Blacklight Power

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Sat, 05 Nov 2005 13:00:00 GMT
From Brad, a protest sign seen at a recent anti-war demonstration in Washington, DC:
WOULD SOMEONE PLEASE
JUST GIVE HIM A BLOW JOB
SO WE CAN HAVE HIM IMPEACHED

From The Federalist:

"Anti-war protestor Cindy Sheehan said that she would tie herself up at the White House to get President Bush's attention. Right idea, wrong president. I think that was more Bill's kind of thing." -- Jay Leno

From samizdata:

"The Bush administration is the most dangerous force that has ever existed. It is more dangerous than Nazi Germany because of the range and depth of its activities and intentions worldwide." -- Harold Pinter

# BBC News spoofed by Owen - Blair announces abolition of elections - satire. Hehe. [samizdata]

# Mike Rogers at LewRockwell.com - Police and Thieves - think the U.S. is freer than Japan? Think again. [lew]

Recently, a friend of mine told me that he was in Tokyo for over 1 week and never saw one policeman. I can believe that. In the last two weeks I've come across the Japanese police twice. That's quite an unusually large amount of times. Both times some foreigner was passed out on the subway platform. The police tried to awaken the guys, but couldn't. I overheard the police say, "What are we going to do? We can't just leave him here." They seemed at a loss. I walked up to them and said to the guy passed out on the floor, "Hey man. The cops are here. If you don't get up, they might arrest you." Bam! The guy gets up real quick. The police ask me to ask him if he's okay. He says he is. Do they ask for his ID? Do they give him a breath test? Do they give him a hard time? No. They just tell him, "Please don't sleep on the subway platform. It's dangerous." And they walked off. Now, you just know that the police in the States would have arrested these guys for something. In Japan, I gather that the police just don't want people bothering other people. Or maybe it's because they just can't be bothered with the little stuff. That's it. Is this the way things should be? I think so. But perhaps the American police cannot be blamed completely as it also seems a part of today's American society to be very confrontational. That's one thing I really like about Japan: Japanese people (and police) will generally leave you alone. Things here are much more relaxed. Japanese people are not "in your face" like Americans.

# Alok Jha at Guardian Unlimited - Fuel's paradise? Power source that turns physics on its head - Randell Mills claims to have found a new source of energy, turning hydrogen into hydrinos, releasing energy when the electrons move into a closer, and currently theoretically impossible, orbit. Blacklight Power is working on commercializing this process. Their "53,000-square-foot advanced chemical facility" is located in Cranbury, NJ, near Princeton. From the Blacklight Power home page: [smith2004]

An ordinary hydrogen atom consists of an electron orbiting a proton. The BlackLight Process allows the electron to move closer to the proton, to which it is attracted, below the prior-known ground state. This generates power as heat, light, and plasma (a hot, glowing, ionized gas) with the formation of strong hydrogen products that are the basis of a vast class of new chemical compounds with broad commercial application.

The energy released from this process is hundreds of times in excess of the energy required to start it. The primary fuel is hydrogen gas, which can be created inexpensively via electrolysis from water. Energy is released as heat and may be converted to electricity using known methods. The process is scalable from small, hand-held units to large, fire-box replacements in large central power stations.

Rather than pollutants, the BlackLight Process releases heat, light, and valuable chemicals. The lower-energy atomic hydrogen products of the process can be used to form novel hydrino hydride compounds ("HHCs") which are proprietary to the company, and form a vast class of new chemistry. Alternatively, the product can be a new inert form of hydrogen gas that may serve in revolutionary applications such as the medium for a new high-energy laser. Since this gas is lighter than air, it may also be safely vented and allowed to diffuse into space.

BlackLight's technology has far-reaching applications in many industries such as: Power, Heating, Lighting, Lasers, Chemicals, Batteries, and Advanced Materials.

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