The U.S. Government began a weather control project in the late 1940’s under the codename “Phoenix.” The information and technology for this came from Dr. Wilhelm Reich, an Austrian scientist who had studied with Freud and Carl Jung.

Reich was an extremely brilliant man but highly controversial. Although he experimented extensively and wrote many volumes, few of his critics have taken an honest look at all of his research because much of it is not available. Part of this can be attributed to the Food and Drug Administration who supervised a massive book burning of all his available materials and also destroyed much of his laboratory equipment.

Reich was known in part for his discovery of “orgoneenergy, which is orgasmic or life energy. His experiments revealed orgone energy to be distinctly different from ordinary electromagnetic energy. He was able to prove the existence of this energy in the laboratory. His findings were written up in various psychiatric and medical journals of the period. The discovery of a type of energy called “orgone” was not so controversial. It became very controversial with the powers at be when he reported curing cancer with his theories. He also associated “orgone” energy with “cosmic energy” and the Newtonian concept of “the ether”. None of these views won him support from conventional scientists of the 1940’s.

At the turn of the century, scientists had embraced the Newtonian “ether”. This is referred to a hypothetical invisible substance as a medium for light and radiant energy. Einstein, who embraced the theory in his early years, eventually determined that there could not be a calm ether sea through which matter moves. Not all physicists bought Einstein’s argument, but Reich didn’t disagree. He pointed out that Einstein disproved the concept of a static ether. Reich considered the ether to be wave-like in nature and not static at all.

Conventional scientists have since recognized the existence of phenomena that are a cross between particles and waves. They are sometimes referred to as “wavicles”. Common research has also shown that vacuum space contains complex properties that are dynamic in nature.

Although it is not my cause to take up the case of Reich, his concept of the ether has proven itself functional in my research. It does not matter whether we are actually referring to “wavicles” or even more esoteric phenomena when we talk about the ether. Is is the word that Reich used, and it is easier for me to use in describing this for the general public. The reader is invited to read up on Reich as his work is vast and encompasses much more than can be covered in the scope of this book.

For instance, he found practical uses for his theories such as modifying the weather. He found that violent storms accumulate “dead orgone”, which he termed “DOR.” Dead orgone refers to the accumulation of “dead energy” or energy that is on a descending spiral. Orgone and DOR were found to be present not only in biological organisms but in empty regions of the environment as well. An active and enthusiastic go-getter would be considered to have plenty of orgone energy, whereas a complaining hypochondriac who wanted to die would have DOR energy.

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For example, he found that the more DOR in the storm system, the more violent the storm. He experimented with many forms of DOR busting, and came up with a simple electromagnetic method to reduce the violence of storms. In the late 1940’s, Reich contacted the government and told them he had developed technology that could take the violence out of storms. Despite what disinformation you may hear, the government already knew what Reich could do and considered him a brilliant man. They asked for his prototypes and he was happy to oblige since he wasn’t interested in the mechanical development, just the research.

At this point, the government’s technology team merged Reich’s discoveries with their own weather monitors and produced what is known today as the “radiosonde.”
The government’s contribution to the radiosonde dates back to the “airborne metrograph
* of the 1920’s. This was a mechanical device that recorded temperature, humidity and pressure. It was sent up in a parachute balloon and recorded information on a paper tape. The balloon was designed to burst so that the parachute would bring the metrograph back to Earth. The public were encouraged to retrieve them for a $5 reward, which was considerably more money in those days. This was how the government obtained data on the weather.

* The word “metrograph” is more clearly defined if you understand that “metro” signifies that it was a meteorological device and that “graph” means to write.

As these devices were returned via the mail, the time that elapsed before the recorded information could be read was much too long.
In the late 1930’s, a new device was designed that was called a “radio metrograph.” This was similar to the airborne metrograph except that it contained electrical sensors. These sensors were connected to a transmitter that would transmit to a receiver on the ground.

The radio metrograph was the state-of-the-art weather device when Wilhelm Reich contacted the government in the late 1940’s. He gave them a little balsa wood package that could be sent up in a balloon. According to witnesses, approaching thunderstorms actually split up and went around the test sit on Long Island.

The government combined the technology of the radio metrographs with Reich’s DOR busting device and called it the “radiosonde.” It was developed until consistent effects on the weather could be reproduced.

By the 1950’s, radiosondes were being sent into the air en masse at a rate of about 200 per day.

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Since these radiosondes were sent up in balloons, they would not come down hard enough to self destruct upon impact. The public would find them, and it would be impossible to keep the actual units secret enough without arousing suspicion. They publicized the apparent purpose of recording weather data, which uniformed examination would back up.

The real purpose is not that obvious. If someone tuned into one of these packages, the signal would not appear unusual when normal radio equipment was used. So far so good!

They showed the public a data receiving station; set up to receive the inaccurate and unusuable data. A small production run of this receiving equipment was produced.
There were literally hundreds of these radiosondes in the air every day. With the radio range being limited to 100 miles, there should have been a “pile” of receivers known as radiosonde receptors and they should have been very common. As I am a surplus radio collector “nut”, it is quite strange that I have never seen a radiosonde receptor or the equipment that should accompany one. It is very unusual to have a data transmitter (in this case, the radiosonde) with no receiver to pick it up. This indicates that the Government didn’t use the receivers!

My next clue was to look at the specification sheet for the radiosonde tube which emphatically states that the life expectancy is only a few hours. Despite this, I have had a tube on the air for over 2,000 hours, and at this time have built over twenty such units with only one failure. This is a good industrial failure rate but is a major red flag. My only explanation is that if some local amateur radio operator finds or buys a radiosonde on the surplus market, he will read the data, get misled and not bother building a circuit that will run for a “only a few hours.” He will use another tube.

It appears that the Government does not want the public to use these tubes and find something unusual and thus blow their secret. This is why misinformation in the spec sheet preserves the secret. In fact, they are not telling a lie because the battery pack was designed so that the tube would burn out after three hours or so. This is caused by back bombardment of the cathode, which would cool slowly and then destruct.

By the time these radiosondes hit the ground, they were dead. This way the public, who were encouraged to return them, wouldn’t be able to pick up live units. If there was no secrecy involved here, why would the government design a battery to burn out a costly tube that would have to be replaced after a very short usage? More disinformation was accomplished by packing the sensors in sealed vials, which implies that upon exposure to the air, the sensors are short lived. Because of these precautions, the secret was maintained for over forty years, which is excellent security.

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Upon further examination of the radiosonde and its circuitry, I discovered that the temperature and humidity registers in the radiosonde didn’t work. Not any of them!
The temperature sensor was useless for recording the temperature, but it did have a function.** It acted as a DOR antenna while the humidity sensor acted as an orgone antenna. If DOR was sensed by the antenna, the transmitter would be broadcast out of phase and bust up the DOR and take the violence out of a storm. Conversely, transmitting in phase would cause the DOR to build up.

** For those technically oriented, the temperature sensor is essentially a thermistor; but instead of being carbon-based, it contains noble metals and exotic elements. It is a very poor temperature sensor because as the temperature cycles it up and down, the resistance curve changes and it doesn’t hold its calibration. The humidity sensor suffers from the same problem.

The humidity sensor had the same effect with orgone energy. Transmitting in phase would build up the orgone energy and transmitting out of phase would reduce it.

The radiosonde also contained a pressure element that would act as a switch signal and would maintain either DOR or orgone. This was how they built up the orgone energy.

The transmitter consisted of two oscillators. One was a carrier oscillator, which runs at 403 MHz. The other ran at 7 MHz and is a relaxation oscillator. This one would pulse on and off depending on what was encountered. Somehow, this monitored the etheric function of the radiosonde. I haven’t discovered everything there is to know about radiosonde, but I have done a scientific analysis of it.

What I have told you about the radiosonde is hard evidence that can stand up to scrutiny. It establishes the credibility of my story that there was a secret project that involved weather control. We can’t say exactly whether the radiosondes were used just to bust up violent storms, but the possibility was also there to build them up. The government abandoned the weather control aspect eventually. Changing weather, if it were proven in court, could lead to many lawsuits.

What is more intriguing than the weather aspect is the entire prospect of orgone and DOR energy and what could be done with that. In theory, this means that the government could have targeted communities, buildings or an entire populace and transmitted orgone or DOR energy. These type of activities have been reported in Russia for years. Not much press coverage has been given the U.S. effort in this regard, but there has been some activity. Whether it has been used harmfully or in war, I cannot answer, but the potential was there.

Forty years of development could also have made this a very refined technological device.

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