If this affair doesn't go anywhere, we could start a fund for an opensource
development of LENR.

2012/2/24 Jarold McWilliams <oldja...@hotmail.com>

> If everyone was better off, including yourself, you'd still follow your
> "values"?  I completely disagree with this.  All I care about is making
> people's lives better.
>
> On Feb 24, 2012, at 12:32 PM, noone noone wrote:
>
> When it comes to sticking to my principles, it does not matter what people
> think of me.
>
> I'm the kind of person who goes into church and asks Christians, "who
> would Jesus bomb." At that point I'm automatically considered an evil
> liberal.
>
> In this life you can usually take two roads when it comes to most
> decisions. The first road is the one that is a compromise of your
> principles, and branches out to many different roads. This road is often
> easier to ride on, has fewer bumps, and makes a commute easy. The second
> road is the one where you refuse to budge one inch on your principles. It
> is full of bumps, and can easily get you a flat tire. For example, a woman
> divorcing her husband after being cheated on (THE FIRST TIME) despite
> having ten kids and no way to financially support them, and her husband
> apologizing. Divorce is the only appropriate answer, even if it could mean
> the kids end up being sent to orphanages and never seeing each other again.
> Some may say she should have not divorced her husband, but I believe her
> principles are more important than anything else.
>
> If I were Andrea Rossi and if my technology had been copied without
> permission (I'm not saying it has) I would let the world consider me the
> most evil man in history. I would sleep just fine at night knowing that I
> did the right thing, by standing up for not only my rights, and the
> property rights of all other inventors.
>
> A world without absolute rights is not worth living in. Sadly, the way the
> world is going, individuals are having their rights violated more and more
> each day.
>
>   ------------------------------
> *From:* OrionWorks - Steven V Johnson <svj.orionwo...@gmail.com>
> *To:* vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
> *Sent:* Friday, February 24, 2012 1:21 PM
> *Subject:* Re: [Vo]:Test day in Greece time
>
> noone noone sez:
>
> > If I invented a billion dollar technology and someone copied
> > it without my permission, I would not accept a trillion
> > dollars from a lawsuit.
> >
> > The only thing I would accept is for the other company to be
> > forced to re-call all their products. Then I would make money
> > by selling the products from my own company.
>
> Good luck. You give me the impression that you think you can go to
> court and win your case in a just few weeks, and then everything will
> be honky dorey. Think again. Think years. Many, many years.
>
> And during all those contentious years of unending litigation that
> will make many a lawyer rich, and while you are demanding all those
> recalls, and to a complete halt to sales, just think of all the good
> PR you will be generating for yourself. People across the planet are
> desperate for any kind of cheaper energy. But your sense of demanding
> "justice" could end up potentially denying a huge portion of the
> population that opportunity - all on personal principle. I'm sure they
> will all understand your personal sense of outrage for not getting
> even richer off of your invention. But of course you'll be right. You
> have that going for you.
>
> Don't get me wrong. I would be pissed off, too, if someone stole my
> invention. But consider the ramifications of how best to get even with
> the competition. Try to get even without turning yourself in to the
> energy pariah of the century - someone who will be written up in the
> history books as having denied millions of desperate individuals
> access to cheap energy because he was unhappy over the fact that
> someone was making profits off of something that he thought he should
> be profiting over himself.
>
> > If Rossi's technology has been stolen, I hope he refuses any
> > credit, money, or other compensation. I would also hope he
> > would turn down the nobel prize. I hope his mission in life
> > becomes to stop anyone who has used his technology without
> > permission.
>
> Shish! I'm glad I don't think the way you do.
>
> Regards
> Steven Vincent Johnson
> www.OrionWorks.com
> www.zazzle.com/orionworks
>
>
>
>
>


-- 
Daniel Rocha - RJ
danieldi...@gmail.com

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