"The great enemy of the truth is
very often not the lie-- deliberate, contrived and dishonest-- but the myth,
persistent, persuasive and unrealistic. Belief in myths allows the comfort of
opinion without the discomfort of independent thought."
-John
F. Kennedy
America Is
unknowingly on a path of Self-destruction
By de Andréa,
Opinion Editorialist for
‘THE BOTTOM LINE’
The stage was
set a long time ago. Probably unknowingly
as much as a hundred years ago. But more
strategically, it began in the 1950’s when the U.S. lost the Korean war, and then
it was catalyzed in the 1970’s when we lost the Vietnam war. From there, the infiltration of Fabian
Communism became self-perpetuating. America is now on a downhill slope of self-destruction.
Early
on, many different philosophy’s and ideologies from outside our culture fed
this inevitability, until today we naively endeavor to perpetuate our own
destruction. Abraham Lincoln once said, “The philosophy of the classroom in one
generation will be the philosophy of government in the next.” Which
is subtly addressed by Vincent Pry, former CIA
analyst at the end of the video
that I urge you to watch at the end of this article.
For years now,
I have been trying to get this warning across in one way or another to
seemingly deaf ears and blind eyes but I fear it has been too’ little’ too’
late’. (Check the words under my banner
at the top)
Concentrating
mostly on the Middle East, which is no doubt an extreme danger to the free
west, I have neglected to emphasize the danger not only from the Far East such
as China and Russia, but a Communist driven and supported North Korea.
North Korea
will likely detonate a nuke this Monday. They’re busy prepping their
Pyunggye-ri site, and Party Foundation Day is Oct. 10. And while the nut-job
leader Kim Jung Un is the dictator of one of the poorest countries in the
world, he does have some pretty dangerous nukes. But more importantly, North
Korea has been developing smaller nukes that they can put on their
intermediate-range missiles. And/or launch from a small low orbit satellite. Which is bad
news for neighbors South Korea and Japan.
But it’s also
bad for the U.S. Korea already has the
capability of attacking the U.S. with a low yield Gamma Ray nuclear devise,
between 3 and 5 Kilotons, producing a nationwide EMP. And if they already have one aboard their
satellite that is now in a low orbit crossing the U.S. every day from the south
to the north, we could already be facing total
disaster and we have no defense against it.
“I believe they [the North Koreans] have the
capability to have miniaturized the [nuclear] device at this point, and they
have the technology to potentially, actually deliver what they say they have.” Said General Curtis Scaparrotti, U.S. Military Commander, S. Korea,
10/24/2014
Fact 1: North Korea has low orbiting satellites.
Kwangmyongsong 3 (KMS 3-2) is a North Korean Earth satellite, which represents the country’s third attempt to orbit a satellite. The satellite dimensions are 1.4 m × 0.6 m × 0.7 m. Power is provided by solar cells. The orbit is sun synchronous at an altitude of 300 to 500 kilometers. It is claimed to have 3-axis control to point a camera to earth. The satellite broadcasts its remote sensing data in the UHF band and video in the X-band. Observers reported that the satellite is tumbling with a period of about 8 seconds, giving occasionally bright reddish flashes, visible even to the naked eye. Flashes are probably generated by its solar panels when they reflect the solar light directly on the observer. Flashes have been reported during south-east passes by NORAD
Kwangmyongsong 3 (KMS 3-2) is a North Korean Earth satellite, which represents the country’s third attempt to orbit a satellite. The satellite dimensions are 1.4 m × 0.6 m × 0.7 m. Power is provided by solar cells. The orbit is sun synchronous at an altitude of 300 to 500 kilometers. It is claimed to have 3-axis control to point a camera to earth. The satellite broadcasts its remote sensing data in the UHF band and video in the X-band. Observers reported that the satellite is tumbling with a period of about 8 seconds, giving occasionally bright reddish flashes, visible even to the naked eye. Flashes are probably generated by its solar panels when they reflect the solar light directly on the observer. Flashes have been reported during south-east passes by NORAD
Fact 2: North Korea is a nuclear power.
Despite what the U.S. Administration is willing to
admit to, North Korea has successfully “miniaturized” nuclear warheads –
although this has never been independently verified. However North Korea
has conducted five successful nuclear tests: in 2006, 2009, 2013, in January
and September 2016, and will test its sixth this month.
Although still
small, as nuclear weapons go, the September 2016’s test has indicated a device
with an explosive yield of between 10 and 30 kilotons – which, if confirmed,
would make it the North’s strongest nuclear test ever.
Fact
3: North Korea can fire ballistic missiles from submarines
North Korea’s firing of a submarine-launched ballistic missile over the weekend sparked sharp condemnation and concern from officials around the globe. The missile was fired off the east coast of the Korean Peninsula at 6:30 p.m. on April 23rd. It appears to have flown just 30 kilometers (about 19 miles). CNN
North Korea’s firing of a submarine-launched ballistic missile over the weekend sparked sharp condemnation and concern from officials around the globe. The missile was fired off the east coast of the Korean Peninsula at 6:30 p.m. on April 23rd. It appears to have flown just 30 kilometers (about 19 miles). CNN
Fact
4: North Korea has military aspirations and isn’t afraid to sacrifice its own
people
The commander of American forces in South Korea warned back in February that a conflict with North Korea could resemble the scale of World War II. Describing what the confrontation might look like, Gen. Curtis Scaparrrotti said that, “Given the size of the forces and the weaponry involved, this would be more akin to the Korean War and World War II — very complex, probably high casualty.” Scaparrotti made the statement while testifying before the House Armed Services Committee and added that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un would use a weapon of mass destruction if he thought the fate of his rule was at stake, reported by CNN.
The commander of American forces in South Korea warned back in February that a conflict with North Korea could resemble the scale of World War II. Describing what the confrontation might look like, Gen. Curtis Scaparrrotti said that, “Given the size of the forces and the weaponry involved, this would be more akin to the Korean War and World War II — very complex, probably high casualty.” Scaparrotti made the statement while testifying before the House Armed Services Committee and added that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un would use a weapon of mass destruction if he thought the fate of his rule was at stake, reported by CNN.
Fact
4: We are “blind” to our South
The U.S. has never before expected a nuclear attack from the south so all of our early warning systems as well as our nuclear trajectory’s are pointed north over the north pole toward Russia. North Korea is orbiting its KSM-3 satellite over the United States, regularly passing over the U.S. from our southern blindside, at the optimum trajectory and altitude to place an EMP field over the 48 contiguous United States–if’ the KSM-3 is a small nuclear warhead disguised as a satellite. The thing is we don’t know!
The U.S. has never before expected a nuclear attack from the south so all of our early warning systems as well as our nuclear trajectory’s are pointed north over the north pole toward Russia. North Korea is orbiting its KSM-3 satellite over the United States, regularly passing over the U.S. from our southern blindside, at the optimum trajectory and altitude to place an EMP field over the 48 contiguous United States–if’ the KSM-3 is a small nuclear warhead disguised as a satellite. The thing is we don’t know!
Several
times every week, North
Koran satellite KMS 3-2 passes over North America and the
US. Capable of carrying
a hydrogen bomb, we
can see this satellite’s continuous passes over America in the screenshots seen
in this story. Called by one expert ‘the problem
from hell‘, we see this satellite often sneaking up on America from the
south where we’re told we’re quite vulnerable as that is our ‘blind side’.
Back
in 2004, members of the Congressional EMP Commission met with two Russian
generals, Russia’s top experts on EMP technology. The generals disclosed that
Russia had a ‘decisive new nuclear weapon’, a ‘Super EMP warhead’. The
generals also disclosed that the design information for this weapon had
‘accidentally’ been ‘leaked’ to North Korea.
Ballistic missile defenses (BMD) of the sort that we are
half-heartedly pursuing are largely ineffective against an EMP caused by a
simple nuclear weapon in a small satellite launched into low- Earth orbit.
One
reason for our BMD’s lack of effectiveness is that our defensive
systems face north and the Russians have admitted to us that they have not only
developed, but have passed on to North Koreans, the approach towards launching
satellites or missiles called a “fractional orbit bombardment system.”
This is simply launching a satellite to the south into orbit instead of on an
arcing ballistic trajectory over the North Pole, so the satellite’s first
approach comes at the U.S. from the south, and would hit us with a surprise EMP
attack from our blindside. The United States has no Ballistic Missile Early Warning
Radars or missile interceptors facing south.
Whether
it is a ballistic missile targeted on the U.S. and designed to proceed
immediately toward a target on land, or is the first orbit of a satellite
carrying a weapon able to be detonated whenever the launcher wants, our
defensive systems are not focused on such a southern-hemisphere bound launch.
THE BOTTOM
LINE: If the electric grid goes down for a period longer
than emergency backup power is available – as was the case e.g., for some
electricity consumers during Hurricane Sandy two years ago – affected
electricity consumers aren’t just transported back into the mid-80s,
pre-internet. They
are, rather, transported back into the 1880s,
pre-electricity. Very few of us have enough
wells, hand pumps, plow horses, and seed stocks to live in a 1880s world.
The problem is not just that some things wouldn’t
work. Nothing’ would
work. Not water purification. Not food storage. Not medical care. Not
transportation. Nothing. Estimates from the Congressional chartered EMP
Commission indicate that those killed by such effects could total, within a
year, somewhere between two thirds and 90% of the U.S. population.
Watch this Video. It’s an hour long but very informative. You’ll see
that a low orbit EMP is very possible even by a fourth world power like North
Korea or even Iran. In the video Peter Vincent
Pry, former CIA analyst and author, talks about North Korean nukes, the EMP
threat, and the nuclear balance of power.
If you
watch the video to the end, and I suggest that you do, not only
because you will learn in one hour what is actually going on militarily as well
as politically in the U.S. and the world today, but
towards the end, you will learn why and how we got to the point we are now, as
well as where we are likely to go from here.
Thanks
for listening my friend!
-
de Andréa
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article to everyone on your email list.
It may be the only chance for your friends to hear the truth.
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