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Serious Someone more intelligent than Amos Yee and he is an Ang Moh. talks about bible

kryonlight

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Wow! Just wow! Thank you for the video. I believe he's the returning Nikola Tesla as Kryon of Magnetic Service revealed 4 years ago. Is he going to be best friends with Einstein? LOL! Maybe we can look forward to a better Earth in 15 years time. The hottest month of Earth has just passed and I believe we are into the first month of the new mini ice age. We are going to need more energy to heat up a colder Earth. Everything seems to be falling into place with this little guy's invention. What earth shattering device is he going to make teaming up with Einstein, if ever? Go, go, go away, you old energy, old consciousness. You can no longer prevent the new energy, new consciousness from taking hold of what is rightfully ours, unlimited free energy. You can no longer shackle us to your foul petroleum and their toxic by-products to fatten your pockets.

http://www.kryon.com/k_channel11_Boulder-12.html

It's interesting, is it not, what the Akashic memory banks bring forward within a Human? Your Akash is soul memory designed to release information about your Akash as the energy of the earth changes to a measurement where it's appropriate to begin a process of revelation. Nikola Tesla created massless objects in his laboratory - what you would call anti-gravity. He knew how to transmit electricity wirelessly (by the way, through the ground, not the air), through the earth (not the atmosphere), and he was frustrated he could not prove it better. The technology was not there, but more than that, the energy of the planet, consciously, was not ready for him. He could not get past the barrier of the belief of others. By the way, he's back and so is Einstein and you'll know them when you see what they're up to.

The energy of your time is now appropriately ready for some of the theories that were before their time, which were just as accurate then as they are now. Watch for entirely new science to suddenly erupt with solutions for problems that you have been working on for years, solutions where you say, "Why didn't they think of that before?"

Expect cold fusion, by the way. I've told you this before. The experiment with cold fusion was accurate [speaking of the much-discounted Ponds and Fleshman experiment in the past]. The experimenters could not repeat their discovery because they were not aware of the attribute of magnetics that was influencing their experiment [which was done in a basement with the electric utility panels around them]. They thought it was simple chemistry. It wasn't. It was an accidental discovery of physics that remains a mystery at the moment, but that combines chemistry with magnetics, which few are trying. The same thing happened to Tesla, where he was actually able to observe an object fly off the bench, but really didn't know why. He knew it had to do with the design of magnetics, but couldn't begin to do the design with the tools and technology of the day. Can you imagine such a thing? Now you understand his depression. Such is the way advancement often happens on the planet.
 

laksaMan

Alfrescian
Loyal
Carl Sagan a renowned cosmologist said he doesn't believe in God because he doesn't want to believe, he wants to know.

But the problem is how can you know of you don't believe?
 

retrenched

Alfrescian
Loyal
there are many who feel that amos will be a really really great man if the pap was not standing in his way...so bad luck for him i guess :smile:
 

bodycells

Alfrescian
Loyal
Wow! Just wow! Thank you for the video. I believe he's the returning Nikola Tesla as Kryon of Magnetic Service revealed 4 years ago. Is he going to be best friends with Einstein? LOL! Maybe we can look forward to a better Earth in 15 years time. The hottest month of Earth has just passed and I believe we are into the first month of the new mini ice age. We are going to need more energy to heat up a colder Earth. Everything seems to be falling into place with this little guy's invention. What earth shattering device is he going to make teaming up with Einstein, if ever? Go, go, go away, you old energy, old consciousness. You can no longer prevent the new energy, new consciousness from taking hold of what is rightfully ours, unlimited free energy. You can no longer shackle us to your foul petroleum and their toxic by-products to fatten your pockets.

My friend, there are many kids who are born to this planet in this manner recently. It is a positive change for the planet as a whole. They are helping to reach more people to develop a higher consciousness until the critical mass of the higher consciousness of the population is reached.

The lower conscious global elites are having a hard time and trying to do catch up to delude the people.They trying their best to push their plans to mass population control. RFID chips is being introduce to human soon but i expect it to fail.



graafstra_rfid_xray_new.jpg


img_1975.jpg




http://www.popsci.com/my-boring-cyborg-implant

A few months ago, in the expo-hall of the Austin Convention Center, I laid my left hand flat on a sheet of sterile paper and let a very tall, friendly man insert an RFID chip into the space between my thumb and index finger. “Oh, you’ve got thick skin,” he said, pressing the needle a little harder. I made a half-hearted joke about being a woman on the internet, and the whole thing was over.

Today, the tiny scab has healed, and the device sits just below the surface of my skin, where it looks like a little pill poking up out of my hand. Often, when I tell people I have an RFID chip, they react with confusion and a tiny drop of horror. “You have a what? Why?” Then they want to touch the little bead through my skin — if I squeeze my thumb and pinky together you can see the bulge and feel its hard exterior.
What they’re touching is a passive, near-field communication (NFC) chip encased in glass. It’s likely that you’ve used a chip like this recently, if you’ve had to tap a fob to a keycard reader at your office, or if you’ve held your phone near a card reader to pay for something. If you have a pet with a microchip, you’re living with an animal that has the same technology that’s in my hand.

The place that most people buy RFID chips like this, designed for human implantation, is Dangerous Things, an online store that sells four different implantable transponders. Its founder, Amal Graafstra, is the tall man who implanted mine. Dangerous Things has sold several thousand of these implants to bodyhackers all over the world, who use them for everything from opening the doors to their homes and offices, to unlocking their cars, to fun projects like auto-displaying GIFs on a phone or marking a geocache. The chip can also store information and (if a chip reader is placed really close to it) transmit that data.
The most common question I get about the implant (aside from “why would you do that?”) is whether I’m being tracked. The short answer is no. RFID chips aren’t that powerful. Think again of your office keycard: If you’ve ever had trouble getting it to work through a bag or wallet, you know that these chips aren’t good at transmitting through anything, let alone over long distances. My chip certainly can’t talk to a satellite. Just like your dog’s microchip can’t locate her when she runs away, my RFID chip couldn’t tell anybody where I am—even if I wanted it to. And that’s not the only limitation my implant has.

Right now, most systems aren’t designed to work with independent NFC chips. For example, iPhones don’t allow you to use the built-in NFC reader for anything other than Apple Pay, which means I can’t use my implant to unlock my iPhone. I can, however, unlock my partner’s Android, a fun party trick I use to show people that yes, this little glass device in my hand does do something. And to snoop on him. (Just kidding, I don’t snoop on him.)
Some people also seem to think that my hand can now unlock any door it encounters. That’s not true either—your office key doesn’t open the neighboring building’s doors, and neither does my hand. To use my RFID chip, I need to control both sides of the system. Graafstra, for example, programmed the implant in his left hand to unlock the doors of his car and house. (I don’t have a car, and I rent my apartment so I’m not about to install a custom lock on our door, but that’s not the RFID chip’s fault.)
So my implant is both less scary and less useful than you might think. Even its ability to store information is limited. My chip can store just over 1000 bytes of memory. To put that into perspective, a document containing just 100 characters takes up 800 bytes. My chip, in other words, can store just about a single Tweet. Those 1000 bytes may not serve as helpful storage—but they can still do a whole lot of other things.


In 2002, long before I had even heard of RFID implants, the Canadian artist Nancy Nisbet wanted to use the chip to track her internet use. Her plan was put an RFID reader in her mouse, and to use one hand when she was browsing for fun, and the other when she was working. The mouse would pick up how often the chips in her hands were used, and break down how often she was working or playing online.
More recently, people have used NFC chips to unlock their computers. One artist has coded a (very simple) GIF into his implant, and when he scans it with his Android phone, the animation pops up. Another person has turned their chip into a geocaching site. People have attempted to use the chips for darker things too. This hacker claims he can send malware to someone’s phone by holding it in his chipped hand.
These are fun, goofy things to do with the implant. But in theory, the possibilities are far grander and more useful. I could connect it to my bank account and use it to pay at the grocery store. I could connect it to my transit card and use it to get into certain subway systems. The problem is, these systems aren’t designed to work with my rogue implant—which makes sense. So few people have chips in their hands that it’s inefficient to design around them. And these RFID chips aren’t regulated or controlled, so in theory someone could put nefarious things on their chip and corrupt a system. And by the time grocery and subway scanners allow access to outside NFC chips, I’ll likely have to upgrade my implant to a new version.
I’m not complaining. I knew the chip wouldn’t be able to do much when I got it, and I’m planning on doing some more experiments with it: I don’t like strangers enough to want my hand to be a geocaching site, but I am planning on trying to retrofit my bike lock to open without a key, and I’m currently choosing what kind of GIF to call up when I grab my partner’s phone and perform my new cyborg party trick. But for now, it’s mostly just a funny bulge in my hand.
 
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bodycells

Alfrescian
Loyal
This is a video about the REAL reason behind RFID chip and feminism. It is the work done by Rockefeller and its agenda.

[video=youtube;LSGZ4Hkdyg4]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSGZ4Hkdyg4[/video]
 

bodycells

Alfrescian
Loyal
[video=youtube;_qJgBayC1N0]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qJgBayC1N0[/video]

bump up this thread to pay tribute to this genius.
 
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