......yes....i've been aware of these things for many years & saw the evidence for myself, first hand.....no one wants to hear it, because it scares them, but it's True all the same.
quote
"Are you aware that biological weapons research is documented in Google searchable articles and plenty of it is unclassified?"
Do you think it’s weird that no articles in the mainstream press ever cites one of these easy to find and even easy to understand scientific papers, even though they can be found and understood in 10-20 minutes?
Are you aware that bioweapons research is called dual use gain-of-function research and takes place in the open, unlike nuclear and chemical weapons, so there is no excuse for governments not to tell us this?
Are you aware that this bioweapon was created in May 2008 in Wuhan by Zhengli Shi, and that the US government, rather than protest this violation of the 1925 treaty banning bioweapons, begged Shi to come do bioweapons for the US?
Are you aware that the Obama administration banned these bioweapons in 2014 so Shi went back to Wuhan with money from NIH and USAID, so US taxpayers used federal funds to create the bioweapons that now has a 37% fatality rate as a percentage of closed cases?
Do you understand that the WHO and CDC know all this and this are covering up for bioterrorists, and that the bioterrorists and their allies in the WHO and CDC and the press are getting away with it?"
Dr. Rashid Buttar: "It was discussed in 2015 that this should not be done!""The Virus Is Not a Naturally-Occuring Phenomenon" ► Special thanks to Dr. Rashid Buttar. Watch the entire episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15YKs_dyE...
Nancy Beckwith Oh Yes..people must be getting pissed...Google is chock Full of these links..here are two excellent ones: https://www.businessinsider.com/military-government...
Nancy Beckwith ok...3....i am a rebel, after all..so..
Bioweapons Research Proliferates
for some "unknown" reason the links that follow are loading up to the wrong page despite 4 re-edits so i added them individually further up the blog page
Future Strategic Issues/Future Warfare [Circa 2025]
Publication date 2001-07Usage Public Domain Mark 1.0Topics National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, transhumanism, superhumanism, posthumanism, the Singularity, superintelligence, Virtual Reality, virtual worlds, biotechnology, bioengineering, biohacking, genetic engineering, directed evolution, life-extension, nanotechnology, nanoassemblers, living factories, robots, flesh-eating robots, robot swarms, self-replicating robots, replicators, nanobots, cyborgs, cybernetic organisms, artificial life, artificial neural networks, dreaming neural nets, Artificial Intelligence, AI, quantum computers, terraforming, drones, microchip implants, brain chips, Air Force 2025, torture, terrorism, bioterrorism, biowarfare, biowar, CNN Syndrome, Psychological Warfare, Psywar, Information Warfare, IW, Infowar, information dominance, robotic warfare, Robowar, Space Warfare, Spacewar, military superiorityCollection opensourceLanguage English
Dennis M. Bushnell, "Future Strategic Issues/Future Warfare [Circa 2025]" (sic), NASA Langley Research Center (National Aeronautics and Space Administration), July 2001, 113 pp.; PDF, 1400357 bytes, MD5: c833f3fbc55d07fe891f5f4df5fb2f57. The aforesaid PDF was found on the US Department of Defense's Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC) website, as archived by the following Internet Archive URL: http://wayback.archive.org/web/20031224161719/http://www.dtic.mil/ndia/2001testing/bushnell.pdf
Dennis M. Bushnell is the Chief Scientist at NASA's Langley Research Center. The following is a biography page for him:
Joe Atkinson, "Dennis Bushnell", NASA Langley Research Center (National Aeronautics and Space Administration), Mar. 21, 2013. http://www.nasa.gov/centers/langley/news/researchernews/snapshot_DBushnell.html
Bushnell's above presentation was given on August 14, 2001 at the 4th Annual Testing and Training for Readiness Symposium and Exhibition organized by the National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA) and held at the Rosen Centre Hotel (formerly the Omni Rosen Hotel) in Orlando, Florida. For information on that, see the following page in which the above presentation is available:
"The 4th Annual Testing and Training for Readiness Symposium & Exhibition: Emerging Challenges, Opportunities and Requirements, 13-16 August 2001", Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC). http://wayback.archive.org/web/20020409151859/http://www.dtic.mil/ndia/2001testing/index.html , http://wayback.archive.org/web/20040825220041/http://www.dtic.mil/ndia/2001testing/2001testing.html
See also the following announcement page for this conference:
"4th Annual Testing and Training Symposium and Exhibition: A National Partnership, on August 14-16, 2001 in Orlando, FL at the Omni Centre Hotel", National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA). http://wayback.archive.org/web/20010410031320/http://register.ndia.org/interview/register.ndia?~Brochure~1070
The following is the conference proceedings:
Testing and Training for Readiness Symposium and Exhibition (4th Annual): Emerging Challenges, Opportunities and Requirements Held on 13-16 August 2001 (on CD-ROM), National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA), Aug. 2001; National Technical Information Service (NTIS) Issue Number: 1014. http://www.ntis.gov/search/product.aspx?ABBR=ADM002244 , http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADM002244
The text on each page stating "Future Strategic Issues, 7/01" within the above PDF refers to the document's finalization date of July 2001. The creation date of the above PDF is given as Thu 13 Dec 2001 08:48:04 AM EST, which possibly refers to when the PDF was created from a Microsoft PowerPoint file (.ppt), as it looks like the document was perhaps originally a PowerPoint file.
Addeddate 2014-02-11 00:44:28Identifier FutureStrategicIssuesFutureWarfareCirca2025Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t05x4vt08Ocr ABBYY FineReader 9.0Ppi 300Scanner Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.5.1Year 2001
DTIC ADA358618: Battlefield of the Future: 21st Century Warfare Issues
Publication date 1998-09-01Topics DTIC Archive, Schneider, Barry R., AIR WAR COLL MAXWELL AFB AL, *WARFARE, *MILITARY STRATEGY, MILITARY OPERATIONS, NATIONAL SECURITY, DECISION MAKING, THREATS, BATTLEFIELDS, BIOLOGICAL WARFARE, AIR POWER, INFORMATION WARFARE.,Collection dticarchive; additional_collectionsLanguage English
This is a book about strategy and war fighting in the midst of a revolution in military affairs as the world moves into the twenty-first century. Its 11 essays examine topics such as military operations against a well-armed rogue state or NASTI (NBC-arming sponsor of terrorism and intervention) state; the potential of parallel warfare strategy for different kinds of states; the revolutionary potential of information warfare; the lethal possibilities of biological warfare; and the elements of an ongoing revolution in military affairs (RMA). The book's purpose is to focus attention on the operational problems, enemy strategies, and threats that will confront US national security decision makers in the twenty-first century. The participating authors are either professional military officers or civilian professionals who specialize in national security Issues. Two of the architects of the US air campaign in the 1991 Gulf War have contributed essays that discuss the evolving utility of airpower to achieve decisive results and the lessons that might portend for the future of warfare.
Addeddate 2018-04-21 04:32:05Identifier DTIC_ADA358618Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t07x3349sOcr ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)Pages 277Ppi 533Year 1998
DTIC ADA346285: The Soldier-Cyborg Transformation: A Framework for Analysis of Social and Ethical Issues of Future Warfare
DTIC ADA346285: The Soldier-Cyborg Transformation: A Framework for Analysis of Social and Ethical Issues of Future Warfare
Publication date 1998-05-26Topics DTIC Archive, Gagliano, Donald A., ARMY WAR COLL CARLISLE BARRACKS PA, *WARFARE, *ETHICS, MILITARY PERSONNEL, LEADERSHIP, DEMOGRAPHY, MAN MACHINE SYSTEMS, CYBERNETICS.,Collection dticarchive; additional_collectionsLanguage English
Combining man and machine to enhance innate soldier capabilities is the hallmark of a soldier-cyborg transformation. Increasing the man-machine interface in the unpredictable environment of war has enormous potential to change the human dimension of war. This paper discusses the issues of values, ethics, and leadership concerning technologically advanced armed forces as they move warfare into the unfamiliar world of the cyborg.
Addeddate 2018-04-16 00:11:29Identifier DTIC_ADA346285Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t02z7wx0kOcr ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)Pages 53Ppi 600Year 1998
DTIC ADA304777: Information Technologies and the Future of Land Warfare,
DTIC ADA304777: Information Technologies and the Future of Land Warfare,
Publication date 1995-01-01Topics DTIC Archive, Nichiporuk, Brian, RAND CORP SANTA MONICA CA, *LAND WARFARE, *ARMY RESEARCH, *ARMY PLANNING, *TECHNOLOGY FORECASTING, COMPUTER PROGRAMS, FIBER OPTICS, COMMAND CONTROL COMMUNICATIONS, MILITARY OPERATIONS, COMPUTATIONS, POLITICAL SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS, ECONOMICS, ARMY PERSONNEL, MILITARY DOCTRINE, BATTLEFIELDS, DEMOGRAPHY, INTEGRATED CIRCUITS, SHIFTING, MISSIONS, MILITARY CAPABILITIES, LOW INTENSITY CONFLICT, INFORMATION SCIENCES, MILITARY ART.,Collection dticarchive; additional_collectionsLanguage English
Much of the future of land warfare will be shaped by the rapidly expanding information technologies. In December 1993, RAND convened 18 researchers with expertise in the information sciences and military operations to brainstorm on the ways that fast-growing communications and computational capabilities might change the nature of conflicts, the Armys missions, the way the Army organizes, and especially its concepts of operations. The researchers generally agreed that the nature of conflict is changing not so much because of technological and demographic shifts of power. The causes, participants, and objectives in conflicts are being transformed by the information technologies faster and more fundamentally than the weapons are. The report concludes with six new concepts for Army organization and operations. They span a broad range of issues: from the primary role of the soldier on the battlefield to how the Total Army might be organized for its disparate missions. All six concepts would imply significant changes in Army doctrine, training, organization, and equipment.
Addeddate 2018-03-29 09:27:30Identifier DTIC_ADA304777Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t0sr5hd2zOcr ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)Pages 95Ppi 300Year 1995
DTIC AD1028425: Littoral Undersea Warfare in 2025
Publication date 2005-12-01Topics DTIC Archive, Bindi,Michael, NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA MONTEREY United States, contingency operations (military), military organizations, naval operations, naval warfare, navy, military applications, combat areas, systems engineering, warfare, undersea warfare, antisubmarine warfare, sensor networks, warning systems, unmanned underwater vehicles, acoustics,Collection dticarchive; additional_collectionsLanguage English
The US Navy is unlikely to encounter a sea-borne peer competitor in the next twenty years. However, some regional powers will seek to develop submarine forces which could pose a significant threat in littoral waters. In this context, the Littoral Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) in 2025 Project applied Systems Engineering principles and processes to create a anumber of competing ASW force architectures capable of neutralizing the enemy submarine threat. Forces composed of distributed unmanned systems and projected conventional ASW force systems were modeled and analyzed. Results provided insight to ASW challenges and suggested continued efforts that are required to further define and integrate the contribution of evolving technologies into the complex undersea battlespace.
Addeddate 2020-02-18 16:49:32Identifier DTIC_AD1028425Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t26b5nv70Ocr ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)Pages 440Ppi 600Year 2005
textsDTIC ADA442603: The Privatization of Warfare: Back to the Futureby Defense Technical Information Center
Publication date 2002-01-01Topics DTIC Archive, Housen, Roger T, NATIONAL WAR COLL WASHINGTON DC, *MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS, *PRIVATIZATION, MILITARY OPERATIONS, THREATS, LOW INTENSITY CONFLICT, OUTSOURCING, MILITARY DOWNSIZING, MILITARY CAPABILITIES, GEOPOLITICS,Collection dticarchive; additional_collectionsLanguage English
It is a very old practice for rulers to fight some or all their wars by hiring foreigners, military skilled groups and individuals who have no special ideological stake in the conflict at hand. Loosely speaking, these hired soldiers are grouped together as mercenaries. At the beginning of the 21st century, when various entities-states, corporations, political movements, etc.-find themselves in need of military or large-scale security services, hiring mercenaries is an obvious recourse. When even major states are reducing their armed forces and showing less interest in foreign military adventures because of pinched economic circumstances or political constraints and a changed geo-political environment, smaller states may be doubly motivated to go the presumably cheaper mercenary route. During the 1990's a number of corporations termed private military companies have sprung up to service this demand. This evolution is likely to continue and even to expand. It will change the character of war. As states, their military forces and international organizations prove less capable or unwilling to meet the security threats, more and more of the functions now performed by national armed forces will be assumed by private military companies. The level of privatization of warfare will vary in an inversely proportional way to the interests at stake. Nation-states as well as international organizations will outsource their military activities.
Addeddate 2018-05-29 03:16:04Identifier DTIC_ADA442603Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t2h777q2bOcr ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)Pages 13Ppi 300Year 2002