Frederick Sparber wrote:
 Mike Carrell wrote:
>
> Tesla did not 'pump energy into the earth'. He had a large antenna
> atop his Colorado transmitter and the idea was to pump energy into
> the cavity formed by the earth and the conductive ionosphere.
> Reportedly he was able to light  a lamp at some distance without a
> wired connection. "Lamp" in this context  does not necessarily mean
> an incandescent lamp, which has low resistance, but could be any of
> several versions of high frequency 'lamps' which Tesla demonstrated
> at various times. Supposedly his backers withdrew support when they
> realized that there would be no way to meter and charge for the
> power drawn. Tesla's system would have generated enormous broad
> spectrum radio noise which would have prevented the growth of AM
> radio broadcasting. The RF energy density would currently be
> regarded as a health hazard.
>
 Judging by the Tesla Cults that pervade the Internet, I think Tesla
 himself was/is a health hazard.

 OTOH, CQ up in Canada seems to be in good health. :-)

 A recent survey stated that "Canadians are in better health than
 Americans".

 Could this be because Canadians that get sick, just die quick?

Nah, they just eat "healthier" than folks in the States. We bust the budget on health care and then eat a diet that negates it all.

The Canadian diet is not so great either for that matter, but it's not as bad as the U.S. diet.

By rights, heart disease should be a rare illness, affecting only those with congenital heart defects and those with a congenital problem regulating their cholesterol level. Instead it's the most common cause of death among middle aged and older people here.

Sorry, this is 'way, 'way off topic.


 Fred
> Mike Carrell

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