Wow. You've been spouting CT-er rhetoric throughout the whole thread, and yet when you feel someone else is doing the same thing, you have to call them on it. Beautiful

.
Didn't I just explicitly tell you
not to write something this outlandish?
When the military develops something new, be it stealth technology, unmanned aerial vehicles, or advanced weaponry, it's kept under wraps. When the F-117 Nighthawk was under construction, did they just park them right out on the field at some air force base in a major city, so that everyone could see it when the base had an Open Day? Could someone involved in the project have started a webiste like B2SpiritTruth.com and posted pictures, blueprints, technical data and names of those involved there without retaliation from the military?
No.
Oh, and to answer your rhetorical question: what would it look like if there was a closed-in, heavily guarded military perimeter which happened to have communications towers within its enclosure? It would look like any other closed-in, heavily guarded military perimeter which happened to have communications towers within its enclosure.
Oh, and since you didn't really answer the question: We're looking at the strongest, more efficient super weapon in human history. Why is it so utterly undefended? Why are there tours to the site? Why can people just walk right in?
Why is the most powerful and effective weapon in human history utterly undefended? Oh, and
why isn't everyone else doing the same thing? It's not like only the United States has atomic bombs.
Righty. They could just flip a switch and cause Taliban's caves to crumble, but they'd rather do it "the old-fashioned way" with highly expensive bombers and munitions, risking men and machines when they could just have sat home and flipped a switch. But they
do use HAARP on the civilian populations of insignificant countries like Chile and Haiti, with whom they are not even at war.
Right. Silly me.