Green Bank, WV — previously thought to be a “safe” place for those who have become ill from exposure to wireless radiation and devices — is destined to be one of the world’s most powerful death traps for anyone within 50 miles of this demonic device.
Green Bank is an area that has no cell towers. This is because cell tower emissions would interfere with the ENORMOUS satellite/telescope (65 feet!) that is housed in the middle of the town. When I visited this area I absolutely did not feel well and don’t understand how people who have become ill from radiation exposure can feel healthy around this monstrosity.
According to Wikipedia:
The Green Bank Telescope operates at meter to millimeter wavelengths. Its 100-meter diameter collecting area, unblocked aperture, and good surface accuracy provide superb sensitivity across the telescope's full 0.1–116 GHz operating range. The GBT is fully steerable, and 85 percent of the local celestial hemisphere is accessible. It is used for astronomy about 6500 hours every year, with 2000–3000 hours per year going to high-frequency science… The high-sensitivity mapping capability of the GBT makes it a vital complement to the Atacama Large Millimeter Array, the Expanded Very Large Array, the Very Long Baseline Array, and other high-angular resolution interferometers.
In other words, the technological monstrosity at Green Bank is a massive component of the 5G, millimeter wave, frequency arsenal designed to destroy life on Earth and/or enslave whatever is still able to survive in the radiation soup. This hideous device may also be used to assist in the the mass kill event they are planning such as the one depicted in the movie “Cell”.
The article below came out in 2021 and describes the “new planetary radar” they have created. This would explain why the energy in Green Bank is so dark and why the people there all felt like spies to me.
The following article was quickly wiped from the net but can still be seen at this link: https://web.archive.org/web/20230926001243/https://greenbankobservatory.org/successful-test-paves-way-for-new-planetary-radar/
Successful Test Paves Way for New Planetary Radar
Posted by Jill Malusky

The National Science Foundation’s Green Bank Observatory (GBO) and National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), and Raytheon Intelligence & Space conducted a test in November to prove that a new radio telescope system can capture high-resolution images in near-Earth space.
GBO’s Green Bank Telescope (GBT) — the world’s largest fully steerable radio telescope — was outfitted with a new transmitter developed by Raytheon Intelligence & Space, allowing it to transmit a radar signal into space. The NRAO’s continent-wide Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) received the reflected signal and produced images of the Apollo 15 moon landing site.
The proof-of-concept test, culminating a two-year effort, paves the way for designing a more powerful transmitter for the telescope. More power will allow enhanced detection and imaging of small objects passing by the Earth, moons orbiting around other planets and other debris in the Solar System.
The technology was developed as part of a cooperative research and development agreement between NRAO, GBO, and Raytheon.
“This project opens a whole new range of capabilities for both NRAO and GBO,” said Tony Beasley, director of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory and vice president for Radio Astronomy at Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI). “We’ve participated before in important radar studies of the Solar System, but turning the GBT into a steerable planetary radar transmitter will greatly expand our ability to pursue intriguing new lines of research.”
Using the information collected with this latest test, the participants will finalize a plan to develop a 500-kilowatt, high-power radar system that can image objects in the Solar System with unprecedented detail and sensitivity. The increased performance also will allow astronomers to use radar signals as far away as the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, increasing our understanding of the Solar System.
“The planned system will be a leap forward in radar science, allowing access to never before seen features of the Solar System from right here on Earth,” said Karen O’Neil, the Green Bank Observatory site director.
“Raytheon’s radar techniques could ultimately improve our ability to explore the Solar System,” said Steven Wilkinson, Principal Engineering Fellow at Raytheon Intelligence & Space. “Working with the astronomy community allows us to apply decades of radar know-how to a project that provides high-resolution images of near-Earth objects.”
“We are excited to be partnering with Raytheon and applying their radar expertise to transform our observatories’ telescopes in new science areas,” said AUI President Adam Cohen.
The National Radio Astronomy Observatory and the Green Bank Observatory are facilities of the National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.
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Media Contacts:
Dave Finley, NRAO
ude.oarn@yelnifd
(505) 241-9210Jill Malusky, GBO
ude.oarn@yksulamj
(304) 460-5608
Amazing the $ spent on this. We are a nation in decline where the average person is having troubles purchasing groceries. The infrastructure is out of control with wireless. In 2013-14 HAARP was shut down in Alaska, just to reopen a few years later. Got chills down my spine when I was researching this. Here in CO, CSU-CU Boulder-University of Denver are all now working with HAARP. HAARP is now on most large college campuses...ugh. Then there is the 'VLF Research Group' via Stanford University and the University of Florida. VLF Research = HAARP. There is also the GIRO (Global Ionospheric Radio Network) out of MA = HAARP. This is a "HAARP GRID, not a smart grid." God only knows what is truly being done with this infrastructure. I knew 6 years ago that Green Bank WV was no longer the sanctuary that it once was. We are surrounded now. The WEF (World Economic Forum) is pushing mind control.
Thanks for the link!