Re: Tsunami and the SEGNPMSS

From: josephus (dogbird_at_earthlink.net)
Date: 02/23/05


Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2005 09:49:38 GMT


|-|erc wrote:

> "Barbara Schwarz" <barbara.schwarz@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
>>---------
>>So, lasers can destroy missiles. But will they find them in time?
>>June 8, 2000
>>Web posted at: 3:33 PM EDT (1933 GMT)
>>By Tony Karon
>>
>>(TIME.com) -- Not quite "phasers on stun" -- or not yet, anyway -- but
>>the U.S. appears to have finally developed a battlefield laser weapon.
>>Now the question is whether it's up to its mission.
>>The Pentagon announced Thursday that the Tactical High Energy Laser
>>(THEL) designed for Israel to deploy on its northern border was
>>successfully tested in New Mexico on Tuesday against an armed Katyusha
>>rocket (the favored artillery of the Hezbollah guerrillas for attacking
>>northern Israeli towns). The system tracked the incoming rocket and
>>blew it up with an invisible laser beam created by a chemical reaction
>>in a battlefield weapon.
>>-------------------------------------
>
>
> Right, but these lasers weigh 100 tonnes, they fit inside the backs of trucks. Of course
> every country would like one in orbit but that's about 100 shuttle missions per laser,
> and a new shuttle mission for each laser blast to replace the power source / chemicals.
>
> Unless they have nuclear lasers in space, aka the Star Wars Program. Cooling is the
> major problem in space for nuclear reactions, I think they abandoned putting high power
> lasers in space, and instead realised the fruit of laser listening_from_a_distance technology.
>
> The Magnitude and Frequency of Tsunami
> http://www.uow.edu.au/science/eesc/research/Various%20research/tsunami/tsun_sc_nsw.htm
>
> Figure 2:
> Radiocarbon ages of tsunami deposits (roughly every 600 years)
>
> Some of the hotels in the Tsunami footage were called TSUNAMI HOTEL with a big
> picture of a wave! Tidal waves happen from time to time, Earth quakes are common in
> Japan and parts of US because they are right on a fault line. The 'ring of fire' is
> the largest active fault line, most of it is underwater but Japan is right on it.
>
> Herc
>
>
>
You sound sane for a change. have you gotten help?
          josephus