So, I heard several people now mention HAARP as the cause for all the natural disasters that have been happening lately. And here I thought the cause was rampant pollution and global warming!

But seriously, I’m looking at the HAARP page on wikipedia and it seems to be an array for studying the ionosphere? How in the hell do you go from “we’re using this to see what’s happening way up there in the sky” to “this causes tornadoes”? Who even started this garbage?

  • @bob_lemon@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    As far as I know, the “logic” is as follows:

    1. The ionosphere is very important for the weather
    2. HAARP is doing something with it
    3. Obviously not just studies, these antenna arrays use lasers or radiation to influence it directly.
    4. Pew pew
    5. Tornados
    • Sightline
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      1 year ago

      Nowadays blaming HAARP means they aren’t blaming Exxon. In the past I believe it was just conspiracy fodder.

      • zephyrvs
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        -71 year ago

        Two things can be true at the same time:

        • Government aligned capitalist profiteurs have been extracting value from the Earth for more than a century, causing massive damage to the ecosystem
        • Governments have some control over the weather (from 1965, National Science Foundation)

        I mean, just look at The Dimming and tell me that they’re all just stupid idiots who spent money and time on making a 2+ hour documentary, modifying planes to collect cloud samples, analyse and compare the results, etc? For what? Getting rich selling merchandise?

        Sure, I’m open to all of them being quacks but I’d really like to have some conclusive counter-evidence.

    • @Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago
      1. people die
      2. society collapses
      3. ???
      4. profit

      That’s the basic pattern for most conspiracies anyway. I’m still wondering how the conspiracy theorists expect billionaires will make even more money by cutting the human population to a tiny fraction of its current number. Well, I guess I’m just not smart enough to see the hidden truth or whatever.

      • amio
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        81 year ago

        Right? Billionaires have an obvious interest in the status quo - that’s why getting anything to ever change in ways that mildly inconvenience them is like pulling teeth.

        Like others have pointed out in the thread, though: if you’re expecting rationality from conspiracy theorists, you’ve already lost.

    • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      -21 year ago

      If those premises are true it seems to make sense.

      This is the sort of thing that with enough data we could determine experimentally whether that’s what’s happening.

  • @Nonameuser678@aussie.zone
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    711 year ago

    HAARP is an old school conspiracy theory. I haven’t heard someone bring this one up in years. It’s your classic government control the weather theory.

    • Carighan Maconar
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      331 year ago

      Back in the days we all laughed about it.

      Then it turns out, governments do control the weather! Through deforestation and shit.

    • @ours@lemmy.film
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      211 year ago

      Old enough to have an X-Files episode. Remember when wacky conspiracies where good old fun?

    • @onlooker@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      I had no idea this was old school. I thought this was a recent thing. Though, the book in @Strangle@lemmy.world’s comment was published in 1995, so I guess I just hadn’t noticed until now.

  • amio
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    481 year ago

    As conspiracy theory bullshit goes, this is a true classic - almost up there with the Moon landing. Some Infowars-regurgitating twat was spamming about HAARP on an IRC channel I was on like 15+ years ago.

    • @entertainmeonly@lemmy.ml
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      81 year ago

      Yes I remember haarp conspiracy as early as, I think, 98. It was from a friend’s mom who was into David Icky at the time. Definitely a classic older theory.

  • @Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Long story short, the HAARP nonsense has its origins in psychology. If you want the long version, check this article. It also answers how conspiratorial thinking in general works, not just the nut jobs spreading wild stories about HAARP.

    Because these delusions are based on defects of the mind, there’s no amount of facts that you can throw at this problem and expect it to be fixed that way. What wasn’t reasoned in, can’t be reasoned out of a broken mind like that. These people are in need therapy and support more than anything else.

    If podcasts, are more your thing, consider listening to You’re not so smart - episode 197 conspiratorial thinking. I think the part about the history of small and large conspiracies was particularly fascinating. Grand conspiracies are impossibly difficult to pull off, because there’s always a weak link somewhere which will make the whole thing collapse sooner or later. On the other hand, small conspiracies are a reality, and there have been numerous documented cases of those happening in real life.

    • @onlooker@lemmy.mlOP
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      201 year ago

      Because these delusions are based on defects of the mind, there’s no amount of facts that you can throw at this problem and expect it to be fixed that way. What wasn’t reasoned in, can’t be reasoned out of a broken mind like that.

      This hurts to read, but I have to agree. Especially because the person who first told me about HAARP has a freaking degree in psychology.

      • @Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz
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        221 year ago

        Well, I know someone with a PhD in chemistry, and he still believes the covid vaccine is designed to kill people, cause a global collapse and all that. The human mind just is never truly safe from this type of thinking.

        • Dr Cog
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          1 year ago

          A PhD doesn’t mean anything other than that you are a fast learner and are dedicated enough to work on a project for years. It doesn’t mean you are intelligent or even that you know everything in your field, however it does usually result in you being an expert in a very specific small corner of your field.

          I have a PhD

          • @Erk@cdda.social
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            51 year ago

            This is a very interesting case study in how confirmation bias can affect conspiratorial thinking, thank you.

          • @themarty27
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            21 year ago

            To add to @Erk@cddn.social, this is about the virus being designed ti kill, not the vaccine, andteven cites Pfizer’s director.

  • @MONKEYHOG@lemm.ee
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    211 year ago

    Because people are stupid. Stupid people believe stupid things. They don’t have logic, just stupidity.

  • Frater Mus
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    111 year ago

    How in the hell do you go from “we’re using this to see what’s happening way up there in the sky” to “this causes tornadoes”?

    a good starting point is The Paranoid Style in American Politics, by Richard Hofstadter

    • @postmeridiem@lemmy.antemeridiem.xyz
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      51 year ago

      Yeah blaming it for adverse weather is a pretty old thing, I haven’t actually seen anyone mention HAARP in a long time and was thinking about its absence the other day

  • Possibly the same as the 5G people. Due to the frequency used by HAARP, it can be received all around the world. (They published the times of planed transmissions, so if you have a shortwave radio, you can listen in)

  • @Diplomjodler@feddit.de
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    41 year ago

    But seriously, I’m looking at the HAARP page on wikipedia and it seems to be an array for studying the ionosphere?

    That’s just what they want you to think!

  • aaaaaaadjsf [he/him, comrade/them]
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    31 year ago

    That’s some old school before Qanon conspiracy brainworms. Made up by people who don’t understand basic science and think the earth is 6000 years old.

    I just hope they stick to that and don’t adopt the new conspiracies like Qanon to be honest.

  • @zeppo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    An eccentric friend told me recently we “hit Saturn with HAARP!” Or was it Jupiter? Not sure. But anyway, these theories have been around for quite some time. Someone else pointed out the ”Angels” book, which I haven’t read but recall hearing about a long time ago.

    • zephyrvs
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      -51 year ago

      Thanks so much attempting to bring at least some nuance into this discussion. But the cold hard truth is that no one really wants to know, because you’ll sleep a lot better if this is all just mumbojumbo.

      Unfortunately though, here is a research paper straight from a US government server that basically describes how it works in theory, with the following title:

      Weather as a Force Multiplier: Owning the Weather in 2025

      Scroll through the document. Read it. Then compare the technology to what’s being claimed about HAARP and other weather manipulation tech. I know there are insane people out there who’ll make the most insane claims but for every 100th nutjob there’s 1 person out there who actually read up on the stuff that’s available and often they’re a lot more hesitant on calling it all just a hoax.

      Unfortunately the truth is that people don’t care. Just look at the rhetoric used in these comments. Why would scientists come forward and risk being doxxed, ratted out to their employer as a lunatic conspiracy nut, claiming that is might be possible, even if just in theory?

      We had the mayor of Ankara in Turkey claiming that artificial earth quakes were used against Turkey way before 2023, though the USS Nitze docked in a Turkish port in the Black Sea just a couple of days before the February 6th earthquakes), right when Turkey was stalling for Sweden to join NATO. There’s videos out there of people filming bright blue-ish lights coming from a central source the night before the earthquakes happened.

      The longest time I thought this was all bullshit but the more I dug into it, the less I was able to convince myself that this is all just made up nonsense from idiots on the Internet. I’m not on the “it’s all HAARP!!” train but come on, let’s keep the discussion a bit more civil?

      • WeAreAllOne
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        -21 year ago

        Couldn’t have expressed my thoughts better. I couldn’t agree more!