Quote# 126051
During WWII, "neutral" Switzerland was the world center of spying. There was a good spy located in Hitler's HQ called "Werther" who transmitted the Nazi "Order of Battle" from Berlin to Switzerland. Then that vital info was transmitted via radio to Moscow. The earth was FLAT back then because the distance from Zurich to Moscow is 2,700 km. Every time Hitler farted it was known in Moscow, but the Nazis could not invade Switzerland because they were financed by the Bank of England via the BIS (Bank for Intl. Settlements) located in Basel.
After Charles "Kissin' Cousins" Darwin's On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, the most exciting book for the British Empire was published in 1875. It was entitled Physics of the Ether by Samuel Tolver Preston. Unlike fake "scientist" Albert Einstein, Preston believed in the existence of the ether.
Physics of the Ether by Samuel Tolver Preston was published in London in 1875.
It showed the extraordinary relationship between matter, time, and energy.
It was the most explosive discovery since gunpowder cannon.
To the military establishment in the British Empire it held out the possibility of a super weapon to destroy Britannia's 3 main rivals: France, Russia, and the United States. Here is an short excerpt from that explosive book:
To give an idea, first, of the enormous intensity of the store of energy attainable by means of that extensive state of subdivision of matter which renders a high normal speed practicable, it may be computed that a quantity of matter representing a total mass of only one grain, and possessing the normal velocity of the ether particles (that of a wave of light), encloses a store of energy represented by upwards of one thousand millions of foot tons, or the mass of one single grain contains an energy not less than that possessed by a mass of forty thousand tons, moving at the speed of a cannon ball (1200 feet per second); or otherwise, a quantity of matter representing a mass of one grain endued with the velocity of the ether particles, encloses an amount of energy which, if entirely utilized, would be competent to project a weight of one hundred thousand tons to a height of nearly two miles (1.9 miles).
This remarkable result may serve to illustrate well the intense mechanical effect derivable from small quantities of matter possessing a high normal velocity, the extremely high value of the effect depending on the fact that energy rises in the rapid ratio of the square of the speed. (Preston, Physics of the Ether, p. 115).
That explosive book was published just the year after Winston Churchill was born. Churchill was the son of Jennie Jerome from Brooklyn and "Edward the Caresser." 1881 was another milestone in the development of the atomic bomb when Samuel Insull arrived in the British Empire State.
Psychic researcher Sir William Crookes was the real discoverer of radioactivity!!
Psychic researcher Sir William Crookes, O.M, F.R.S., was also the President of the British Psychical Society. That "scientist" and psychic researcher had a mordant interest in spiritualism and psychic phenomena. Crookes was also a member of the British Secret Service.
Psychic researcher William Crookes published a book in 1874 entitled Researches in the Phenomena of Spiritualism. The Holy Bible calls it WITCHCRAFT.
His "medium," a woman named Florence Cook, contacted "Katie King," who instructed him to investigate pitchblende or uranium.
"Chemist" Crookes discovered the strange qualities of uranium which he later called radioactivity.
The legitimate scientific community did not want to be associated with a man who had a reputation as a fraud and a charlatan. For that reason, Crookes decided to plant his uranium sample on a reputable French scientist named Henri Becquerel At that time, France was in the forefront of legitimate scientific research. The French were pioneers in the field of ballooning and airplanes.
Henri Becquerel was a legitimate French scientist who did not use mediums or witches to help in his research.
On March 1, 1896, he "accidentally" discovered a piece of uranium in a drawer in his lab.
In reality, British Secret Service agent Crookes was in his lab at that time, and he planted the uranium in the drawer.
Nothing happens by "accident" in the political or scientific world. Henri Becquerel died suddenly from a "heart attack" on August 25, 1908. Crookes wrote his obituary for the Royal Society and he just happened to mention that he was in Paris at the time of the "accidental" discovery of radiation:
When Leonard and Röntgeen published his memorable papers on new radiations he attacked the subject with renewed vigour, and zealously followed up his father's work of 1872 on the light emitted by phophorescent uranium compounds. The writer visited Becqerel's laboratory one memorable morning when experiments were in progress which culminated in the discovery of "Becquerel rays" and of "Spontaneous radioactivity." (Fournier d'Albe, The Life of Sir William Crookes, p. 384).
After the timely death of Henri Becquerel, "Becquerel rays" were soon forgotten and replaced by the now familiar term radiation or radioactivity. From that time onward, uranium research was no longer considered the realm of the occult or witchcraft.
Pierre and Marie Curie also consulted a psychic to help with their uranium research!!
In 1867, Maria Sklodowska was born in Warsaw, part of Russian occupied Poland. The Polish people were filled with a fanatical hatred for Orthodox Russia and Maria was no exception. Ironically, unlike Orthodox Russia, women were not allowed to attend university in Poland.
In late 1891, she moved to Paris, and enrolled in the University of Paris, majoring in physics, chemistry, and mathematics. Her tuition was paid for by Sir William Crookes. The legend has her living on the 6th floor of a walkup apartment and suffering from cold winters and occasionally fainting from hunger. Almost like the legend of poor, down on his luck "Adolf the Artist," barely surviving in Vienna.
In 1895 she married a man named Pierre Curie and became known as Marie Sklodowska Curie.
After the "accidental" discovery of radiation, Marie Curie decided to study that mysterious substance for her Ph.D. thesis at the university.
The university reluctantly gave her an old dilapidated shed for her experiments, and she convinced her weak-willed husband to become her collaborator.
Soon she obtained a ton of pitchblende from Joachimsthal, in the then Austro-Hungarian empire, and she began to stir the noxious brew.
Marie was as excited as a child on Christmas morning when the first load of pitchblende arrived:
Marie was ecstatic when the first load of pitchblende arrived early in 1899 and she and Pierre hurried from the shed to watch the sacks of it unloaded from a truck, Too excited to wait, she opened the nearest sack and eagerly plunged her hand into the mix of ore, dust, and pine needles. Visitors were astonished to see the apparently fragile young woman wielding a hefty iron bar almost as tall as herself to stir a vat of the boiling solutions for hours on end—unprotected from the poisonous hydrogen-sulfide used in the purification process. (Brian, The Curies, p. 64).
Indeed, to Frenchmen familiar with Shake-spear's Macbeth, the scene with the 3 witches would immediately come to mind:
Double, double toil and trouble;
Fire burn, and pitchblende bubble.
Once Marie had separated enough radium, she was also very curious to see where the mysterious power came from. For that part of her research she consulted a powerful "medium" named Eusapia Palladino.
In the non-scientific community, Eusapia Palladino was known as the "Witch of Napoli."
She was one of the most famous witches of the 19th century and a close friend of Sir William Crookes.
In 1905, she arrived in Paris to help the Cures with their research. She was successful because Marie received a Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911.
Marie instructed Eusapia to ask her spirit guide, "John King," where the mysterious power latent in uranium actually came from:
It was in this spirit that he and Marie began to attend, around this time, the séances of a woman named Eusapia Palladino. Eusapia Palladino was one of a handful of mediums, those intermediaries between the world of the living and the dead, who traveled the world conducting séances. Born in an Italian mountain village, "Eusapia" as she was widely known, was a neglected, and perhaps, abused child. (Quinn, Marie Curie, pp. 207-208).
The "medium" came through for her because she was awarded a second Nobel Prize in 1911. Unfortunately for Eusapia, there is no Nobel Prize for Witchcraft.
As relaxation after stirring the noxious brew, Pierre and Marie loved to go on long bike rides through the pristine countryside.
In those days, the French air was not poisoned by nuclear power plants and deadly radiation.
Pierre was trampled underfoot by horses after coming from a séance.
Pierre paid a high price for consulting with familiar spirits. Right after he attended a séance, he was run down by a horse drawn cart on the streets of Paris. Satan still had big plans for Marie because she did not join him in Hades until 1934.
Patrick Scrivener,
Reformation 9 Comments [4/5/2017 1:08:40 PM]
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Submitted By: Yossarian Lives