribe to their website, but it's expensive):
'Acoustic Canon' for Non-Lethal Uses.
Sounds... perfectly... insane.
[Edited 1 times, lastly by sedona on 02-02-2001] |
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defender

Joined: 27 Oct 2000
Posts: 1113
Location: Level 64 |
Sat Feb 03, 2001 7:06 am
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Yes, there's lots of interesting stuff in Janes Weekly.
(I was going to suggest 'chickendebunker' should check it out when 'Topgun' asked her what kind of plane her neighbor flew when she/it told us that her neighbor was in the Air National Guard, like so many of the pilots she hung around with)
I read an article in Newsweek some time ago about several military non-lethal weapons, including a weapon that can literally blind enemies on a battlefield.
Guess I'm on the conspiracy theme tonight, but Tesla must be an example of a conspiracy of omission. Did any of us growing up ever hear about him, or read about him in one of the "history" books we had in school? I know I didn't. |
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Rt
Joined: 01 Feb 2001
Posts: 9
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Sat Feb 03, 2001 3:50 pm
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A visit to The Smithsonian reveals the extent of 'omission'. |
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