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This is, without question, the most important article I've ever penned, because it discusses the idea that the human race is being destroyed in the name of science. Stopping these "scientists" from destroying our world and our civilization must become our top priority if we hope to survive.
Human race being terminated by scientific suicide, 5/7/12
What corporate-driven "science" has in mind for the future of humanity is far different from the dreamy utopian landscape that's been portrayed by the mainstream media. To hear the corporate-run media tell it, science is always "good" for humanity. Scientific achievements are always called "advances" and not "setbacks," even though many of them have proven to be disastrous for humanity (atomic bombs, for example, or GMOs). While pure science is, indeed, a necessary component of any civilization which seeks to expand its understanding of the universe, what we see dominating the landscape today isn't pure science but corporate-driven "science" that only seeks to accelerate corporate profits, not human understanding. And with that corporate-slanted science comes a whole new era of truly terrifying technologies that we may soon see become reality in our world.
10 outlandish things the 'scientific' controllers have in mind for you in the near future, 11/23/11
Charles Xavier Thomas de Colmar invented the first commercially successful mechanical calculator in 1820. It was 100 years before mechanical calculators gave way, in the 1930s, to electromechanical calculators, which then quickly gave way to the first general-purpose electronic computer, ENIAC, in 1946. By 1965, Gordon Moore was predicting that engineers would be able to double the number of components on a microchip every two years (and by 1968, he co-founded Intel to help them do so). Just as Moore predicted, computers continue to become exponentially faster, while their components have become much cheaper. William Nordhaus, an economist at Yale University, examined hundreds of devices—from the first computer to the Apple II to modern PCs—and determined how many basic calculations they could perform every second.
Rise of the Machines, 11/2/11
Russia is planning to further it's reach in the Arctic circle, according to a statement from Vladimir Putin's website. The country has already made a bold appeal to the UN to annex some 380,000 square miles of Arctic seabed due to the existence of oil and gas in the area. One plan for the region will involve special Arctic cities. The first city is proposed for a frozen Siberian island will be known as "Umka", housing 5,000 residents underneath a huge dome. The city will be spared from the harsh weather — -30 degrees Celsius in the winter with strong winds — by the dome, living instead in a sealed environment.
A Look At 'Umka', The Domed Russian City Planned For Sub-Zero Arctic Temperatures, 10/24/11
The people who work at IBM's Emerging Technologies lab in Winchester, England can read minds and move things with mere thought. Four hundred years ago they would have been burned at the stake. But these high-tech sorcerers aren't in league with Beelzebub, they just know the devil's in the details and paying attention to those details has enabled them to work technological magic.
New software permits mind-reading and mind-over-matter, 10/13/11
At first glance, such a thing might be too fantastic a notion to believe, yet Pohlman does hold a Bachelor of Science in Engineering Physics, an MBA from Lexington Business School, and a PhD in computer science from Trinity University. He's also a member of Portland Mensa, and is a Licensed Professional Engineer, Certified Information Systems Auditor, Certified Information Security Manager and Certified Information Systems security professional. Perhaps he invented the time machine because he discovered he hasn't enough time to squeeze in everything he wants to accomplish?
U.S. Scientist Patents Time Machine, 10/11/11
The world’s first 'printed' car has finally rolled off the printing press. The 'Urbee' was made using a special printer which built up layer upon layer of bodywork - almost as if the car was 'painted' into existence, except using layers of ultra-thin composite that are slowly 'fused' into a solid. But unlike most 'innovations' in cars, this one won't break down after 5 years - Urbee is built to last 30. Project leader Jim Kor, told MailOnline today: 'For us, this unveiling was quite a milestone.
Rolling off the 3D printing press... the world's first 'printed' car - and it actually works, 9/23/11
For Terrafugia, the long road to making its “roadable aircraft” a commercial reality hasn’t been exactly straight, but the company keeps on rolling forward. Its Transition aircraft just received a few special exemptions from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that further clear the way for first deliveries of the vehicle, which are now slated for late next year.
Terrafugia's 'Roadable Aircraft' Receives Regulatory Clearance for the Road, 7/6/11
Nudging open a door with its extendable arm, a bomb-disposal robot became the first robot to enter a reactor building at Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, confirming high radiation levels that are unsafe for humans.
A pair of iRobot PackBots carefully rolled through double doors at the reactor building on Unit 3 and Unit 1, both of which were damaged in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Tokyo Electric Power Co. officials spent much of the day Sunday using the robots to conduct radiation and oxygen-level surveys in the crippled reactor buildings. A robot also explored Unit 2 on Monday.
Robots Finally Enter Crippled Japanese Nuclear Reactor, Find High Radiation Levels, 4/18/11
Europe and the rest of the world are developing new technologies that will give them the economic edge in technology and products, as America unthinkingly erodes into a third world nation as our politicians who are beholden to fossil fuel companies, legislate for them to make billions of dollars.
A car that runs on compressed air is a French invention that orchestrates old technologies into a new chassis.
A Car that Runs 200 Miles on Compressed Air
The Switchblade, a flying motorcycle brainstormed into reality by its visionary inventor, Sam Bousfield, may soon take to the skies.
Flying cars have been a mainstay of science fiction from the days of Hugo Gernsback and pulp fiction to the Star Wars saga and Hanna-Barbera's Jetson cartoons. But rarely has anyone thought of flying motorcycles, until now.
Inventor creates incredible flying motorcycle, 3/25/11
But what’s actually happening turns out to be much more complicated. Indeed researchers — from sociologists and psychologists to neuroscientists — have discovered that middle-aged brains do not necessarily act like the rest of our bodies at all.But at the same time, our ability to make accurate judgments about people, about jobs, about finances — about the world around us — grows stronger. Our brains build up patterns of connections, interwoven layers of knowledge that allow us to instantly recognise similarities of situations and see solutions.
Middle-aged? Believe it or not, you've never been brainier, 3/22/11
Cracking combination locks has never been so easy. A group of engineering students at Olin College of Engineering have built a robot that will solve any MasterLock combination in a under two hours by running through all the possible combinations. Just set it and forget it.
Video: Combo-Cracking Robot Makes Quick Work of Padlocks, 3/9/11
A carnivorous plant that lives in bogs worldwide traps its prey in less than a millisecond, more than 100 times faster than a Venus flytrap can manage, a new study finds. The study is the first to capture a high-speed recording of the plant's traps snapping shut.
Utricularia, a genus of rootless carnivorous plants, is better known by its common name, bladderwort. There are more than 200 species worldwide, living in fresh water and saturated soils. To survive without roots, bladderworts trap and digest tiny organisms, including protozoa and tiny crustaceans. They do so with small bladder-like traps that line their stems.
The super-fast motion of bladderwort traps (which are a few millimeters in size) is too quick to be seen with the naked eye. So Philippe Marmottant of the Universite Grenoble in France and his colleagues made high-speed recordings of bladderworts snapping up crustaceans just a few millimeters long.
Carnivorous Plant Snaps Shut With 600 Gs, 2/16/11
As a grad student, Cynthia Breazeal wondered why we were using robots on Mars, but not in our living rooms. The key, she realized: training robots to interact with people. Now she dreams up and builds robots that teach, learn -- and play. Watch for amazing demo footage of a new interactive game for kids.
Rise of personal robots
In the not-so-distant future, instead of buying manufactured food items at the store, you may instead just "print" them right in your own kitchen. The technology is called "food fabrication," and it allows you to fabricate foods right in your own kitchen, layer by layer, in much the same way an inkjet printer prints a color bar chart on a piece of paper.
What's in your future kitchen? Food fabrication technology prints out your meals in seconds, 1/26/11
The very reputation of so-called "science" has been irreparably damaged by the invocation of the term "science" by GMO lackeys, pesticide pushers, mercury advocates and fluoride poisoners who all claim to have science on their side. It seems that every toxin, contamination and chemical disaster that now infects our planet has been evangelized in the name of "science."
Where "science" used to be highly regarded in the 1950's, today the term is largely exploited by pharmaceutical companies, biotech giants and chemical companies to push their own for-profit agendas. Actual science has little to do with the schemes now being pushed under the veil of science.
Downfall of science and rise of intellectual tyranny, 1/21/11
For more than three centuries inventors—usually crackpots—have sought the elusive fantasy of a perpetual motion machine.
Now investigators of an amazing object stuck in the dusty corners of an obscure Romanian museum may have found the next best thing: a perpetual battery.
Whether a battery that has operated continuously since 1950 without a recharge can be termed perpetual may be open to debate, yet the fact remains that the remarkable device has never ceased working and doesn't look like it's about to give up the ghost anytime soon.
A battery operates continuously in Romanian museum since 1950, 1/7/11
In 2008 mathematician and author Michael S. Schneider put together a video explaining how mathematics used by Ancient Egyptians is identical to the math used in computers today.
The Ancient Egyptians figured out how to do multiplication without memorizing times tables, and how to do long division without using half boxes.
Modern man used Ancient Egypt's mathematics to build computers! The Ancient Egyptians multiplied mostly by repeated doubling and adding, sometimes also by using ten as an intermediate multiplier when it was more convenient.
This way, they avoided the need to learn multiplication tables.
Ancient Egyptian Math Identical To Math In Modern Computers, 12/16/10
In a paper published today in the journal Science, the J. Craig Venter Institute and Synthetic Genomics Inc announced the laboratory creation of the world’s first self-reproducing organism whose entire genome was built from scratch by a machine.(1) The construction of this synthetic organism, anticipated and dubbed “Synthia” by the ETC Group three years ago, will stir a firestorm of controversy over the ethics of building artificial life and the implications of the largely unknown field of synthetic biology.
Panacea, or…? According to today’s publication, “Synthia” could be a boon to second-generation agrofuels making it – theoretically – possible to feed people and cars simultaneously. The article further suggests that Synthia, or synthetic biology, could help clean up the environment, save us from climate change, and address the food crisis. “Synthia is not a one-stop-shop for all our societal woes,” disputes Pat Mooney, Executive Director of ETC Group, an international technology watchdog based in Canada. “It is much more likely to cause a whole new set of problems governments and society are ill-prepared to address.”
Completely Synthetic Life Form – Synthia is Alive … and Breeding: Panacea or Pandora’s Box?, 5/20/10
Still more evidence of the genius of our Grand Creator. How could evolution be responsible for this mathematical miracle!
Fibonacci numbers - Fingerprint of God, 4/30/10
Glenn Clark, searching for a versatile genius who knew and used universal law, and would be an inspiration to others, found Walter Russell, musician, illustrator, portrait painter, architectural designer, sculptor, business practices advisor to employees of International Business Machines, champion figure skater, natural scientist, philosopher and author.“Can you give me the secret of your life?” asked Glenn Clark. “I believe sincerely that every man has consummate genius within him. Some appear to have it more than others only because they are aware of it more than others are, and the awareness or unawareness of it is what makes each one of them into masters or holds them down to mediocrity. I believe that mediocrity is self-inflicted and genius is self-bestowed. Every successful person I ever have known, and I have know a great many, carries within him the key which unlocks that awareness and lets in the universal power that has made him into a master.” “What is that key?” queried Glenn Clark. “That key is desire when it is released into the great eternal Energy of the Universe.”
Glenn Clark: Man Who Tapped The Secrets of The Universe
The woolly mammoth, extinct for thousands of years, could be brought back to life in as little as four years thanks to a breakthrough in cloning technology.
Previous efforts in the 1990s to recover nuclei in cells from the skin and muscle tissue from mammoths found in the Siberian permafrost failed because they had been too badly damaged by the extreme cold.
But a technique pioneered in 2008 by Dr. Teruhiko Wakayama, of the Riken Centre for Developmental Biology, was successful in cloning a mouse from the cells of another mouse that had been frozen for 16 years.
Mammoth 'could be reborn in four years'
There is a special sound and color of love according to Dr. Horowitz, a Harvard-trained award-winning investigator. Broadcasting the right frequency can help open your heart, prompt peace, and hasten healing. "We now know the love signal, 528 Hertz, is among the six core creative frequencies of the universe because math doesn't lie, the geometry of physical reality universally reflects this music; these findings have been independently derived, peer reviewed, and empirically validated," Dr. Horowitz says.
528 Hz, the frequency for transformation and DNA repair, 5/28/8
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