tagged w/ Current News Peru
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If you're like most people, you're not sure who Tesla is. Nikola Tesla is arguably the greatest inventive genius of the modern age. That's because he invented most of the technology we depend on every day, like alternating current electricity, radio, x-ray, etc... "Tesla's inventions and discoveries also formed the basis of modern robotics, radar, most forms of wireless communications, loudspeakers and more. Few of these breakthroughs are credited to the inventor, even today." So why don't you know about him? Because certain people don't want you thinking about free energy, weather control, the wireless transmission of electricity, or the "death ray". It is apparent that many of Tesla's inventions and discoveries were developed far after his death and are still being developed and expanded upon today.
So here's the significance of the "Earthquake Machine". If a six pound pneumatic device can cause a large steel building to quake and an enormous bridge to vibrate rythmically and consistently throughout, then what would it take to vibrate an existing fault enough to cause it to give out? Well, my friends, I think that technology has been around for a while now. It's called HAARP. HAARP sends controlled and tuned bursts or streams of high frequency (HF) radio energy at Earth's ionosphere. The enormous amount of energy added to the ionosphere creates a tuned vibration which then is directed around the globe on the jet-streams. Where ever this enormous vibration ends up it creates extremely low frequency (ELF) waves which travel down to the earth. (It can also send down LF, HF, VHF, UHF) Using this method, HAARP is capable of extremely deep earth tomography: basically "x-raying" the earth. That much is not controversial. Well, what if they tune it to resonate with the geological features of a fault line, causing a violent vibration, which then causes the fault to give way? I'm not alone in believing this is entirely possible. It makes perfect sense. Tesla may have been a mad scientist, but he beileved he could literally split the earth in two, using this method.
That is, of course, not the only thing HAARP can do. It has a range of applications. Wanna know how to steer a hurricane? Heat the water along its path. HAARP can do that. HAARP can manipulate weather patters by heating land, air and sea, as well as by changing pressure levels in the upper atmosphere. Wanna shoot a giant bolt of electricity at a target... HAARP can do that. Wanna create an EMF blast to wipe out all electronics in an area? HAARP can do that. How about an EMF blast that will kill all living creatures, but won't damage structures? Wanna put up a "missile shield" over your country? What else? Wanna send down some of the extensively researched psychoactive and biophysically active frequencies, to create "non-lethal" effects on huge areas of people, all at once? Then you need HAARP.
That's why HAARP is so dangerous.
If you don't believe HAARP is capable of these things, do some research before you dismiss it. Watch "Holes in Heaven: HAARP and the Advancement of Tesla technology". It's no joke. One of the best kept secrets of our time.
http://tribes.tribe.net/haarp/thread/25409c43-8067-46b6-9307-1fad26f9080a
http://www.propagandamatrix.com/271203iranearthquake.html
http://www.excludedmiddle.com/earthquake.htm
If you're like most people, you're not sure who Tesla is. Nikola Tesla is... more
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A 5.4-magnitude earthquake rattled Peru's coast near the capital early Thursday, causing alarm and minor damage but no fatalities, officials said.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake struck under the Pacific Ocean at 7:51 a.m. local time, 10 miles (15 kilometers) west of Peru's coastal capital, Lima, shaking startled residents out of bed.
Five houses collapsed in Lima, Civil Defense chief Luis Palomino told reporters. No injuries were reported, but several people were being treated for emotional trauma.
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsww/Quakes/us2008sxby.phpA 5.4-magnitude earthquake rattled Peru's coast near the capital early Thursday,... more
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Aerial photographs of an isolated community of indigenous people in the Amazon basin, near the border shared by Brazil and Peru, were released this week to show that they exist but may be endangered by illegal logging.
A photo shows an indigenous Amazon people in Brazil, near the Peruvian border. The Brazilian government released photos of them because of concerns that their way of life is threatened.
One picture, taken by the Brazilian government, showed two men, painted red, brandishing bows and arrows at the camera-bearing plane flying low over the dense rain forest. In another picture, about 15 men, women and children who were not painted looked up from thatched huts.
Survival International, an organization based in London whose mission is to help tribal peoples to “defend their lives, protect their lands and determine their own futures,” said the pictures were taken as part of several flights over the thinly populated upper reaches of the Amazon, in Acre, a Brazilian state.
Some of the photographs are at www.survival-international.org.
The Brazilian government conducts such photographic operations to locate the scattered tribes and monitor their well-being. Anthropologists say the government’s practice in recent years has been to track these remote people by air or from boats, but to leave them alone.
In a statement on Thursday, Survival International quoted José Carlos dos Reis Meirelles, an official of Funai, the Indian affairs department of the Brazilian government, as saying, “We did the overflight to show their houses, to show they are there, to show they exist.”
The photographs were shot in late April and early May, but the government released them now because of growing concerns that disease and the spread of illegal logging threaten to destroy the tribe’s way of life.
Initial news reports and the statement from Survival International did not identify the tribe or give the exact location of the settlement, presumably to protect it from unwanted visits. But the reports described the people as members of one of South America’s few remaining indigenous tribes that had not had contact with the outside world.
But Robert L. Carneiro, an anthropologist at the American Museum of Natural History who has made a career of studying indigenous people of the Amazon, questioned that claim after examining the photographs on Friday.
He noted that the men wore bamboo headpieces that looked like crowns, with strips of thinly cut bamboo around their waists.
He said that attire reminded him of the Amahuaca people he lived with and studied in the 1960s. Most of them live along the Amazon’s headwaters, in Peru, not far from Acre, Dr. Carneiro said. “I’m not saying these people in the pictures are Amahuaca, but they could be,” he said. “Or they are a closely related group.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/31/world/americas/31tribe.html?_r=1&ref=americas&oref=sloginAerial photographs of an isolated community of indigenous people in the Amazon basin,... more
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LIMA, Peru (Reuters) — More than 1,000 women protested outside Peru’s Congress [in May], banging empty pots and pans to demand that the government do more to counter rising food prices, which are squeezing the poor worldwide.
The women, some toting small children on their hips, run food kitchens, known as eating halls, for the poor.
The meals the eating halls serve are subsidized by the government, but the women say they are struggling to provide enough food and want the government to increase financial aid so they can cover their costs.
Hundreds of thousands of people rely on the eating halls each day in Peru, where about 12 million people, or 42 percent of the population, live in poverty.
The rising cost for basic foods sank President Alan García’s approval rating to 26 percent this month, the lowest level since he took office in 2006. This month, weeks after cutting taxes on food imports, Mr. García started sending the army to hand out free bags of food in the poorest neighborhoods here in the capital.
“Food prices keep on rising, and the government doesn’t pay attention to the eating halls,” said María Bozeta, director of one of three associations that represent eating halls in Lima.
“The pot is empty, García!” the women chanted as they wound their way toward Congress in downtown Lima.
By REUTERS
Published: May 1, 2008LIMA, Peru (Reuters) — More than 1,000 women protested outside Peru’s... more
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Whether you know it or not, the US military has been up to some spying in South America. After Bush's attempts to attack Iran were thrwarted, Bush went after their close allies in South America. Many countries in South America are peacefully joining forces with Iran, with interest in their new energy programs.Whether you know it or not, the US military has been up to some spying in South... more
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Watch how Fox "spin" the story
· Ahmadinejad signs energy deals during regional tour
· Venezuela and Bolivia back Iran's nuclear plans
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/sep/29/venezuela.iran
The Guardian reported:
Red carpets, brass bands, bear hugs and a hero's welcome: there is at least one part of the Americas that loves Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
South America this week greeted the Iranian president as a brother and benefactor, defrosting him after his icy reception in New York. The leaders of Bolivia and Venezuela embraced Mr Ahmadinejad and blessed Iran's nuclear programme, underlining how much influence Washington has lost over a region it once considered its backyard.
The Iranian president signed a series of energy and trade deals during brief stopovers which extended Tehran's foothold in South America. In contrast to the insults heaped on him in New York, the visitor was feted as a strategic ally in the struggle against gringo imperialism. Cuba and Nicaragua echoed the rhetoric.
Mr Ahmadinejad was received late on Thursday by Venezuela's president, Hugo Chávez, in a pomp-filled ceremony in Caracas. Mr Chávez, who is using oil revenues to challenge US influence, saluted "one of the greatest anti-imperialist fighters".
He praised Mr Ahmadinejad's speeches this week at the UN general assembly and at Columbia University, New York, where he faced hostility from students and the university president. "An imperial spokesman tried to disrespect you, calling you a cruel little tyrant," said Mr Chávez. "You responded with the greatness of a revolutionary. We felt like you were our representative."
The Iranian, appearing cheerful and relaxed, responded in kind. "Together we are surely growing stronger, and in truth no one can defeat us. Imperialism has no other option: Respect the peoples [of the world] or accept defeat."
This was his third visit to Venezuela. In recent years the countries have launched joint projects worth more than £10bn to develop oil and make tractors, cars and bicycles. Mr Ahmadinejad's Islamism and questioning of the Holocaust and gay rights have not impeded an alliance which says that if anyone should be in the dock for human rights abuses it is the US for the Iraq war, Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo Bay.
The west suspects Tehran of plotting to make atomic bombs, but to the Bush administration's chagrin several Latin American leaders defended the regime's nuclear programme as a legitimate attempt to make electricity, including Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who has good relations with the US.
Nicaragua's president, Daniel Ortega, a long-time Washington foe who recently visited Iran, went further in his UN address. "Even if they want nuclear power for purposes that are not peaceful, with what right does [the US] question it?"
Before going to Caracas Mr Ahmadinejad visited La Paz on a Venezuelan government jet to establish diplomatic relations with Bolivia's leftwing president, Evo Morales. The two governments agreed to a five-year industrial cooperation plan with a £500m investment as well as a £50m plan to jointly develop technology and trade. "The people of Iran and Bolivia have decided to build their countries together, hand in hand," said Mr Ahmadinejad.
Without naming the US, Mr Morales said the Andean nation would not be bullied into shunning supposedly rogue states. "We will never promote war but nor do we accept that in the name of peace the criteria of the strongest prevails."
Some analysts play down Iran's economic links with Latin American as more rhetoric than substance. But when US diplomats discuss the issue it is striking how their jaws tend to clench.
A US Republican congressman, Connie Mack, said the links reminded him of Fidel Castro's relationship with the Soviet Union. "You don't want to have your enemy at your backdoor."
Rory Carroll in Caracas
The Guardian,
Saturday September 29 2007
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/sep/29/venezuela.iranWatch how Fox "spin" the story
· Ahmadinejad signs energy deals... more
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Social organizations called to a general strike to protest against the presence of US troops in Ayacucho, in central Peru. The general strike will take place on July 8, according to a decision taken by the Ayacucho Defense Front after it was announced that 70 US American soldiers had been deployed in the area. Another 350 military troops will arrive soon.
Front chairman Iver Maravi said protesters will demand the withdrawal of the foreign troops, because its presence, which was approved by congressional conservative forces, goes against national sovereignty and dignity.
Army chief Gen. Edwin Donayre claimed the US troops will only perform humanitarian tasks, without settling a permanent base in Peru.
However, former Army officer and opposition leader Ollanta Humala ruled out Donayre's words.
Humala said the water wells and school classrooms to be built by the American troops can be built by Peruvian workers and engineers.
Former Minister of Defense and Congressman David Waisman agreed with military analyst Jose Robles on that the Ministry of Defense is lacking transparency regarding the number of US military troops that has been authorized to enter Peru.
Social organizations called to a general strike to protest against the presence of US... more
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The Amazonian city of Altamira played host to one of the more uneven contests in recent Brazilian history this week, as a colourful alliance of indigenous leaders gathered to take on the might of the state power corporation and stop the construction of an immense hydroelectric dam on a tributary of the Amazon. By Patrick Cunningham in Altamira, BrazilThe Amazonian city of Altamira played host to one of the more uneven contests in... more
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