From: Orionworks - Steven Vincent Johnson 

 

Ø  The only responses I fee appropriate to make here … no commercial
prototype has ever been publicly revealed…. A repeated string of inaccurate
predictions has turned Dr. Mills into his own worst enemy in terms of
garnering public credibility…. That said, I still personally seen no reason
to doubt the underlying experimental evidence BLP has meticulously
accumulated and presented…

 

OK, speaking of the accumulated evidence, or the credibility thereof, I will
give you a valid reason to harbor some doubt about the technology. It comes
from the actions of one of its early architects.

 

His name is Paresh C Ray, PhD. As you may remember, Dr. Ray was a top
employee of BLP who left about 2003, having co-authored many of Mills most
important papers… first co-author, notably. Yet Dr. Ray left BLP pf his own
free will to teach at a third-tier college in Mississippi. Here are some of
his papers – several thousand hits on Google scholar. Guess what – not a
mention of the hydrino or anything remotely related. Sure he was under NDA
for a few years, but did he take away absolutely nothing useful about
hydrogen chemistry from his stay at BLP?

 

https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en
<https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=Paresh+C+Ray&btnG=&as_sdt=1%2C5&;
as_sdtp> &q=Paresh+C+Ray&btnG=&as_sdt=1%2C5&as_sdtp=

 

My contention is that few researchers in their right mind, at least not a
well-paid insider, leaves a company like BLP - a cutting-edge, well-funded
high tech company, with founders stock guaranteed, to go to Mississippi to
teach – unless they have a few misgivings about the core technology of said
cutting-edge high tech company.

 

Dr. Paresh Ray was privy to the inside information at BLP. He was first
co-author on many of the most important papers. He knew everything there was
to know about the future prospects of this technology, yet he made his
choice. 

 

Maybe he made a grave mistake, and in fact, he may regret leaving, but
sometimes the best evidence can be found in actions, not words … and not
even experiment, if that experiment needs interpretation, and is not
replicated by others.

 

Having said all this, there is still the strong likelihood that some, or
even much, of Mills theory will end up in whatever successful company is the
first to commercialize LENR. But there is every reason to doubt that this
company will be BLP.

 

Jones

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