Scientific Research Balloon Hysteria is U.S. SNAFU



Since Chinese scientists and astronauts went to the dark side of the moon on 3 January 2019, the country’s top scientists have been energetically using high altitude research balloons for studying magnetotactic bacteria which likely survives on Mars, Venus and maybe on the dark side of the moon, plus on Earth in the extreme tropospheric environment at above 75,000 feet ASL.

Many large scientific research balloons with massive antenna for locating and tracking sources of magnetic radiation like that from extremely resilient magnetotactic bacteria—impervious to even UV-C—which synthesizes iron oxide nanoparticles called magnetosomes. The bacteria are covered with biological material. They navigate the Earth in the stratosphere using Earth’s magnetic lines of energy.

These particles are being studied in China for possible cancer research and fighting cancer. They are also seen as a needed component for interplanetary space research according to University students in Beijing interviewed for this article.

America hysterical over antenna that tracked magnetisomes

U.S. Navy Photograph. The U.S. Navy says it has recovered debris from a Chinese science research balloon shot down with a war missile after it went off course.

China Scientific Research Balloon


Desperate for a war with China in the hope of destroying America’s primary global trade competitor, the USA hopes to fight from military bases in the Philippines and not from USA territory.


Meanwhile Chinese officials say balloon-borne experiments in Earth’s near space designed by Chinese scientists are paving the way for better extraterrestrial life research according to Xinhua.

Researchers have speculated that the biological mineralization within the bacterial cells they are researching in the troposphere with scientific research balloons can be one of the bacterial survival strategies on Mars.

“The balloon-borne platform may be used as an in-situ life probe in Venus’ atmosphere in the future,” according to a Chinese university study.

US Navy Balloon for war purposes

America uses balloons for military purposes in the South China Sea against China but China uses satellites not balloons to spy on America, says University professor. Here sailors deploy an aluminum sphere attached to a helium balloon used for AN/SPY-1A radar external calibration aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Gonzalez (DDG 66). Gonzalez was underway conducting composite training unit exercise (COMPTUEX) with Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 12. – U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Maria I. Alvarez


Magnetotactic bacteria endogenously produce magnetic nanocrystals enabling them to orient and navigate along geomagnetic fields which is what China’s scientific researchers have been studying from high troposphere and low stratosphere balloons carring equipment that can find the swarms of magnetotactic bacteria in the stratosphere and study the movements in the upper winds aloft.

 

 

America has expressed a keen interest in new wars since the inauguration of Joe Biden and the haphazard American retreat from Afghanistan—a war that America bitterly lost to the Taliban leaving Afghan women in a shameful state. The loss in revenue for the military industrial complex is also driving the vigorous appeal for more war. China is the current target as America scrambles to build a dozen or more bases in the Philippines including Subic Bay.

Read: USA Military eyes Philippines Itbayat Island very near Taiwan

American bases in Philippines under close surveillance by China

The aircraft carrier USS Nimitz

The aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68) transits through the South China Sea. Nimitz is in U.S. 7th Fleet conducting routine operations. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and operates with Allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Hannah Kantner Photo is cropped:
Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective-Magazine