On Sep 2, 2008, at 8:05 PM, Robin van Spaandonk wrote:
In reply to R C Macaulay's message of Tue, 2 Sep 2008 20:20:19 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
The large Hadron back in the news,
Richard
http://www.worldnetdaily.com:80/index.php?fa=PAGE.viewpageId=74044
Quote:
The Large Hadron Collider will
Nick, I think we can see that the deteriorating financial situation in
Britain could create irrational behavior there as well. However, is it
focused on religion being the solution as it is in the US? Do the
Brits expect God to save them from their poor decisions?
Ed
Umm, tricky question.
Jones Beene on 2 Sep 2008 wrote:
``One interesting point which I am surprised is not often
mentioned in this polarized debate:
Blow up the third chart on Michael's cited reference, and
contemplate the full implication of the Maunder Minimum
and the so-called little ice age ...
... and the
Ah, but what do you think caused all those craters on the moon? ;-)
Michel
- Original Message -
From: Jones Beene [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2008 2:53 PM
Subject: Re: [VO]: Scientists sue to stop 'black hole' from sucking up Earth
...
OK
--- On Wed, 9/3/08, Taylor J. Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Taylor J. Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Vo]:Sunspotless
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Date: Wednesday, September 3, 2008, 5:05 AM
Jones Beene on 2 Sep 2008 wrote:
``One interesting point which I am surprised is not often
At the risk of having not followed this discussion thread too closely, this
issue could bend to another perspective, that of specific effects of carbon
build up and not the global and more vague nut that's so hard to pin down.
Chemical oceanographers Ken Caldeira and Long Cao presented a paper in
... apologies for previous null-posting .
I am sensing the rumblings of some kind of email software revolt...
Jack,
Thanks for the update and particularly the strange message of Bill Arnold .
Do you have a url for his paper? I cannot find it in a quick goggling. Common
name.
It is bizarre
Beyond the LENR implications of laser irradiation in LENR: Letts, Hagelstein,
Cravens et al. (or maybe this is something which even they have not fully
realized)
There is putative excess energy coming from some reports of metallic
hydrogen or so-called Rydberg matter, and these reports
Howdy Jones,
Most assuredly, we have our eyes on this work published.
Richard
This paper should have raised more eyebrows in the ranks of alternative
energy folks. This is a massive gain which should be able to be converted
into electrical energy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metallic_hydrogen
http://newenergytimes.com/BubbleTrouble/BubblegateSendLawyersAffidavitsMoney.htm
Excerpt:
...On the other hand, The New York Times published a document allegedly
written and signed by Adam Butt, a graduate student at Purdue. It was
perhaps the most damning evidence, which caused great harm to
A graduate student at a university would be crazy to write a letter
damning a member of the faculty unless he was sure of being protect.
This would be like a private in the army publicly criticizing his
commanding officer in a letter. This simply is not done. The fact
that such a letter
Steve sent me this an hour ago. He has done a bang-up job uncovering
this mess. My response to him:
So, both the New York Times and Nature are involved in this. As I
said before, it is sickening.
You have certainly found a scandal worthy of your skill as an
investigative reporter. This is
Jones wrote on 9-3-08:
Jack,
Thanks for the update and particularly the strange message
of Bill Arnold .
Do you have a url for his paper? I cannot find it in a
quick goggling. Common name.
It is bizarre enough to be insightful, if not accurate.
Is he saying that sunspots create
Steven Krivit wrote:
http://newenergytimes.com/BubbleTrouble/BubblegateSendLawyersAffidavitsMoney.htm
*Excerpt:
*...On the other hand, /The New York Times/ published a document
allegedly written and signed by Adam Butt, a graduate student at Purdue.
It was perhaps the most damning
See:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTsl1b6X2es
Kinda complicated. Not too bad . . .
- Jed
A few Hollywood-moment musings on the current state of affairs on the fringes
of fizzix. which was brought to mind by reading the fine Letts / Hagelstein
paper, amidst the dose of high level conspiracy fueled by Purdue, UCLA, NYTimes
and assorted brain-washed grad students... and all that jazz
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Wed, 3 Sep 2008 05:53:13 -0700 (PDT):
Hi,
[snip]
OK - but then what about the situation with our moon or Mars -- with almost no
atmosphere and a dense solid core to absorb cosmic rays ?
This is an excellent point, and I concede. You have put my mind at rest.
http://newenergytimes.com/BubbleTrouble/BubblegateTimelineOverview.htmBubblegate
Conflict at Purdue -
Timelinehttp://newenergytimes.com/BubbleTrouble/BubblegateTimelineOverview.htm
Overview
Excerpts:
2006 (Feb) Tsoukalas obtains statement from graduate student Adam Butt.
[SR* page 65] Butt
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