Steven Greer points out that technology restrictions are still going strong and asks our help to agitate for its end. The Federation of American Scientists has recently published an article bringing the issue of “national-security” restrictions to the center stage of science.
Undoubtedly disclosure will be the signal for everyone to come clean and stop blocking the technology which the galactics have shared with us and which they will tell all of society about, I’m sure.
Important News: Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists has published an extremely important article titled Invention Secrecy Still Going Strong. It comes from a mainstream organization and corroborates information The Orion Project has presented.
We are constantly asked, “If better energy systems exist, why are they not available for public use?” This article addresses one reason: The systematic suppression of energy inventions by abusing the national security provisions of U.S. law. This means that thousands of inventions have been suppressed- and more than that number through national security orders not issued via the patent process. This is why the Orion Project has a specific strategy to develop and bring out to the public such energy inventions: One that stands up to these abuses. With your help we can do it!
Invention Secrecy Still Going Strong
October 21st, 2010 by Steven Aftergood
https://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/2010/10/invention_secrecy_2010.html
There were 5,135 inventions that were under secrecy orders at the end of Fiscal Year 2010, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office told Secrecy News last week. It’s a 1% rise over the year before, and the highest total in more than a decade.
Under the Invention Secrecy Act of 1951, patent applications on new inventions can be subject to secrecy orders restricting their publication if government agencies believe that disclosure would be “detrimental to the national security.”
The current list of technology areas that is used to screen patent applications for possible restriction under the Invention Secrecy Act is not publicly available and has been denied under the Freedom of Information Act. (An appeal is pending.) But a previous list dated 1971 and obtained by researcher Michael Ravnitzky is available here (pdf).
Most of the listed technology areas are closely related to military applications. But some of them range more widely.
Thus, the 1971 list indicates that patents for solar photovoltaic generators were subject to review and possible restriction if the photovoltaics were more than 20% efficient. Energy conversion systems were likewise subject to review and possible restriction if they offered conversion efficiencies “in excess of 70-80%.”
One may fairly ask if disclosure of such technologies could really have been “detrimental to the national security,” or whether the opposite would be closer to the truth. One may further ask what comparable advances in technology may be subject to restriction and non-disclosure today. But no answers are forthcoming, and the invention secrecy system persists with no discernible external review.