From: Winston on 14 Mar 2010 00:21 On 3/13/2010 6:29 PM, Bill Beaty wrote: > On Mar 13, 11:55 am, AZ Nomad<aznoma...(a)PremoveOBthisOX.COM> wrote: > >> Besides, the store owner is likely to be the first to test >> it accidentally on himself. It's inevitable with such boobytraps. > > Then within a few days, during a large drug-ring takedown, the police > officers all fall unconscious simultaneously. The secret is out! > Magnetron beats bullet! Civilization grinds to a temporary halt. > Thousands of arrests pending on people who posted the plans online > (but arresting officers usually fail to return.) Looting and > pilliaging ensue. Sales of tinfoil hats surge, then plummet, when > everyone learns that those old web-articles are correct in finding > that metal-lined bowl-shaped headgear *focuses* microwaves rather than > shielding them. Everyone on the street is walking around with > soldered Cu-foil fullhead masks with little screen-covered eyeholes. > > Then the first hobbyist-built backscatter x-ray scanners make their > appearance, and sales of lead-lined petticoats become all the rage. Now, that is just silly. :) --Winston
From: AZ Nomad on 14 Mar 2010 00:30 On Sun, 14 Mar 2010 05:09:51 +0000, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bruere(a)gmail.com> wrote: >On 14/03/2010 02:17, Bill Beaty wrote: >> On Mar 12, 11:49 pm, Bill Sloman<bill.slo...(a)ieee.org> wrote: >> ] A big dish antenna aobe a false ceiling, and the RF transmitter to >> ] drive it? A bit harder to hide that a hand-gun, and ripping it out >> and >> ] dumping it off the bridge would be a little more obvious, and leave >> ] more obvious traces, clown. >> >> A more pertinent point: LET THE EXPERIMENT BE MADE. Experiments >> trump any hours of theoretical discussions. Existence proofs are >> difficult to defeat. An advanced hobbyist could build one of these >> sources and note any odd effects. Just add some pulses in series >> with a microwave magnetron's DCHV supply, or perhaps drive the >> magnetron with a TC-type spark gap or rotary gap source. The needed >> brain-exposure would be brief, and the required wattage is less than >> the exposure from older cellphones, or that encountered by Tesla-coil >> builders. >> >> Does it work as advertised? If so, then the public idea cannot be >> put back into the box, and will no doubt spread like gunpowder, or bow >> +arrow, or "hit other apes using a rock." >> >> OTOH, perhaps this thread is actually about the following... "I go >> insane whenever I eat at this particular restaurant. Since I cannot >> possibly be suffering schitzotype disorders, the actual cause must be >> that THE RESTAURANT MANAGEMENT IS AIMING BRAIN-RAYS AT ITS >> CLIENTELE!!!!!!" >> >> That's the only possible conclusion, eh? :) >> (((((((((((((((((( ( ( ( ( (O) ) ) ) ) ))))))))))))))))))) >> William J. Beaty SCIENCE HOBBYIST website >> billb a eskimocom http://amasci.com >> EE/programmer/sci-exhibits amateur science, hobby projects, sci fair >> Seattle, WA 206-762-3818 unusual phenomena, tesla coils, weird sci >You poor naive fool - the Jewish Nazi Illuminati New World Order has >bought you off, haven't they! No... wait... you're a CIA shill... that's >it! It's so obvious now, and the proof will be you denying all knowledge >of the plot, and sending more harassing brainwaves. Sounds like he's accidently beamed himself a few too many times.
From: Winston on 14 Mar 2010 00:30 On 3/13/2010 9:05 PM, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax wrote: (...) > I don't think the judge who awarded �640,000 against McD for hot coffee > was mysteriously gunned down... IIRC he was not even fired. I may not have mentioned this but in that case, there was evidence. There were photographs of injuries. There was expert testimony. There were depositions. There were 700 previous complaint records. Evidence. A legal foundation to support a lawsuit. Hello? >> They would be smart to drop the case at the earliest possible >> moment, like a nanosecond after the victim's brother-in-law >> says "so why don't you sue?". > > Like Microsoft never gets fined hundreds of millions for > anti-competitive practices. Right... Joe Shmoe does not have the resources of a national government. Can we agree on that? Thanks for your thoughts. --Winston
From: Dirk Bruere at NeoPax on 14 Mar 2010 00:47 On 14/03/2010 05:17, Winston wrote: > On 3/13/2010 8:59 PM, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax wrote: > > (...) > >> If I decide to take you to court because I claim you are stalking me, >> what are you going to do? Ignore it and lose by default? Or hire a >> lawyer? > > Let's think this through. > > You call a lawyer and tell him you are going after a 50 billion dollar > corporation. When he is done laughing, he rings off and calls opposing > council at the corporation. Six months down the road, you have successfully > moved your life savings into your lawyer's bank account. > Game Over. > > Was that a smart thing to do? It was for the woman who sued McD for "hot coffee". -- Dirk http://www.transcendence.me.uk/ - Transcendence UK http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onetribe - Occult Talk Show
From: Dirk Bruere at NeoPax on 14 Mar 2010 00:49
On 14/03/2010 05:20, Winston wrote: > On 3/13/2010 9:07 PM, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax wrote: >> On 14/03/2010 00:19, Winston wrote: > > (...) > >>> This is quite sufficient, yes? >> >> No. >> Not by a looooong way. > > Hokay, my numbers were off and it would take a power > amplifier and / or a slightly larger antenna to kick > enough watts through the inverse square law losses to > deliver the necessary milliwatt where it needs to go. > > One point to you. > > I still contend that it does work and can be done for > surprisingly little money. There is no evidence that such a system as you describe is even possible, let alone ever built. And if it was possible why would it not be deployed as a major military weapon? -- Dirk http://www.transcendence.me.uk/ - Transcendence UK http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onetribe - Occult Talk Show |