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1.3.12

美軍試射電磁炮 邁向「超能」時代

(綜合報道)(星島日報報道)美國海軍工程師近日在弗吉尼亞州達爾格倫(Dahlgren)對地作戰中心,成功試射首 部由軍工企業製造的電磁炮。電磁炮彈速度可達七倍音速,攻擊範圍最遠可達一百八十公里外的目標。專家相信,今次成功試射電磁炮原型,意味美軍距離製成這種 「超能」大炮邁進一大步。
七倍音速 最遠達180公里
電磁炮是一種超遠程武器,並非利用化學推進劑,而是用電磁動能發射炮彈。炮彈初速可達時速八千公里,能夠打擊九十至一百八十公里外的目標。
電磁炮的初速和射程遠超普通艦載火炮,意味未來可為海軍陸上軍事行動提供精確遠程火力支援,攔截來襲的敵方導彈,以及攻擊敵艦。
這部原型炮由美國BAE軍械研製公司製造。海軍將用約兩個月時間,進一步評估BAE製造的這部電磁炮原型與通用原子能系統公司製造的另一部電磁炮原型。通用原子能系統公司原型炮預計四月完工。
英國《每日郵報》╱美聯社╱新華社
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相關資料

美國海軍新電磁炮試驗,2020年所有軍鑑都會有的超級武器

日茨城縣發生5.4級地震

日本氣象廳網站消息,當地時間1日早晨7點32分(香港時間6點32分),日本茨城縣東海村發生黎克特制5.4級地震。據日本氣象廳觀測,震源為茨城縣近海,震源深度約60公里。
據日本媒體報道,受此地震影響,茨城縣部分地區的震級為5級。東京也有震感,為3級。
日本經濟產業省原子能安全保安院表示,處於定期檢查狀態的東海第二核電站未出現異常。
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破壞伊朗核設施 美提升鑽地彈威力

法新社華盛頓29日電) 美國空軍參謀長今天指出 ,萬一必須對伊朗採取軍事行動,美國有強力炸彈可用 ,並正致力提升炸彈威力。 美國空軍參謀長史瓦茲Norton Schwartz)拒絕 回答美軍武器能否破壞隱蔽或位於地下的伊朗核子設施 ,包括1顆3萬磅巨型鑽地彈(MOP) 在內。 外界猜測核子設施位於美軍武器射程不及的科姆( Qom)附近深山內。美國國防部長潘內達(Leon Panetta)承認巨型鑽地彈的缺點,指出五角大廈正在 努力提升炸彈能力。 史瓦茲說:「我們不會坐視不管,我們會隨著時間 不斷改進巨型鑽地彈。」(譯者:中央社樂羽嘉)
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令人難以置信的故事:一個失控UFO墜毀在納粹德國, 發生在羅斯威爾事件之前

Incredible Story: A Flying Saucer Lost Control and Crashed in Nazi Germany Before Roswell Incident

Roswell, New Mexico is famous in terms of crashed alien craft but another story surfaced saying that an alien craft crashed at the countryside of Nazi Germany ten years before the Roswell incident. This story is allegedly covered-up by both the U.S. and U.S.S.R. for over 70 years. According to the story, the Nazi has been basing their research on wingless, disc aircraft on the flying saucer. Moreover, the crashed alien craft was allegedly the actual basis of Hitler’s and Himmler’s near obsession with exotic technology and flying saucers. The amazing studies by S.S. physicists that developed flying saucers and the Bell, a motor that neutralized gravity and ripped a gash into the very fabric of the time-space continuum making amazing effects, were also made possible through studies of the flying saucers that crashed.

Nazi Germany is the first real superpower in the world rising from ashes of the old German Republic in 1937. During the same year, aliens crashed their troubled craft into the German countryside, according to the story.

Allegedly, the German army quickly arrived at the crash site and picked up the pieces. However, no record has found if bodies are also recovered.

According to what has been alleged, when the news about the crash arrived to the German authorities, they immediately ordered aeronautical experts to study the remains of the saucer. It is said that remains of the damaged saucer were brought into a warehouse facility with 24 hour security and some were brought to a facility near the Austrian border.

Rumors indicate that the members of the team working in advanced alien technology were from Luftwaffe, the Speer Ministry of Arms under the leadership of Albert Speer, and from formal research council Reichsforschungrat, which was composed of industrial engineers and university professors.

Experts were task to do a reverse engineering to the alien craft and among them were Horton brothers. The brothers later designed and tested advanced flying wing aircraft and the first stealth jet fighter-bomber in the world. While it can’t be proven, many think that the revolutionary technology from the brothers was the result of the thorough study of the alien aircraft.

Few days past, Viktor Schauberger was tasked to examine the alien craft and later, he invented the imploder motor developed an imploding vortex.

It is rumored that the motor was the basis for S.S. experiments in Poland with Glocke (Bell) device capable of creating inter-dimensional rifts in space-time.
Italian researcher Renato Vesco wrote in his book that Nazis were developing many advanced propulsion system and rudimentary anti-gravity devices for its disc-shaped, or lenticular, aircraft.
www.Latest-UFO-Sightings.net (c) 2012
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聯邦調查局在社交網站上監控官方詞語名單

Official List Of Words Feds Monitor On Social Networking Sites

Alexander Higgins, Contributing Writer
Activist Post

The Feds have been forced to release their social network monitoring manual, which contains the list of words the government watches on social media and news sites.

Earlier the Huffington Post reported on the Feds have been forced to give up their list of words they monitor on Facebook, Twitter, and comments being posted on news articles, so I compiled that list below.

Homeland Security Manual Lists Government Key Words For Monitoring Social Media, News
Ever complain on Facebook that you were feeling “sick?” Told your friends to “watch” a certain TV show? Left a comment on a media website about government “pork?”
If you did any of those things, or tweeted about your recent vacation in “Mexico” or a shopping trip to “Target,” the Department of Homeland Security may have noticed.
In the latest revelation of how the federal government is monitoring social media and online news outlets, the Electronic Privacy Information Center has posted online a 2011 Department of Homeland Security manual that includes hundreds of key words (such as those above) and search terms used to detect possible terrorism, unfolding natural disasters and public health threats. The center, a privacy watchdog group, filed a Freedom of Information Act request and then sued to obtain the release of the documents.
The 39-page “Analyst’s Desktop Binder” used by the department’s National Operations Center includes no-brainer words like “”attack,” “epidemic” and “Al Qaeda” (with various spellings). But the list also includes words that can be interpreted as either menacing or innocent depending on the context, such as “exercise,” “drill,” “wave,” “initiative,” “relief” and “organization.”

These terms and others are “broad, vague and ambiguous” and include “vast amounts of First Amendment protected speech that is entirely unrelated to the Department of Homeland Security mission to protect the public against terrorism and disasters,” stated the Electronic Privacy Information Center in letter to the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence.
The manual was released by the center a week after Homeland Security officials were grilled at a House hearing over other documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit that revealed analysts were scrutinizing online comments that “reflect adversely” on the federal government. Mary Ellen Callahan, the chief privacy officer for the Department of Homeland Security, and Richard Chavez, director for the National Operations Center, testified that the released documents were outdated and that social media was monitored strictly to provide situational awareness and not to police disparaging opinions about the federal government. On Friday, Homeland Security officials stuck by that testimony.
A senior Homeland Security official who spoke to The Huffington Post on Friday on condition of anonymity said the testimony of agency officials last week remains “accurate” and the manual “is a starting point, not the endgame” in maintaining situational awareness of natural and man-made threats. The official denied Electronic Privacy Information Center’s charge that the government is monitoring dissent. The manual’s instruction that analysts should identify “media reports that reflect adversely on DHS and response activities” was not aimed at silencing criticism but at spotting and addressing problems, she added. Source: The Huffington Post
The Official List – Using these words online will put you in the crosshairs Big Brother’s multi-billion dollar spy machine

 

Domestic Security

Assassination
Attack
Domestic security
Drill
Exercise
Cops
Law enforcement
Authorities
Disaster assistance
Disaster management
DNDO (Domestic Nuclear
Detection Office)
National preparedness
Mitigation
Prevention
Response
Recovery
Dirty bomb
Domestic nuclear detection
Emergency management
Emergency response
First responder
Homeland security
Maritime domain awareness
(MDA)
National preparedness
initiative
Militia
Shooting
Shots fired
Evacuation
Deaths
Hostage
Explosion (explosive)
Police
Disaster medical assistance
team (DMAT)
Organized crime
Gangs
National security
State of emergency
Security
Breach
Threat
Standoff
SWAT
Screening
Lockdown
Bomb (squad or threat)
Crash
Looting
Riot
Emergency Landing
Pipe bomb
Incident
Facility

 HAZMAT & Nuclear

Hazmat
Nuclear
Chemical spill
Suspicious package/device
Toxic
National laboratory
Nuclear facility
Nuclear threat
Cloud
Plume
Radiation
Radioactive
Leak
Biological infection (or
event)
Chemical
Chemical burn
Biological
Epidemic
Hazardous
Hazardous material incident
Industrial spill
Infection
Powder (white)
Gas
Spillover
Anthrax
Blister agent
Chemical agent
Exposure
Burn
Nerve agent
Ricin
Sarin
North Korea

 

Health Concern + H1N1

Outbreak
Contamination
Exposure
Virus
Evacuation
Bacteria
Recall
Ebola
Food Poisoning
Foot and Mouth (FMD)
H5N1
Avian
Flu
Strain
Quarantine
H1N1
Vaccine
Salmonella
Small Pox
Plague
Human to human
Human to Animal
Influenza
Center for Disease Control
(CDC)
Drug Administration (FDA)
Public Health
Toxic
Agro Terror
Tuberculosis (TB)
Tamiflu
Norvo Virus
Epidemic
Agriculture
Listeria
Symptoms
Mutation
Resistant
Antiviral
Wave
Pandemic
Infection
Water/air borne
Sick
Swine
Pork World Health Organization
(WHO) (and components)
Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
E. Coli

Infrastructure Security

Infrastructure security
Airport
CIKR (Critical Infrastructure
& Key Resources)
AMTRAK
Collapse
Computer infrastructure
Communications
infrastructure
Telecommunications
Critical infrastructure
National infrastructure
Metro
WMATA
Airplane (and derivatives)
Chemical fire
Subway
BART
MARTA
Port Authority
NBIC (National
Biosurveillance Integration
Center)
Transportation security
Grid
Power
Smart
Body scanner
Electric
Failure or outage
Black out
Brown out
Port
Dock
Bridge
Cancelled
Delays
Service disruption
Power lines

 

Southwest Border Violence

Drug cartel
Violence
Gang
Drug
Narcotics
Cocaine
Marijuana
Heroin
Border
Mexico
Cartel
Southwest
Juarez
Sinaloa
Tijuana
Torreon
Yuma
Tucson
Decapitated
U.S. Consulate
Consular
El Paso
Fort Hancock
San Diego
Ciudad Juarez
Nogales
Sonora
Colombia
Mara salvatrucha
MS13 or MS-13
Drug war
Mexican army
Methamphetamine
Cartel de Golfo
Gulf Cartel
La Familia
Reynosa
Nuevo Leon
Narcos
Narco banners (Spanish
equivalents)
Los Zetas
Shootout
Execution
Gunfight
Trafficking
Kidnap
Calderon
Reyosa
Bust
Tamaulipas
Meth Lab
Drug trade
Illegal immigrants
Smuggling (smugglers)
Matamoros
Michoacana
Guzman
Arellano-Felix
Beltran-Leyva
Barrio Azteca
Artistic Assassins
Mexicles
New Federation

 Terrorism

Terrorism
Al Qaeda (all spellings)
Terror
Attack
Iraq
Afghanistan
Iran
Pakistan
Agro
Environmental terrorist
Eco terrorism
Conventional weapon
Target
Weapons grade
Dirty bomb
Enriched
Nuclear
Chemical weapon
Biological weapon
Ammonium nitrate
Improvised explosive device
IED (Improvised Explosive
Device)
Abu Sayyaf
Hamas
FARC (Armed Revolutionary
Forces Colombia)
IRA (Irish Republican Army)
ETA (Euskadi ta Askatasuna)
Basque Separatists
Hezbollah
Tamil Tigers
PLF (Palestine Liberation
Front)
PLO (Palestine Liberation
Organization
Car bomb
Jihad
Taliban
Weapons cache
Suicide bomber
Suicide attack
Suspicious substance
AQAP (AL Qaeda Arabian
Peninsula)
AQIM (Al Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb)
TTP (Tehrik-i-Taliban
Pakistan)
Yemen
Pirates
Extremism
Somalia
Nigeria
Radicals
Al-Shabaab
Home grown
Plot
Nationalist
Recruitment
Fundamentalism
Islamist

 

Weather/Disaster/Emergency

Emergency
Hurricane
Tornado
Twister
Tsunami
Earthquake
Tremor
Flood
Storm
Crest
Temblor
Extreme weather
Forest fire
Brush fire
Ice
Stranded/Stuck
Help
Hail
Wildfire
Tsunami Warning Center
Magnitude
Avalanche
Typhoon
Shelter-in-place
Disaster
Snow
Blizzard
Sleet
Mud slide or Mudslide
Erosion
Power outage
Brown out
Warning
Watch
Lightening
Aid
Relief
Closure
Interstate
Burst
Emergency Broadcast System

 

Cyber Security

Cyber security
Botnet
DDOS (dedicated denial of
service)
Denial of service
Malware
Virus
Trojan
Keylogger
Cyber Command
2600
Spammer
Phishing
Rootkit
Phreaking
Cain and abel
Brute forcing
Mysql injection
Cyber attack
Cyber terror
Hacker
China
Conficker
Worm
Scammers
Social media

Read the Department of Homeland Security Media Monitoring Desktop Reference
Analyst Desktop Binder_REDACTED

Watch: Congressional Hearing Department of Homeland Security’s monitoring of social media


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禽流感武器化辯論, '蝙蝠流感'在媒體引起恐慌


‘Bat Flu’ Scare Hits Media Among Weaponized Bird Flu Release Debate

Anthony Gucciardi
Activist Post

Amid the controversy surrounding the potential release of heavily weaponized H5N1 bird flu, scientists are now reporting that they have found evidence of flu in bats, and state that the risk to humans is unclear.

Being labeled as ‘bat flu’, the discovery marks the first documented report of a flu virus in winged mammals. For now, scientists have not been able to grow the virus and are unaware of how easily the virus can spread.

The news shocked many scientists who previously thought that the flu had already been discovered in all possible animals. While flu bugs have been tracked in animals such as dogs, horses, whales, and seals, bats were never thought to contract the flu. Interestingly, however, it may have been discovered around five years ago.

Back in 2009, Russian virologists reported that they had found flu in bats, but their claims were rejected due to insufficient evidence.
'Most people are fairly convinced we had already discovered flu in all the possible' animals, said Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scientist Ruben Donis, who co-wrote the bat flu study.
The news could not have come at a better time for some scientists who continue to push for a release of the mutated H5N1 bird flu strain, which was mutated 5 times in order to become highly contagious between ferrets – the very animal model used to study human flu infection. Taking attention away from the bird flu release controversy, bat flu may soon become the new focus in the field of potentially threatening viruses.

For now, the WHO says that the weaponized strain will not be released until a panel of ‘experts’ determines it to be safe. Paul Keim, chair of the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity, explained how volatile of a weapon the mutated bird flu could become:
'This is such a dangerous biological weapon, it would not be controllable. Whoever used it would doubtlessly decimate their own people as well,' Keim said.
Scientists say that bat flu could potentially pose a risk to humans if it were to mingle with more common forms of influenza, swap genes, and mutate into something more dangerous.

If you’re worried about the flu, natural solutions do exist. Vitamin D can slash your risk of the flu by nearly half, and is more effective than harmful medical interventions.

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