On Friday, July 24, 2020, 12:40:37 PM PDT, таракан 
<[email protected]> wrote:

 

>(I don't say that specifically for you Jim Bell, whether you are the 'real' 
>Jim bell or a fake) 
If you want to find out that I am the "real" Jim Bell, we could do a Skype 
call.  There are a few pictures of me already available using Google, and a few 
videos on YouTube of me.  (There are MANY videos  of "Jim Bells", nearly all of 
which AREN'T me!!!)
https://planetcryptocurrencies.com/2017/12/28/jim-bell-on-how-cryptocurrencies-could-make-assassination-market-come-true/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KLqi1v2zSE

https://blog.anarchapulco.com/jim-bell-of-assassination-politics-makes-first-public-appearance-since-imprisonment-at-anarchapulco/

The following picture was taken May 2000 by Declan 
McCullagh.http://baptista.cynikal.net/AP/index.html



 

>@Jim bell (if you are the right one) 
About 30 years ago, I got a phone call from somebody looking for a "Jim Bell".  
A few questions, and the caller said, "you aren't the right Jim Bell".I 
responded:  "That's odd!  All these years, I THOUGHT I WAS the RIGHT Jim 
Bell!"The caller chuckled.

>What your years in jail brought to your mind? What sort of ideology? Concepts ?
In a truly astonishing event of monumental engineering and scientific 
importance, I made a discovery and then a large series of inventions based on 
the concept of substitution of isotopes.  See  daltonium.com for a very brief 
sampling.  My college degree is a BS in Chemistry from MIT (1980), but I also 
had an extensive history of experience in electronics.  The story of this 
discovery will eventually be the weirdest tale of discovery in the entire 
history of science.  I need to write the whole thing up in a book.  
Generally, people are taught that isotopes are atoms with different numbers of 
neutrons, leading to them having different weights.  That is quite true, but it 
turns out that isn't the only difference.  Some isotopes have either an odd 
numbers of neutrons, or an odd number of protons.  Either condition (or both) 
causes a nucleus to have 'electromagnetic spin', a permanent mechanical wobble 
which results in a tiny permanent magnetic field:  Think of it as a nanoscopic 
permanent magnet suspended in space.  This leads some isotopes to have 
different mechanical and electronic properties, but different in ways all 
engineers and nearly all scientists either didn't notice, or didn't bother 
with.  Since separation of isotopes has been extremely expensive, the only 
useful inventions are those where the benefit of of the invention exceeds the 
cost of the isotope separation.  And so far, I'm the only person who 
understands these effects and how to apply them to existing materials and 
devices.  
 

>Sometimes I think that dying is easy but surviving is hard. The same I think 
>going to jail is easy but defeating a bunch of special agents with guns is 
>hard...
Yes, that's pretty much it!
             The RIGHT "Jim Bell"  
  

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