This Is What I Think.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Bill Gates The New York Times = Al Qaeda




From 7/25/2010 ( the New York Times and WikiLeaks actively instigate insurrection and subversive activity against the United States federal government ) To 12/4/2010 ( --- ) is 132 days

From 3/3/1959 ( date hijacked from me:my birth date US ) To 7/13/1959 ( the Santa Susana nuclear reactor accident ) is 132 days










http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/26/world/26editors-note.html

The New York Times

The War Logs

A Note to Readers

Piecing Together the Reports, and Deciding What to PublishPublished: July 25, 2010

The articles published today are based on thousands of United States military incident and intelligence reports — records of engagements, mishaps, intelligence on enemy activity and other events from the war in Afghanistan — that were made public on Sunday on the Internet. The New York Times, The Guardian newspaper in London, and the German magazine Der Spiegel were given access to the material several weeks ago. These reports are used by desk officers in the Pentagon and troops in the field when they make operational plans and prepare briefings on the situation in the war zone. Most of the reports are routine, even mundane, but many add insights, texture and context to a war that has been waged for nearly nine years.

Over all these documents amount to a real-time history of the war reported from one important vantage point — that of the soldiers and officers actually doing the fighting and reconstruction.

The Source of the Material

The documents — some 92,000 individual reports in all — were made available to The Times and the European news organizations by WikiLeaks, an organization devoted to exposing secrets of all kinds, on the condition that the papers not report on the data until July 25










http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/alibi

alibi

Law. the defense by an accused person of having been elsewhere at the time an alleged offense was committed.










http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_military_nuclear_incident_terminology

United States military nuclear incident terminology


NUCFLASH

Pinnacle - Nucflash refers to detonation or possible detonation of a nuclear weapon which creates a risk of an outbreak of nuclear war. Events which may be classified Nucflash may include:


Detection of unidentified objects by a missile warning system or interference (experienced by such a system or related communications) that appears threatening and could create a risk of nuclear war.










http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/interference

interference

Radio. a. a jumbling of radio signals, caused by the reception of undesired ones.

Psychology. the forgetting of information or an event due to inability to reconcile it with conflicting information obtained subsequently.

run interference, Informal. to deal with troublesome or time-consuming matters, as for a colleague or supervisor, esp. to forestall problems.

The inhibition or prevention of clear reception of broadcast signals.










http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/July_1959

July 1959


July 13, 1959 (Monday)

The worst nuclear accident in American history happened at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory in southern California. The Sodium Reactor Experiment, which used liquid sodium to cool the uranium fuel rods and the nuclear reactor, experienced a sudden rise in temperature and radiation. Technicians managed to shut down the reactor, and after a two hour inspection, the reactor was restarted. On July 26, a second inspection determined that 13 of the 43 fuel rods had melted. For two weeks, radioactive by-products had been released into the surrounding area.





http://www.vcstar.com/news/2009/jul/12/field-lab-meltdown-50-years-later-delayed-59-for/

vcstar.com

Ventura County Star

'59 nuclear reactor accident remains vivid for former Santa Susana Field Laboratory worker

Field lab meltdown | 50 years later delayed reaction

By Teresa Rochester

Posted July 12, 2009

Something was wrong. John Pace saw it in the men’s faces, heard the anxiety in their voices and felt the nervous excitement in the nuclear reactor control room at the sprawling Santa Susana Field Laboratory. “I knew something had happened,” said Pace, then a 20-year-old Moorpark resident working as a reactor trainee at the Sodium Reactor Experiment in the hills of eastern Ventura County.

At 6:25 p.m. on July 13, 1959, the experimental reactor’s power went out of control, forcing a manual emergency shutdown after an automatic shutdown failed to kick in. It was the beginning of a partial meltdown, a rarity in U.S. history.

For 13 days, officials turned the damaged reactor on and off despite high radiation levels, more emergency shutdowns, and the release of radioactive gases into the air. In some cases, the readings exceeded monitoring instruments’ capacity to measure them.

Workers at the reactor, operated by Atomics International, would discover that 13 out of 43 fuel elements were damaged during that period as portions of steel tube encasements melted into the uranium alloy fuel rods.

“The key to the excitement was they barely got the thing shut down before going critical and having an explosion,” Pace said in a recent interview, recalling the events of that night 50 years ago. “They just felt so good that they were still alive and they got it shut down.”