We all have heard of the terrible devastation in North Carolina following Hurricane Helene. Ginger Breggin did a great summary of background information regarding the lack of emergency support and the devastation in the area.
There certainly is reason to suspect that weather warfare was involved and that the attack on this mining area was not without reason. See this short alert by Dane Wigington regarding the pulsed radar that can steer the air masses to specific target areas.
I have previously discussed that we no longer have any natural weather. Dane explains this excellently on my show – as well as the relationship of electrically conductive nanoparticles and polymers creating devastating effects for our biosphere and health.
There is another important dimension to this weather warfare event:
Devastation from Hurricane Helene could bring semiconductor chip making to a halt
Tucked in the Blue Ridge Mountains on the outskirts of Spruce Pine, a town of less than 2,200, are two mines that produce the world’s purest quartz, which formed in the area some 380 million years ago. The material is a key component in the global supply chain for semiconductor chips, which power everything from smartphones and cars to medical devices and solar panels.
Sibelco and The Quartz Corp, the companies that separately manage the two mines, say they shut down operations on September 26 ahead of the storm and are working to restart.
Quartz is an essential ingredient in the semiconductor manufacturing process. And its purity is crucial to avoid damaging the chips.
“You’re building these incredibly complicated chips that have, in some cases, 100 billion transistors, 100 billion tiny little machines, on a chip that is the size of your thumbnail … One atom being out of place could mean a defect that breaks the chip,” said Gregory Allen, director of the Wadhwani Center for AI and Advanced Technologies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
And while quartz is abundant around the world, the kind of ultra-high-purity quartz mined in Spruce Pine is not. The Spruce Pine mines provide an estimated 80% to 90% of the world’s high-purity quartz — experts say the exact amount is proprietary and unknown — supplying semiconductor manufacturers like chipmaking giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company.
The question is has the potential semiconductor shortage another reason – since recent science indicates that the human body acts as a semiconductor?
In 2023 an article was published discussing the Heme molecule of human blood as a semiconductor. I have written in my book Light Medicine – A New Paradigm – The Science of Light, Spirit and Longevity about the possibility to enhance the coherent energy storage in the physical body by converting light energy from melanin to increase energy storage of the whole organism that can be used for biological work. The authors discuss the same but specifically refer to the human being as a semiconductor and heme molecules of the blood as a semiconductor.
