At 09:39 AM 12/18/2009, Stephen A. Lawrence wrote:

On 12/18/2009 08:46 AM, Terry Blanton wrote:
So, you have a free energy system and want to tell the world.  Do you
put an ad on CNN or Fox News?  No, you choose Al Jazerra:

http://www.youtube.com/user/KaiBSteornForum#p/a/u/0/XcNwc-GhzIs

That is a very strange ad.

It consists almost entirely of quotes from highly respected sources saying they're phony, and, at the end of the sequence, they quote their own jury as saying there is no evidence of energy production.

No. That's not the end.

There's absolutely nothing positive in it -- the closest they come is a quote from a philosopher about great truths starting as blasphemies (which doesn't seem like it's ideally chosen for an Islamic audience, but what do I know).

But that quote is exactly the point. They are painting themselves as "blasphemous." And they are appealing to an audience which may have a lot of extra cash lying about. They then say "Get Real. Get Orbo."

Reverse psychology carried to the Nth degree? It sure wouldn't convince me to invest in them.

They aren't seeking your investment, they are seeking someone else's. And those investors, at least the early ones, may indeed make substantial profits. It looks like a Ponzi scheme to me, one designed to be legal. Could any investor having seen this ad claim that Steorn didn't disclose that the technology was "controversial"? "Blarney" is not the strongest of it!

One thing's sure, they're very, very far from violating any truth in advertising laws with that spot!

That's right. And what if the whole operation is like that, under the NDA?

About 50 seconds into the news cast.  They also had an ad on the web page.

Ahem.  Is this the real answer?  Threaten the oil companies so they
will offer a big buyout?  If so, they'd better be careful.  Middle
east oil has friends in "high" places as the prince discovered in
"Syriana".

I doubt that there is any danger perceived by the oil companies. They aren't stupid. If they think there is the remotest possibility that this is real, they'll buy in to check it out. Like dropping a penny into a beggar's hand, they won't even think about it.

Yeah, if it's real, watch out! But it isn't. No, if this were real, the strategy to avoid eradication by the Men in Black would be very, very different. You'd need to widely spread the technology, and quickly, before the Men in Black realize that it might be real. As it is, the Men in Black will look at this and see only business as usual, some con artists stirring something up, nothing of interest there. Do you think the Men in Black will be impressed with the phony demos?

To take down Steorn and crush any real technology there would be quite a bit more expensive than buying in first. Buying in would be the absolutely prudent thing for them to do, and they would do it through an intermediary, it would be invisible. I'd say the Steorn campaign is the strongest evidence that this thing isn't real, it's a device for attracting attention and cash in legal payments, with the secret legally protected. "The secret" isn't an over unity motor. It's a marketing scheme, a device for making money, not energy.

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