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Re: [microsound] talk about supersonic signals and distortion



> I think its Genesis P. Orridge that claim there is a low frequency that
can
> give people orgasms ... or maybe it was the Hafler Trio .. dont remember
> right now. One of them. So the US military may be in for a surprise when
> they start using those infrasound-weapons ... and that guy Rumsfeld
> certainly looks like he need it ;=)

Here is some info on these ultra low sound weapons, and it isn't funny at
all...
For more info:
http://www.disinfo.com/pages/news/id2561/pg1/

(and if you want to you can also listen to our mid range sound it's mp3 so
don't worry about harmfull frequecies)
www.nhgfabrik.nl

grtz
Jsf

SAN FRANCISCO (Wednesday, August 7, 2002) -- A coalition of environmental
groups today sued the U.S. Navy and the National Marine Fisheries Service to
block deployment of a new sonar system that poses a threat to entire
populations of whales, dolphins, seals and other marine mammals. The
coalition, led by NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council), filed the
lawsuit in federal district court in San Francisco.

The sonar system, known as Surveillance Towed Array Sensor System Low
Frequency Active sonar (or "SURTASS LFA") relies on extremely loud, low
frequency sound to detect submarines at great distances. According to the
Navy's own studies, the LFA system generates sounds capable of reaching 140
decibels more than 300 miles away. Scientists claim that, during testing off
the California coast, noise from a single LFA system was detected across the
breadth of the North Pacific Ocean.

"One of the truly disturbing aspects of this system," said Joel Reynolds,
senior attorney and director of NRDC's Marine Mammals Protection Project,
"is its unprecedented power and geographic scope. If the Navy deploys LFA,
tens of thousands of square miles of ocean habitat would be saturated with
extremely loud and dangerous sound. The Navy has illegally been given a
blank check to deploy LFA in 75 percent of the world's oceans."

Over the last few years, scientists have been increasingly alarmed about
undersea noise pollution from high-intensity sonar systems.

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