Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 5:08 a.m. No.20048046   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8051 >>8118

>>20047821

>Owner of 'Jewish Space Laser' Hits Back at Marjorie Taylor Greene Claim it Started Cali Wildfire

 

>"Recklessly Speculated"

 

 

Owner of 'Jewish Space Laser' Hits Back at Marjorie Taylor Greene Claim it Started California Wildfire

News By TooFab Staff | 1/29/2021 10:47 AM PT

 

 

The satellite — which doesn't actually exist yet —cannot be weaponized, the company patiently explained.

 

Marjorie Taylor Greene has been trending all week over a range of colorful reasons, be it harassing school shooting survivors, calling for Democrats to be executed orjust plain old pushing QAnon.

 

But on Thursday another resurfaced gem threatened to eclipse them all: the Jewish Space Laser.

 

An (alas since-deleted) Facebook post from 2018 saw the Congresswoman theorize that the deadly Camp wildfire in California that killed 85 had been ignited by space solar generators firing the sun's energy back to Earth.

 

 

Governor Jerry Brown, the Vice-Chairman of Rothschild Inc, insider trading on PG&E stock, and the $77billion High Speed Rail project running through the exact same area were all involved, she claimed.

 

"I'm posting this in speculation because there are too many coincidences to ignore," she recklessly speculated at the time.

 

Laying out the supposed nefarious plot, she claimed several people had witnessed "what looked like lasers or blue beams of light causing the fires" — and they had pictures and videos to prove it.

acific Gas and Electric Company ultimately were found liable for the fires, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and were forced to file for bankruptcy. However, no evidence of space laser-ing was ever found.

 

Linking to an old Alternative-energy-news.info article about the theoretical space lasers, Greene explained: "The idea is clean energy to replace coal and oil."

 

"If they are beaming the suns energy back to Earth, I'm sure they wouldn't ever miss a transmitter receiving station right??!! I mean mistakes are never made when anything new is invented."

 

"What would it look like anyway? A laser beam or light beam coming down to Earth I guess. Could that cause a fire? Hmmm, I don't know. I hope not!"

 

She concluded the post with the boast "But what do I know? I just like to read a lot [shrug emoji]."

 

But, as Solaren — the company behind the supposed galactic weapon pointed out on Friday — the self-declared bibliophile clearly didn't read everything about the project.

 

For one, Solaren hasn't quite gotten to the launching satellites into space stage yet.

 

Secondly, the contract between Solaren and PG&E dissolved in 2015 — three years before the fires started — because they were never able to generate the financing for it.

 

Thirdly — as the article Greene referenced clearly stated — the theoretical satellites would convert the solar energy to radio waves before transmitting them to Earth… which are both harmless and invisible, thus making them the unlikely source of those blue laser beams, much less the cause of any fires.

 

Thanks to their newfound viral fame, the company was forced to explain that its satellites — which do not even exist yet — "cannot" be weaponized.

 

"Solaren uses a different technology than described in the Facebook post, as we do not transmit power via lasers," it patiently explained. "Solaren uses radio frequencies to transmit power from Earth Orbit to a Receiving Station on Earth. Radio frequencies are what cell phones, radios and satellites use to transmit their signals."

 

"The Facebook post infers that lasers or blue beams of light caused the fires to erupt. As Solaren Space Solar does not use lasers for power transmissions, the described light phenomena 'as seen by witnesses in 2018' nor the fires could ever have been caused by Solaren Solar Power Satellites either then or in the future."

 

Needless to say, ridicule followed:

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 5:11 a.m. No.20048051   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8118 >>8216

>>20048046

>the Vice-Chairman of Rothschild Inc

 

Rothschild-Owned PG&E to Declare Bankruptcy Following California Wildfires

Fact checked

January 14, 2019 Sean Adl-Tabatabai News, US 2

 

The Rothschild-owned PG&E Corp. is preparing to declare bankruptcy after a judge ruled it was responsible for last year’s California wildfires.

 

The San Fransisco-based energy company is planning to send redundancy notices to workers next week to fulfil a state law that requires the company to alert workers 15 days before a bankruptcy filing.

Bloomberg.com reports: PG&E declined to provide a statement, saying the company doesn’t comment on rumor or speculation.

A notice may signal that the company has accelerated plans to make a Chapter 11 filing as way of dealing with crippling liabilities from wildfires that tore through California in 2017 and 2018, killing over 100 people and destroying hundreds of thousands of acres. Investigators are probing whether PG&E’s equipment ignited the deadliest of the blazes. The company is facing as much as $30 billion in damages — a prospect that has wiped out two-thirds of PG&E’s market value, sent its bonds plummeting to record lows and prompted rating companies to downgrade PG&E’s debt to junk.

 

California passed legislation last year in the aftermath of the deadly Wine Country fires requiring utilities to post public notices for employees at least 15 days before a change of control, including a bankruptcy filing.

 

California Governor Gavin Newsom said during a press conference Thursday that his office would be making an announcement related to PG&E within the next few days and that the issue was at the top of his agenda. He said in a later interview that the announcement would involve appointments to the California Public Utilities Commission, the state’s grid operator and to a commission established by legislature to explore wildfire issues.

 

Newsom is “monitoring the situation very closely,” Nathan Click, a spokesman for his office, said Saturday.

 

PG&E’s deepening financial crisis has already spread to the companies that supply its natural gas and generate electricity for its customers. At least two small gas suppliers have restricted sales to PG&E out of concern that the company won’t be able to pay, people with direct knowledge of the situation said earlier this week. Some banks are taking a long look at a potential $2 billion debt financing for the Geysers, the world’s largest geothermal complex, because it supplies the utility, people familiar with the matter also said this week.

 

On Thursday, S&P Global Ratings cut the credit rating of Berkshire Hathaway Energy’s 550-megawatt Topaz Solar Farms to junk, noting that the plant counts on PG&E for all of its revenue.

 

People familiar with PG&E’s situation said last week that the company is considering filing for bankruptcy within weeks.

 

https://thepeoplesvoice.tv/rothschild-pge-declare-bankruptcy-california-wildfires/

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 5:43 a.m. No.20048118   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8150 >>8159 >>8216 >>8236 >>8451

>>20047813

>>20047814

>>20047818

>PG&E Space Lazers Patent

>CALL TO DIG

 

>>20047821

>>20048046

>>20048051

>Rothschild-Owned PG&E to Declare Bankruptcy Following California Wildfires

 

From the patent. The same technology that was literally called a 'Death Star Super Weapon' in the patent was the same or similar technology that Rothschild Owned PG&E signed up for to begin using in 2016

 

 

Dispersed space based laser weapon

Abstract

A dozen or more orbiting solar generators stay in constant touch. They can be congregated rapidly in space at any desired secret location. Once congregated they all focus their energy to a death star.This death staris a newly launched ICBM with a microwave or laser collector. A laser generator uses this huge energy to project a non-nuclear death ray to a target. The target could be a city, a ship or a satellite. In the event of an asteroid approaching earth, this system could destroy an asteroid. In peacetime the orbiting solar generators supply electric power to an earth based power grid.

 

 

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Death star super weaponshave been designed but not implemented. One key reason is the vulnerability of a giant orbiting weapon from ICBM's and/or killer satellites and/or space based nuclear explosions.

The present invention eliminates that vulnerability. Many dozen small orbiting solar generators (cells) are launched so that each cell continuously generates solar energy as exemplified in the international space station. Each cell communicates not only with earth control stations, but with each other. Each cell has an onboard processor that continuously calculates how the group of cells could quickly organize into a small area and focus their energy to onedeath star.

 

The beam of microwave energy would measure a mile or two across and would pass through the atmosphere easily. Some energy would be lost, although exactly how much is not yet know, and skeptics could raise disaster ridden questions: What if the beam strays? Could birds or humans be harmed? Would the beam affect weather or cause other changes to the environment?

Dr. James Logan, former chief of medical operations at NASA's Johnson Space Center, has studied these issues and has answers to many of the questions: If the beam strayed, for example, it could be defocused. If birds passed through the beam, they would feel some warmth, but microwave radiation is nonionizing and cannot make a charged particle that would damage DNA or biomolecules.

Signing Up

Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (PG&E) of San Francisco recently signed a supply agreement with Solaren Corp. of Manhattan Beach, Calf., for 200 MW of electricity generated in space and transmitted by microwave beam to a receiving station in Fresno County, Calif. The contract calls for the power to begin to flow in 2016.

In an interview posted on PG&E's Next 100 Web site, Solaren CEO Gary Spimak said he is confident that, by using proven technology and designs, and through extensive testing, the company will be able to deliver on the contract.

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 5:50 a.m. No.20048136   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20047813

 

looks like the same but under a different number

 

US9346563B1

United States

Download PDF

Find Prior Art

Similar

 

Inventor:

Rick Martin

 

Worldwide applications

2013 US 2014 US 2015 US US

 

https://archive.ph/ZS3Ei#selection-3655.0-3659.13

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 5:59 a.m. No.20048150   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8159 >>8216 >>8236

>>20048118

 

8 December 2009

California Approves Space-Based Solar Satellite Project

Share

 

The California Public Utilities Commission has approved a power project that could see solar energy beamed to Earth from space, in an effort to meet the state’s aggressive renewable energy goals.

 

Under the agreement, California’s utility company Pacific Gas & Electric will buy 1,700GWh of electricity a year for 15 years from Solaren for its space-based solar arrays, the first of its kind in the world, with a generating capacity of 200MW.

 

Expected to start operation in June 2016, the space-based solar project will generate renewable energy round the clock, something that is not achievable by land-based solar or wind power.

 

To generate electricity, which will be transmitted as microwaves to a ground receiver station in Fresno County, California, Solaren will use satellites equipped with solar photovoltaic panels and mirrors.

 

Solaren engineers have designed a lightweight system around a Mylar mirror, 1km in diameter to concentrate light onto the solar panels and squeeze more electricity from them.

 

>https://www.aerospace-technology.com/uncategorised/news72114-html/

 

Jul 1, 2009

PG&E Makes a Deal for Space-Based Power

Just as reports emerged earlier this year that NASA had abandoned, for lack of financial resources, its research into space-based solar power that would be harnessed via orbiting solar arrays beaming microwaves to earthly receivers (Figure 7), California’s Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (PG&E) wrote the California Public Utilities Commission (PUC) requesting its approval of a power purchase agreement from a similar technology.

 

  1. Reaching for the stars. Pacific Gas & Electric asked the California Public Utilities Commission this April to approve a 200-MW baseload power purchase agreement it made with Solaren for space-based solar power. Solaren’s technology proposes to collect solar energy via a satellite in space, convert it into radio waves, and beam it to Earth. The idea is not new: The Department of Defense and NASA have been studying it for years. Both have said at some point that it is not economically feasible. Source: NASA

The utility requested that the PUC consider the 200 MW of power purchased from Solaren’s new space solar power project, anticipated for completion by 2016, as eligible for its Renewables Portfolio Standard (RPS). It said Solaren’s "breakthrough technology" could provide baseload power from a space-based technology that collects solar energy as it travels in a geosynchronous orbit. The energy would then be converted into radio frequency power via a high-efficiency generator such as a magnetron or solid state power amplifier, and then be transmitted from the satellite’s antenna to a receiving station in Fresno County, Calif. The primary obstacle would be the "engineering challenge" — not the technology — of building the space-based plant and the space solar power (SSP) satellites, which are much larger than current kW-class communications satellites.

The only fuel-type hindrances the project would experience are brief blockages of sunlight (from a few minutes to an hour around midnight) on its solar arrays by Earth during the spring and fall equinox periods, PG&E told the PUC.

It also said the technology was fairly mature, owing to 40 years of research in the U.S. by NASA and the Deapartment of Defense. "Space solar technology is based on components that are in use today or being developed for use with satellite communications, radar systems, and other applications," the utility wrote. "Consistent with its designation as an emerging technology, these components must be engineered, tested, manufactured and integrated into large-scale SSP satellite and ground system architectures."

The only aspect that PG&E did not chronicle in its letter to the state regulator were the costs involved, though it noted that the RPS statute required utilities to procure the "least cost, best fit" eligible renewable resources.

So how much could space power cost, and has it become more economically feasible since NASA first studied it in the 1970s? NASA had then estimated it would cost $300 billion to $1 trillion to deliver the first kilowatt-hours to the ground. In 2007, when the Pentagon laid out a roadmap for a 10-MW space-based power demonstration, it suggested the project could be tested as soon as 2012. It concluded that significant technological progress had been achieved, making the approach more straightforward — but it would cost up to $10 billion, it said.

>https://archive.ph/aMbOx

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 6:03 a.m. No.20048159   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8164 >>8187 >>8205 >>8216 >>8236 >>8451

>>20047813

>>20048118

>>20048150

Wired Article from2008

 

Loretta Hidalgo Whitesides

Science

Sep 12, 2008 2:31 PM

Researchers Beam 'Space' Solar Power in Hawaii

The key to our energy future may be in space. A new long-range energy transmission experiment opens the possibility of sending solar energy from space to earth. Former NASA executive and physicist John Mankins captured solar energy from a mountain top in Maui and beamed it 92 miles to the main island of Hawaii. Tonight […]

 

The key to our energy future may be in space. A new long-range energy transmission experiment opens the possibility of sending solar energy from space to earth.

 

Former NASA executive and physicist John Mankins captured solar energy from a mountain top in Maui and beamed it 92 miles to the main island of Hawaii.

 

Tonight at 10 pm Discovery Channel will air an episode of Project Earth on the recent first-of-its-kind experiment. This long range demonstration of wireless power transmission was also a key step toward space-based solar power satellites. The team also beamed the power almost 100 times farther than NASA's major 1970's power transmission in the Mojave Desert in California.

 

Although the amount of power sent, 20 watts, is barely enough to power a small compact fluorescent light bulb, and most of it was lost in transmission, the system was limited by the budget not the physics. If they had been able to afford more solar panels, more phased array transmitters and a better receivers (the one they had could only receive in the horizontal direction), Mankins claims they could do much better– possibly up to 64% efficiency.

 

The Discovery Channel-sponsored experiment was executed with the support of scientists in Japan, Texas and California and showed that real progress could be made toward space-based solar power satellites in less than 5 months with less than $1 million. Their concept also uses mirrors to focus as much solar power as possible on the solar cells. The Discovery Channel's teaser boasts that they were able to get five times more electricity than conventional solar cells.

 

The high winds, high altitude helicopter monitoring, and the need to pack up the whole rig every night to honor the sacred ground on Haleakala will probably make for some great TV tonight.

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 6:04 a.m. No.20048164   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8187

>>20048159

>Researchers Beam 'Space' Solar Power in Hawaii

 

 

More exciting than the drama though is the implication for our energy future. The 120 gigawatts of solar power hitting the planet every second is more than all of human kind has used since the dawn of the industrial era. In space, you can tap into that without having to worry about losses in efficiency from the atmosphere, clouds or night. The space program seems like it could lead to a very tangible benefit, as tangible as global communications satellites and weather tracking satellites were to the previous generation. Image what living on the gulf coast would be like without our armada of weather satellites.

 

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"We need a short, mid and long range plan for energy," said Former Florida Congressman Paul Rancatore at a press conference this morning. Lately you've heard a lot of people talk about drilling, he added, "Don’t be focused on drilling down, focus on drilling up."

 

Mankins says we can get a demonstration system in orbit in 6-7 years and could have a full scale operation system up in 10-15 years. It has the ring of being part of an, "Apollo-like program for energy." Most interestingly, the satellites could be very small and would work by being bundled together allowing economies of scale that we have not yet seen in space. U.S. factories could manufacture lots of identical satellite units and maybe even become a "net exporter of energy," claimed National Space Society Senior Vice President Mark Hopkins.

 

When asked if he thought the future would be all space based solar power Mankins reasonably answered, "No, I think we need to maintain a portfolio of energy options. Using wind and other renewables in combination with space based solar power."

 

Discovery Project Earth: Orbital Solar Power [Discovery Channel]

Space Solar Power [NSS]

 

See Also:

 

Tiny Country Offers to Be Space Solar Power Satellite Testbed

Report: Space-Based Solar Power Could Slow Climate Change, Ease Oil Dependence

Richard Branson Shares Eco-Vision of IT in Space

Military Target: Solar-Beaming Sats

Pentagon Dreamer's Sun-Beaming Sats

 

Image Courtesy Managed Energy Technologies and National Space Society

 

>https://www.wired.com/2008/09/visionary-beams/

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 6:15 a.m. No.20048187   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20048159

>Wired Article from2008

>>20048164

Loretta Hidalgo Whitesides

Science

Dec 28, 2007 6:44 PM

Tiny Country Offers to Be Space Solar Power Satellite Testbed

At the climate change meetings in Bali, the small western Pacific island nation ofPalau offered to be a testbed for space based solar power. Although the price of space based solar power is still prohibitively high for general use, there may be special cases where its unique ability to deliver energy directly to where […]

 

Ssp

At the climate change meetings in Bali, the small western Pacific island nation of Palau offered to be a testbed for space based solar power.

 

Although the price of space based solar power is still prohibitively high for general use, there may be special cases where its unique ability to deliver energy directly to where its needed with zero carbon emissions could be quite appealing. One such niche markets may well be this island nation. According to the Associated Press article, Palau president Tommy Remengesau Jr. is interested.

 

An entrepreneur, Kevin Reed, is proposing a very small demonstration satellite in low earth orbit that would be able to beam enough power down as it passes over every day to power 1,000 homes. The beam would at first be sent to a power station on one of Palau's uninhabited islands and provide direct current that could be used to charge batteries. He is currently looking for the $800 million he would need to fully fund the project.

 

Space based solar energy has long interested NASA and others in the space community because solar energy is eight times stronger in space then it is after it has passed through the atmosphere. Although it is not the silver bullet for climate, it is hard to imagine that we won't eventually utilize space based solar power, especially as the price of launching things into space comes down.

 

Larger systems could be placed in geosynchronous orbit that stay over a single point on Earth continuously and beam down 5 gigawatts of power (as the AP article puts it, "twice the output of the Hoover Dam"). The power would be converted to microwaves for beaming down to Earth. The beams would be "no more powerful than the energy emanating from a microwave oven's door."

 

Space based solar power also got a boost this fall from a new 75-page study by the Pentagon's National Security Space Office which was investigating space based solar power as a potential new source of power for global US military operations. If they could convince the Pentagon of its utility, space based solar power may get an even larger "demonstration project."

 

The article continues:

 

"The climate change implications are pretty clear. You can get basically unlimited carbon-free power from this," said Mark Hopkins, senior vice president of the National Space Society in Washington.

 

"You just have to find a way to make it cost-effective."

 

Advocates say this is an imperative to develop lower cost launch vehicles. They see this as "drilling up" instead of "drilling down" for energy.

 

I appreciated that the U.N.'s climate change expert even took the long view.

 

To Robert N. Schock, an expert on future energy with the U.N.'s

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, space power doesn't look like science fiction.

 

The panel's 2007 reports didn't address space power's potential, Schock explained, because his team's time horizon didn't extend beyond 2030. But, he said, "I wouldn't be surprised at the beginning of the next century to see significant power utilized on Earth from space — and maybe sooner."

 

This may be another great place where space exploration and environmentalism can merge.

 

'Drilling Up' Into Space for Energy [Associated Press]

 

See Also:

 

Report: Space-Based Solar Power Could Slow Climate Change, Ease Oil Dependence

 

Image: ©Mafic Studios, Inc.

Anonymous ID: 16ecb2 Dec. 9, 2023, 6:21 a.m. No.20048205   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8219 >>8451

>>20047813

>>20047821

 

>>20048159

>Researchers Beam 'Space' Solar Power in Hawaii

 

Solar photovoltaic

See also: Solar power in Hawaii

Name Location Coordinates Capacity

(MWAC) Year

Opened Refs

Aloha Solar Energy Fund 1 PK1 Honolulu County 21°24′25″N 158°09′05″W 5.0 2017

EE Waianae Solar Project Honolulu County 21°27′07″N 158°11′16″W 27.6 2017

Kalaeloa Renewable Energy Park Honolulu County 21°19′41″N 158°02′24″W 5.0 2014

Kalaeloa Solar Two Honolulu County 21°19′12″N 158°05′13″W 5.0 2012

Kapaa Photovoltaic Project Kauai County 22°04′49″N 159°19′54″W 1.0 2010

Kapolei Solar Energy Park Honolulu County 21°19′16″N 158°07′03″W 1.0 2012

Kawailoa Solar Honolulu County 21°37′26″N 158°03′18″W 49 2019

Kekaha Solar Kauai County 22°00′02″N 159°45′44″W 14 2019

Kihei Solar FarmMaui County20°47′37″N 156°26′02″W 2.9 2018

KIUC Kapaia PV Kauai County 21°59′50″N 159°22′45″W 13 2017 [18]

KRS I Anahola Solar Hybrid Kauai County 22°07′54″N 159°18′11″W 12 2015 [19]

KRS II Koloa Solar Kauai County 21°54′03″N 159°27′00″W 12 2014

Ku'ia SolarMaui County 20°53′10″N 156°39′28″W 2.9 2018

Lanai Solar-Electric PlantMaui County20°46′00″N 156°55′24″W 1.2 2008

Lanikuhana Solar LLC Honolulu County 21°25′43″N 158°01′25″W 14.7 2019

Lawai Solar Hybrid Kauai County 21°54′30″N 159°29′31″W 20 2018 [20]

Pearl City Peninsula Solar Park Honolulu County 21°22′32″N 157°58′05″W 1.0 2012

Port Allen Solar Kauai County 21°54′07″N 159°34′54″W 6.0 2012

Waikoloa Solar + Storage Hawaii County 30 2023 [21][22]

Waihonu North Solar Honolulu County 21°28′14″N 158°00′48″W 5.0 2016

Waihonu South Solar Honolulu County 21°28′08″N 158°00′59″W 1.5 2016

Waipio Solar Honolulu County 21°27′22″N 157°58′55″W 49.9 2019

Waiawa Solar Honolulu County 36 2023

West Loch Solar One Honolulu County 21°20′25″N 158°00′54″W 20 2019

 

> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_power_stations_in_Hawaii