Asinine Claims About Energy and Jurisprudence
Here’s a video I just saw on Facebook providing a completely fraudulent concept in energy. Apparently, the guy who posted it believes that:
• Energy comes from nowhere, and• The State of California ordered a judge to throw this guy in prison without a trial, and the judge complied.
That’s really gullible.
Note: the guy in the video is a charlatan/fraud, so he deserves to be convicted, then sent to prison.
1. How do you find this stuff?
2. The title is only going to be enticing to a select group with some narrow preconceived ideas.
3. Everyone else is going to take one look and leave the site.
1) This was a share by a “friend” on Facebook
2) Yes, the header is a bit strange; I sometimes try to grab people’s attention with weird headers; I grant that this might have been a bit TOO weird
3) Well, I’m hoping that if they don’t like this, they’ll be OK with some of the other 6675 posts (or the videos, webinar podcasts, white papers, or free e-book) on the site. But you could be right; people could leave. In fact, they DO leave–all the time; I get about 3 unsubscribes a day. Fortunately, I get more subscribers than I do unsubscribers.
Well perhaps the China Man wish – that we May Live in Interesting Times !
is ringing True –
This scam feeds on people’s desires to be free of the system & creates self delusions Lots of distractions out there if you open the wrong doors.
All one has to do to realize that those posts provide unreliable information is to look at several posts. Surely after doing so any reasonable person capable of critical thinking would realize that it is not a source of reliable information.
Regarding energy, even grade school science teaches that energy can neither be created nor destroyed; it can only be converted from one form to another. That law was well understood centuries ago. Of course it has been modified now that we know that matter can be converted to energy (E = MC**2), but in most practical situations, that is a minor consideration.
Craig,
I hope in your enthusiasm you unintentionally left out the words,
(If)the guy in the video is a charlatan/fraud, so he deserves to (be) (investigated), (tried), convicted, then sent(to)prison? 🙂
Actually, it’s quite clear from the video itself that he’s a fraud.
Craig,
Okay, so let’s just skip all that messy business of trials and legal procedure and progress straight to the pitchforks and nearest tree !
It’s possible he just a crank,fantasist or batshit crazy. He may be genuinely deluded, or even deranged, that doesn’t make him a fraud. Fraud requires a ‘knowing’ intent to deceive.
But like you say, why bother with the lady with the blindfold and scales, due process and all that BS, let’s just go get him…
I suppose you have a point. I guess I should have qualified my statement: “if what the guy himself claims is true. …” There is some chance, albeit minuscule, that he wasn’t of sound mind when he made those claims.