HAARP Conspiracy Claims
The claim, popularised by Nick Begich's 1995 book Angels Don't Play This HAARP, that the facility can control weather, trigger earthquakes, or transmit mind-altering signals.
This is a knowledge-graph entry: what our data records about HAARP Conspiracy Claims and how it connects to the rest of the atlas. It does not have a full article of its own yet.
Connected to
How this topic links to the people, places, and ideas around it — drawn from our knowledge graph.
Theories & Explanations
HAARP Conspiracy Claims contradicts Ionospheric Research Explanation — Stanford ionospheric physicist Umran Inan describes the claims as based on a mismatch between HAARP's actual power output and the atmospheric layer it targets.
HAARP Conspiracy Claims is frequently compared to Chemtrail Claim — Both are secret atmospheric-manipulation claims built around a real government facility or document read far beyond what it actually establishes.
Organisations & Programmes
HAARP Conspiracy Claims is based on HAARP — The claims build on HAARP's real military and DARPA funding history and its historically limited public outreach.