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Attaching machinery to the wheelwork of nature PDF Print E-mail
Written by Debbie Smit   
Sunday, 28 August 2005
Monsanto has announced that they invented the pig. The amazing thing is that because they have lots of money they’ll probably get away with it and end up controlling the world’s food supply. How can the blatently horrific assertions of Monsanto – actually they’re more than just assertions; they aim to patent their low fat porker – achieve credibility along with Verimark specials like lava gloves and vacuum bread knives, while marvellous inventions that would solve the world’s energy problems and rid our planet of disease are glossed over with hardly a thought?
Here are a few that could benefit from some good marketing.
1. Cosmic energy
Very basically, space energy converters draw power from an abundant energy source in surrounding space called the zero-point quantum fluctuations of vacuum space. Free energy or fuelless electric generators put out more power than goes into them. And they’re clean. What more could you want?
2. Fuel from water
Only the most courageous thinkers have attempted this anomalous field of research which begins with using electrical or sound resonance to split apart a water molecule in order to release its hydrogen molecule. Filling up with water instead of petrol has obvious implications for the oil barons – and I’m sure Afghanistan would never have happened.

3. Wireless powerlines
‘Wireless’ is associated today with any technology that has the desirable quality of being easy to move around because it’s not attached to anything. In other words, an invention of convenience. Funny thing is, my gran used to call her radio a wireless.
Nikola Tesla, the inventor of alternating current and lots of other useful stuff, figured out that we don’t need powerlines a long time ago. His problem was a familiar one; the bankers didn’t like the thought of any old so-and-so sticking an antenna in the ground and getting access to power and communications. They cut off his funding and tore down his Wardenclyffe tower, which he planned to use as a transmission vortex, and sold it for scrap.
5. Modern alchemy
It is the stuff of dreams: the ability to change atomic elements or make them mysteriously appear. Metaphysician Walter Russell (1871-1963) experienced visions of an invisible geometry that governs everything in the universe. His epiphanic shape-shifting experiments, based on the geometry of motion in space, have been verified by modern scientists who have achieved the same results by changing the shape of magnetic field around an element. The technology could be used to clean up radioactive waste.
6. Exploding germs
In the late 1920’s Royal Raymond Rife invented a electromagnetic frequency generator with which he could view living organisms by tuning into their natural frequencies. He also discovered that he could kill certain bacteria and explode viruses selectively by using certain frequencies. His drug-free, painless method of treating illness was dismissed by the medical profession as quackery.
7. Electronic Telepathy Device
In the 1960’s when Patrick Flanagan was a teenager, Life magazine regarded him as one of the top scientists in the world. He made his first Neurophone, an electronic device that can program suggestions into a person through skin contact, when he was fourteen. With the device he could ‘hear’ through his skin. The patent people said hearing could only happen through your ear, and refused the  invention a patent number. After 12 years the file was re-opened when a nerve-deaf patent-office emplyee did hear with the neurophone.

© Debbie smit – The Sunday Independent

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© 2008 Francois Smit