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From Sundown Lounge No. 15 An Open Letter To All Americans By R. William Davis The Real Reason the Government Won't Debate Medical Cannabis and Industrial Hemp Re-legalization Documented Evidence of a Secret Business and Political Alliance Between the U.S. "Establishment" and the Nazis - Before, During and After World War II - up to the Present. UNICEF bombs the Smurfs BRUSSELS -- UNICEF's first adult-only episode of "The Smurfs," in which the blue-skinned cartoon characters' village is annihilated by warplanes, has terrified young children. The short but chilling film is to be broadcast on national television this week as a campaign advertisement for a fundraising drive by the U.N. children's agency. The animation was approved by the family of the Smurfs' late creator, "Peyo." Belgian television viewers were given a preview of the 25-second film last week, when it was shown on the evening news. The reactions ranged from approval to shock and, in the case of small children who saw the episode by accident, wailing terror. UNICEF and the family company, IMPS, which controls all rights to the Smurfs, have stipulated that it is not to be broadcast before 9 p.m., when it is hoped that children will be in bed. The short film pulls no punches. It opens with the Smurfs dancing, hand in hand, around a campfire and singing the Smurf song. Bluebirds flutter past and rabbits gambol around their familiar village of mushroom-shaped houses until, without warning, bombs begin to rain from the sky. The Smurfs scatter and run in vain from the whistling bombs, before being felled by blast waves and fiery explosions. The final scene shows a scorched and tattered Baby Smurf sobbing inconsolably, surrounded by prone Smurfs. The final frame bears the message: "Don't let war affect the lives of children." It is intended as part of a fundraising drive by UNICEF's Belgian arm to raise more than $100,000 for the rehabilitation of former child soldiers in Burundi. Philippe Henon, a spokesman for UNICEF Belgium, said his agency had set out to shock, after concluding that traditional images of suffering in Third World war zones had lost their power to move television viewers. The Air Car - A vehicle that claims to run on fuel and compressed air, with no pollution... Third World Grows its Own Biodiesel Zimbabwe is working to join Germany, Central American countries, Egypt, India and South Africa in exploring the benefits of the jatropha tree, processing the seeds into biodiesel and fuelling their vehicles. The emerging technology would also see countries growing the jatropha tree, cutting down on costs of fuel and be able to process the oil for other industrial use that include soap making and lighting. It is highly drought resistant and thrives on well-drained soils and plants propagated by cuttings normally produce seed within one year of planting and growth is rapid. A litre of oil is extracted from a 5kg pack of high quality seed. And, a late entry from Manny, a friend of mine who's a Nigerian film producer, with info on Fela Kuti Month, from Oct. 15 - 29 out here in So. Cal... From Sundown Lounge No. 14 Is Helium3 our "Dilithium?" Helium3 is a rare element on Earth, but common as dirt on the Moon, and potentionally, the power source that will drive our future spaceships... Check out these articles from Space.com, Asi.org, and Cornell Univ. Sonofusion This was crazy, even after I read it: you hit a beaker of acetone with sound waves, that causes tiny bubbles to expand, and when they contract, they release great amounts of light and heat. Huh? Frogs fight HIV Nashville (Tenn.) - Investigators at Vanderbilt University Medical Center reported this month in the Journal of Virology that compounds secreted by frog skin are potent blockers of HIV infection. The findings could lead to topical treatments for preventing HIV transmission, and they reinforce the value of preserving the Earth's biodiversity. From Sundown Lounge No. 13 Water-Based Fuel... is this for real? Now is an excellent time for this alternate tech to step forward and prove itself, if the science checks out... OK, I have links to a site that is selling fuel cell plans and another that gives away plans for other devices for free, and a third site with photo and testimony of a "working system." Can an engineer tell from these examples whether we've got something viable as an energy source, or is this total crap? The Map Room wants to know! From Sundown Lounge No. 12 A History of Perpetual Motion Machines The history of perpetual motion machines dates as far back as the 8th century, and probably further. Perpetual motion machines are a class of hypothetical machines which produce useful energy "from nowhere" - that is, without requiring additional energy input... A sample from the history: Brown's Gas, pro and con... From Sundown Lounge No. 11 Nanobiotech Makes the Diagnosis Gazing at an electrical meter, Yi Cui, a graduate student in the Harvard University lab of chemist Charles Lieber, waits for evidence of a remarkable feat in simple, ultrasensitive diagnostics. His target is prostate cancer. His new tool is a microchip bearing 10 silicon wires, each just 10 nanometers (billionths of a meter) wide. These nanowires have been slathered with biological molecules with an affinity for PSA, a protein all too familiar to men of a certain age as the telltale sign of prostate cancer. If the experiment works according to plan, when the PSA molecules bind to the nanowires, there will be a detectable electrical signal. Prototype backpack generates electricity when you walk From Sundown Lounge No. 10 ![]() In a suburb of Toronto, Canada, a small company called Rothman Technologies, Inc., has in fact discovered not one but two viable methods for breaking down ordinary water into hydrogen and oxygen. Neither method involves the need to spend a billion dollars. They are simple answers. The existing engines in our automobiles could work with these systems with very little alteration and no need for an external support infrastructure like the one now provided by gas stations, and which would be required by fuel-cell technology. Gravity just bugs the hell out of me. It is not the equations; they are easy enough to work with. The problem is trying to visualize what is going on. What process is at work here? What is the mechanism? I have never been able to see it. And as far as I can tell, no one else can either. Therefore, with innocence and arrogance, I set out to develop some way of looking at gravity that would be more intuitively satisfying. The outcome has been very curious. I found that I could, indeed, work out a hypothetical underlying mechanism that is fairly easy to visualize and which seems consistent with observed gravitational phenomena. But then one day something unexpected happened. While puzzling over the implications of the model, I suddenly saw, completely and with transparent clarity, the identity between gravity and acceleration. Understand: I am not saying that I saw why gravity and acceleration have equivalent equations. I saw that they are a single phenomenon. From Sundown Lounge No. 9
Homebrew Biodiesel. reprinted from THE EDGE news... Homebrewing has two parts - cooking the fuel, then washing it From Sundown Lounge No. 8 Wikipedia entry for "Homopolar generator": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homopolar_generator (The Late) Physicist Bruce DePalma has a 100 kilowatt generator, which he invented, sitting in his garage. It could power his whole house, but if he turns it on, the government may confiscate it. Havard educated DePalma, who taught physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for 15 years, claims that his electrical generator can provide cheap, inexhaustible, self sustaining and non polluting source of energy, using principles that flout conventional physics and are still not fully understood. His N machine, as it is called, is said to release the "free energy" latent in the space all around us. DePalma views his device as an innovation that could help to end the world's dangerous dependence on finite supplies of oil, gas, and other polluting fossil based fuels... ![]() DePalma's device functions as a result of principles established by the inventor of the electric generator, Michael Faraday. The following section is for engineering and physics geeks... Michael Faraday conducted several experiments that demonstrated a current could be induced to flow in a wire by one of three methods. Move the wire relative to a magnet, move the magnet relative to the wire, or change the strength of the magnetic field. This discovery led to Faraday's law of induction and contributes to Maxwell's laws of electromagnetism. In addition to these experiments he also conducted a less heralded experiment where he affixed a copper disc atop a cylindrical magnet and rotated the ensemble. From this apparatus he was able to generate a current at the edge of the copper disc. This ensemble was dubbed the Faraday Disc. A single spinning round conductor placed between two magnets performs identically and is called the homopolar generator, or unipolar dynamo, or an acyclic generator. The results of this experiment have never been satisfactorily explained because it appears to be at odds with his more famous law of induction. In the classical inductive process, apart from the creation of a current, it is the relative motion of the magnet and the conductor that are important. It doesn't matter which moves as long as they move relative to each other. Such is not the case with the homopolar generator. A generated current is dependent solely upon rotation of the conductor disk. It makes no difference if the magnet is spun or not. Here is a brief explanation, a more detailed study of Faraday's Homopolar Generator (in PDF file format), and a look at a few experimental and untried N machines you can test out... From Sundown Lounge No. 7
jesusland map by Barry Ritholtz... True picture of election results in these electoral maps: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~mejn/election/ Tesla's Fuelless Generator: http://home.earthlink.net/~drestinblack/generator.htm Java applet of an animated hypercube: http://dogfeathers.com/java/hyprcube.html From Sundown Lounge No. 6 San Francisco AM station KYCY going all podcast: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/05/17/BUGRVCQ45G1.DTL&type=business Unsigned doesn't mean 'free' music: http://blindingflashes.blogs.com/blinding_flashes/2004/10/free_means_free.html
Behold! It's the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Know where your pirate is... From Sundown Lounge No. 5 Trinary computer: http://www.trinary.cc/Tutorial/Tutorial.htm Relativity vs Autodynamics: Goodbye Einstein, article by David de Hister Wikipedia discussion on Autodynamics
The Cassini spacecraft solar wind poetry From Sundown Lounge No. 4 Generating gravity waves: http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/research/1281736.html http://www.light-science.com/gen2.html http://www.americanantigravity.com/gravitywaves.shtml Articles: "...two separate and controversial uses of new technologies that are coming your way pretty fast, even to a lovely isle in the middle of the ocean - "nanofoods and radio frequency identification tracking (RFID)". From Sundown Lounge No. 3
From Sundown Lounge No. 2 Links: freakradio.org Pirate radio station broadcasting online from Santa Cruz radio4all.net Independent open network of grassroots journalism bushsamerica.com/counting This page is a solemn tribute to the soldiers who've given their lives in Iraq for a President who lied to them... Articles: "...like Nixon, "George H W Bush was deeply involved with supporting the Nazis in the Republican's closet. In fact, support for the Nazis was a Bush family tradition which goes back more than six decades... "The real story of George Bush starts well before he launched his own career. It goes back to the 1920s, when the Dulles brothers and the other pirates of Wall Street were making their deals with the Nazis..." Excerpted from "Under the Shadow of the Swastika". And also the list of senators who apparently don't have a problem with lynching: Lamar Alexander (R-TN) Robert Bennett (R-UT) Christopher Bond (R-MO) Jim Bunning (R-KY) Conrad Burns (R-MT) Saxby Chambliss (R-GA) Thad Cochran (R-MS) Kent Conrad (D-ND) John Cornyn (R-TX) Michael Crapo (R-ID) Michael Enzi (R-WY) Chuck Grassley (R-IA) Judd Gregg (R-NH) Orrin Hatch (R-UT) Trent Lott (R-MS) Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) Richard Shelby (R-AL) John Sununu (R-NH) Craig Thomas (R-WY) George Voinovich (R-OH) From Sundown Lounge No. 1 Articles: "Ibogaine is a naturally occurring alkaloid found in the root of an African plant called tabernathe iboga. In Africa, ibogaine is used in religious ceremonies to induce visions, but in the West, it is being used to treat addictions to heroin, cocaine, alcohol and nicotine. Howard Lotsof, the man who first drew attention to ibogaine's anti-addictive properties, claims that after a single dose most people abstain from using drugs for more than three months..." |

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