Missile barrier protecting every town 1959
The strategic missile defense in space that Ronald Reagan thought could be overwhelming. In order to go ahead of nuclear weapons in the 1980s, this was to intercept enemy missiles from artificial satellites with missiles and lasers.
A more spectacular anti-age barrier was predicted for a one-line comic book "Closer Than We Think" in 1959.
The research ultimately produces the star rocket will make a kind of protective wall appear in the sky to keep the enemy fighter away from the defensive position. This is why Eugen Sanger, a jet propulsion expert at the University of Stuttgart (Germany) testified in front of the parliamentary committee.
The photon beam flows from an ultraviolet illumination lamp and creates a high energy belt in the air. Flying objects passing through the belt are destroyed in a fraction of a second, even a few hundred miles apart.
Therefore technical advancement in aviation may ultimately eliminate aircraft as a tool of war
A single-line cartoon always painted a happy and brilliant future. However, in some cases, painted a distorted future. "Closer Than We Think" series began in 1958, but that was the year after the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1 in 1957. The purpose of the series was to educate children about science and technology. But while drawing the familiar technology, they grew bigger and beat the Soviet Union on the moon, the foundation for America to conquer the universe.
In addition to avoiding mentioning nuclear war directly, it is important that the United States uses the meteorological change program, the space base to conquer the world, the technology to evacuate every town in the emergency, and the UFO type of walking vehicle. It was structured to have longed for the future in which children were developed.
In retrospect, do you realize the photon line missile defense wall of the December 6 issue. The very least if the aircraft is no longer a war weapon, the future is bright.

