Yes I do. There's a good "why files" on it, though it's mostly related to cars.
There has been a gov't monopoly on electricity production from the early FDR days. There had been a thriving competition for electric energy production among municipal governments, driven largely by electric train systems, until the feds stepped in. They eliminated the competition and took over. Today even if you could produce infinite free electricity from home (without getting killed by the cabal enforcers) you wouldn't be permitted to wire it into the grid or even to your neighbors because of the govt interest in enforcing its monopoly. It's one of the reasons there was such a big to-do about solar panels being allowed to send power back into the grid: they didn't want anybody to get the idea they could edge into the gov't profits. It's been an invisible and unnecessary controlled tax on all of us for nearly a century now.
I don't believe anything is free, but there are, and always have been, sustainable fuel for cars and electricity. In the early days of internal combustion engines, most designs were based on grain fuel. Even the Model T had multi-fuel capabilities. Then, Big Oil stepped in and lobbied a huge tax on grain spirits; including fuel. This presented new challenges to engines; gasoline burns hotter, ignites almost too easy and creates more toxic byproduct, not to mention the addition of another toxic and expensive product. Progress, I think they would call it. I call it greed and planned obsolescence. Looking back after 40+ years fixing cars, I really wish they just stuck to grain fuel.
Agreed. But the large scale electric plants have been paid many times over via taxes and artificially high rates. Consequently, electric bills should be a thing of the past after initial setup.
I look forward to the bright new future Q has promised.
u/#q2450
Nope. Caked-up intake valves and carbon built up from oil consumption. My 30 year old shitbox truck has nearly 400k on the original engine running premium the whole time. It's designed for that, wheather or not the manufacturer recommends it. Notice that they never discouraged it?
I like the Chicago 1893 World Fair at Night Photo and St Louis World Fair 1904 at night
It's clear to me that the history we're told doesn't match up with what these photos show us...not to mention the "temporary buildings" made out of staff fantasy... and orphan trains... insane asylums... and incubator babies... and cabbage patch kids... and... and... and...
We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." - William J. Casey, the CIA Director under Ronald Reagan
Law of thermodynamics only applies to this universe and assumes that there are no other universes and or that if there distinct additional universes that none of them are able to interact with one another - which conflicts with rapidly evolving ideas and theories revolving around multiple/infinite universes that can bridge together or "collide" with one another. Free energy doesnt have to break if we are porting the energy from a system outside of our own.
This law is an axiom, energy follows from one state to another, but if it can be persuaded to stop flowing to another state it will go round and round forever and be harvested. Source: Tom Bearden's Motionless Electromagnetic Generator.
I think there was a misinterpretation. I think the real concept was wireless transmission. That implies that people would not have to pay for it directly. Directly is the key word. Taxes or everyone paying a set fee.
Wireless doesn't have to mean wifi as we know the term, it just means without wires. It could mean transmitted through the earth. The Wardenclyffe Tower was just such a thing, J.P. Morgan put a stop to it as it was impossible to meter. There is one of these towers in Texas, another NE of Moscow, how many more are there?
Yes
Yes. Of course, by indicating that I'm aware of these things, I'm probably next on the list to mysteriously suicide.
Thank goodness that they don't know of my UFO research.
Kek your going to be just fine ..
Yes I do. There's a good "why files" on it, though it's mostly related to cars.
There has been a gov't monopoly on electricity production from the early FDR days. There had been a thriving competition for electric energy production among municipal governments, driven largely by electric train systems, until the feds stepped in. They eliminated the competition and took over. Today even if you could produce infinite free electricity from home (without getting killed by the cabal enforcers) you wouldn't be permitted to wire it into the grid or even to your neighbors because of the govt interest in enforcing its monopoly. It's one of the reasons there was such a big to-do about solar panels being allowed to send power back into the grid: they didn't want anybody to get the idea they could edge into the gov't profits. It's been an invisible and unnecessary controlled tax on all of us for nearly a century now.
I don't believe anything is free, but there are, and always have been, sustainable fuel for cars and electricity. In the early days of internal combustion engines, most designs were based on grain fuel. Even the Model T had multi-fuel capabilities. Then, Big Oil stepped in and lobbied a huge tax on grain spirits; including fuel. This presented new challenges to engines; gasoline burns hotter, ignites almost too easy and creates more toxic byproduct, not to mention the addition of another toxic and expensive product. Progress, I think they would call it. I call it greed and planned obsolescence. Looking back after 40+ years fixing cars, I really wish they just stuck to grain fuel.
Agreed. But the large scale electric plants have been paid many times over via taxes and artificially high rates. Consequently, electric bills should be a thing of the past after initial setup.
I look forward to the bright new future Q has promised. u/#q2450
If only you had seen a engine with 1/2 million miles on it run on propane. Shiny as brand new.
Nope. Caked-up intake valves and carbon built up from oil consumption. My 30 year old shitbox truck has nearly 400k on the original engine running premium the whole time. It's designed for that, wheather or not the manufacturer recommends it. Notice that they never discouraged it?
6,000 suppressed patents, dead inventors & scientists tells the story.
This is a DEEP rabbit hole...
I like the Chicago 1893 World Fair at Night Photo and St Louis World Fair 1904 at night
It's clear to me that the history we're told doesn't match up with what these photos show us...not to mention the "temporary buildings" made out of staff fantasy... and orphan trains... insane asylums... and incubator babies... and cabbage patch kids... and... and... and...
Everything you have been taught is a lie. -- Q
Interesting and fascinating ! 🤔 Love it !
Tesla proved electric universe, in the aether.
So yes, free. You can't put a meter on it.
Maxwell's first laws included the aether.
He was forced to change his laws to exclude the aether. Rothschilds I guess.
Have a nice tall glass of orange JOOS.
Video is 1min. 38sec.
Law of thermodynamics only applies to this universe and assumes that there are no other universes and or that if there distinct additional universes that none of them are able to interact with one another - which conflicts with rapidly evolving ideas and theories revolving around multiple/infinite universes that can bridge together or "collide" with one another. Free energy doesnt have to break if we are porting the energy from a system outside of our own.
This law is an axiom, energy follows from one state to another, but if it can be persuaded to stop flowing to another state it will go round and round forever and be harvested. Source: Tom Bearden's Motionless Electromagnetic Generator.
Stop throwing around the "Law of Thermodynamics" as if it's a science.
How isn't it science?
I think there was a misinterpretation. I think the real concept was wireless transmission. That implies that people would not have to pay for it directly. Directly is the key word. Taxes or everyone paying a set fee.
Wireless doesn't have to mean wifi as we know the term, it just means without wires. It could mean transmitted through the earth. The Wardenclyffe Tower was just such a thing, J.P. Morgan put a stop to it as it was impossible to meter. There is one of these towers in Texas, another NE of Moscow, how many more are there?
There was the key: unable to meter.
Hmmm. Interesting -