I appear to be an unwelcome guest at
societyforclassicalphys...@yahoogroups.com 
Below is my third rejected post out of 4 since I joined back in 2008 all
rejected by the same moderator who no longer even feels it necessary to
justify himself. I won't be wasting further effort on their forum but my
opinion is they have their heads in the sand.
 
From: not...@yahoogroups.com [mailto:not...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of
john1farrell
Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2010 11:33 AM
To: Frank
Subject: Message not approved: Hyperbolic electron

> Novell_compound,
> 
>  
> 
>             I agree with your conclusions based on Naudts relativistic
> interpretation of the Black Light Process. At the most basic level Mills
> 
> has set the stage to exploit 2 opposing forces of nature. Natures desire
for
> diatomic states and the difference between atomic and diatomic translation
> inside a catalyst.
> 
> Mills makes a point of the "nonradiative" translation of hydrogen to
> fractional states but makes little mention of the effects of translation
on
> fractional diatoms. I submit that this is the easiest way for a "working
> man" such as myself to understand the process. The covalent or ionic bond
of
> the diatom opposes the fractional translation. If the diatom is outside
the
> cavity it either repels or disassociates the diatom like a Pd membrane, If
> it is a fractional diatom (formed from fractional atoms already inside the
> catalyst) then the opposition to further catalytic action will break the
> diatomic bond and the atoms will translate to a fractional value
appropriate
> for the immediate Casimir geometry. These fractional atoms continue to
> translate between states and accelerate from our perspective until they
once
> again from a fractional diatom, give off a photon and repeat the cycle
over
> and over again until they escape the cavity. Naudts relativistic solution
> also explains the spectrum shift as the normal emission is time dilated
from
> the inertial frame of the fractional diatom back to the inertial frame of
> the observer outside the cavity.
> 
> Regards
> 
> Fran
> 
>   _____  
> 
> From: societyforclassicalphys...@yahoogroups.com
> [mailto:societyforclassicalphys...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of amack43
> Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2010 2:04 AM
> To: societyforclassicalphys...@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [SocietyforClassicalPhysics] Re: Hyperbolic electron
> 
>  
> 
>   
> 
> --- In SocietyforClassical
> <mailto:SocietyforClassicalPhysics%40yahoogroups.com>
> phys...@yahoogroups.com, "novel_compound" <novel_compo...@...> wrote:
> snipped
> 
> This is the strange thing about this whole saga. If you look at fringe
> claims, most can be dismissed out of hand. The inventor isn't credible,
has
> no theory- it doesn't mean they might not have seen something new or
unusual
> but there's usually nothing there to basis a reasonable belief they they
> might be correct.
> 
> With blacklightpower we have the strange situation where Dr. Mills has all
> the evidence, reams of it, all the theory and it amazingly fits everything
> we see and everything we know about the universe and the Mills haters have
> nothing. They provide no evidence and little more than tedious, slanderous
> and repetitive assertions.
> 
> Some take the view that even if Dr. Mills builds a working reactor he is
> still wrong about the theory. So their own test that he must provide
> saleable product to prove his case, one that of course is never applied to
> their own grants and funding or public funded positions, is worthless. 
> 
> They point to the time taken to build a reactor and when I point out
fusion
> reactors have had less progress, with less results with more time and more
> money they sneer, "But fusion is real"
> 
> They lecture people on how a real two dimensional electron would behave
when
> none of them had the slightest idea before Mills that such existed and
don't
> believe it exists now. Yet they declare themselves "experts". Well kudos.
> 
> I still hold that any impartial person with a fraction of common sense
could
> have seen classical physics was real, and obviously so based on the
provided
> evidence more than ten years ago.
> 
> The technological breakthroughs are going to be amazing. I hope I'm around
> to see the first fifth force spaceship power up into space on a great big
> plume of nothing.

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