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The Gods #77342 jews

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Not all earthquakes, but some of them can definitely be influenced by technology. Naturally, earthquakes occur when stress builds up in the Earth's lithosphere (outer shell) due to tectonic forces. When the stress exceeds the strength of the rocks, it causes a sudden fracture along a fault line. This rapid release of stored elastic energy generates seismic waves that travel through the Earth, and shakes the ground. And then, science in fields like seismology shows that small perturbations can sometimes trigger big shifts if the conditions are already "locked and loaded".

There are several tectonic weapon theories about classified military technologies that can trigger earthquakes by targeting fault lines with energy weapons, explosives, or electromagnetic pulses.

D.E.W. (Directed Energy Weapons) are absolutely real; laser weapons, microwave weapons, and electromagnetic pulse (EMP) systems have all been developed and even tested by militaries around the world. When you consider how powerful electromagnetic fields can affect the environment, how underground structures and fault lines respond to energy and vibrations, and the huge secrecy surrounding advanced military projects, it's really not far-fetched to imagine that with enough focused energy, you could at least aggravate a fault line that’s already stressed and close to breaking. It wouldn't even take a massive "blast", just the right kind of nudge at the right place and time.

Then you have the well-known underground nuclear detonations. There’s historical proof that underground nuclear tests by various countries (especially during the Cold War) have triggered seismic events. Some secret military agencies could use such methods deliberately to destabilize regions.

HAARP (High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program) is another famous example, which was officially built to study the ionosphere, the part of Earth's atmosphere that's full of charged particles, way up (~50–600 miles above). HAARP uses high-frequency radio waves to heat small areas of the ionosphere and study how they behave. But unofficially, pulsing powerful radio waves into the ionosphere could create downstream effects.

The above can happen where HAARP beams energy into a patch of the ionosphere, heating it up and pushing it outward, creating an artificial "bubble" in the Earth's magnetic field. This bubble can mess with the Earth's magnetic lines, which temporarily weakening them in specific areas. Since Earth's magnetic field is loosely tied to atmospheric pressure systems, it's possible (in theory) to shift weather patterns such as storms, jet streams, etc. The ionosphere and the Earth's crust are linked through electrical currents (telluric currents). Disturbing the ionosphere at such a scale could send electromagnetic waves down into the Earth, which causes vibrations in specific fault lines that are already under stress. If those faults are critically stressed, the extra energy input (even if tiny compared to a natural tectonic force) could be the the final straw that breaks, which then trigger an earthquake.

There are of course well-known technologies and activities that can trigger earthquakes, called induced seismicity. However, these are not like creating a giant natural earthquake as they're typically smaller unless conditions are very unstable in those areas. Some of these technologies include: Hydraulic fracturing (fracking) that works by Injecting high-pressure fluids into rock to extract oil or gas can cause small earthquakes. Geothermal energy production that works by pumping water into hot rocks underground can create fractures and trigger quakes. Reservoir-induced seismicity that works by building large dams and reservoirs that can add pressure to faults below, sometimes causing earthquakes.
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Shaitan

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