Image (C) 2007 Dan Hemingson
View photos of the experiment
TRANSCRIPT OF DR. GRETEL GREENE'S IN-CLASS LECTURE
As I mentioned, this article was published over 20 years ago. Since
then, experiment has been replicated
and successfully. The Canadian
Institute for Advanced Research and the Russian Ministry of Energy are
only
two of the several organizations who have verified these initial
findings. Unfortunately, the costliness of retrofitting
schools has
prohibited widespread use of the electrically charged classrooms.
Stolkhom continued to use the
single electrically charged room
constructed for the experiments for over ten years, until interest in
the project waned
and funding was relocated elsewhere. The project
boasts an astonishing who's who in the young intellectual world:
Arvid
Rydberg, the particle physicist, Gustaf Sergel, whose artwork has been
purchased by the Moderna Museet
and the New York Whitney, as well as
Anna Palme who is currently revolutionizing the inner workings of the
Stockholm Municipal council have all participated in the project in
their youth.
Still, the most exciting development in this research (and the point
as which Sailor and I joined the project) is the
examination of a
segment of the project population whose physiology has actually
altered over several years
of current exposure.
Let me direct your attention to the figure on my left. It seems that
certain subjects' bodies began to store surplus
energy in muscle and
organ tissue. We have been able to map these particular sites of
energy pooling or "reservoirs"
as well as the circulating path of the
surplus energy flow. After further inquiries into this special
segment of the experiment
population, we have found that these
individuals are able to develop control over the expenditure of this
surplus energy.
Furthermore, because it is surplus energy, that is,
unnecessary for homeostasis of the organism, the current can be
directed toward external energy vessels with little or no harm to the
subject herself.
We'd like you to meet one of these very special subjects today. This
is Kristina, who participated in the original
Stockholm experiments.
Gretel: Kristina, Why don't you introduce yourself?
Kristina: Hello.
Gretel: Thank you Kristina, why don't you prepare with Sailor now.
You can imagine that the implications for this mutation are
revolutionary. Kristina is now going to demonstrate her ability
to
control the surplus energy located in the reservoirs in her body's
tissue. First, she will simply visually manifest the current.
She
will then move on two our second demonstration, and the one which we
are most excited to share with you today.
You have all been passing around a solid sphere of ice. You will now
see Kristina invest this block of ice with energy
radiating from her
body's reservoirs.
Thank you Kristina.
Some of our most promising subjects, Kristina among them, can store
and in turn externally exert and control upwards
of 1.5 kilowatts in
surplus energy. This is enough energy to power a small living space.
To demonstrate this feat, Sailor and I
have designed a compacted
apparatus that requires roughly 1.35 kilowatts to operate. Kristina
has extended experience
with this machine and will demonstrate her
abilities in just a few short moments.
As you can see, the connection between human subject and machine is
perfect. Not only does electrical treatment promise
the possibility
of a symbiotic relationship between humans and their lived
environment, the energy is clean with no end waste
product given that
the energy origin itself is clean. Furthermore, this offers a new way
to transport energy and new possibilities
for energy distribution and
enterprise. This will offer us the chance to re-engineer our
collective spaces into sites of communal
energy absorption while
giving individuals the ability to powering their private home spaces
with this communal power source. . . .
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