Terry Blanton wrote:

Suppose, just suppose that you had a generator that self powered and
lit a couple of 200 W light bulbs at the same time.

What would you do tomorrow?

I would prepare a detailed report describing the thing with as much concrete information as possible, and I would upload it to LENR-CANR.org. I would also upload a "companion video" to YouTube. The video should demonstrate as clearly as possible that there are no wires or strings attached. Of course one cannot convince a skeptic of that fact, but it should make a strong case to an open minded person.

I would not spend any time trying to convince people that it is real -- especially not "skeptics." Target people such as the readers here, who are knowledgeable and sympathetic to such claims, although not pushovers (we hope).

In the next phase, I would invite friendly people in to observe the gadget. Not too many people at one time. The Arata demonstration was marred by the fact that the room was crowded, time was limited, so along with most observers, I could not get a decent look at it. (Plus, I did not stick around because I suffer from mild claustrophobia. Noisy, crowded, warm rooms give me the creeps, especially dark ones. You couldn't pay me to go into a bar or disco!)

I would make copies of the gadget for some of the friendly observers, charging them whatever it costs plus a modest profit. They should be willing to pay. If they aren't, they are the wrong people.

The important thing is to keep it low key, low profile, and matter-of-fact.

If you have a gadget like this, or like Arata's cell, people who are sincerely interested will come to you. You don't need to go to them. The Internet has changed the way a gadget of this nature should be handled.

- Jed

Reply via email to