A Call for Compassion in the use of Directed Energy Weaponry

by
Kensley Vitoria

The Maui wildfires are devastating and greatly saddening. My wife and I visited Lahaina’s old town just last year in November. It was a quaint, cute little European-style town center that felt straight out of Brussels or London.

The several blocks in the historic district were all two or three-story buildings that had been recently repainted and renovated. We had dinner at Pacific’o on the beach and watched luau fire dancers while the sun set over the harbor. 

When I first saw the images of the Maui fire, I was immediately reminded of the Summer 2020 California wildfires in the San Francisco Bay Area. Those images showed residential plots totally leveled, burnt to gray ash. Automobiles melted. Trees hollowed out with flames flickering in the trunk cores while the exterior shell still stood. Those wildfires also spread terrifyingly quickly, leaving firefighters and emergency responders in a state of shock. The reactions echoed consent that nothing like this had ever been seen before. 

What critically connected the two incidents? Allegations of the use of Directed Energy Weapons (DEW). Now, I am a conspiracy theorist, and very proud of it. I want to know who is conspiring to influence world events on the planet where I live. I want to know their intention and their motive, and I want to be able to stop them if their methods are evil. I want to explore the possibilities of causes and effect, and I am not scared by establishment folks attempting to slander— because hiding among them are the real conspirators. 

A quick search on Rumble— the upstart alternative to YouTube where the cabalistic globalists at Google (whose motto of “Don’t be evil” was recently abandoned) don’t hold sway— returned today three pages of content by similarly minded folks providing video evidence that substantiates the DEW hypothesis. Yet even Google and YouTube are awash with blog posts on space lasers. 

DEW is next-generation technology, typically satellite-mounted, that concentrates electromagnetic energy in a beam to generate heat. They have been used small-scale on naval vessels and on shoulder-mounted systems to combat drone warfare with great success. One system is Lockheed Martin’s ATHENA (Advanced Test High Energy Asset), tested by the US Air Force in 2019. If you wonder what goes into low Earth orbit on secret US military satellites, it’s a good bet that it’s these systems.

What’s unclear is which other countries around the world possess similar DEW technology. Do Russia, China, the United Kingdom, or the European Union? Does Japan? India? The Emirates? Certainly, this would be highly classified, with communications only occurring through high-level military and state department channels. If it were Russia, is this a move in the theatre of global war? If it were the United States, what diabolical scum in the Pentagon is using state-of-the-art weaponry against their fellow US citizens? That person must be held accountable because this usage of DEW is unjust and despicable. 

On Maui and Hawaii, coming up next month, there are three interesting conferences. One is the EMER-GEN forum on September 16, organized by the Maui Economic Development Board and the Space Generation Advisory Council, focusing on young professionals and students interested in careers in the space industry.

The next is the Hawaii Digital Government Summit in Honolulu with a Keynote topic of “Transform Adversity into Advantage.” The third is the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (“Eye-triple-E”) conference on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics. These are the folks who oversee HAARP, another DEW fan favorite. How about that timing? Some large conferences by folks looking to design the future just after a large plot of real estate has become a prime target for redevelopment. 

Looking at the Maui Economic Development Board, I wonder how many of them are decolonialists– the kind of folks who spend a lot of their time ruminating on how to destroy vestiges of European colonial societies. Wouldn’t the perfect decolonization project be total destruction of a small European-style town center?

Apparently, for these people, the loss of life justifies the erasure of European culture. Too many people have been brainwashed into thinking that European cultural influence is somehow bad, totally ignoring the broad range of benefits that European colonial efforts in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries brought to many small, isolated societies all over the planet. They’d apparently rather totally destroy that history than have it exist, regardless of how pleasant it is to walk along small, cobblestone streets through a centralized marketplace of local vendors and merchants and stop for a coffee or a cold pint at an open-air streetside cafe.

Is that a horrifying experience? Does it make you think about how in a bygone age, people implemented outdated expansionist state policy to force native societies into integrating into a globalized marketplace? Or outfitting natives with modern technologies in textiles, architectural construction, animal husbandry, food processing, and agriculture while simultaneously encouraging multilingualism and multiculturalism? What about sharing ideas and establishing stronger networks among the planetary civilization? To decolonialists, who are typically regressive, these ideas aren’t even considered. Their focus is only ever on racism and racialized supremacy theory, slavery, servitude, and exploitation.

Implementing DEW to create opportunities for economic development is like cutting off your own foot in order to install a prosthetic. Economic development can also occur if demolition companies are brought in to make small-scale changes to outdated structures. Instead of destroying 100 blocks of an old colonial-style settlement, deconstruct some of the blocks slowly and carefully, and rebuild them so that the result is an interweaving of old and new technologies. 

DEW causes widespread chaos, destruction, loss of life, pain, and misery. It is totally evil to use such technology against human settlements, and it should never be done unless there is widespread agreement among the residents of the settlement itself that creating a blank slate is a mutually agreed upon solution, and residents are provided notice six months to a year in advance in order to be able to make necessary steps to move personal belongings and relocate.

Only with the consent of the inhabitants should such application of DEW be permitted. Otherwise, it is still extremely colonial, just in the most possible modern sense. 

 

Author

  • Kensley Vitoria

    “Kensley is a proponent of freedom, virtue, intelligence, education, and justice. A teacher by trade, they enjoy writing about global politics, international economics and finance, and space exploration. Having attended Georgetown and Hong Kong Universities, they are happy to provide a unique perspective on world affairs.”

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