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Darpa Wants to Sniff Your City’s Distinct Chemical Scent

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Darpa Wants to Sniff Your City’s Distinct Chemical Scent

Don’t panic. But there’s a nontrivial chance terrorists will launch a chemical-weapon attack on U.S. soil. So the far-out researchers at Darpa are thinking about an unorthodox detection method: breathing in your city’s chemical bouquet. You’ve heard of racial and ethnic profiling? Here’s chemical profiling. Just imagine the privacy concerns.

In theory, chemical attacks can be detected before they happen. Even trace amounts of chemicals give off specific signatures that tools like sorbent tube samplers can register. But in order to figure out if dangerous chemicals are stockpiled somewhere or are floating through the air, the government’s going to have to know the baseline level for those chemicals wafting near your trash receptacle.

Darpa’s big idea, according to a new solicitation, is to collect trace elements of chemicals at different places in a city and then derive a model for determining that city’s chemical smell. It’ll have to vary with place, as high levels of petroleum-based chemicals are going to be more suspicious near a florist’s than at, say, a gas station.

Then Darpa wants researchers to represent the results in a “high-fidelity, three-dimensional chemical-composition map.” So-called “chemical cartography” is the first step in “identifying ‘dual-use’ substances with legal and illegal/illicit uses.”

For now, Darpa isn’t calling for any tools to actually track down anomalous amounts of chemicals. It just wants researchers to build models for chem maps, in order to prevent detection from becoming “prohibitively expensive” — that is, so guys with chemical-sampling canisters aren’t walking around each and every city block.

The data Darpa wants collected will include “chemical, meteorological and topographical data” from at least 10 “local urban sources,” including “residences, gasoline stations, restaurants and dry cleaning stores that have particular patterns of emissions throughout the day.”

Researchers will spend less than 30 minutes at each station taking chemical readings over a 48-hour period. Then they’ll adjust for atmospheric and environmental variables like wind speed, humidity and time of day — when, say, the dry cleaners’ is open to spew perchloroethylene vapor into the air — to account for the impact on chemical potency.

They’ll use that data to “predict concentrations down to trace gas concentrations of 10 parts per trillion” across a whole city. That’s where the maps get built.

They’ll have to include “labeled three-dimensional shape files for each focus area, as well as information about the types of infrastructure and activities present during data collection,” listing the “types of chemicals associated with various landmarks and activities.” And they’ll map fluctuations in chemical signatures across different times of year.

Of course, all this raises questions privacy concerns. Businesses and residents may not appreciate having Department of Defense-funded researchers taking chemical samplings on our near their property, especially for a project that will eventually go toward identifying would-be chem-terrorists.

The solicitation doesn’t have much interest in mapping areas of potential concern with much specificity. On the chemical maps, “labels may include ‘residential,’ ‘restaurant,’ etc.,” it reads.

“Useful metadata also may include imagery, databases of urban features (infrastructure, traffic patterns, etc.), and other sources of information.” But Darpa doesn’t say anything about who would own the maps or how they’d be used by the military, law enforcement or even regulatory agencies.

The Chemical Cartography project’s just in the beginning stages, so there’s no cash to hand out just yet. Darpa’s just seeking proposals for how researchers might build their models for the maps. They’ve got until Jan. 6 before Darpa decides who it wants to send sniffing around.

Photo: Defense Department

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Jupiter’s Missing Stripe Reappears

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Jupiter’s Missing Stripe Reappears

Jupiter’s lost cloud belt may be coming back.

One of the gas giant’s characteristic red stripes, the South Equatorial Belt, faded late in 2009 and had vanished completely by early May, 2010. The band had waned and returned several times in the past, astronomers noted, and kept an eye out for its return.

A few amateur astronomers just spotted signs of a return. The image above, captured Nov. 9 by amateur astronomer Christopher Go in the Phillipines, shows a white plume piercing the cloud tops where the belt belongs.

This tiny spot, called an outbreak, is actually a high altitude cloud. These spots are what makes the South Equatorial Band red, Go told Wired.com in an email. Small disturbances like this one are an omen of more spots and swirls to come, ultimately reviving the great brown stripe.

Other astronomers followed up in infrared wavelengths (below), which show the spot much more clearly.

“The spot was pretty small and unimpressive in normal light,” said astrophotographer Don Parker of Florida. “When I started imaging in the methane band, the images that appeared on my monitor blew me away! The spot was big and brilliant. This indicated that it had a very high altitude above Jupiter’s cloud deck and was a powerful towering convection plume — indeed something special.”

As of Nov. 11, the eruption is the single brightest spot on Jupiter in all wavelengths.

“Will this outbreak fully revive the SEB? Time will tell,” Go said. “That is why I am encouraging other observers to keep an eye of this outbreak.”

If you catch any activity in Jupiter’s cloud belt, send us your photos!

Via Spaceweather.com

Image: 1) Christopher Go. 2) Don Parker. Note that the planet is upside-down, as it would appear through a telescope. The south pole is at the top of the image, and the bright spot is to the left.

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Concept Artist Probes Interstellar Reaches of God Porn

Sick!!!


November 9, 2010: Jesuit Provincial Meets with Lebanese President Suleiman

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November 9, 2010: Jesuit Provincial Meets with Lebanese President Suleiman

Lebanese President Michel Suleiman with Jesuit Provincial Victor Aswad and a Brother Jesuit, Accomplice in Enforcing Jesuit Papal Tyranny

Depicted in this most telling photograph is your typical Jesuit rule, the global rule over all the Presidents, Kings, Queens, Military Dictators and Tribal Chiefs of the world!  First, take notice of the look on Lebanese President Michel Suleiman’s face; for it is suspect and defensive.  Suleiman is a Maronite Christian (i.e., Papal Roman Catholic slave of the Pope) overtly brought to power by the Sunni Emir of Qatar!

Lebanese President Michel Suleiman (3L) with Lebanese Speaker of Parliament, Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, and Prime Minister of Lebanon, August 1, 2010

Yes, the Jesuit Papacy rules Sunni Qatar!  Notice the jovial and befriending Beirut Jesuit Provincial Victor Aswad (the older man sitting on the left) accompanied with his subordinate brother Jesuit, cool and pensive.  Yes,  these reprobate, bloodthirsty soldiers for Jesuit Superior General Adolfo Nicholas always conduct their designs in pairs—just as Christ sent his disciples out two by two!

But this is Business dear truth-seeker—the Business of Who Rules: these members of the Black Pope’s Praetorian Guard are maintaining the Temporal Power of Pope Benedict XVI over little Lebanon!

And if President Suleiman does not obey his immediate Jesuit masters in Beirut, he will be “Kennedyed” in short order by the Black Pope’s International Intelligence Community—Satan’s global Holy Office of the Inquisition in complete command of its Masonic Islamic International Terrorist Network and its Masonic International Crime Syndicate!

Read more at www.vaticanassassins.org
 

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Jesuit Magazine Ponders Regime Change in Israel


Jesuit Magazine Ponders Regime Change in Israel

This commentary piece comes from America.
Two Peoples, One State
Raymond A. Schroth
What began in September as hope for a two-state solution between Israel and Palestine has fizzled. Palestinians will not negotiate while Israel builds settlements on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem, which in international law are occupied territory; Israel will not extend the “moratorium” on construction, during which Israel continued to build settlements and segregated highways and to demolish Palestinian homes.
The United States offered Israel concessions to renew the moratorium, but Mr. Netanyahu proposed a law demanding that all would-be Israeli citizens, including Israeli Arabs (20 percent of Israel’s population), swear allegiance to Israel specifically as a Jewish state—in effect, a forced commitment to beliefs they do not hold. Now Palestinians should consider alternatives. Should they unilaterally declare themselves a state and ask for U.S./U.N. recognition? Merge with Jordan? As the situation deteriorates, it is time for new ideas.
Hostility throughout the Arab world and within Israel mounts. Even if the West Bank and Gaza were to become a state, settlers already in place would refuse to budge. As Hanan Ashrawi, a representative of the Palestine Liberation Organization, said to The Washington Post, “How can you have a two-state solution if you are eating up the land of the other state?”
Many Israelis, particularly in Tel Aviv, distracted by prosperity, seem not to realize that within a few years an Arab majority will emerge and “Greater Israel” (Israel, West Bank and Gaza) will not be Jewish. If Arabs are not given full citizenship rights, Israel will not be a democracy either.
In this context, Israel must choose. It must either: (a) dismantle the settlements and return to the 1967 borders; (b) try to remain in the occupied territory as a ruling minority, which is in effect apartheid; or (c) drive out the Arab population, which would be ethnic cleansing.
But Israelis might also consider an alternative, one with roots in history and recently developed by Jewish, American and Palestinian intellectuals: a one-state solution.
A nation state built around one religion might have worked in the unique, post-Holocaust context of the years after World War II; but today Israelis must ask, Has the idea of an ethnic state become an anachronism? Furthermore, a pre-historical promise to Abraham of a land for his descendants does not give any 21st-century ethnic or religious group a legal right in modern international law to a particular territory.
Once there was a “Christian Europe.” But today’s great Western cities—London, New York, Paris, Geneva—teem with Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus: people of every land and color. Israel’s self-definition as a one-religion state sealed off by a 28-foot-high wall, a network of settlements and segregated highways, projects an image that is disturbing to many, including younger generations of American Jews alienated by Israel’s policies. Palestine has always had a multi-ethnic identity; and early Zionists, including Hannah Arendt and Martin Buber, saw Palestine as a spiritual center promoting Jewish culture, not as a nation state.
A plan for a single-state solution might include the following: (1) With Belgium and Switzerland as models, a new constitution would set up either a binational state or one unified with a one-person-one-vote structure. (2) With its combined army and police forces, the more secure state of Israel-Palestine would join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. (3) A law of return would apply in some way to both Jews and Arabs. (4) A new school curriculum would teach accurate history to both peoples. (5) A truth and reconciliation commission would be set up.
Look at the map. Erase the lines setting off the West Bank and Gaza; imagine highways connecting the whole territory with Jerusalem, the shared capital. Every citizen has the same right to vote, the same access to water, land, education, marriage, health care, employment, property, and freedom of speech and religion. Walls disappear. Settlements may remain, but Palestinians will build beside them. An emerging leadership class will shepherd Israel-Palestine into a peaceful future. The Jews are a gifted, energetic people. Even if in the future they become a numerical minority in Israel-Palestine, they will still demonstrate leadership in the new Promised Land.
About 25 years ago, when I was swimming in the Dead Sea, two young men who saw my camera asked me to take their picture. As I wrote down their address to send them the shot, I couldn’t help asking, “Are you Israelis or Arabs?”
They replied: “What difference does it make? We are all brothers.” Where are they now?Read more at thevaticanlobby.blogspot.com
 

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