New Electrics Woo - Explorers' Guide to SciFi World
electrics TMs Privacy Phone DIY Bio other TMs
electrics TMs Privacy Phone DIY Bio other TMs
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Hello humans. | |
Hello humans. | |
There we go. | |
Nice new hat. | |
The other one's got to be washed. | |
This is the 13th of December. | |
This is the new electrics woo. | |
Sort of a report update telling you some new stuff going on. | |
That kind of thing. | |
Very cold. | |
We're going to go through this fairly quick. | |
So some housekeeping stuff is that people are taking my bit shoot videos and uploading them on YouTube, and YouTube lets them upload them but won't allow me to post, right? | |
Some people with minimal channel subscription levels are taking my videos and uploading them to YouTube. | |
And they get strikes. | |
But a couple of uh individuals are able to upload them and uh with impunity. | |
So YouTube likes them. | |
The algorithm likes them for some reason. | |
Anyway, so that's not particularly fair. | |
And I just want to make sure that in uh that I'm gonna try and follow a new uh protocol here and say things like, you know, uh vaccines cause illness, uh don't ever take a vaccine, humans do badly with vaccines, and you know, Joe Biden and the Democrats stole the election, sprinkled that kind of stuff throughout these videos, such that they would have to do extensive editing to try and get them through YouTube. | |
And um, and we'll see how that goes. | |
Alright, so that's that's one point. | |
Uh my Twitter accounts back, and I'm gonna burn that. | |
I'm just gonna do all everything that they say you don't shouldn't do until they until they destroy it or drop it off. | |
Um Twitter itself is dying, just no point in continuing with it. | |
I'm just doing everything on BitChute and um Telegram at the moment. | |
I have a gab account, uh, I have a Gitter account, I have a Rumble account. | |
Rumble is spotty as to whether or not I can get a video to upload uh just based on our bandwidth and stuff. | |
Um the getter account and the uh gab account. | |
I'm still looking for some kind of a third-party software uh such that I can just do one post and have it go to Telegram, have it go to uh get her, have it go over to Gab. | |
Uh there used to be uh there were there are third-party software that you can use to run Twitter that way. | |
Say if you have multiple Twitter accounts, if you're a social manager for uh, you know, media types or somebody, uh you can manage multiple accounts through a single um interface. | |
I'm just looking for that for the other social media while I'm waiting for the new uh platform to come online from Trump uh at all. | |
Okay, so this is the new electrics. | |
Um the data sets going all the way back to like 1997 had this concept that uh humans were gonna change their relationship to electricity. | |
It was a difficult concept to get across to me. | |
It took from 1997 to maybe 2003 before it finally gelled as to what the the data was presenting. | |
So uh the presentation for the new electrics basically led into sci-fi world. | |
It's a big temporal marker. | |
Uh it has in it descriptions of things like um uh new ways in which electricity is used by humans in an I mean like novel, not like a new kind of a blender or a new electric razor or something, but rather an entirely different approach to um the use of electricity here in the materium. | |
And we're seeing those things now, and this is why I'm bringing this up. | |
I've had a personal temporal marker, uh, regardless of how that particular thing works out. | |
I'll get into that in a minute. | |
It is still a temporal marker that it occurred, that this particular um circumstances presented itself. | |
And we've had other temporal markers in the uh new electric set. | |
So the new electrics were bounded or or uh conjunct, so we had one set that was new electrics. | |
And then we had this this other set that was DIY bio. | |
Okay, and the DIY bio contained in it uh data sets about kids in Asia, all the way from India all the way up into China and down into Malaysia and stuff, more so than uh the Western nations, but kids in Asia moving into do-it-yourself biology stuff, | |
like um uh all different kinds of stuff, like uh uh crafting new drugs, I mean kids, like you know, high school kids, that because we tumbled to a new understanding of things, and I think we've already got that, right? | |
And I'll explain in a second. | |
Um so these two sets were concurrent, and they grew uh in the into the future from as I say 1997 for the new electrics, DIY bio, I think came in in like 2004, 2005, and then thereafter they grew apace, continued to grow a pace. | |
And this was pointing to uh um in a loose way, kind of like a um uh uh a revolution in uh do-it-yourself biology, not creating new critters, uh, but uh working and getting new properties into biological things. | |
Okay, it's it's difficult to describe. | |
I I can't go into the whole uh morass of it. | |
You can go read some of the reports. | |
Uh they're on uh Beyond Mystic Umite. | |
Uh I'll and we've got links for them. | |
I'll stick those up too. | |
Anyway, the uh do-it-yourself biology stuff has an interface, has a uh a subset that is in both of these, right? | |
And the curiously, but now I understand why. | |
The do-it-yourself um biology stuff had taken uh uh uh language from the electrics into its set. | |
They shared a common uh area of language that was primarily, in fact, all of it was derived from the language of electricity. | |
Uh so in other words, the new electrics didn't get biology, uh, you know, wet biology language, rather the the biology got dry electricity language if you want to think of it that way. | |
Um and they shared this common set here. | |
Let's just say it blooped out like that, and so this this set here was its own discrete set, and all three of these progressed up through time until we're at this point now, and we're starting to get um temporal markers out of this set. | |
Now, it could be that the that this um biology set uh and this actually should be drawn something like this, such that as they went through time, this one eventually brought up and they merged, right? | |
So this set may take a number of years to mature and come in with its temporal markers, even though this set here and especially this area here are showing temporal markers right now. | |
So it might take some some amount of time for the DIY biology stuff, and in fact could be expected that it would take some time for it to mature and to show up and manifest, okay, especially with the the world in such chaos at the moment. | |
All right, so anyway, um we're seeing um I personally have had a uh a manifestation of a temporal marker within the new electrics. | |
Uh that manifestation was the uh offer for me to purchase the number one unit out of a production line of a magnet motor, a fuel-less electrical generator of 50 kilowatt capacity. | |
And I said, sure. | |
Okay, now these people um I'm gonna I'm gonna go ahead and pursue this and see if they've got a legitimate product. | |
They're they're saying that they'll be able to produce it and give it to me in February or thereafter of this coming year. | |
And uh it's a clunky little box, it's green, it's uh you know, all metal on the outside and stuff, and it has a couple of of uh flat plate units on uh sticking out over here. | |
I have yet to determine how they're doing it, what their mechanism is, how they've overcome the torque issues uh relative to uh generating electricity if they took an entirely different approach, uh go in more solid state. | |
I I have no idea about any of the internal uh workings. | |
Uh they that it's patent pending. | |
The cost is gonna be at a retail level. | |
They're projecting now for February, which that's really sketchy, Guys, but they're projecting that this um uh magnet motor uh gen set would cost 67,000 uh 500. | |
Let's just 67,000. | |
So we can just say close to 68,000 plus the cost of shipping, right? | |
To get it to you. | |
Now they're offering me a deal, and I'm gonna take it. | |
Alright, I'm not an idiot. | |
So I'm gonna I'm gonna take their deal and purchase one of these and um and we'll see. | |
We'll we'll set it up and run that run the thing. | |
I'll go off-grid with it and see how it does, how it performs. | |
There's many issues with magnet motors, especially as gen sets. | |
Uh, one of the primary ones, the very first one you're going to encounter, is uh the torque, the issue of uh coming up with enough torque uh to make electricity if you're using a traditional um uh magnet and a copper um rotor approach, right? | |
Uh for the genset part. | |
Uh so there's two components. | |
So you could have uh the motive power, that is the ability to turn the gen set, you can have that come from a magnet motor, and what it has to do is it has to get over a particular torque level. | |
It has to have enough oomph to get that genset to turn over and actually make electricity for you. | |
Now, our gen sets are stupid. | |
Our gensets from an ether viewpoint are sitting there and twisting the ether up like a towel uh that's hung up on the back end of the the dryer and the and in the front of it is tied to the drum and it's just sitting there spinning and getting all torn up and stuff, right? | |
So we're doing that to the ether to make electricity out of it with the way we have gens. | |
So it's really stupid to do do that for number one. | |
Our gen sets are not our gen sets are crude, they're uh brute force way of doing it, they're not sophisticated, we don't really have to do it that way. | |
We can make electricity with solid state things where we don't spin anything in the in the ether, trying to twist the ether up to remove electricity from that modality. | |
All right, so that's number issue number one. | |
So if they've overcome the torque, then I want to know how, what mechanism they're doing. | |
If they're doing that, then they're using some kind of a magnets within a uh on a on a shaft to spin that shaft in order to turn the gens set, and so that's where the torque comes in. | |
They may have a clutching mechanism, any number of mechanisms to to ease that, but there's another issue with that, and that is two issues with that. | |
If you're doing things that way, a spinning shaft within a uh bound set of permanent magnets, you're you're twisting the ether again in this process of trying to get that um uh shaft to spin, so that's not good, and then you're gonna twist it the other way to get the the gen set to produce electricity, and then there's also the heat issue, okay. | |
And so magnet motors at their current state, as far as I'm aware, because I've been working with them and investigating them and so on, uh, have a failure in the um in this eddying, this um uh muddying of the magnetic currents within the uh magnet motor itself. | |
Uh the more you spin them, the more you get the ether twisted up, you create eddy currents, you you create uh conditions that are gonna work against your motor, trying to do things that way. | |
Then there's the heat uh issue that you're gonna generate from that, which destroys the magnetic fields anyway. | |
So you got some major problems with that. | |
Now they may be taking a solid state approach, right? | |
Uh uh a motionless electromagnetic generator, those exist. | |
Megs do, and they may have something really good that way, and we'll see. | |
And and so it could be that that um uh their gen sets really good, right? | |
And uh it's gonna work. | |
We'll find out. | |
Uh, but that's that alone, just getting offered that, uh, is a temporal marker, right? | |
Not just for me, but the fact that they're going into production with them. | |
Um we'll see how that all works out. | |
Now the price by the time we get to February, 67,500 ain't gonna cut it. | |
Uh so these people are a little bit uh naive in their understanding of um our current uh position within the financial system and and where we're going in the ultimate um uh new economy, okay, because along with the new electrics is the new economy with a plethora of currencies, a plethora of ways of doing things uh that don't exist under the old system, under the old power pyramid of control from the central banks. | |
So as the central banks die Off things change, we get into sci-fi world. | |
One of the markers for sci-fi world was this giant set new electrics, which included the floating RVs, all different kinds of crap, right? | |
But one of them was fuelless motors that you could just take and plop out everywhere. | |
So we no longer, once that starts, we no longer put our energy into stringing copper wires for miles and then paying people to maintain the distribution system. | |
So mostly on our electric system that comes in off the wires to your house. | |
In Europe they call them the main system. | |
Here it's the grid power. | |
Mostly all of that money you pay is to cover employees, insurance, and all of that, just to maintain the distribution system. | |
Relative to the actual cost of the energy produced, that is the larger mass of our our payments for electricity. | |
So we mature into a world of new electrics where we don't do that anymore, right? | |
Where we are able to encapsulate all of the cost and get over a um a critical capital cost and basically shrink a power plant down to something you can set next to a house and not worry about it, right? | |
And it isn't gonna blow up, it's not fueled with explosive stuff or any of that crap. | |
You should get to sit there and hump. | |
And if it breaks, you put new magnets in and you're good to go. | |
Okay, so this is part of the new electrics. | |
Um as an aside, not really directly part of New Electrics or anything, just uh to let people know. | |
I got the privacy phone, and this is from it's a pixel, it's a Google uh Pixel 5A, um, and it's from Unchained Innovations. | |
These guys are out of um Australia, okay. | |
So this is a privacy phone that uh Max Egan uh had been um uh talking about. | |
Uh it's interesting because oh, you can't really see it, of course, because of the privacy privacy shield on it, uh, but it's an interesting approach. | |
I haven't super examined it, I haven't gone all the way down. | |
Uh it's a Google phone, but then they strip out all of the Android stuff and they they put in blocks for the uh Android connections to the um uh to the hardware, and then they installed their own OS, which is called Graphene OS. | |
And not a good name these days, right? | |
Uh, but nonetheless, it's a it's a quality phone, uh loaded with abs. | |
Um it works well, but I don't even have a sim card in it yet because I gotta go way the hell into town to get that done because my hands are just too large to do this, I think. | |
I've I've looked at it and it's just um a little tricky at the moment. | |
Uh anyway, though, so the phone works well. | |
Um, insofar as I'm able to determine with my Wi-Fi gear and these kind of things, uh, this is not yeah, hang on, hang on. | |
Uh this is not uh recording trying to throw anything onto uh Wi-Fi or any of that uh relative to the phone itself. | |
So in that sense, it's it is a privacy phone. | |
I have yet to use it out and about to see if there's any kind of tracking, you know, relative to the cell towers and so on. | |
Uh but nonetheless, so far it does appear that it that it's uh it's a very good product, uh other than the name for the OS. | |
Um they take cryptos if you go and look them up, okay. | |
So it's unchained innovations. | |
Uh you're probably gonna it's a 5G phone, and so let's let's examine this, okay. | |
You got a lot of people running around saying, oh, 5G triggers this, triggers that, triggers the other thing. | |
Now, 5G is a low power system, people. | |
Um 5G is designed. | |
All right, so anyway, I'll let you know when I when and if I get the gen set and uh how it all works out. | |
I'll report on uh the progress of it and how it works and that sort of thing, right? | |
Our goal is to is to plop the gen set here, fire it up and do some tests because I got all kinds of test equipment here. | |
I don't even have to open the box up or any of that. | |
I just have to use it, and I'll be able to determine a great deal of stuff about it, its potential lifespan and so on. | |
Uh anyway, so we'll do that, and if it's good, if it's uh if it's worth it, uh we're gonna go out and cement the thing into a great hunk of um rock and cement uh out on my property, uh my timber property, way the hell out in the wilderness. | |
As much As people might think I live in the wilderness here, there's 200 people within uh 20 miles anyway any direction, right? | |
Uh so I got I got that level of support on my on my timberland property, there's maybe maybe if I'm lucky, uh two people within 20 miles in any direction, uh except across the water, uh because I think there's a hamlet across the water uh of canal from the property. | |
Anyway, so the idea is we would put the gen set out there, we'd have electricity to just do all kinds of stuff 50 kilowatts. | |
Uh that's uh two and a half times what I need for this property right here, which would be really cool, and at a cost, even if you paid retail, if they're actually gonna ask 67,000, uh so there's two issues there. | |
Alright, so 67,500, if I had to pay that for it right now, and say it lasted um 20 years. | |
Uh I have a terrible environment, maybe it'll rust out in half that 10 years, okay. | |
So $6,700 uh per year for 10 years use of electricity. | |
That is more than I would pay for uh electricity coming through the wire to my house here, but this is two and a half times the amount of electricity, so that's one. | |
I'm restricted by the um uh provider of the electricity as to how much I can actually have here because of how much they can deliver through their wires. | |
So I have to have a hundred amp circuit, and that really cuts into what I can do in the house, right? | |
Um so uh so that's a big increase, so that adds value there, and then the fact that it would never shut down in the in these giant storms, that's a huge increase in value. | |
So at six six thousand seven hundred dollars a year, that's very worthwhile. | |
So, especially if you're out put and that's if it only lasts ten years, and if you're able to put it out in places where it's virtually impossible to get electricity. | |
So, out on my um timber land out there, let's it I'm five seven, let's estimate that I'm ten miles away from the nearest power pole. | |
Um I think maybe there's a cable line, like a um telecable line that uh that they run through, but let's just say that I'm 10 miles away from that power pole to be able to get at a uh major junction to be able to take off electricity. | |
So I'm still restricted instantly because I would have to A pay for the 10 miles of the power to be put in, and and you know, poles, all of this, it's extremely steep out there, that would be a double or a triple cost. | |
Uh you know, we got really serious grade on these roads. | |
Um maybe it would cost 40 or 50,000 just to get the line moved in, and then um add another 20,000 for uh all of the uh fiddly bits on each end. | |
So I'd still be at $60,000 for electricity, and then I would be paying someone, and then it's gonna get interrupted any time there's a major storm in the area, or potentially. | |
So it's $67,500, these gen sets would be uh a very very economical system for places like this. | |
Um you know, not so much, and even I guess for places like New York City, right? | |
You can just set one on top of a building, 50 kilowatts, you could supply a number of apartments, depending on how you you wired it. | |
Anyway, though, so okay, so on to other things. | |
Um within the new electrics, there are a bunch of those subsets that are joined. | |
Um the joining subsets, we're starting to see temporal markers in there that now tell me why they're joined. | |
So there's this guy, all right. | |
So he's his name is Michael Levin. | |
This guy's a scientist dude. | |
All right, so what he's done with other guys is they've come up with an electric understanding of a level of intelligence within the body. | |
If you wanted to look at it in a particular way, they are looking at something that's like one or two layers away from our soul, all right? | |
And so um, so uh we have cells that have an electric charge around their surface, all right, and they've discovered how that electric charge uh comes into existence. | |
And they're calling this um a and it and it is they don't think of it as a field, but it really is. | |
It's uh because fields can be incredibly small. | |
But here's how it exists. | |
So let's just say that our our cell had a real thick wall. | |
In order to create an electrical charge, what happens is there's these things called ionophores. | |
Ion O's, right? | |
And these are organelles. | |
They're little tiny organs inside a cell. | |
And these ionophores pass a charge through the cell wall to the outside of the cell. | |
And but they don't let in the bad stuff, right? | |
So they just pass electricity in the form of an ion. | |
And it can be a sodium ion, a calcium ion, a magnesium ion, any number of ions. | |
And there's dozens of these ionophores, zinc even, right? | |
That's why everybody wants to take zinc against COVID, is because it zinc is a great uh has to be it has to be passed through these ionophores, quirtisin, um uh ivermectin, uh uh fenbendazol are all uh aiding the ionophore process, right? | |
And so they pass ions through uh the cell wall and a charge state exists on the outside of the cell. | |
Now, what Levin had, and we've known about this, and this is actually how cells protect themselves and so on. | |
What the cool part is that Levin has discovered is that all of the other cells that are around it are all each have their own ionophores, each send out ions, each develop this um what I'm gonna call a gated electric field. | |
Okay, so because the ionophores are gate, so it's not evenly distributed around the the top of the cell, around the outside of the cell. | |
That's the really cool part. | |
So if you look at if you go and look at um Levin's work, uh he's been talking about this for eight or nine months, they'll probably give him a Nobel Prize for it. | |
Um major radical discovery. | |
He's like uh Crick and Watson fucked up, and he's repaired their understanding because now we know what happens. | |
But anyway, so these uh gated electric fields form all across the cell, and they're continually moving and changing as ionophores ionophores come through all of these ionophores, or as the ions come through all the little ionophores, it changes this the charge state, the potential, the resting uh electrical potential of that cell, right? | |
Uh these are spatial distributions uh over a resting potential. | |
So the cell has a basic level of potential, and then floating over it is this are these electric fields. | |
We now know that electric fields from all of the cells are all talking to each other, and that is a control mechanism. | |
So there's a whole new etheric body that they've discovered that Michael Levin has discovered that does not exist, does not have hardware, doesn't have a cell as its basis, it has this interface between all of the cells electrical charges all around. | |
And that forms, if you will, a software layer within our body that accomplishes all this really cool shit. | |
He goes into it, they're gonna be able to grow limbs, put in new teeth, grow you a new eye, all of this kind of shit, right? | |
Turn cancer off, all of that sort of thing. | |
It's a huge great discovery, and it's part of the new electrics because it's all about electricity. | |
His language is all about up to the point of the morphogenesis. | |
Now he talks about a morphogenic field, it's not like Sheldron, uh not like Sheldrake's um description because what Levin's talking about is this field, this combination of all these individual cells fields existing down here is his description for a morphogenic field. | |
So he's talking about it at a micro level. | |
Um it's a quasi-field in in a quasi field, the Brits would say. | |
Um in my understanding, right? | |
Okay, so uh this that this these sets of temporal markers, it's curious to me that I got offered this and then also discovered that within the same period of time we now get to the point where this stuff's coming out. | |
Uh so we're starting to see a lot more of these uh new electric uh markers. | |
Now there's other new electric markers that are actually going to the idea, my favorite one of the floaty RV. | |
Okay, of the anti-gravity Tic Tac uh 40-foot recreational vehicle. | |
So what we've had is we've had some breakthroughs in magnet understanding as well. | |
I'm not going to get into those at the moment because that's really its own separate uh subject. | |
However, we've had these temporal markers coincident with the temporal marker of me getting the offer, and it's really not me. | |
It's the it's the fact that I've been talking about it that the guy arranged to offer me number one production unit, right? | |
So it's just my big mouth that got me in that position. | |
What's cool is as temporal marker is they're going into production as of 2022. | |
And that's really fitting because of what's going on with the space stuff. | |
Also, 2022 we'll see um. | |
We'll see the uh if okay, so as the temporal markers accrue, we should see the temporal marker for the cleaning up over the next few years of the encapsulated earth, and they'll be using a form uh coming out of the new electrics to do it. | |
We don't know what that is, but it was very close within the data sets to these other temporal markers that are showing up. | |
Now, my phone is not a temporal marker, it just happens to be electric, and I brought it out. | |
And I'd gotten it a few days ago and I had to examine it. | |
Uh so I'll let you know how it works and stuff. | |
It's a pretty cool um little box. | |
Okay, so now the 5G. | |
Uh all right, so understand that Starlink Tesla's uh stuff up there is not 5G. | |
Uh you can't pump 5G from 145 miles in space down to Earth. | |
5G is millimeter waves, okay, like you get out of your microwave. | |
They don't go very far. | |
To get them to go very far, you'd have to have giant amounts of power and it would just burn itself up because it's trying to produce frequency at a millimeter level really really really fast. | |
Microwaves. | |
So 5G is used because the telcos ran into a problem. | |
we were using the cell service too much. | |
So 5G was originated to basically bust up the individual tall cell towers and distribute them down to the ground level to work out the power issues so that the telco can maintain more phone connections. | |
Because the big 4G systems are limited to the number on the transponder that it can interact with in any given way. | |
given time. | |
Plus, the way those things are set up, you can go out of its, you can be within its range but go out of its sight, so to speak, just moving over five feet, right? | |
You're still in range, uh, but you you've just gone ever so slightly um out of phase with the signal just because of your physical location. | |
So 5G was intended to um not end those problems but reduce them and add more capability and move more stuff through the system, right? | |
More cell phone. | |
So in and of itself, it's not particularly an evil thing. | |
Now 5G at a millimeter wave, you don't want to be around very close to it, because it'll actually penetrate the skin some small distance and cause problems within the skin. | |
Uh you can look at DNA with it, right? | |
But you couldn't use it to go through the the floor and look at the earth. | |
It's not that kind of radiation. | |
It'll only go a little tiny bit in anything that has a wet surface. | |
Uh 5G is also very, very, very susceptible to atmospheric moisture. | |
So I don't expect 5G to ever work out here except for maybe in one month in the summer, right? | |
Because there's just too much moisture in the air. | |
Okay, so um so 5G, I think is a danger, but not the way that other people do. | |
Some some people think 5G is gonna take over your brain and that kind of thing, right? | |
Uh I do think that if you had graphene oxide in you, uh, the 5G could be um causing problems on that stuff that's at the surface of the skin. | |
So 5G won't penetrate down to my bones. | |
Uh You can't use it like an ultrasound. | |
It won't go down that far. | |
But if I had graphene oxide circulating in the skin, then yeah, you could see that the 5G penetration through the skin would indeed have a potential for causing those kind of reactions. | |
I there's there's literature coming out that has a an association between 5G and the COVID stuff, right? | |
Personally, I think that's a away diversion down a road that we need not go. | |
Mostly 5G is not ubiquitously everywhere. | |
5G is not in a lot of those places where we had COVID hotspots. | |
So it's not directly associated. | |
So for instance, all the people in Italy didn't die because there was 5G in their area because there wasn't 5G in their area. | |
So we've got other mechanisms and stuff going on in this depopulation agenda. | |
As like I was saying earlier, you know, Joe Biden cheating, uh, the election being stolen, all of that is wrapped up in the uh COVID um stuff. | |
We now know that the vaccine producers could not physically have made the vaccines that they had by 2021 if they had not started sometime around 2012. | |
Okay, so it would have taken them seven or eight years to produce the amount of vaccines they popped up with in 2021. | |
Um so did they? | |
Or are we talking about space alien production, you know, that kind of thing, right? | |
Anyway, though, so um the vaccines are causing the pandemic to continue. | |
The vaccines cause people to be ill. | |
The vaccines cause people to shed and make other people ill. | |
We now have to take uh prophylactic treatments against that, uh the shedding and stuff from the people that have taken the shots. | |
But this may be a um there's a good aspect to that, all right. | |
There it's not a blessing in disguise or anything, but there's a good aspect to that. | |
That we have to take precautions against stuff being shed from people out in that have taken the vax that it were out and about in contact with going to aid us now because we're discovering that they're putting a lot of the same stuff that they uh had put in the vaccines, the hydra, the graphene oxide, the nanoparticulates, are now for sure in the chemtrails. | |
100% for sure. | |
So there's people that have been looking at uh fresh snow and um water samples in Spokane. | |
Okay, so 500 miles that away. | |
Um maybe 450, something like that. | |
Uh anyway, uh so uh so we know the hydra are in there, all right. | |
So this makes um this is a uh another prompt to think about getting ivermectin and getting and or getting fenbendazol for humans. | |
Now, fenbendazole for humans is a antiparasite antifungal um uh anti-cancer uh dewormer. | |
Another one of these dewormer products. | |
I take it. | |
It's uh I take it prophylactically against the cancer. | |
Um I know people that are reporting to me that they started taking it a year ago and they're cancer-free now. | |
Uh we know people that started taking it um 18 months ago with stage 4 cancer and they've recovered from that. | |
No sign of the cancer or it's in great remission or all of these kind of things. | |
Fenbendazol really works. | |
But one of the things it is is antiparasitical. | |
That's how we discover it, right? | |
They used to give fenbendazole to lab rats to get rid of worms so they could make them healthy before they induced cancers. | |
They had to do that so they could eliminate as many variables as possible. | |
They were doing real science back then. | |
This is 60, 70 years ago. | |
And um they would give uh fenbendazole to the lab rats, and then they discovered those lab rats they gave fenbendazole to, they could not give cancer to. | |
That it just didn't work. | |
Even though the lab rats or the mice had been bred to cancer, you give them fenbendazol, and it's like, oh crap, you can't give this mouse cancer, so he's out of the experiment, right? | |
And so they stopped giving these animals fenbendazol, but they didn't tell anybody about it. | |
Uh we find out about it later on through vets and this kind of thing, and now now it's a really good thing that we have found out about it because I think we've got confirmation that the U.S. uh postal service is now stopping shipments of ivermectin from any source coming into the U.S. under orders from the FDA from the evil Biden regime and and um uh their evil killing machine, right? | |
They're they're trying to create concentration camp gulag America. | |
Okay, that's what they're trying to do. | |
Gulag all of North America, including Canada. | |
And uh, and so they're gonna deny all of these drugs and stuff to us while they're dumping all of this shit in the chemtrails. | |
So people in Spokane have examined the recent snow and and uh rain coming down. | |
It is loaded with graph graphene oxide, it's loaded with the hydra coming in from the sky because they're putting that shit up there with the chemtrails. | |
We see them put the chemtrails here, the chemtrails float east to uh Spokane, and then they deposit all that stuff as they go across the mountains and cool down, it gets rain, and so all of the that area is being inundated with it. | |
Now, I'm gonna start, I'm gonna I've got a I've got a bunch of microscopes, but none of them go over 200 power of digitally, right? | |
So I can't take pictures on it. | |
So I'm getting some 600 power microscopes to be able to examine the water and keep on on top of this because we see them spraying the chemtrails right up there, and we always get rain. | |
And so uh just because of the proximity of the ocean. | |
So if anything's gonna come down, it'll come down here before there. | |
And I will do a um uh video on and show what I've got once I get um uh the microscopes in and get set up for it. | |
Anyway, so I think that's about it at the moment. | |
Okay, so um there's this uh one last thing. | |
All right, so there is this principle in physics that um in principle that derives from uh the work in the ether, and it's called the least action principle. | |
And so the least action principle uh says if you've got a field of uh 40 um charged harp antennae. | |
So you got a bunch of harp antennae that are set up in a grid all through here, and and they get a charge state on them, just getting ready to fire up the the harp um to to change the shape of the ionosphere. | |
The principle is that this will discharge in a way that will involve the least number of these antennae. | |
Okay, so this is the least action principle from dealing with electricity and ether and magnetism and stuff, and that is the universe wants to use only the the minimal electricity, uh minimal action in involved in virtually anything. | |
And so this is also true with water. | |
This is why water never goes straight, because it's always going to find the the way of least action required to get from the top to the bottom, which is not always straight, okay. | |
Uh in fact, never is. | |
Um so water will never go down straight channel because of this principle. | |
Uh these uh harp arrays will never fire twice in the same way because of this principle, because the atmospherics are gonna change in between firing on them. | |
So some of these things will be nearer to a point of discharge in the local atmosphere than others. | |
Uh this least action principle uh is one of the new electrics things that's come out now that we are able to apply it to magnetics. | |
We've known about it in electricity, we've known about it in explosives, so that if you put a bunch of explosives all next to each other and theoretically say that you say that you had um a bunch of explosive bombs in paper sacks, so they'd be easily to set off, right? | |
Um and you put them in a grid like this, and you just uh sort of like dominoes, you set one off in the middle. | |
Unlike dominoes, you can't control the way they're all gonna fall down. | |
And so one might blow up in the middle, and that might Set one off over here and that might set one off over there, and then it might go around in sort of a circle as they all blew up, right? | |
The the principle is here though that they will do that in a way for universe that involves as minimal amount of these things in there in order to get the maximum amount of effect. | |
This now has been established for explosions, for chemical catalytic reactions, uh for laser-triggered reactions. | |
Um I think it extends to herd animals that there's a pathway for pheromones that triggers the most animals with the least amount of pheromones, and that causes the herd to move uh within the quickest amount of uh reaction time, uh, these kind of things. | |
So I think that this least action principle uh goes to basically everything within the materium. | |
Now there's been some uh discoveries uh between uh because or I don't know if they actually cooperated or what, but a Japanese guy and uh a guy in um I'm gonna say Latvia, but it could be Finland, uh, have come up with these these applications for least action principles for the formation of and soon the manipulation of magnetic fields. | |
Um I one of them, I probably the guy in Japan is working at uh what's known as spintronics, okay, and that's the um on these uh SD cards. | |
A spintronic is the is working with the electricity that creates the actual information within the card itself at this micro level. | |
Now the other guy in in northern Europe, he was working at at big magnets level for um probably for like cars, that sort of thing, you know, ferry boats, giant giant motors. | |
Uh but it's uh it's hugely important discovery, hugely important um temporal marker for the application of of this particular old discovery, least action principle, being able to be applied to map to magnets in a reproducible fashion for uh magnetic field structures. | |
So we're really seriously on our way in using uh the new electrics and also having our new magnetics. | |
Anyway, so uh it's cold, I've got to get some stuff done, it's Monday. | |
There's all kinds of stuff happening in the world. | |
Uh, we're gonna have financial crises, we're gonna have a really rough couple of months. | |
Um, and we got to deal with these uh buggers terraforming the planet with chemtrails and trying to kill us all with the shit they're putting in it. | |
So, you know, you need to take action, you need to understand that this is happening, and uh there's lots of different ways that are anti-parasitical. | |
Uh you know, even such things as um vinegars, you know, there's uh some vinegars like the uh organic vinegars with mothers in them, right? | |
Apple cider and those others are anti uh anti-parasite, and so they would presume to get at least some of them. | |
They're not gonna be as effective as a drug, but if they were continuously used, you'd always maintain a flushing action. | |
So there's there's things you can do against it. | |
Uh, that's not going to be too harsh, uh, but we need to consider as long as there's chemtrails, we're now actively at risk. | |
I filter all my water, for instance, anyway. | |
Uh, but you know, now I'm getting really serious about it because I don't know that these guys over here doing, you know, in my water supply system are doing as good a job as I would like. | |
Anyway, guys, um, I'll give you a report on the phone after I've used it for a month or two and see if I get the um get any kind of tracking out of it on me. | |
Uh, but it looks solid, looks really good the way they've put the graphene uh OS in there. | |
Uh again, bad name for the times, but good oper operating system. | |
Anyway, okay, so uh live long and prosper, and you know, watch out for yourself. | |
It's a dangerous world out there, and we'll be more so over these next few months. | |
So I think we'll start slacking off in April or May. | |
It'll start easing off then. |