For a projectile what matters is momentum, and light does have momentum, that's 
what pushes solar sails.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_pressure

Michel

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "R.C.Macaulay" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2007 2:03 PM
Subject: [Vo]: Re: Di-Ozone


> Howdy Jones,
> 
> You amaze me with your ability to stretch the elastic of the mind.   One 
> must eat a heartly breakfast and tighten the safety belt before launching 
> into one of your posts <grin> that can range from rail guns to Ormus... and 
> that is a stretch.
> 
> Now that light has been accepted as having "particle" or "weight", it can be 
> taken to the next step and think of light having "projectile force" 
> qualities. A rail gun projectile would not necessarily require a socalled 
> "mass" ( I have always been abhorred by the term mass). A better constructed 
> railgun would fire a " projectile of light"... hmmm.. a strange beasty 
> indeed.. Why so ?
> Because the projectile could be " tuned" to either/or focus or impact. 
> Strange account of a battle predicted centuries ago where the flesh,eyes and 
> tongue will rot while they are still standing  ( bones remain) Zec: 14. This 
> description seeems to indicate a type of a ray gun, however, the projectile 
> does not knock the person off their feet.. only  dissolves the flesh.
> 
> You referred to Barry Carter's Subtleenergy website that mentions a new 
> method of producing O3 and O6 but does not describe the process. He does 
> describe the healing qualities of vortex induced ormus water. Reminds me of 
> the account of the angel that would "stir" or "trouble" the waters in the 
> pool. Whoever would be the first sick person to enter the pool thereafter 
> would be healed.  If the "stirring" means inducing a water vortex and only 
> the first person would be healed, could this mean the vortex was destroyed 
> by entering the pool and the residual remains of the vortex properties 
> dissappear?
> 
> Out in the wildwood behind the Dime Box Saloon lurks an old whisky still 
> left over from the old days. The tale goes that sippin some that " thinkin 
> drinkin" stuff could make a person believe the earth was flat.
> 
> Richard 
>

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