Really Dumbass idea....wire free current transmission?

justoffal

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There is no way in hell I would want to live anywhere near this type of radiative current transmission. The unknowns including everything from an increase in health problems to static electricity strong enough to blow you out of your shoes are just too risky and not well enough researched to take the chance.

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https://search.app/Ln35g
 
There is no way in hell I would want to live anywhere near this type of radiative current transmission. The unknowns including everything from an increase in health problems to static electricity strong enough to blow you out of your shoes are just too risky and not well enough researched to take the chance.

Source: X
https://search.app/Ln35g
This is what Tesla was working on. The technology would be revolutionary if it can be brought to fruition.
 
There is no way in hell I would want to live anywhere near this type of radiative current transmission. The unknowns including everything from an increase in health problems to static electricity strong enough to blow you out of your shoes are just too risky and not well enough researched to take the chance.

Source: X
https://search.app/Ln35g

The tech is required for the concept of a giant orbital solar array that could beam power down to earth. One of the Simcities (2000 I think?) had this as power plant option.

Of course, they also had an accident at the plant called "Oops" when the beam went off target and cut a swath through your city.

It's not a bad idea, but obviously you would need nuclear plant level safety and security systems in order to run it properly.
 
There is no way in hell I would want to live anywhere near this type of radiative current transmission. The unknowns including everything from an increase in health problems to static electricity strong enough to blow you out of your shoes are just too risky and not well enough researched to take the chance.

Source: X
https://search.app/Ln35g
I saw a segment on 60 Minutes many years ago--something about increased cancer and premature in dairy cattle in WI that were pastured under high voltage power lines. The gist was that the flux created around those transmission lines was causing it. This was about 40 years ago and I don't recall hearing any more about it.
 
I saw a segment on 60 Minutes many years ago--something about increased cancer and premature in dairy cattle in WI that were pastured under high voltage power lines. The gist was that the flux created around those transmission lines was causing it. This was about 40 years ago and I don't recall hearing any more about it.
Most definitely....that kind of atmospheric penetration comes with a plethora of unidentifiable reactions.
 
Electricity doesn't flow inside the transmission line, the transmission line directs the electromagnetic energy to follow it. That's why high tension lines are so far above the ground, because the ground would siphon off the energy. Having the electricity flow without transmission lines might not be much different.
 
Yes the famous Tesla Coil...
Actually it was Wardenclyffe tower that was supposed to provide the power through the air but it got de-funded in favor of transmission lines.
 
There is no way in hell I would want to live anywhere near this type of radiative current transmission. The unknowns including everything from an increase in health problems to static electricity strong enough to blow you out of your shoes are just too risky and not well enough researched to take the chance.

Source: X
https://search.app/Ln35g
No need.

We just need the little box that converts the planet's electromagnetism into electricity for everyone.

I'm certain it has been invented and is being kept from us.
 
I saw a segment on 60 Minutes many years ago--something about increased cancer and premature in dairy cattle in WI that were pastured under high voltage power lines. The gist was that the flux created around those transmission lines was causing it. This was about 40 years ago and I don't recall hearing any more about it.
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I saw it too.

I was up in the mountains cutting wood and doing some shooting practice with an old guy in Montana. His truck was parked almost directly under some power lines, and I didn't notice anything until I put on the headphones to cancel the gunshot noise. Then my head was full of a very loud, annoying hum. I couldn't stand it and had to leave the place.

My brother, who lived very close to that same power line for several years, died just two years later. We had lost contact so I never learned the cause of his death, but I'd almost bet money.

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I saw it too.

I was up in the mountains cutting wood and doing some shooting practice with an old guy in Montana. His truck was parked almost directly under some power lines, and I didn't notice anything until I put on the headphones to cancel the gunshot noise. Then my head was full of a very loud, annoying hum. I couldn't stand it and had to leave the place.

My brother, who lived very close to that same power line for several years, died just two years later. We had lost contact so I never learned the cause of his death, but I'd almost bet money.

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It was a factor that I considered when choosing a home in a subdivision. One house was under high voltage trunk lines and the one I chose was a few blocks away from it.
 
Electricity doesn't flow inside the transmission line, the transmission line directs the electromagnetic energy to follow it. That's why high tension lines are so far above the ground, because the ground would siphon off the energy. Having the electricity flow without transmission lines might not be much different.
Trust me it's different....the lines offer a certain measure of containment...even then the area in close proximity is energized.
 
I saw a segment on 60 Minutes many years ago--something about increased cancer and premature in dairy cattle in WI that were pastured under high voltage power lines. The gist was that the flux created around those transmission lines was causing it. This was about 40 years ago and I don't recall hearing any more about it.
I don't think cattle live long enough for it to matter.
 
15th post
Made me go looking. They don't live very long. Five years average--2.8 lactation cycles. Under the best circumstances they will only get 10 lactations.
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Oh, my beef is also calf, so that cuts down on the age and length of exposure.

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If you eat veal, those never see the light of day.
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You mean the calves? Fortunately, not correct. The animals are raised by good friends of mine on a very small farm, and they know how I feel about the quality of the food I eat. They have the same standards for the food they eat. They just shipped this year's calves, all 8 of them, down to the local locker that will cut mine to my specifications.

It's great to live in farm country. These people sit next to me in church!

I would never buy my meat from a huge outfit. Ditto the milk and eggs that go into my mouth. Also for the garden vegetables they grow, when I need something I can't grow in my own garden and orchard.

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I don't think cattle live long enough for it to matter.
We are all cattle, in the aspiring globalists eye. They just use different types of cattle prods. One of them streams through those 5G towers at an alarming rate. 5th Generation.
 
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