tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6757083416792635619.post9200952517114891201..comments2024-01-09T14:03:43.304-08:00Comments on Pull Me Under: Linda Howe Promotes Bogus UFO Metal...Againufowatchdog.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03436068407519747060noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6757083416792635619.post-64250998511111551232018-06-04T00:34:43.470-07:002018-06-04T00:34:43.470-07:00The quality of your research is always astonishing...The quality of your research is always astonishing: thank you Royce. I never understood how anyone could look at this lump of industrial residue and think that it represents any kind of technology, human or otherwise.<br /><br />But here's what's been twisting my gourd lately: the bismuth/magnesium photonic metamaterial that we've been hearing about lately. First Tom DeLonge described it to Joe Rogan last year, and I wrote it off as a misguided reference to this ugly little sample because Hal Puthoff discussed this stuff with her years ago, and since he's on the staff at TTSA, I assumed they were the same thing. But I wasn't completely sure, because the sample that Tom DeLonge talked about was atomically aligned in structure, possessed non-naturally occurring isotopic ratios, and consisted of many thin layers - and apparently the material itself was quite thin overall, unlike this clunky Howe sample. DeLonge claimed that this material lost some mass under stimulation with THz radiation - a heretofore unseen physical effect.<br /><br />Then in the 1-hour interview with Luis Elizondo, he basically confirms the existence of this material. He states that indeed the isotopic ratios are not naturally occurring, and he implicitly confirms the atomic aligned of the elements by emphasizing how difficult and expensive it would be to manufacture. And he further describes it as a metamaterial. Combining that with Tom DeLonge's description, we're talking about a photonic metamaterial. And recent developments in that field point to a potential avenue for mass reduction under light stimulation via the electrostriction and magnetostriction terms in the Helmholtz stress-energy tensor that best models the stress-energy within such materials under high-frequency (generally in the THz range and neighboring ranges) light stimulation. But it’s hard to imagine any human-made material losing enough mass through this mechanism to be detectable, even remotely.<br /><br />Unfortunately we only have these anecdotal remarks about this exotic metamaterial, but Tom DeLonge tweeted a few months ago that TTSA is going to attempt to make some of it so it can be tested and shown to the public.<br /><br />But what are the odds that two apparently totally unrelated materials associated with alien technology (at least in the press via Howe and Art Bell) would both consist of bismuth and magnesium? It's almost unthinkable that this could be a coincidence. Perhaps this worthless sample that Howe studied was provided to Art Bell as a PsyOp to discredit any info which later got out about a real bismuth/magnesium metamaterial in the possession of the DoD, which actually does have highly exotic properties. That's just a wild guess of course, but viable explanations for the coincidence in composition are few and far between. One could argue that both men are telling a fish tale, but I don’t think so; my read on Luis Elizondo is very favorable – he seems sincere and 100% legit to me. If he’s a liar then he’s the best liar I’ve ever seen. I think he’s telling the truth.<br />Thomas Randolph Morrisonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04985188819749914157noreply@blogger.com