Thursday, May 31, 2012

RAW


"Every fact of science was once damned. Every
invention was considered impossible. Every discovery was a nervous shock
to some orthodoxy. Every artistic innovation was denounced as fraud and
folly. The entire web of culture and progress, everything on earth that
is man-made and not given to us by nature, is the concrete
manifestation of someone's refusal to bow to Authority. We would be no
more than the first apelike hominids if it were not for the rebellious,
the recalcitrant, and the intransigent."
Robert Anton Wilson

Friday, May 18, 2012

the real thing

If you've ever been in any kind of super market, convenience store, or food mart you'll noticed a plethora of fluids filling half the shelves with promises of quenching thirst, promoting good health, or improving your life as you know it.

If you're a label reader, like I am, you'll see most of these fluids are water, high fructose corn syrup, flavorings and colors made in a laboratory.  If you hang around me long enough you'll realize one of my major peeves is the mass consumption of high fructose corn syrup or HFCS in our food supply.

HFCS is everywhere and in everything from candy to condiments and it's not only replaced sugar but is now added to things that traditionally never had sugar, like spaghetti sauce, potato chips, cheese burgers, soup mixes, fried chicken, and beef.  If you or anyone you know were to analyze something like a hair sample, you would be shocked to know we're mostly made of corn.

Cows eat and process grass for most of their lives and do a damn good job of it.  That's what they do.  Range cattle are lean and healthy but big, fat cattle weigh more and bring in more profits so for six months these healthy bovines are immobilized in pens and force fed corn to fatten them up.  Corn is toxic to the bovine digestive system so massive doses of antibiotics and bovine growth hormones are pumped into them to keep them alive just long enough for slaughter.  No cow can live longer than six months on a corn diet but it's that terminal beef that fills the meat cases at your local super market.

Then there's the diet soft drinks and healthy fluids that boast lower calories and no sugar, as if sugar is the cause of all our health problems, like the establishment science has conditioned us to believe.  So, the sugar substitute becomes aspartame, sucralose, and a handful of other laboratory, chemical concoctions designed to satisfy our appetites for sweet while lowering IQ's and raising mortality rates.

What's so bad about sugar?  Compared to HFCS and artificial sweeteners, sugar is a health food.  Consuming sugar and natural sweeteners will raise your metabolism to burn off most of those calories before your body processes it to fat while artificial sweeteners trigger the same reaction without boosting metabolism.  The result is artificial sweeteners make you fat, just like corn does to cattle.  

Every day you hear about someone diagnosed with diabetes, cancer, or liver failure and we're so used to this disease acceleration we actually think terminal disease in the middle of an average human lifespan is normal.  Like, that's the way things are supposed to be.   That's not the way it's supposed to be and decades of research points to HFCS as a leading cause of most of these health problems. 

It was twenty five years ago when Coca Cola introduced New Coke, much to the horror of every die hard Coke loyalist.  New Coke tasted like Pepsi and if Coke drinkers wanted Coke to taste like Pepsi they'd drink Pepsi.  I saw the Coke CEO at a press conference saying how he liked the new formula better than the old one, and it was at that moment I realized Coca Cola's CEO was nothing more than a corporate whore and a disgrace to all things holy.  I mean, here's the CEO of a world famous trademark and product recognized as THE symbol encapsulating what America is and the high water mark of the soft drink industry and this jackass so much as says he prefers Pepsi over Coke.  Coke was the Harley Davidson of the fluid industry.  If Pepsi had the choice they'd be Coke.  Sure as shit, if Pepsi had the Coke recipe they'd make New Pepsi and take over the market.
This Coke CEO should have been dragged off the stage and beaten bloody for having such bad taste and lack of respect for this world famous formula he was hired to serve and protect.  For that matter, the people who hired him should have been shot.

The Coke Classic that soon followed was less than a shadow of it's former self and Coke disappeared from the shelves of consumer refrigerators.  Coke is now just another crappy soft drink loaded with HFCS.  If it don't have sugar, phosphoric acid, and caffeine it aint Coke.

I often wonder what would possess a corporation like Coke to abandon the most successful, coveted, and secreted formula in the world for a slim chance of more profit and a huge chance for mega losses.  The cost of sugar compared to HFCS was one excuse but now that HFCS costs more than sugar you'd think Coke would go back to the original formula that put them on top.  Is it the corn lobby?  They're big but so was Coke.  If I owned the rights to the Bible I don't think I'd sell it to Random House, but then I'm not a corporate whore.  It seems as though there are powers behind the scene that's hell bent to make sure we all consume high doses of HFCS or some other chemical crap for reasons greater than corporate profits.

Anyway... I was checking out the fluid isles and came across something that resembled a Coke bottle and after scanning the content label I checked out a couple bottles.
I slammed half a bottle and much to my delight and surprise, this stuff was the real thing.  This was the Coke I remember from childhood and the taste jarred loose old memories of happier times and how things really do go better with Coke.  It's been so long... Twenty five years, to be exact.  It's that bite in the back of your throat when you slam a cold one followed by that wonderful, full, happy feeling in your tummy just before that Coke belch.  I drank the rest and picked up more to make a Coke stash and to give away to those who could appreciate a taste of history.

It's sad that a whole generation of Americans grew up without tasting a real Coke.  This icon of icons that the whole world knew as the best in it's class, hasn't been made in this country since 1983.  So.... I found a twenty five year old stash of vintage Coke?  No, Mexico makes it because they love it down there, as if the folks up here don't...  They want to pass on to their children the drink they loved in the pre-new coke days, as a bond with family and to connect to a happier time and a sweeter past.

Is that the reason Coke destroyed their formula?  As a deliberately planned step to condition the American populous to accept annihilation of heroes and embrace banality as a standard?  Reducing the biggest icon in a society to the level of every other icon is like replacing the lead singer with a chorus.  Innovation is stifled, freedom is diminished, liberties lost, and banal sameness and lock-step ordinary are the guiding principles of this pre-planned society taking shape before our eyes.

Yeah, I know lots of folks could care less for Coke and preferred Pepsi long before the formula change.  That's not my point and I can go on and on with this stuff for way longer than I initially intended.  Each sentence I write generates a dozen tangents and it's taking me off track.

My point is, if an unknown power has the ability, the finances, the control, and the will to cut down the biggest, most recognized, and most loved soft drink in history, it's been done with purpose and timing as a single step in a much larger plan that's been in the works for a very long time.  If they can do that, what else are they working on?  What's the goal?  Anybody?

This Coke I found, that was made in Mexico, got me on this roll and it pisses me off that the only real Coca Cola on the planet is made in a country by people who still have the freedom of choice to retain the original, true recipe while a generation of Americans are still denied as much as a taste of their own collective consciousness and see no difference between Coke and Pepsi because now they both taste like crap. 

I'm sure a lot of you reading this will think I'm ranting about being a health nut and liking coke.  It's ok.  Keep sleeping.  My point is when we encourage under achievement and suppress individual excellence we lose our identity, our self, our personal passions and become a single voice in a choir singing the same song in mindless repetition while we let duty replace our goals.  


I'll bet dollars to donuts they use real coca leaves in the process, too.
     

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

immortality

"Life is real! Life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul."
-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)

Sunday, May 13, 2012

misquoting scarlett...

AS GOD IS MY WITNESS, I'LL NEVER BE SOBER AGAIN!

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

mexican hat 2

After the unexpected results from the Mexican hat experiment, I was compelled to make a bigger one to see if bigger is better.  It seems I miscalculated the bottom mass and the result was a bowl shaped chunk of black orgonite with a proportionately smaller cone protruding from the center.  Although it was very good orgonite, it didn't come close to the extreme power of the previous, much smaller hat.  I now realize it was the shape that directed such concentrated energy and I'm just now starting to get a handle on it.

Aside from size and the somewhat flatter top on the larger one, the two objects on the left are identical.
Both have a cone of powdered iron oxide and aluminum with powdered crystal in the form of play sand.  The bases are equal amounts of sand and resin with powdered aluminum and trace amounts of iron oxide.  The different resin mixtures is to provide cascading densities where the medium density stimulates the higher density to ramp up its output.

Cascading densities works in the bigger ones so I figured, what the hell.

As soon as they came out of the molds I could tell these things were far from ordinary orgonite.  Both put out a very noticeable vibration buzz you can feel.  Clearly, the energy is concentrated at the cone peaks and feels more electric and alive than any non-powered unit previously made.  The larger one puts out slightly more energy but the energy signature is identical.  All in all, I'm impressed.

I wonder why I never considered this combination of shapes before.  After playing with this concept, I realize I overlooked a design aspect that should have been obvious.  Using the edge to direct the energy in a natural way brings better results than ignoring or obliterating the edge, and assume this stuff is releasing energy in the direction you expect it to go...  which is straight up like smoke coming out of a chimney.

A few thoughts... Will I get the same effect if I machine an edge in a location of my choosing?  Are round edges better than straight ones?  Will stacking them multiply the output?  What about a mobius?   

One thing I learned from years of working with this stuff is sometimes the laws of physics are replaced with guidelines of alchemy and things seldom work out the way you expect.  What should work sometimes doesn't and then a small change can have dramatic, unexpected results.  The idea that combining quartz and aluminum, the most abundant elements on the planet, can produce a substance so beneficial to humanity and can be made by anyone at little to no cost is nothing short of amazing.  Best of all, it's free!

Did someone say pyramid?

I'm on it.

          

Saturday, May 05, 2012

almost 5 months

I'm ashamed to admit I haven't made any orgonite since last December.  I had all kinds of excuses like it's too cold, not enough time, other projects on the burner, etc.  Truth be told, I felt I had some learning to do before I jump into making better orgonite using the same formulas and theories as before.  I was feeling like Sonny Rollins before he took his sax to the bridge.  Something was missing and I spend the last five months thinking about it.  Of course, I didn't spend all my time thinking about making better orgonite like some Michael Medved pondering the significance of cinema, but it was always in the back of my mind as I was working on colloidal silver and distillation theory.

I always knew the shape of orgonite was just as important as what it was made of, but it was OrgoniteAustin who suggested it was the edges and points that let the energy leak out like opening the barn door.
You see, orgone energy loves smooth bends and spirals but it's the bottom edge of the orgonite that releases the energy as much as the sharp point at the top.  This explains why a pyramid generates such a laser-like blast of energy out the top.  It seems the 51 degree slope of the great pyramid is the perfect shape for energy to emerge and travel up the edges to concentrate at the apex.

I wondered if an edge in orgonite would really make that much difference and decided to make a few pieces and see for myself.

Three objects, all made from the same material, different shapes.  Synthetic iron oxide and powdered aluminum in a 3/2 ratio with equal volumes of quartz sand and resin make these very dense and heavy.  The one on the left is edgeless with a round bottom and rounded cone.  The one on the right has rounded cones top and bottom with a sharp center edge.  The one in the center has a round bottom, smaller cone and razor sharp edge and looks like a Mexican hat.  Perfect for Cinco de Mayo.

As I was relaxing on the deck with my cerveza in one hand and the Mexican hat in the other, I felt a distinctive tingling beginning with my thumb and fingers.  A second later I could feel this tingle travel all the way up my arm.  It was a pleasant vibratey feeling and, knowing the tingle came from my non-cerveza, orgonite holding hand,  I realized this is some seriously kick ass orgonite. 

I did the same experiment with the other pieces but nothing came close to the vibratey tingle I got from this Mexican hat.  The energy seems to be concentrated at the hat peak and no matter how you hold this thing you can feel that tingle strongest at the top of the hat.  
What's more impressive is the fact that this piece is one third the mass of the other two with ten times the energy level.

It's definitely the shape, and as OrgoniteAustin pointed out, the edge puts out the most power.  So, why is the peak concentrating the energy, you say?

Damned if I know, except maybe the round bottom acts as a parabolic dish directing the energy away from it.  It might be that edges are exits and round contains and the cone simply guides the energy to the peak.

And to think I was going to recast this because I didn't like the look of it.

So much for aesthetics.

   

Friday, May 04, 2012

stocking up

The department of homeland security recently purchased 450 million rounds of .40 caliber hollow point ammunition.   That's roughly a bullet and a half for every US citizen.  That's a LOT of ammo.  Considering homeland security is designed to operate solely within US borders, it stands to reason this ammo is intended to be used on the general population.  The combined total of firearm ammo used during the gulf war was only 6.5 million, which makes 450 million rounds of hollow point ammo to be used only in the good ol' USA a concept that's hard to wrap your mind around.

It's not just homeland security buying ammo.  In 2009 41 percent of Americans owned guns.  Two years later, that number jumped to 47 percent and the numbers are climbing.  Even with Walmart's inflated ammo prices, ammunition is flying off the shelves faster than it can be restocked and gun manufacturers have a six month waiting list for some models.  The vast majority of American gun owners realize the biggest threat to their way of life won't be from foreign invaders but their own government in an attempt to beat them to their guns, so they stockpile more, just in case.  DHS, as well as every other agency on the planet, can see Americans are arming themselves to the teeth.  As Ash said in Army of Darkness, "Good.  Bad.  I'm the one with the gun."

It's not just guns and ammo that's selling like hotcakes.  MREs, freeze dried foods, water purification systems, non-GMO seeds, canned goods, rice, potassium iodide, geiger counters, gas masks, and everything else humans consider essential for survival are being bought and stocked in record numbers by individuals and governments alike.

Why?  Is it because government leaders and the smart guys running the show know more than the common Joe?

Here's some food for thought.

Zibigniew Brzezinski once said at a Trilateral meeting, "It used to be easier to control a million people than to kill a million people but today it's easier to kill a million people than it is to control a million people."  Henry Kissinger once said we have way too many people on our planet for Earth's limited resources and suggested we cull the herd by two to three billion people.

Is Walmart still open?

    

Sunday, April 22, 2012

society and state

One of the most vital concepts that needs to be addressed in American politics today is, the difference between a state and a society, because the line between them is steadily being erased via the state's aggressive attempts to control every aspect of our individual lives and war. . . Society consists of the many shared, common ingredients that make up American life: a shared history, religious convictions, common lore and cultural norms. Society is essentially a concept of peace.

The state, on the other hand, is an institution that asserts a monopoly on plunder and violent force. State is essentially a concept of power.

A society and a state function in radically different ways too. Society uses what Oppenheimer calls "the economic means" or cooperation; the state uses what Oppenheimer calls "the political means" or the use of force. Where society produces, the state plunders; where society works through agreement, the state enforces edicts. The state, therefore, is at odds with society, which is the host it feeds upon, until eventually consuming it whole.
Joe Sobran

Sunday, April 08, 2012

easter

Last Sunday I fired up the pvc cb and the area has been receiving the nicest weather in memory for seven days straight.  Each day the sky was bluer than the day before and even the spring winds failed to blow in any clouds.

Maybe it's coincidence that the weather turned crappy shortly after I took down the cb and sky cleaner a few weeks ago.  Perhaps, it was just timely that 12 hours after I set up the sky cleaner and cb the low level shit clouds broke up, exposing the azure sky we have now.  No doubt, the three times it snowed since October and the total absence of chemtrails had nothing to do with all the powered orgone devices set on automatic. 

But... unless coincidence is 100% accurate and these orgone devices have anything to do with the extremely beautiful weather we've been enjoying this past year, I figure I can at least have a few bragging rights.

The last time we failed to have snow in April was just short of 30 years ago.  I figure it's time we have a snow-free April for 2012 and to help Mother nature out, I did another modification to the pvc cb.

The frequency generator powering this pvc cb is set at 14Hz and modified with a small amplifier to boost the signal amplitude.  A 4" galvanized top pipe houses a three foot length of 1" copper pipe filled with insulated orgonite with a 3" ST quartz crystal to direct the energy.  This setup can last about four days before the 9v batteries run down, but test show this device continues to work in passive mode long after the power is gone.

Considering the ring generator I'm using is a first generation, and incapable of working in passive mode, I can only assume the internal orgonite filled copper pipe is supplying the energy to keep the thing operating.  It must have to do with all the quartz sand and powdered metals I put in the mix.

At any rate, I'll let this run for another week and see what happens.

Or, did you REALLY want snow for April?

  

Thursday, April 05, 2012

reason

"The object of reasoning is to find out, from the consideration of what we already know, something else which we do not know."
-Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914)

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

f*ck the earth day

Saturday, March 10, 2012

gettin outta dodge

2012 is here and it seems the whole world is gearing up for... something.  Hell, I've been gearing up for quite a while by stocking up on food, fuel, silver, guns, ammo, drugs, alcohol and anything else that could be used as survival necessities when the engine of the world finally stops and we begin killing each other for things we now throw away.

So, I decided it's time to go underground and relocate to an undisclosed location.  The problem is all the stuff I've accumulated through the years that I have to unload.  Stuff like my collection of beta tapes, PDRs, first edition books, lava lamps, power tools, and a hundred other categories of detritus I've picked up over time that  I no longer have use for.  It's all just stuff and no longer has any value to me.

Rather than try to sell anything, I decided to give it all away.  (it's a karma thing) Needless to say, between three floors of a house and a two floor garage I have a shit load of stuff from bamboo bongs and bota bags to acetylene torches and VW parts and everything in between. 
I'm even unloading my first and only orgone accumulator. In case you're unaware of what an orgone accumulator is, it's a medical device designed by Wilhelm Reich for the purpose of curing a plethora of diseases by bombarding the whole body in life-force energy generated by it's construction of organic and non-organic laminations.

At any rate... if you want it, come and get it.

BTW, how often do you see FREE on a price tag?
 

Friday, February 24, 2012

god given rights

On December 31, 2012 Barry Obama signed into law NDAA or National Defense Authorization Act.
I've been asking people what they know about it and what it entails and to my shock and horror, no one seems to know anything about it.

It was front page news January 1.  Every major newspaper covered it but no one I talked to had a clue.  I should think the elimination of the Bill of Rights might be something the masses might think was an important event but it seemed to fly over everyone's head.  When I asked a coworker about it, she didn't have a clue about the signing, let alone what the Bill of Rights was all about.  When I told her the military can now arrest American citizens without charge and whisk them off to a foreign country to be tortured without so much as a phone call to their lawyer, all she said was, if you don't do anything wrong you have nothing to worry about.

Is this what we've come to?  A nation of  apathetic boobs not only completely unaware of what we lost but what rights we had?  Have we become so complacent that we blindly accept any law no matter how many freedoms we lose?  Are we even aware we have any freedoms?  Have Americans completely given up the right to fight or even complain?

This bill was passed by both houses of congress, with bipartisan support, and finalized by Obama in  Hawaii while the main stream media were quaffing  unlimited amounts of champagne to celebrate the new year.  Did congress read this before signing off?  Do these guys represent us or someone else?  Who is this someone else?  Why are these bastards in congress so eager to eliminate the constitution they swore to uphold and defend?  If this were to happen 200 years ago, the president and everyone in congress who voted for this bill would be hanged for treason.  Today, everyone on the presidential campaign trail voted for it except RON PAUL and it's not even brought up.

Listen... the constitution is a contract between the American people and the federal government that spells out what the government can do and what it can't do.  The Bill of Rights spells out, specifically, what those rights are.  Our founding fathers considered these rights as God given rights.  Governments can't take those rights away because governments never granted them.  They are God given rights and, as far as I know, God hasn't given up on humanity. 

Or maybe he has.

Tuesday, January 03, 2012

democracy. aint it cool?

Democracy seems to be one of those words that strike a chord in Americans like patriot, freedom, and liberty.  I think it was Ben Franklin who said, democracy is great until the people realize they can use it to rob the treasury.  I'm paraphrasing here but the concept is correct.

What we have going is democracy in action.  The 51 percent have decided they don't want to pay taxes so the remaining 49 percent will.  The 51 percent consist of the lowest levels of our society as well as the upper 20 percent.  Big business and the independently wealthy all have lawyers and accountants working out angles and loopholes to avoid taxes.  The lowest levels of our society don't have to pay taxes and have free money given to them.  Congress?  They don't pay taxes of any kind and retire on whatever salary they'd get if they stayed in congress, regardless if they were at retirement age or not.  And they can still get another government job and pension that pays them, along with any other government pension, as long as they live, as well as any other package they got along the way.  Sure beats social security.

With all these people getting a free ride, it's up to Joe Blow tax payer to foot the bill for these deadbeats to keep the system going.  The middle class, who just so happens to be anyone dumb enough to allow their employer to take money out of their paycheck, foots the bills the poor and wealthy don't want to pay.

Is that about it?  Is that a good interpretation of democracy?  Sounds more like socialism to me.

From each according to his ability, to each according to his need? 

This explains why all those bankers, financial institutions, and major corporations got all that bailout money.  They needed it and congress, as acting representatives for the working class, had the ability to give it to them.  And why not?  Congress has been feeding from the taxpayer trough for so long they feel entitled to perpetually satisfy their gargantuan needs, so it's only natural they feel a special kinship for these high end parasites and are more than happy to give away someone elses farm.  Our representative form of government created this caste system of congressional need that's constantly satisfied by proxy.  The Federal Reserve, a private corporation owned and run by international bankers and as much a part of the federal government as Federal Express, got on-board and created trillions of dollars out of thin air for the largest banks in Europe without so much as a nod from congress.  No wonder that bunch in The White House are so eager to give social security benefits to illegal aliens.

Not to worry.  The working class can handle it.... as long as we're still able.

Next time you hear a politician say democracy, substitute socialism and the words take on a different meaning.



 

Thursday, December 15, 2011

stereo field generator

I built this field generator last summer to see if two mobius coils in a device is better than one and to see if there were any differences between a conventional counter-clockwise twisted coil and a perfect duplicate wound in a clockwise fashion.  Since they were both in the same resin matrix and differed only in the direction the wire was twisted, they should both act the same. 

I was a bit shocked when tests showed the conventional counter-clockwise twisted mobius out performed it's doppelganger.  Common sense tells you it shouldn't make any difference which direction the wire is bent as long as the geometry is the same.  They should operate exactly the same but there's something here I couldn't wrap my mind around so I shelved this project and moved on to something bigger and more powerful.

On my way into town I thought about the two channel mp3 player powering up my single channel field generator and wondered how much better it could run on stereo.  Then it hit me.  I've been using stereo leads and connectors and only using one channel for the mono mobius.  I wondered if I could run separate channels through a field generator with two built in mobius coils.  Seems last summer's failure might come in useful for another experiment so I headed to Radio Shack with a new parts list in mind.

I learned long ago that Radio Shack clerks are useless when it comes to parts and projects but they always ask what I'm building and when I tell them I can see their faces morph into this slack jawed retard look that reminds me of my high school field trip to Danville State Mental Hospital.  I was talking out loud to The Shack's most seasoned employee about how I can use this splitter and plug it into some female connectors on each mobius, one for each channel, to allow the stereo to resonate and increase it's efficiency.  Reducing any stereo signal to a mono signal will always lose something in the translation and this should turn a regular field generator into a brainwave entrainment device.  I barely noticed the clerk when he told me what I just said was all Greek to him.  He then added he wasn't ashamed to admit it, either.  Sigh.......

I hooked my new stuff up to my dual mobius coil field generator and fired it up with a small mp3 player and the results were interesting, to say the least.  I could feel energy patterns more complex than before, despite the severally inferior secondary mobius.  

The stereo Solfeggio tones running through this device are translated to energy waves you can feel, very much like the vibration you can feel in front of a speaker.
Question... Do you have to hear to benefit from sound waves?  Can deaf people benefit from brain entrainment?

   

Sunday, December 11, 2011

morning epiphany

I had an epiphany today.  As I was enjoying my shower and listening to news on the radio about the front running candidates vying for the presidential republican seat and their respective plans to fix everything that's wrong with the world, a thought came to me that could do just that with no more effort than a stroke of the presidential pen.

Illegal immigration, the national debt, high unemployment, and over population are four of the biggies besetting our boys in Washington and I think I found a quick fix for all of that and we might actually be better off than letting congress dream up something more toxic.

This is so simple I'm amazed no one's thought of it before.  All Uncle Sam needs to do is grant citizenship to any illegal immigrant who pays a citizenship fee of $10,000.  10k times the estimated 20 million illegals in this country and you got some serious coinage filling the government coffers.  No doubt, many illegals will refuse to shell out 10k to stay.  Sure, 10 grand is a lot of money for a legit social security number but, looking at it from a different angle, it's equivalent to the average annual federal tax a legal U.S. citizen pays just to keep the IRS from knocking on their door.  By shelling out 10k, an illegal can emerge from the shadows and join the mainstream job market like everyone else and hold their heads up high as they hand that payroll check to the bank teller for some honest-to-goodness greenbacks sanctioned by the federal reserve to spend like free men.

Of course, there are always choices.  This is the land of the free and the U.S. government would have a contingency plan for anyone who refuses to buy their citizenship.  Any illegal who can't or won't pay the 10k fee will have a choice of three options.  Deportation, garnishment, or slavery.

Deportation means just what it says.  Repeat border-crossers will require being chipped so our intelligence networks can track their movements from outer space to make sure they stay where they're sent.  Garnishment means the 10k will be deducted from their pay checks, plus interest.  If they're working illegally, their employer will be responsible for payment.  Slavery....  perhaps indentured servitude might be a more appropriate term.  Illegals can work off their 10 grand debt by working for honest, tax-paying citizens who will provide food, clothing, and shelter in exchange for all those chores most folks would rather not do. Chores like mowing the lawn, cleaning the pool, pulling weeds, taking the kids to soccer practice, cleaning the garage, doing laundry, etc.  In some cases, getting a part time job that direct deposits the paycheck in the patron's account. Factories can use indentured servants to offset the low wages of Chinese labor and save even more by cutting all that cost for transportation.  After a set period of time, determined by the patrons in an iron clad contract, the indentured servant can earn citizenship and freedom if they satisfy all conditions of the contract.

These rules go for everyone including anchor babies and drug lords.

Subsequently, since each illegal born will cost another 10,000 bucks, the newly legal work force will reduce their population growth to tolerable levels, thus reducing the welfare burden.

Now, isn't this a better idea than Obama's amnesty plan?



      

Monday, November 28, 2011

portable PVC CB modification

Problem:  Constructing a complete, stand alone PVC CB that will not only clear up low level surf overcast but make it tinker-toy simple to assemble.

I'm a tinkerer, not a mechanical engineer, so coming up with a low cost, full sweep, modified, satellite dish cb that can be set up quickly, in any terrain, took some thought before I settled on being simple about it.

The platform is 3/4" plywood with four 2x4's radiating out to make this unit as stable as possible.  The low profile of the dish, field generator, and pipe give it a low center of gravity, preventing tip over from strong winds or clumsy people.  The dish, field generator, and PVC pipe is a single unit and the legs are held on by wing nuts.  No tools required for assembly.  The base, ring generator, and big pipe are shellacked as an organic layer and protective coating.  Looks pretty cool, too.

The field generator is has a few improvements.  Hell, every field generator I build has a few improvements and this one is four generations beyond the one I'm now using.  I'm not satisfied with just grinding out cookie cutter field generators and orgonite using the same formula, the same way, as if I was producing assembly line, mass produced crap for the masses.  These units aren't just functional works of art.  Each unit has distinct improvements from the previous model, which was an improvement from the one before.  I'm satisfied this unit rocks better than anything I made before in ways I didn't expect.

A friend of mine uses sand as the primary ingredient in his orgonite with powdered aluminum and just enough resin to hold it together.  Since sand is primarily crushed quartz, compressing it with resin and powdered metals should be enough to produce very strong orgonite.  And it does because sand IS quartz, and his orgonite is not only incredible but the lowest in cost.
So, the secondary density in this field generator has six handfuls of play sand and two teaspoons of powdered aluminum per quart of resin.  By comparison, the inner density that contains the mobius is powdered copper and iron oxide in a very dense mixture.  The result is a 28 lb powered field generator with a secondary density powerful enough to run in passive mode.  The torus shape concentrates and directs the energy output far more efficiently than a basic CB three times it's mass.  Introducing frequency is just icing on the cake to this stand-alone orgone generator.   

The test consisted of pointing it south and powering it up with 14Hz for one day and letting it run in passive mode for six more days.

The weather for that week was sunshine, blue skies, gentle breezes, and not a drop of rain in sight.  Rather impressive, considering we've had more rain than any place in North America since spring.

I figure if it can cure a rainy day in Pennsylvania it can easily blow away those pesky low level surf clouds that make west coast tanning such a chore.

I wonder if Al Gore would approve?

Friday, November 04, 2011

does anyone use tools anymore?

Cell phones aren't designed to hold up to abuse.  Almost everyone I know gets a new phone every couple of months, in part, because of planned obsolescence, engineered fragility, and the endless thirst for more whistles and bells.  Phones are now boredom killing, communication pocket pals that makes Spock's tricorder look primitive by comparison. 

Well, my cheap, thirty dollar, pay-as-you-go, minimalistic burner hit the concrete once too often, resulting in a handful of parts that didn't light up any more.  It's not the loss of the phone that bothered me but losing all those contacts is a real bitch, especially when you don't have a backup.  I figured the phone I found after a party might be useful so I switched chips only to find my chip was incompatible with with this phone.  After a few inquiries I learned the sim card and chipset are married and the service I had wouldn't retrieve my contacts. 
Well, that sucks!

I don't give up that easily and decided to try and fix it just enough to retrieve my contacts.  Considering these things are mass produced by machines in automated Chinese factories with an expected lifespan of a Bic lighter and a price tag equivalent to the minutes it comes with, it stands to reason a cell phone repair business is a less than adequate career choice.  I figured, nothing ventured, nothing gained and got my jewelers glass and the smallest tools I could find to perform micro-surgery on a throw away phone most people wouldn't bother with at 20 times the price.

Maybe that's what's wrong with society today.  We all know we spend tons of money on crap that will eventually break but we buy it anyway and immediately replace it when it breaks and never consider repair as an option because we don't have the time, knowledge, abilities, intelligence, or patience to do much more than buy some other limited lifespan gizmo with even more colored lights and cool sounds.

I understand the whole thing about how making crap that breaks is good for the economy but do we have to lose critical thinking and the ability to use simple hand tools as a trade off?  Can't someone build an automated phone factory some place besides China?  It doesn't have to be a big factory and you won't need people to make the phones.  What's a cell phone cost?  A couple hundred bucks?  Parts cost pennies and machines work day and night.  You'd think someone out there might give this idea a go if not for any other reason but bragging rights as the only place that makes phones in the U.S.A.  What ever happened to that pioneering spirit?  I can't believe we have a nation of 300 million people fixated on buying cell phones from an automated factory on the other side of the world without questioning why it's ok for China to have the monopoly on cell phone manufacture, as well as everything else.  Seems a lot of people piss and moan about it and that's about it.

Anyway, using a micro phillips, tweezers, and a jewelers glass I tore two phones down to their smallest parts and cobbled together one working cell with my contacts still intact.  Of course, the phone I used for parts is now totally scrap but I only kept it around just in case the remote possibility of this type of situation might occur.  Besides, the jerk who left it here deserved an asshole tax, at the very least.

Don't ya love it when things go positive full circle?

Thanks, Dave. 

Friday, October 14, 2011

it's the sand, man

I was wondering about how orgonite is like a magnet to most living things.  People, plants, animals all seem to be drawn to it, whether it's visible or not, and the reaction is always positive to those around it.

This got me thinking of the beach and how people are drawn to it.  Is it the ocean air and salt water that draws people like moths to a  flame or is it the life force emanating from all that quartz sand that heals what ails us?  I've been to beaches in Puerto Rico, equal to the finest beaches in the world and completely deserted.  Many beaches in the Florida Keys are just as beautiful and just as vacant.  I never gave it much thought before but the deserted Puerto Rican beach sand was crushed shells and the vacant beaches in the Keys were granulated corral.  By comparison, the super packed beaches on the Jersey shore are  mostly granulated quartz.

Just as interesting is how people seem drawn to desert areas.  Beaches without oceans.  The similarity between most beaches and deserts, aside from a lack of drinking water and vegetation, is the sand, primarily made of granulated quartz and other minerals resistant to weathering.

Sand can consist of anything from river mud to pulverized coral but most of Earth's sand is made from quartz, the most abundant substance on the planet and a principal component in orgonite.

In my last post I mentioned the incredible energy I got from adding sand to the orgonite resin mixture and the healing effect it had.  The life force, energy rush feeling that pulls vacationers to the beach is the same force that drives me to make better orgonite.  It appears the beach bums, desert rats, and orgone engineers are all addicted to the same thing... The total bliss from orgone energy enhanced psyche repair.

It's the sand, man.  That massive amount of crystal energy under our bare feet is what does it.  The water is scenery and the surf is background music but it's the sand that creates that addictive energy that transmutes our accumulated negativity and puts us back in balance.  At least it's a working theory.  

I wonder if anyone has ever done a study on the composition of beach sand and if the quartz content is proportional to the amount of people using those beaches.

Here's a deal you can't turn down.  Send me a sample of sand and where it's from and I'll send some kick ass orgonite in trade.  Deal?