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'Ray Gun' a Lethal Weapon, Says Former OSI Agent
By Sharon Weinberger EmailApril 03, 2008 | 3:09:00 PMCategories: Lasers and Ray Guns, Less-lethal, Shhh!!!
Staregoats "Dead animals can't speak," says Dave Gaubatz, a former OSI agent, who worked on security for the Active Denial System at Kirtland Air Force Base. Gaubatz saw he saw clear evidence that the Air Force was testing lethal effects related to microwave weapons, including the Active Denial System.
The Active Denial System, of course, is the military's nonlethal "pain ray" that uses millimeter waves to heat the top layer of skin to create an intense burning sensation.
In an interview with FrontPage, Gaubatz says he saw "truck loads of animals were being brought in during the middle of the night."
Dead animals can’t speak, but if a goat or 500 pound cow can be killed almost instantly with the Ray Gun, then I believe most readers can safely assume a 175 pound man or woman could also die instantly from the intense heat.
Don't believe that Gaubatz was really in a position to see these things? Well, he's got proof that he was there.
Gaubatz' more controversial claim is that the Active Denial System is really designed as a lethal weapon. That would mean all the testing and legal review related to its deployment is a cover-up. But that's not to say Gaubatz is wrong about what he saw, however. I don't think it's much of a stretch to believe that the Air Force conducts testing on animals related to lethal effects of potential microwave weapons.
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The Active Denial System, of course, is the military's nonlethal "pain ray" that uses millimeter waves to heat the top layer of skin to create an intense burning sensation.
In an interview with FrontPage, Gaubatz says he saw "truck loads of animals were being brought in during the middle of the night."
Dead animals can’t speak, but if a goat or 500 pound cow can be killed almost instantly with the Ray Gun, then I believe most readers can safely assume a 175 pound man or woman could also die instantly from the intense heat.
Don't believe that Gaubatz was really in a position to see these things? Well, he's got proof that he was there.
Gaubatz' more controversial claim is that the Active Denial System is really designed as a lethal weapon. That would mean all the testing and legal review related to its deployment is a cover-up. But that's not to say Gaubatz is wrong about what he saw, however. I don't think it's much of a stretch to believe that the Air Force conducts testing on animals related to lethal effects of potential microwave weapons.">
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