This wasn't speculation.
This wasn't a theory.
This was a Raytheon press release openly stating that a directed-energy system had been designed, developed, fabricated, and delivered for military use.
The article
describes the system as a millimeter wave energy beam designed to stop, delay, deter, and turn back an adversary.
It also says the system was intended to provide forces in complex urban environments with a “speed of light” non-lethal capability.
Read that again.
A speed-of-light directed-energy
system.
In 2005.
This matters because today, people reporting Havana Syndrome/AHI-related experiences, pressure sensations, burning, pulsing, neurological effects, ringing in the ears, sleep disruption, and other unexplained frequency-related experiences are still being mocked, dismissed, or told these technologies do not exist.
But the public record says otherwise.
Raytheon was publicly discussing directed-energy systems over 20 years ago.
Government agencies have investigated Havana Syndrome and AHI.
The Epstein files reference neurotechnology, behavioral influence, directed-energy capabilities, and advanced weapons
research.
We're not here to exaggerate.
We're here to document.
We're here to preserve the record.
We're here to ask why technologies that have been publicly acknowledged for decades are still treated like fantasy when civilians report experiences that sound similar to what
government personnel have reported.
This is why documentation matters.
This is why independent review matters.
This is why people need to understand that directed-energy technology is not new.
It's been in the public record for years.
You can also view this document in our documents section
here.
Stay aware,