ForgotPassword?
Sign Up
Search this Topic:
Posts: 1814
Sep 9 15 7:44 PM
Interact
Posts: 14317
Sep 10 15 12:09 AM
Posts: 26945
Sep 10 15 9:27 PM
This is a story that pushes the boundaries of common convention. It is a sad reality that sometimes things we are told can’t hurt us… actually do. We were told against good common sense that being bathed and situated in close proximity to high power radio transmitters was “of no harm”. The energy was not supposed to interact with our cellular architecture…had to be true since there was an acclaimed consensus on the matter in the scientific and research circles…right. We living human beings are more than just flesh and blood; we are also a highly complex electromagnetic system. This also means that we interact with external electromagnetic radiation (EMR). The problem is that no importance is given to how detrimental all this electro-magnetic radiation is to human health and consciousness. Life is stranger than fiction and apparently some science as well. Some humans are sensitive and attuned into more levels of energy then science or anyone can currently quantify. This landmark legal case is the first step into getting legitimacy into the study of human sensitives. Marine Richard, a former radio producer from France, says she is allergic to Wi-Fi and is forced to live in a remote barn in the mountains to avoid electronics. Despite the words of caution from health officials, the judge ruled in favor of Marine Richard, awarding her approximately $995 per month in disability. When the court initially heard Richard’s claims, health authorities claimed that EHS was not a clinically recognized illness. Therefore, the disability claim should be denied, which it was. The World Health Organization mentions electromagnetic sensitivity as an illness that is “characterized by a range of non-specific symptoms that lack apparent toxicological or physiological basis or independent verification.” Despite initially being denied disability for her Wi-Fi allergy, Richard wasn’t going to give up. She took her disability claim to the French courts and won her case for her inability to be near electronics.
This is a story that pushes the boundaries of common convention. It is a sad reality that sometimes things we are told can’t hurt us… actually do.
We were told against good common sense that being bathed and situated in close proximity to high power radio transmitters was “of no harm”. The energy was not supposed to interact with our cellular architecture…had to be true since there was an acclaimed consensus on the matter in the scientific and research circles…right.
We living human beings are more than just flesh and blood; we are also a highly complex electromagnetic system. This also means that we interact with external electromagnetic radiation (EMR). The problem is that no importance is given to how detrimental all this electro-magnetic radiation is to human health and consciousness.
Life is stranger than fiction and apparently some science as well. Some humans are sensitive and attuned into more levels of energy then science or anyone can currently quantify. This landmark legal case is the first step into getting legitimacy into the study of human sensitives.
Marine Richard, a former radio producer from France, says she is allergic to Wi-Fi and is forced to live in a remote barn in the mountains to avoid electronics. Despite the words of caution from health officials, the judge ruled in favor of Marine Richard, awarding her approximately $995 per month in disability. When the court initially heard Richard’s claims, health authorities claimed that EHS was not a clinically recognized illness. Therefore, the disability claim should be denied, which it was.
The World Health Organization mentions electromagnetic sensitivity as an illness that is “characterized by a range of non-specific symptoms that lack apparent toxicological or physiological basis or independent verification.”
Despite initially being denied disability for her Wi-Fi allergy, Richard wasn’t going to give up. She took her disability claim to the French courts and won her case for her inability to be near electronics.
Read more @ http://www.paranormics.com/legal-system-recognized-electromagnetic-hypersensitive-people-as-real/
"What lies behind us and what lies before us are small matters compared to what lies within us." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~
Sep 29 15 11:27 AM
http://www.chron.com/news/science-environment/article/12-times-inventions-in-science-fiction-came-true-6535532.php
Sep 30 15 8:36 PM
Your dream of becoming a Jedi Knight may not be as ridiculous as you thought.Scientists say they have taken a step toward building objects out of photons in super-chilled gas.The findings hint that weightless particles of light can be joined into a sort of 'molecule' with its own peculiar force.Some even hope the breakthrough could lead to a Star Wars-style lightsaber, although the physicists say this still remains outside the realms of possibility.
Your dream of becoming a Jedi Knight may not be as ridiculous as you thought.
Scientists say they have taken a step toward building objects out of photons in super-chilled gas.
The findings hint that weightless particles of light can be joined into a sort of 'molecule' with its own peculiar force.
Some even hope the breakthrough could lead to a Star Wars-style lightsaber, although the physicists say this still remains outside the realms of possibility.
Oct 2 15 7:35 AM
We’ve known since at least the late 1970s that Mars had been a wet planet; one of those Viking orbiters even grabbed photos of what looked like a transitory vapor plume back when Jimmy Carter was president. We’ve all seen the images of dry lakebeds and rivers, which have been bandied about for decades now. And although the space agency tried to inject major suspense over the weekend into the buildup to a “mystery-solved” press conference, NASA's revelations on Monday about the ebb and flow of surface water were a bit anti-climactic, and easily parodied. Moreover, there was speculation about whether or not this alleged news was timed to coincide with – ahem – the release of Ridley Scott’s latest blockbuster, “The Martian.” And that’s today’s segue into some reflections on what may or may not be happening when government interests converge with Hollywood. In a newly-released book Silver Screen Saucers: Sorting Fact From Fantasy in Hollywood Movies, UFO culture critic Robbie Graham argues that when it comes to shaping perceptions of The Great Taboo, the military, or civilian intelligence, or both, have been leaving their fingerprints on Tinseltown since the end of WWII. And in the backwash of these simplistic binary scenarios – space aliens are either conquerors or beneficent guardians, not much in between – comes an enduring legacy of stereotypes that may be impossible to eradicate from the mass mind. Graham calls it “hyperreality, in which reality and simulation are experienced as without difference, or rather, the image has come to mean more to us than the underlying reality.”
We’ve known since at least the late 1970s that Mars had been a wet planet; one of those Viking orbiters even grabbed photos of what looked like a transitory vapor plume back when Jimmy Carter was president. We’ve all seen the images of dry lakebeds and rivers, which have been bandied about for decades now. And although the space agency tried to inject major suspense over the weekend into the buildup to a “mystery-solved” press conference, NASA's revelations on Monday about the ebb and flow of surface water were a bit anti-climactic, and easily parodied. Moreover, there was speculation about whether or not this alleged news was timed to coincide with – ahem – the release of Ridley Scott’s latest blockbuster, “The Martian.”
And that’s today’s segue into some reflections on what may or may not be happening when government interests converge with Hollywood. In a newly-released book Silver Screen Saucers: Sorting Fact From Fantasy in Hollywood Movies, UFO culture critic Robbie Graham argues that when it comes to shaping perceptions of The Great Taboo, the military, or civilian intelligence, or both, have been leaving their fingerprints on Tinseltown since the end of WWII. And in the backwash of these simplistic binary scenarios – space aliens are either conquerors or beneficent guardians, not much in between – comes an enduring legacy of stereotypes that may be impossible to eradicate from the mass mind. Graham calls it “hyperreality, in which reality and simulation are experienced as without difference, or rather, the image has come to mean more to us than the underlying reality.”
Read more @ http://devoid.blogs.heraldtribune.com/15382/one-hand-washing-the-other/
Oct 2 15 7:30 PM
Oct 3 15 8:28 PM
Oct 3 15 10:47 PM
Oct 9 15 10:48 PM
http://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/us-military-two-years-away-from-debuting-innovative-and-futuristic-tactical-light-operator-suit/story-fnjwucti-1227563868197
Oct 10 15 4:44 AM
Oct 21 15 9:03 AM
Master/Mind is a thought-provoking short video compiled from footage of researchers, philosophers, politicians and futurists discussing new technologies that will fundamentally change the manner in which our minds interact with the world, and vice versa - from 'mind-reading' applications to brain uploading: The human brain is the most complex object in the universe. Our understanding of its inner workings has been shrouded in mystery…until now. New technologies are beginning to unlock the brain’s true potential, but at what cost to our humanity?
Master/Mind is a thought-provoking short video compiled from footage of researchers, philosophers, politicians and futurists discussing new technologies that will fundamentally change the manner in which our minds interact with the world, and vice versa - from 'mind-reading' applications to brain uploading:
The human brain is the most complex object in the universe. Our understanding of its inner workings has been shrouded in mystery…until now. New technologies are beginning to unlock the brain’s true potential, but at what cost to our humanity?
Oct 21 15 6:47 PM
Oct 22 15 11:29 AM
icepick wrote:Well, we definitely influence it. I don't think it's that each of us simply create it, because everybody else has to be factored in. But we do have our say. And it would be more assertive, if only we knew how to use it properly. Faith ............ without doubts. Very tough for humans.
Oct 22 15 11:38 AM
A DRIVER has sparked outrage after posting a picture of a dead 16-year-old lying in a pool of blood after being involved in a horror car crash.America’s Action News reports that Trevius Williams was crossing the road when he was struck by a car in Jacksonville, Florida.Police investigating Sunday’s tragic death have since uncovered shocking pictures, tweeted by the driver, which show Williams immediately after being struck.“I just killed a man,” he said.In another tweet he wrote: “Worst night of my life.”
A DRIVER has sparked outrage after posting a picture of a dead 16-year-old lying in a pool of blood after being involved in a horror car crash.
America’s Action News reports that Trevius Williams was crossing the road when he was struck by a car in Jacksonville, Florida.
Police investigating Sunday’s tragic death have since uncovered shocking pictures, tweeted by the driver, which show Williams immediately after being struck.
“I just killed a man,” he said.
In another tweet he wrote: “Worst night of my life.”
Read more @ http://www.news.com.au/world/north-america/driver-posts-sickening-tweet-of-16-year-old-dead-crash-victim-after-horror-collision/story-fnh81jut-1227578026597
Oct 22 15 11:44 AM
Oct 22 15 11:55 AM
icepick wrote:I know it does happen Pen, because the part in the New Testament that addresses it is so definitive. The only reason I believe it's subtle, is because there are at least 7 billion more people changing things too. God lives inside each and every one of us, so I'm confident that he has it all under control. Boggles the mind to think about it though, does it not?
Oct 23 15 1:18 AM
Oct 23 15 12:35 PM
That's a cool story. Do I see a sign of your reality conforming with another person's there? That's cool, because I'm positive that's how this works. But I am just as positive that, given enough faith, one could instill some immediacy in that influence as well. That's what I was driving at, our difficulties we encounter if trying to control that influence.
To be honest, none of us can be smug, because we're all pretty clueless in this day and age. Ah, the irony of it all. As our brains become more capable of these things, our added intelligence sabotages the effort.
Oct 23 15 1:23 PM