Post on 10-May-2015
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New Energy for an Ultra-modern Vietnam
Part 3: The ScienceSection C: Implications
June 2014
To discuss this presentation and pose any questions you may have, please visit our website,
www.nangluongmoisaigon.org
A second “Law of Physics” that we all learned in school was this:
The speed of light in a vacuum (C) is
(a) The same everywhere; and (b) The fastest speed that anything can travel.
New Energy science tells us that both of these concepts are commonly misunderstood and misapplied
Puthoff showed that general relativity allows localized changes to the speed of light
• In this way, the “speed limit” in your localized space can be higher than the “speed limit” we normally experience
Raising of the “light speed barrier” is essentially done by clearing the Zero Point Sea (quantum foam) in front of an object so that it doesn’t
experience inertia
To understand how this is possible, consider that
quantum electrodynamics
tells us that virtual particles are
constantly flitting in and out of physical existence as they
bubble up from the quantum foam
These virtual particles normally survive in our physical time-space for
just a very small fraction of a second before
dropping back down into the transmuting
ether
It’s estimated that in your physical body alone, there are around 1020 virtual particles at any one instant!
Now, imagine a photon of light that is emitted
from a light bulb 10 meters from you.
While it appears that the light is traveling through “empty space”, in reality you know that
the photons from the light bulb must travel through many air molecules and also a
tremendous number of virtual particles which exist in the quantum vacuum
Each photon will inevitably collide with many of these virtual particles
And each time a photon collides with a virtual particle, its journey is disrupted a very tiny bit
As it hits many, many virtual particles, each time causing those particles to return to the
transmuting ether, the photon is slowed down
Because the density of virtual particles in our physical time-space is relatively constant, this gives the illusion that the speed of light
is also a constant.
But imagine that you could remove many – maybe most – of the virtual particles from a given space.
Would that not then allow photons to travel more freely?
Couldn’t photons then travel faster than normal?
Meaning, in such a system, the speed of light in that system would be higher than the speed of light that we typically know of
299 792 458 m/s
That is what Puthoff, Haisch, and others are talking about when they speak of “clearing the Zero Point Field” in front of an object
This is good news for us, because if we ever want to travel linearly from Earth to another star
system, we will need to go a lot faster than 299 792 458 m/s