-Caveat Lector-

Yep and it is all true.. http://www.peg.apc.org/~nexus/ACCandRoswell.html


Peter



We are about to go on a Journey. All Aboard
http://sites.netscape.net/gsussnzl/poleshift




----- Original Message -----
From: Nicola Molloy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 1999 3:44 PM
Subject: [CTRL] [Fwd: Uri geller Article]


> -Caveat Lector-
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Uri geller Article
> Date: Sat, 13 Mar 99 12:00:08 +1300
> From: harryo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> Believe it or not, every word of what you are about to read is for real.
> Uri Geller
>
> Let's start with something that seems fairly down to earth: a microchip.
> Ah, but the new transfer capacitor made by the American Computer Company
> in New Jersey is no ordinary microchip: it's capable of storing 300Gb of
> information - enough for 15 Hollywood blockbusters. ACC chief Jack
> Shulman claims his chip runs at 12,OOOGHz: around 20,000 times faster
> than the fastest Intel Pentium II chip you can buy. About the size of a
> casino baccarat chip, the TCAP takes millionths of a billionth of a
> second to implement a calculation.
>
> Shulman comments that, "The implications are staggering. If I were Bill
> Gates, I'd be jumping for joy. There is no longer an upper limit to the
> performance possible for the common, everyday personal computer."
>
> Which is all well and good, but while it's very impressive, there's
> nothing odd about it. Or there wasn't, until ACC cancelled its patent
> application on July 4th last year. Shulman issued press releases
> insisting he could not legally keep TCAP technology to himself, because
> that would violate the Outer Space Treaty, breaching international law.
>
> His logic is that the TCAP, apparently, was backwards-engineered from a
> crashed alien spaceship recovered at Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947.
> According to UFOlogists, the US Government has been working on secret
> projects at the Nellis Air Force Range at Groom Lake, 90 miles
> north-west of Las Vegas, Nevada - the 'above-top-secret' facility
> codenamed 'Area 51' or 'Dreamland'. Here scientists are said to unravel
> extra terrestrial technology in search of elements they can understand.
> The Roswell ship was fifty times more advanced than anything on post-war
> earth, believes Shulman - and the development of transistors in 1949 was
> the first direct result. In 1998, the TCAP was another.
>
> "We realise that the TCAP was designed by a superior intelligence so as
> to overcome the problems either with super-cooling or over-complicated
> device designs," says Shulman. "It's quite fascinating."
>
> HOLD THAT THOUGHT
>
> Sticking with the Roswell craft for a moment, nuclear physicist Jack
> Sarfatti has suggested it may have been piloted by thought control - its
> occupants setting the co-ordinates by visualising their destination.
> This technology now appears to be within human reach, after astonishing
> research carried out not on alien spaceships but on human paralysis
> victims. Roy Bakay heads a neurology team at Emory University in
> Atlanta, Georgia, which has developed an implant that sends thought
> signals from the brain to a computer.
>
> Bakay buried glass cones the size of a ball point tip in the motor
> cortexes of two paraplegic patients, using a magnetic resonance imaging
> scanner to home in on the most active regions. The glass had been
> impregnated with neurotrophic chemicals taken from the patients' own
> knees, to stimulate nerve growth. Neurons colonised the cones, attaching
> themselves like limpets to minute electrodes, and their signals were
> transmitted to a receiver-transmitter worn in a metal skull-cap.
>
> By imagining body movements, the paralysed users were able to control
> the transmissions and move an on-screen cursor across a simple menu.
> 'Lift left leg' might translate to an upward scroll - 'stamp right foot'
> could click on a choice. The menu offers limited options, and one of the
> volunteers has since died of her sclerosis, but prototype Emory implants
> now enable one 57-year-old stroke victim to switch lights on or request
> food and water.
>
> Bakay's team, which started by experimenting on monkeys, has taken eight
> years to reach this point, and faces several more years of testing
> before more detailed commands can be processed. The aim is to control
> artificial limbs, giving paraplegics new hope of walking, he told the
> Congress of Neurological Surgeons in Seattle. Linking to the Internet is
> another short-term aim: "if you can run a computer, you can talk to the
> world," says Bakay.
>
> The possible non-medical uses are truly mind-boggling. Operating
> computers, TVs and household appliances by thought-power is just the
> beginning: Emory implant wearers will be able to communicate by
> electronic telepathy, firing impulses between their transmitter caps.
> And if TCAP processing power takes hold, virtual reality will be
> significantly more convincing, and with thought control, humans will be
> able to mould their surroundings in the flash of a synapse. You want to
> be on a sunny beach? just think about it for a second...
>
> QUANTUM LEAPS
>
> Dr Fred Alan Wolf, award-winning theoretical physicist, believes the
> human mind can do more than just create a universe - it can leap around
> the future, too. In a paper presented at the Vigier conference, called
> The Timing of the Conscious Experience, Wolf declared: "We are all
> psychic, whether we like it or not. Our brains operate more like time
> machines, and information from the future must influence choices that we
> have made in the past. This is an evolutionary transformation, and
> species which didn't pick up this very important capability died out."
>
> Wolf is talking about quantum physics, the revolutionary spin-off from
> sub-atomics where particles can exist simultaneously in two places. Just
> observing quantum particles affects the way they behave. In his book
> Hyperspace, New York professor of physics Michio Kaku combines Wolfs
> quantum theories with Einstein's relativity equations to design a time
> machine: 'It consists of two chambers, each containing two parallel
> metal plates. Intense electric fields created between each pair of
> plates rip the fabric of space-time, creating a hole in space that links
> the two chambers." Kaku admits the technology to create such powerful
> electro-magnetic circuitry doesn't yet exist - but then he was writing
> before the advent of TCAPs. If one of the chambers is moving at an
> immense speed - in space, for example - Einstein's laws dictate there
> will be a time-lag, with the clock ticking more slowly in space than on
> Earth. Anything stepping through the door here will emerge at the other
> end in the past.
>
> And if the spaceship is piloted by Emory implants, it will be back home
> in the twinkling of a thought. The practical applications are currently
> slim, but the theoretical implications are massive. The time-traveller
> could reach Earth in time to meet himself and order himself not to step
> through the doorway. So now what?
>
> Kaku's answer is simple - and convincing enough to make time travel an
> even more mind-shaking possibility. When the traveller steps back in
> time, he also steps into another universe. All those two-timing quantum
> particles making up all the incalculable trillions of atoms in the
> universe cannot behave the same way twice. Something different happens
> to the universe every time the traveller heads backwards, effectively
> creating another universe running parallel to this one. So he might
> arrive in a world where unicorns roam on Hampstead Heath, and Chateau
> Petrus is only four pence a bottle. Or he might vanish in a scenario
> where life never evolved at all.
>
> TUMMY TROUBLE
>
> If you're sceptical about Back To The Future, how about Fantastic
> Voyage? Can you imagine travelling through your own body? Israeli
> scientist Gavriel Iddan, of the Rafael Arms Development Authority, has
> devised a disposable capsule the size of a vitamin pill containing a
> camera no bigger than a microchip, a miniscule light source,
> transmitters and a power cell. During its seven-hour passage through the
> digestive tract, the camera broadcasts to a receiver on a belt.
> Currently, the belt is removed after the capsule is 'expelled', and the
> receiver then downloads to a workstation where real-time video of the
> intestine can be viewed. But soon, live transmissions will be available.
>
> On the split-screen display, images of the gut appear beside a map
> pinpointing the capsule's location. Current endoscopic imaging
> techniques, where the camera is inserted down the throat on a tube,
> can't be nearly so accurate - all the surgeon can know is how much
> tubing has been paid out.
>
> The implications for medicine are massive. Gavriel Meron, Chief
> Executive of the Rafael subsidiary which is testing the capsule, points
> out that endoscopy and other methods such as X-rays miss around 20 per
> cent of gastrointestinal ailments, including malignant cancers. "With
> that kind of failure rate," he says, "you can't talk about early
> detection". Iddan's capsule isn't expected to reach the market until
> after the year 2000, but Meron is confident it is only the first in a
> family of internal cameras.
>
> The future may be bright, but the past is somewhat more murky: Rafael,
> where Iddan is head of electro-optics research, is after all a military
> establishment. Rumours are circulating that the initial technology was
> part of a missile head, but Meron denies it: "It's not part, as far as I
> know, of any defence system". But then he would say that, wouldn't he?
>
> DOUBLE TROUBLE
>
> While your mind's still happily boggling away, let's go back to quantum
> mechanics. That idea of particles being affected by observation is known
> as Heizenberg's Uncertainty Principle. Formulated in 1927, it cuts both
> ways - if a particle is not observed, it exists in every possible state.
> It does not settle down and make its choice until it is measured. So a
> particle of matter could also be a wave of energy, and a radioactive
> atom may be decayed or it may be whole. Until we look, nothing is
> certain.
>
> Existing in one known, static condition requires no energy. But existing
> in two oscillating conditions simultaneously isn't so economical. Energy
> is required. Even a vacuum frozen to absolute zero will require energy.
> And a vacuum at absolute zero is a succinct description of most regions
> in outer space.
>
> Physicists have argued for decades whether spaceships could convert this
> energy. The debate got hot in 1948, when the Dutch scientist HBG Casimir
> used a pair of gold-coated quartz plates and a torsion pendulum to
> demonstrate zero-point energy did exist. The motion of the pendulum,
> twisting one of the plates, could not be explained unless the zero-point
> was built into calculations.
>
> Russian researchers, in an attempt to make up for their lack of alien
> craft, tried bombarding water with sound to create air pockets which
> imploded, creating energy flashes. Nobel Prize-winner Julian Schwinger
> pointed to zero-point energy as the cause, but the trail went cold with
> the advent of perestroika.
>
> Hal Puthoff, Director of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Austin,
> Texas, has reopened the controversy with an outrageous claim: that
> zero-point energy is the force that holds electrons in orbit round an
> atom's nucleus. "It implies that hydrogen injected into cavities might
> produce excess energy," he said. With the energy taken out, atoms would
> shrink. Imagine a device that reduces a potato to powder - but instead
> of merely dehydrating it, you are extracting enough power to run your
> central heating for a week.
>
> LETHAL KEY-RINGS
>
> But enough of the theories and the physics, you can already get hold of
> a product that is just as mind-boggling in its nature and its functions:
> a mere key-ring. The Bulgarian Osa, or Wasp not only keeps your doorkey
> safe, but also detects radiation, fires .32 calibre bullets and evades
> airport security systems. The £12.50 device was designed by Viktor
> Staef, who proudly declares: "This is the latest descendant of the
> Bulgarian poison-tipped umbrella".
>
> First conceived as a pistol to fire tear-gas capsules, the gadget is
> aimed at the Indian and Pakistani market, mainly as a women's
> self-defence weapon. "Women shy away from guns," said Staef, "so it gave
> me the idea to make it look like something they would find sympathetic.
> It comes in 99 different shades, so you can match it with the colour of
> your eyes, clothes, lipstick or your car." With nuclear tests underway
> in the sub-continent, the Geiger counter is an added attraction.
>
> But Staef isn't stopping there. At his workshop in Pazardzik, south-east
> of Sofia, he has also created an air rifle which converts to an
> underwater harpoon and a drinks cooler. Sounds ideal for serving
> martinis - shaken, not stirred.
>
>
>
> A raindrop, dripping from a cloud,
> Was ashamed when it saw the sea.
> `Who am I where there is a sea?' it said.
> When it saw itself with the eye of humility,
> A shell nurtured it in its embrace.
>
> -Saadi of Shiraz (c. 1200 AD)
>
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outright
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> Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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> Om
>

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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