Monday, November 10, 2008

It's Not Chocolate And Another Radionic Nightmare


Entry for November 10, 2008 It's not Chocolate. It is Radionics. (A Rewrite)

Summary: It’s not Chocolate
I used to chase the mosquito fogging truck in Puerto Rico, where I was a third, fourth and fifth grader. It was called “Smokey Joe” and layered out a thick white fog behind it as it moved at about five miles an hour through the neighborhood. A lot of us did that. It was like cloud walking. The military police that trailed Smokey Joe in their blue pickup trucks lazy twirled their red cop lights into the fog. It scrimmed the area red. It was an eerie flip over for a little angel caught in the devils wind.
I researched it a couple of years ago. The Air Force did not use DDT in the base housing areas during that time periods. I still need birth control.
We didn’t listen to anyone then. It was summer in summer land. After dinner we were out the door into the maze of hedges, on the streets and cliffs above the ocean and all over the place.
We played in the flooded streets during the monsoons too, the brown waters lapping at our doorsteps.
I think it was in that first year that I met some of our neighbors.
They spoke Puerto Rican more than English.
There was Humberto and his little sister, who was two or three years old.
We were talking.
Someone offered Humberto’s sister a cat turd.
He held it in the palm of his hand. It was brown as a Tootsie Roll.
Humberto held his breath.
“It’s chocolate” the boy said.
The little girl looked at it.
“No” she said. “Es caca.”
“No” the boy insisted. “It’s chocolate.”
“Es caca” she said.
They did not play with us again and oved shortly afterwards.
The Broadband Becomes As White as Smokey Joe
I came across the two news stories below this week. I had some questions about them.. They are about opening a broader spectrum of frequencies to the public, so that more people have greater access to the internet and information.
I am all for that. The novelist in me works overtime though, he/she or it likes to thicken plots.
One of the things I have been talking about quite a bit is in this blog isVibrational Medicine.
That is that everything that is, vibrates and has a frequency.
Things can be activated or shut down based on the phase of those frequencies, the combinations they come in and the wave form that organizes them.
You can open up or close down organs and circulation as well as activate glands and deactivate viruses and diseases. It’s clear that what is called “Rife Frequencies," as flawed as they are, may be a cure for the herpes virus. If used correctly they may fulfill the Star Trek model of a sonic medicine. The salt shaker Dr. McCoy used to hold over people while the sound oscillated at various speeds may very well be the tool of the future. I see a future where a doctor greets you with an electronic cello instead of a stethoscope or twaps a tuning fork and sticks it up your nose instead of taking your temperature.
He or she gives you sound advice.
I am curious about what I would call bio-available frequencies, that is electronic frequencies at phase that are harmonic and distonic with the body and environment. We know that binaural sound has a dramatic impact on the body and mind. Trinaural and pryamiding frequencies also have impact. A broad band system with infite possibilities and combination of possibilities presents problems and opportunities of a large degree.
Along with the opportunities to educate and liberate, there is also the possibility of sabotage and harmful manipulation.
In the 1920s the Fisher Radio Company began mapping frequencies and the impact on the human body. It is from that research that radio stations were assigned their frequencies. The harmful frequencies were not assigned.
If you look in my index you’ll find other entries along this line.
My concerns are in the area of vibrational and environmental impact.
It has always been the Federal Communications Commission’s job to monitor these frequencies for the impact they might have on humans. That duty should extend to the animals, physical environment and atmosphere as well.
It’s hard to say much about will happen and who will be involved.
Despite the Big Island experiments of a decade ago in Hawaii, there are still areas that are basically unknown iareas in the science of radionics and broad band broadcasting. We have never used a saturation frequency before.
Like many people in my culture we have been brought up to believe that the fundamentals of creation are in the sound. In the beginning there was the word.
Then came editors.
Being vibrational sensitive I think about these things.
I am also concerned about privacy and civil liberty issues as we all become more vibrationally accessible, as we define ourselves in the electronic environments we hang out in.
As you know I feel this is a national security nightmare.
Here’s The News.

On the cusp of a new wireless revolution?
MP3 - iTunes
The Federal Communications Commission this week decided to free up the little-used “white space” spectrum between television channels. That spectrum slice will no longer be needed when the U.S. ditches analog TV broadcasts early next year.
Backers of the move believe it could usher in the age of a faster, universal wireless Internet. Broadcasters and mobile phone carriers have opposed the move, arguing new devices running in the white space could cause interference.
Guest: Stacey Higginbotham, GigaOm

November 6, 2008
Obama to push for universal broadband?
MP3 - iTunes
Today we feature an interview with Jonathan Taplin of the USC Annenberg School for Communication, who recently analyzed the tech policy platforms of the presidential candidates. We talked about President-elect Barack Obama’s positions on broadband, net neutrality, and electronic privacy.
Tags: radionics, broadband, poison, smokeyjoe, puertoricointhe1960s, rameyairforcebase, vibratorymedicine Edit Tags
Monday November 10, 2008 - 02:58pm (EST) Edit Delete Permanent Link 0 Comments