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OML Archives-
Subject: Re: Radiation/Orgone - Fri, 8 Mar 1996 06:17:32 -0500
Date: Fri, 8 Mar 1996 06:17:32 -0500
Message-Id: <199603081059.CAA10171@mail.eskimo.com>
To: orgonomy@jefferson.village.Virginia.EDU
From: Gary Hawkins <ghawk@eskimo.com>
Subject: Re: Radiation/Orgone
Sender: owner-orgonomy@jefferson.village.Virginia.EDU
For quite some time I have been none too comfortable with the
idea of DOR. I wonder if Reich might have misinterpreted
what he was observing, when a radioactive sample was
left in an accumulator. Am I the only one perplexed over
deadly orgone radiation? Or have others of you wondered
about it?
Having very little to go on in the way of experimentation on this,
I simply prefer to conclude that the accumulator was **fanning
the flames of radiation** and that the results (nausea, vomiting,
etc) was nothing more than the result of radiation. Why it has
been dubbed Deadly Orgone Radiation is baffling to me. I
don't see orgone as ever being bad (to slightly oversimplify it).
I prefer to think that TO nuclear radiation, orgone energy is_AS
oxygen is to fire. I can easily picture a normal radioactive
sample as sitting there smoldering, like a fire that would
like to burn, but doesn't have the air circulation for it. It
pours smoke, but doesn't ignite. Fan it with air, or, particularly
oxygen, and it pops to life.
Could it be that it is actually the "smoke" we measure with our geiger
counters?
The flame element of the analogy--the underlying energy that
bursts to life when orgone is applied--is of course deadly. But
the oxygen that brings a smoldering fire to flames is not deadly,
merely a catalyst to something that is in fact harmful. And yet,
everything harmful has a beneficial counterpart when kept under
control, like the warmth or light from fire.
Wandering down a side-road:
I have heard from an individual who pointed a cloudbuster at
his pickup truck while the engine was running, and it stalled. So,
what if we line an engine compartment with accumulator
materials, the reverse? Better combustion and gas mileage?
What about merely around the fuel line?
Could nuclear power plants utilize orgone accumulator
principles to vastly improve efficiency once they were
newly understood through careful studies? (Yeah, I know,
I don't like that word "studies" either).
I've seen too many examples of accepted beliefs falling by
the wayside to calmly believe that radiation is as simple as
the mere emission of various particles. Understand, tap,
and control that underlying fire, and it could lead to an
incredibly powerful fuel, far beyond using radioactive "smoke"
to make steam to turn turbines to move magnets to get
electrons rolling along. Of course, a shielding mechanism
for that energy (if there is anything to this) would be essential.
In a world where we don't know what a magnetic field
is made up of, what an electron is made of, what gravity really
is, or why women think the way they do ;) I think it is safe to
conclude that our magnetometers, voltmeters, accelerometers,
and our best analytical efforts to quantify everything all have
their limitations, and leave vast realms unexplored.
Well, we all know that. While dealing with radioactive
materials can be very hazardous, some simple small scale
experiments along this line could be illuminating. I've got
all the time in the world but I'm too busy to take advantage of it.
Gary H.
-------------------------------------------------------------
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http://www.eskimo.com/~ghawk/ Seattle, WA
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--Steve Russell
(regarding the attempt at an Internet Censorship bill)
Steve Russell is retired after 16 years as a trial judge in Texas,
is Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of
Texas at San Antonio.
See my: Solution To Resolve the Censorship Issue
http://www.eskimo.com/~ghawk/tagging.txt
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