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			AlienMind
 
			The Verdants 
			
			4. - When the Cosmic-scale Meets the Micro-scale
 
 So, what is this new “electrogravity” that can either make or break 
			the future of an entire planet?
 
				
					
					
					First off, it isn’t new. It’s part 
			of the fundamental basis for many phenomena in our daily lives. 
					
					
					Secondly, it frames many alien thought processes in much the same 
			way that light and electricity frame human thought processes. 
					 
			One 
			note of caution: some hyper-advanced aliens may have exceeded the 
			notion of 
			
			electrogravity by defining their existence in terms of yet 
			deeper alternative cycles, not just the negative cycle that defines 
			electrogravity. By doing so, they will have made their minds and 
			technology sensitive to multiversal dynamics—which most humans 
			wouldn’t understand, at this point.
 For a more basic understanding of electrogravity, we turn to retired 
			Navy Col. 
			Tom Bearden.
 
			  
			Tom Bearden is an engineer, a friendly, 
			bearded older gentleman who has written about his various encounters 
			with electrogravity technology during his career.  
			  
			Here’s Bearden’s 
			quick summary of electrogravity:  
				
				When light waves converge along 
			three different axes so that opposing light waves cancel each other 
			out, they bleed into electrogravity. Simple isn’t it? 
			Let’s re-state the idea, just to be clear. Remember the x, y, and z 
			axes of those point-coordinate graphs that you did in high school? 
			 
			  
			Bearden says that when two different light waves snake toward each 
			other from opposite directions along each of three axes so that the 
			rolling hump in each light wave exactly mirrors and cancels out the 
			opposing light wave along each axis, the energy “bleeds into electrogravity.” All you have to do, says Bearden, is vary the 
			energy potential in such a convergence to produce electrogravity. 
			*Author’s note: you would have to capture the energy with another 
			device and would have to condition the environment to prevent 
			uncontrolled damage of a larger sort.
 Remember how your high school science teacher said that, when light 
			waves cancel each other out, they disappear? It’s called 
			“destructive interference.” That’s what Bearden is talking about. 
			Bearden says that if we do it right, the energy bleeds into an extra 
			dimension (as electrogravity). Bearden isn’t the only one who says 
			this. In the Jan. 2000 issue of Scientific American is an article on 
			“negative energy” by physicists Lawrence H. Ford and Thomas A. 
			Roman.
 
			  
			Both are physics PhD’s: Ford was taught by 
			John Archibald 
			Wheeler, and Roman was taught by a co-author and contemporary of 
			Einstein.  
			  
			In the article, Ford and Roman write that scientists can 
			now converge lasers in a vacuum, which causes “squeezed-state 
			fluctuations in the vacuum of space-time” (places where light waves 
			cancel out and squeeze, or compress, space-time). Such fluctuations 
			involve “negative energy,” places where the energy level is actually 
			“less than zero.”  
			  
			So, how can energy be less than zero? Easy, says 
			Bearden: it bleeds into extra dimension—as electrogravity.
 But that’s not all. Bearden says the converse is also true: 
			Destructive interference of electrogravity bleeds back into 
			electromagnetism (light waves). Bearden says that the relationship 
			between electromagnetism (light) and electrogravity is reciprocal, 
			like two fractions that are upside-down reciprocals of each other.
 
 If all of this sounds confusing, try to visualize light waves 
			snaking toward each other, then read the last four paragraphs above 
			again. Electrogravity tucks the converging energy down into rapidly 
			fluctuating, multiple places, in a sense. It goes deeper.
 
 Aliens suggest that when we produce electrogravity it bleeds into 
			the larger space-time— where it does a neat little trick. As Bearden 
			says, electrogravity can actually speed the flow of time in precise, 
			measured amounts throughout that same section of space-time. Bearden 
			goes so far as to re-state Einstein’s famous equation as E=Δt c2 In 
			other words, Bearden says that mass is equivalent to Δt, the change 
			in time.
 
			  
			Sounds relatively innocuous, doesn’t it?
 Think again. What Bearden is saying, and what aliens have repeatedly 
			confirmed in explicit communications, is that electrogravity can 
			speed the flow of time, perhaps even allowing for a kind of 
			fluctuation into past time (not concretely, we presume).
 
			  
			So, what 
			does that mean?  
			  
			It means that electrogravity isn’t “free.” It comes 
			at a cost because it speeds the flow of time, ever so slightly 
			shortening the life of the surrounding continuum. This means that a 
			reckless overuse of electrogravity could conceivably shorten the 
			life of our sun, for example. Some of those “gray” aliens that you 
			may have read about have reported that their original planet was 
			rendered uninhabitable by a large-scale misuse of electrogravity.
 So, there are both risks and a larger kind of ecology surrounding 
			the use of electrogravity. It needs to be globally regulated. We 
			need to do so within a better international legal framework, i.e. 
			the World Court, and more. Weapons and greed are no excuse for 
			failing to do so because electrogravity is essentially about human 
			(and other) commonality. *A mono-polar US corporate empire is no 
			solution, in such regard. Instead, it will breed deep global 
			resentment, which may set the stage for more intelligent global 
			alternatives.
 
			  
			Depending on the perspective, there’s a risk that some 
			aliens now see the US as just another, low-order nightmare, to be 
			driven toward a transforming crisis—as was Nazi Germany. This has 
			been noted in numerous alien communications on such subjects. It’s 
			more of an issue than most people realize. The big question is: who 
			will control what remains of this planet’s resources, humans or the 
			abducting alien aggregation? In the latter case, human freedoms 
			would be sharply compromised.
 Aliens further suggest that Δt effects of electrogravity must be 
			moderated by countervailing negative energy dynamics. In other 
			words, to prevent uncontrolled damage to the environment, 
			electrogravity must be used sparingly. Aliens suggest that it be 
			used only where necessary, in conjunction with conventional, 
			long-term energy technologies such as solar, and other alternatives. 
			Apparently, the least harmful uses of electrogravity are 
			microgravitic—tiny quantum scale uses of a limited sort, i.e. for 
			medical and research purposes (maybe some limited travel in space). 
			It’s best when such uses are finely interconnected and balanced.
 
			  
			To 
			aliens, humans who use electrogravity too crudely look like cavemen 
			trying to lick a live high-voltage wire, when, instead, we need to 
			use it more like we use micro-electronics (finely interconnected 
			systems that need not disturb the global ecology). Failure to 
			achieve a more peaceful, sharing world order could be our doom 
			because aliens go out of their way to “condemn” the misuse of 
			electrogravity for aggressive weapons purposes.
 Some readers are probably thinking, Now, wait a minute: if you use 
			electrogravity to speed up the flow of time in one place, wouldn’t 
			it slow time down somewhere else? This appears to be the case. 
			Within the focus of electrogravity, time appears to slow down, 
			although at a sum total cost to the universe’s energy lifetime. On 
			the other hand, if we can speed the flow of time, we could use electrogravity to speed the clock on radioactive wastes in order to 
			make them harmless. An advanced use of electrogravity could run the 
			clock on dangerous radioactive isotopes and clear them from the 
			environment and the human body.
 
 If you’re still confused, let me offer some easy, visual ways of 
			thinking about negative energy and electrogravity. Much as you 
			learned in high school, there’s a larger conservation within the 
			universe.
 
			  
			You just can’t get something for nothing. Although the 
			universe has expanded ever since the beginning (and continues to do 
			so), some of the universe is either slowly condensing together 
			(fusion) in stars, or disappearing inward—into black holes. In other 
			words, as space expands, part of the universe is cycling into denser 
			and denser forms—which provide a fundamental underlying basis for 
			all “condensed-state physics,” i.e. electrogravity. 
			 
			  
			The new 
			condensed-state physics (lasers, Bose Einstein condensates, dark 
			states, dark energy and black holes) are at the cutting edge of 21st 
			century science. They will probably provide the basis for the most 
			important scientific breakthroughs of our time.
 As Steven Hawking writes, the sum total positive energy of this 
			universe (seen in matter and the outward movement of energy) is 
			exactly equal to the total negative energy, the inward pull of 
			gravity. In short, the very existence of outward-flowing energy in 
			seemingly empty space is somehow premised on the simultaneous inward 
			pull of negative energy like gravity.
 
			  
			For example, almost all of the 
			light that we see is due to the inward pull of gravity in stars that 
			fuse matter into denser and denser elements. It’s happening all the 
			time, and it’s all premised on the negative energy of a star’s 
			gravity. *It can’t be modeled solely in terms of what we see now, 
			but must be modeled in terms of the entire “lifetime” of the 
			universe, some of which remains hidden from us, of course.
 Now, let’s pretend we’re aliens for a moment. If we were to produce 
			electrogravity in order to literally pull two distant points (or 
			circles/spheres) of space-time together for faster-than-light space 
			travel (as government whistle-blower 
			
			Bob Lazar says aliens actually 
			do), we would borrow so incredibly much energy from the surrounding 
			space-time that we would ever-so-slightly speed the flow of time 
			there.
 
			  
			And, if you speed the flow of time anywhere, you 
			ever-so-slightly shorten the energy lifetime of this universe, which 
			could be cause for concern off-world.
 
 
			If you still don’t get the idea…Here’s another easy way to visualize electrogravity:
 
				
				Light waves are 
			like the waves in a small pond. Throw a stone into the pond and, 
			long before the waves begin to move outward in concentric circles, 
			the determining change of energy (the hurled stone) has hit the 
			water.  
				  
				As it sinks, due to gravity, waves spread on the water’s 
			surface. Negative energy and deeper-dimensional fluctuations are 
			like the stone. They happen on a deeper level, due to a kind of 
			gravity, but we see only the waves on the surface.  
				
				(If you “see” in 
			negative energy terms, you see in the dark, so to speak---in one 
			most ironic sense it would be like the darkened inner vision of your 
			mind).  
			
			Like the stone sinking into the pond, deeper dimensional 
			events accompany every light wave. They connect to a larger, 
			universal quantity because each change of energy runs the universal 
			clock toward some end(s), due to a universal conservation of sorts.
 If you actually watch the stone go into the pond, you hear the sound 
			of the splash, and, in a larger configuration space (an orb-like 
			space surrounding the whole pond and its environs), a nearly instant 
			change of energy occurs when the stone is attracted by gravity. That 
			inward pull of gravity, countered by outward wave reverberations, is 
			like the larger universe’s energy condition. The universe cycles 
			into black holes and constantly cycles into heavier, denser elements 
			in stars (a kind of negative energy in each case).
 
			  
			
			Meanwhile, those 
			deeper cycles reverberate in the “empty space” all around. So, in 
			order to see the event as it truly is, you need to model gravity in 
			universal terms (the stone goes into the pond, running the universal 
			clock ever so slightly), plus you see the event by the sun’s light 
			(caused by a fusion-cycling of matter into denser states) and you 
			hear the sound, then see the surface waves on the water.
 In a sense, light waves are like the waves on the pond’s surface. 
			Meanwhile greater, cosmic quantities affect the scene in such a big 
			way, overall, that they are nearly instantaneous: universal gravity, 
			negative energy fluctuations in empty space all around plus in a 
			universal clock-of-sorts that allows us to even see in the first 
			place—due to a kind of energy condition throughout the universe.
 
 Here’s another visual metaphor that demonstrates electrogravity.
 
				
				Imagine the universe as being a balloon. Blow the balloon up, then 
			use a brown felt-tipped pen to draw spots on opposite ends of the 
			balloon. Now, squeeze the center of the balloon together between two 
			fingers. In a sense, all atoms and quanta are like the balloon: when 
			you converge light waves together to bounce electrogravity out of 
			atoms-and-space collectively, you also “squeeze” the universe 
			together inside the atoms’ nuclei, which causes time to flow faster 
			in the rest of the universe (the brown spots on the balloon that 
			speed away from each other). 
			
			If you think it through carefully, electrogravity is easy to 
			understand.  
			  
			
			Alien children are introduced to the basics early 
			because, if they don’t think in universal terms, they will neither 
			comprehend the nature of their technology, nor the effect that their 
			technology has on the larger universe. If they don’t understand how 
			big-connects-to-small via alternative “cycles” like negative energy, 
			they won’t understand that a selfish misuse of electrogravity 
			violates the larger universal ecology.
 Here’s another easy metaphor reportedly suggested by a crew of
			“gray” aliens:
 
				
				Imagine that under every light wave is a negative 
			energy fluctuation, like a little black hole—a dark spot tucked 
			under the snaking crest of every light wave.  
			
			That’s negative energy, 
			but remember: it both tucks into, and cycles faster-than-light 
			through both the beginning point where the light wave began, and the 
			end point where the light is later absorbed into another atom.  
			  
			
			How 
			can it do that?
 It can do so if gravity is slightly faster-than-light because 
			gravity is coming and going from so many directions all around 
			(inside the nucleus of every single atom, plus in every condensed, 
			or “squeezed-state,” object) on a larger universal scale. It’s 
			almost as though gravity involves a seemingly backward direction in 
			time, which isn’t really backward, but is, instead, a summed-up 
			variety of larger, long-term relationships.
 
			  
			
			Those long-term 
			relationships are always there, everywhere you go, but wow... - they 
			are so tightly stitched into the structure of space-time! It’s as 
			though the bizarrely tight fluctuations within a black hole can 
			instantly leap through a great many of those more normal (“white 
			hole”) light waves that we see all around us (but that leap isn’t 
			linear; it’s multi-directional).
 So, in a sense, light waves would be like small ripples on the 
			surface of a big ocean, when compared to the nearly instant tuck of 
			energy and gravity into (or non-locally through) the nucleus of 
			every atom---which is instantaneous in one basic respect: the sum 
			total mass and gravity (negative energy) is measured only on a 
			universal scale, i.e. how much of it fuses together in stars or goes 
			into black holes and is thus lost to our view for the rest of time. 
			It literally clocks the universe.
 
 And just what is that dark spot we imagine under the snaking crest 
			of every light wave? Think of it as empty space that’s teeming with 
			bizarre, wormhole-like fluctuations that don’t noticeably connect in 
			a weird far-away manner unless you do what Tom Bearden says---you 
			converge and cancel out light waves and vary the potential, which 
			bleeds into electrogravity (extra dimension), then you focus the 
			electrogravity on distant coordinates in space.
 
			  
			
			To do so creates an 
			effect that’s like going through a wormhole because you pull two 
			seemingly distant coordinates in space-time together so fast that 
			it’s as though all the empty space in between was left standing 
			still, in comparison (really it’s just stretching and speeding the 
			clock a little). You move beyond the intervening space-time by 
			entering a denser and faster, yet more universally-timed and hugely 
			non-local dimension. It’s as though you went through a black hole 
			faster-than-light---you took a shortcut through deeper dimensions.
 Aliens further suggest that there’s a critical irony in doing so. 
			Believe it or not, some aliens suggest that you don’t actually “go” 
			as such. Instead, you simply re-dimension within a different sum of 
			perspectives. By doing so, you will have changed yourself and your 
			awareness. Thereafter, if you think about it, you will live within a 
			different kind of universe.
 
			
			Your mind’s concepts and your interactions will be different, 
			considerably more intelligent (we 
			all hope). As such, you will be transitioning into a universe of 
			hyper-condensed, collective 
			identities—a higher kind of mindedness.
 
			  
			
			Act accordingly, say various 
			aliens: you’re merging 
			into a greater, yet finer kind of existence.  
			  
			
			There are (polite) 
			control.
 Here’s a much easier visual metaphor for electrogravity.
 
			  
			
			Light waves 
			are normally modeled as if whole-numbered (one light wave here, 
			another one there, each distinct—as if a whole number 1 here, 
			another 1 there...). The truth is, they aren’t whole quantities. 
			Each wave is a bizarre kind of trick that shoots out of an atom’s 
			depths (where, ironically, we find a deeper kind of destructive 
			interference). Think of the atom as being frozen in time for an 
			almost unbelievably brief moment when a photon is emitted.  
			  
			
			At that 
			moment, the atom exists in a weird, otherworldly context alongside 
			black holes—the weirdest of “quanta.” (*In a sense, the singularity 
			in a black hole is a tiny particle with extra-dimensional tricks up 
			its sleeve.) When our atom is seen in that brief moment, with the 
			black hole in the not-so-distant background (not so distant because 
			the moment is so brief—which effectively shortens all distances), 
			the atom has fractional waveform/multiple connectedness to a black 
			hole singularity.
 What’s “fractional waveform?” The answer is easy.
 
			  
			
			Fractional 
			waveform is a wave that goes both forward and backward in time. For 
			example, the model that physicists use is that of a light wave or 
			photon that goes to its destination (a future “black-body” 
			absorber), then runs backward in time as a “half-wave” and 
			interferes with itself at its point of origin, causing the electron 
			that originally emitted the photon to recoil.  
			  
			
			In other words, an 
			electron that emits a photon recoils like a gun after a bullet 
			fires, but in the electron’s case the recoil is caused by a 
			fractional “half-wave” returning from a future “quantum absorber” 
			and interfering with its own past. Weird, isn’t it? Prize-winning 
			physicists Feynman and Wheeler are famous for fractional wave ideas.  
			  
			The light wave is also conditioned by the original singularity from 
			which the universe emerged, and the light wave is further defined by 
			the seemingly-singular time intervals posed by any and every journey 
			that light takes.  
			  
			Somehow, light seems to know, beforehand, the 
			number of intervals (waves) it must divide into in order to be 
			absorbed by a future atom. Light does a similar trick in what are 
			called two-slit experiments. *In an alternative sense, that 
			backward-streaming “half-wave” can be modeled as not going backward 
			at all, but simply re-orienting within different cosmic conditions 
			(as they relate to the little electron and the light wave in a 
			weird, new kind of time).
 Here’s another visual metaphor for electrogravity:
 
				
				Those 
			multiply-connected “fractional waveforms” discussed above all relate 
			to greater, cosmic quantities. With our eyes, we can see light waves 
			(actually not the waves, but the general glow—one irony of being the 
			big, gooey bodies of liquid that we are), but if we could see 
			incredibly much faster, we would see the fractional waveforms 
			emerging from nowhere in empty space and causing weirdly stormy 
			fluctuations in all of the empty space around us - tiny, tiny goings 
			on, with black hole singularities just over there in the background 
			(again due to the fact that the moment is so incredibly brief, hence 
			the distances aren’t as important... the faster the moment, the 
			smaller is the universe.)  
			This agrees with Heisenberg’s uncertainty 
			principle, which says that high energy particles can appear out of 
			nowhere in empty space because they can “borrow” increasingly large 
			amounts of energy from “empty” space, provided that they then 
			disappear that much more rapidly.
 In short, our new negative energy model provides a nice explanation 
			for how empty space can even exist, in the first place—as an irony 
			of our negative cycle. Apparently, seemingly empty space is but one 
			elusive result of the universe discretely cycling into itself 
			everywhere, through gravity—over great periods of time.
 
 Without being a physicist, one can easily get a feel for it all.
 
			  
			Here’s another visual metaphor. Negative energy and electrogravity 
			are all like something that’s inside of you, but you never notice it 
			because your awareness is primarily in terms of much longer 
			intervals of time. If you could “see” in terms of those tiny, tiny 
			intervals of time (multiply-connected fractional waveform/negative 
			energy cycles) in which black holes and all atoms’ nuclei interact, 
			you’d literally feel electrogravity. You’d probably think that electrogravity framed the only valid outlook, not that weirdly 
			distant, slower-moving “light” stuff. *Of course, I’m simply posing 
			alternative perspective here.
 Here’s a fun-filled mental exercise to help you get a better 
			intuitive feel for negative energy. Forget about tabletop objects 
			and concretes like your hand or a rock, and forget about outwardly 
			moving waves—for a day or two. Instead, think only in terms of deep 
			down inner space, a place where the distances between an atom’s 
			nucleus and its electrons and photons is huge—like the distance 
			between the sun and its relatively tiny planets.
 
			  
			Now, while you’re 
			thinking like that, remember---all of the universe is that way: 
			vast, seemingly empty spaces between atoms traversed by weird 
			fluctuations and strange interactions. 
			
			Black Holes can act on that 
			tiny micro-level where we define gravity. Stranger still, there’s an 
			even deeper kind of inner space that’s important in all that we see 
			around us.  
			  
			Some theorists think that, long ago, when the universe 
			first emerged from the bizarrely convoluted black hole(s) that seem 
			to have existed just before the “big bang” (or whatever we call the 
			original event from which we currently speed away), there was an 
			event called “inflation.”
 Inflation would have been a bizarre process. According to the 
			inflation model, in less than a fraction of a second, the universe 
			expanded so far and so fast that both the speed and the distance are 
			difficult to comprehend.
 
			  
			Why so difficult to comprehend?  
			  
			Because in 
			that tiny fraction of a second the universe went from an almost 
			immeasurably deep kind of inner space, and grew to the size of a 
			basketball. Again, an incredibly deep kind of inner space - a great 
			inner distance, which would relate in active, fractional ways to all 
			that we see around us.
 If that sounds weird (it’s one of the leading theories at present), 
			then consider this: Before 
			inflation, even “space” was tucked inside of, or behind, the 
			original singularity (alt singularities)...
 
 How could that be?
 
			  
			It had to have been fluctuating in bizarrely 
			non-local ways, like our so-called “quantum cosmology,” 
			coincidentally. Clearly, empty space is more complex and enigmatic 
			than humans once thought it to be. To complete the picture, 
			scientists are now certain that seemingly “empty” space isn’t really 
			empty. Instead, it teems with particles and negative energy 
			fluctuations that appear, then disappear—faster than we can measure 
			them, individually. Nonetheless, some of the negative energy of 
			those elusive “virtual particles,” as they’re called, has actually 
			been measured in physics laboratories.
 In short, we live in a universe that was originally premised upon, 
			and is now deeply integrated by, a newly discovered “negative 
			energy” dynamic. The science of negative energy further suggests 
			that despite the fact that black holes swallow all visible light, 
			black holes do, in fact communicate with each other. Black hole 
			singularities interact as both gravity and time barriers.
 
 Meanwhile, within black holes the distances between former atoms is 
			almost nil, which, albeit cold and tiny, suggests alternative 
			dimensions of destructive interference.
 
			  
			So, in the new “negative 
			energy” universe, black holes could conceivably act like 
			wormholes---if you were to approach them faster-than-light (you’d be 
			composed of strangely-distributed fractional waveform, not our 
			visible light waves, because you’d be going so darned fast...). Of 
			course, we now know that black holes are all just fractions of the 
			universal whole. If we “look” at them on the tiny quantum level 
			only, as in our “inner space” thought exercise, they probably make 
			more sense.
 So, please, try thinking in terms of physics’ weirdly tiny phenomena 
			only---for a few days, not the familiar terms of relatively big 
			light waves and concretes... In the end, you’ll be asking yourself 
			which is tinier: the deeply-fluctuating non-local universe, or the 
			idea that our flatland life (locally-sensed concretes, a brief 78 
			year lifespan) is bigger and more definitive than it actually is?
 
 *In one alternative to inflation theory, the universe would not have 
			been “contained” within but one tiny singularity, but would have 
			emerged from a more fuzzy multiplicity of singular conditions, i.e. 
			black holes, that could have communicated with each other via an 
			elusive new physics. Hence, if there were a sudden inflation 
			process, it could have emerged from a variety of fluctuations, 
			overall.
 
			  
			Alternatively, as Stanford theorist Andre Linde has 
			postulated, inflation (s) may yet be occurring on a micro scale, to 
			this very day. If true, this might allow for a universe that 
			continually re-cycles, i.e. within a kind of 
			
			multiverse that can 
			regenerate, over time, through higher order processes. Indeed, every 
			bit of energy, every movement of atomic quanta may be due to a kind 
			of inflation that smears out and is shared by all quanta in a given 
			context - a basic, universal energy condition premised on a black 
			hole-white hole dynamic that ties large scale cosmic phenomenon to 
			small-scale quantum horizons (as does quantum cosmology, by the 
			way).
 Further proof of how far science has gone in the basic direction of 
			Bearden’s model of destructive interference can be seen in Nobel 
			Prize winning experiments on what are called “Bose-Einstein 
			condensates.” Scientists do destructive interference (converging and 
			canceling out light waves) with lasers to cool photons and other 
			particles down to a temperature that is mere billionths of a degree 
			above absolute 0º Celsius, and, voila, the atoms do something weird. 
			They lose their separate identities and merge into a single 
			super-atom.
 
			  
			Recently, in January 2004 scientists at the National 
			Institute of Standards in Boulder, CO announced that they did the 
			same with 
			
			fermions, which are normal atoms (potassium in this case) 
			containing protons and neutrons.  
			  
			In addition, using destructive 
			interference of light, researchers like Lene Hau at Harvard have 
			produced “dark states,” which can make light freeze to a stop—even 
			when one of the interfering beams is turned off! Research of the 
			sort may provide an explanation for what is known as “dark energy” 
			and “dark matter,” which cosmologists say may comprise more than 95 
			percent of the universe. So, scientists can see that Bearden is 
			definitely onto something re: converging and canceling out light 
			waves.
 Supercomputers made of supercooled, condensed atoms may soon 
			revolutionize information density and efficiency. Moreover, 
			scientists recently slammed gold atoms together at nearly the speed 
			of light (extremely high energy—roughly 1 trillion degrees), which 
			caused the nuclei of the atoms to do something weird. They merged 
			into a kind of pudding, a plasma in which the protons, neutrons (and 
			the quarks and gluons inside such particles) lost their individual 
			identity and merged into a mysterious new form of matter. This could 
			easily involve destructive interference of high-energy waveform, a 
			kind of inward reverberation. More recently, experiments of the sort 
			have shown that a plasma of the sort can communicate changes across 
			itself, almost instantaneously!
 
 For decades now, quantum physics has shown that an individual’s very 
			act of observation of a phenomenon has an effect on that phenomenon, 
			in basic quantum terms. A though minute, the effect is even more 
			pronounced when we model the phenomenon in terms of electrogravity. 
			In short, through a logical extension of such principles we can 
			assume that the couch potato anonymity of the 20th century, the 
			illusion of externality to any observation (or suffering people), is 
			no longer valid. It has no basis in science. This doesn’t mean we 
			can’t do experiments without being drawn into the test tube. It 
			simply means that, as Schrödinger’s cat and quantum physics 
			“two-slit experiments” suggest, part of the universal basis is both 
			drawn into, and marginally re-defined within any observation.
 
			  
			Bearden’s Δt is but one example of how this can occur.
 The observer’s terms of observation, the way in which an observation 
			is defined, are analogous to what, in mathematics, is known as 
			Gödel’s incompleteness theorem. The depth and breadth of an 
			observation are limited by the observer’s terms of observation, the 
			framework within which he/she measures and defines them. A 
			relativistic model will look for relativistic solutions, a quantum 
			(and negative energy) model will look for quantum and 
			negatively-cycled solutions. A multiversal model will look for 
			multiversal solutions. In the end, the best model combines all such 
			models and inter-dimensions/inter-cycles them accordingly.
 
 Author’s note: The fact that we affect every act of observation 
			indirectly implies that long-term solutions to Earth’s problems are 
			being defeated by the displacement of the economically disadvantaged 
			from public awareness and political involvement, i.e. through the 
			destruction of long-term common resources for short-term elite 
			indulgence.
 
			  
			In other words, the schlump who thinks he can simply 
			leech onto the underside of anonymous investments irrespective of 
			their ecological implications can’t hide from the ultimate 
			consequences. Negative energy dynamics loop all such doings back in 
			upon the offender, in some cases almost immediately. Those who might 
			think otherwise simply suffer a (consequently) diminished kind of 
			awareness. Aliens have suggested as much repeatedly, in some cases 
			out of frustration with their own governments. 
 So, how does this new paradigm affect me, for instance? Every 
			thought in my mind is a kind of observation—of my own past and of 
			various larger phenomena. Stranger still, the weirdness of quantum 
			and condensed-state physics (like electrogravity) suggests that we 
			need to question which is more valid: the individual’s observation 
			of order in the universe, or the larger universe’s “observation” of 
			the individual’s idea of order, in the first place? Which terms are 
			more valid?
 
 
 
			If you don’t get physics...If the physics jargon above sounds confusing to you, don’t worry... 
			Just remember this:
 
				
				aliens see the universe as being strangely 
			elastic on a bizarrely deep down, inward sub-atomic level. That same 
			elasticity can be connected to form electrogravity, which literally 
			changes the flow of time. It allows for faster-than-light space 
			travel and other new dimensions in physics.  
			So, if aliens are 
			correct, a back-door kind of “negative cycle” allows for strange new 
			connections throughout the known universe. Other dimensions can 
			exist within your very head (or your head inside of them), in ways 
			that humans once thought impossible.
			
 To help put some of this into perspective, here’s a quote from 
			
			Coevolution, a remarkably astute New Zealander’s report about being 
			taken away, fully awake, for a ten-day journey to a distant planet 
			inhabited by three-and-a-half to four foot tall aliens with large 
			dark eyes who call themselves “the Elders.”
 
			  
			In the quotes below, a 
			female alien explains the Elder’s physics to the author,  
			
			Alec Newald: 
				
				“Suffice it to say that your very make-up, and the make-up of 
			everything you can see for that matter, is split into two cycles. 
			The negative or alternate one of these cycles is not known on Earth 
			except by a few, and most of them work for the military. This 
			negative cycle can defeat all the laws of physics as you know and 
			understand them, and this includes 
				
				time travel...
 “This concerns the cycle of the atom; the part that is still little 
			understood by your people, or, should I say, not yet fully 
			understood by them. When this is understood, a whole new dimension, 
			or dimensions, will open up for you—for in this instant of time 
			between the pulses of atoms lies a world within worlds.
 
				  
				They are in 
			fact parallel dimensions to your own—at least to the one where most 
			of you live ‘now.’ These dimensions are so close to your real ‘now’ 
			that you can slip in and out of them without even knowing you have 
			done so...
 “You are very close to a major dimension-leap, the like of which you 
			have never before experienced... You see, you are not always where 
			you think you are. The trick is to be fully conscious when you make 
			these mini-leaps and be aware of where you have gone. You will be 
			very surprised, I think...
 
 “Our (Elder) ancestors wanted to change from what you currently 
			understand as a three-dimensional hard-interface reality into the 
			fourth, or next 
				
				higher dimension. The next reality is, in fact, only 
			slightly different from your own, but it is a softer, airier plane 
			where objects can intermix more easily. There is not so much of your 
			world’s hard-line boundaries, especially as far as body form is 
			concerned.
 
				  
				Also, time can be stretched more easily in this domain.” 
				 
				
				(from 
				
				Coevolution p. 20-22, 42-43, 56. Nexus Press) 
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