On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 8:57 AM, Foks0904 . <foks0...@gmail.com> wrote:

We have to be careful.
>

Without regard to DGT, specifically, I think there is a recurring lesson
here.  In the LENR and free energy fields, more than any other fields I
have followed, there is a certain type of amped-up businessman who belongs
in a late-night infomercial but instead makes wacky claims somewhere on the
Internet.  Whether you would call what they're doing fraud or not probably
depends in part upon the mindset and intention of the people, if any, who
have given them money.  In this context it is something of a miracle that
Rossi's work has stood out as likely being genuine and have not simply
blended into the background.  The LENR researchers, too, on the whole, do
not fit this pattern, although some of them are obviously credulous.  A few
of them do appear to be infomercial salesmen as well.

Even when people seem credible and genuine, it is good to follow up and ask
for some data to support what they're saying.

Eric

Reply via email to