My feeling is that the world is doomed if I cannot get to a handful of
at least upper middle class cool people with a few ideas for
gravity-derived power, using the internet. Not just doomed, either.
DOOOOOOMMMMMMMMMMEDuh. But back to my cheerful optimistic self:
But first: you as a Google Researcher or google-groupie can indeed win
at least part of the whole enchilada. It may not necessarily be able
to be included as part of cost-of-money for the asker, but one can
likely provide a taxable thank-you gift to finders after the smoke has
cleared (some sort of calculatable ROI breakpoint). It has to be
optional, though. A gift is a gift. (Don't talk to me about the
details, talk to the NASAA and NASDR.)
I should state that I don't have anything solid. This is raising money
for enthusiasm and some clues that abundant free energy is very close.
And that positioning itself nearer to the american dream and power
momentum couldn't hurt.
There is something called "blue-skying" where everybody who doesn't
have $2,000,000 USD or work for a hedge fund is weeded out, but "blue
skying" is frought with disinformation, so just keep in the back of
your head that those guys are desirable.
You're agents of love in a world that just saw the elimination of
reasonable bankruptcy protections, as microwave robotics belatedly
emerge to eclipse the remainder of "skilled" occupations. Nobody's
going to need welfare when that happens, fortunately, so it may as
well be eliminated.
So, for $35 and my continuing interest in your well-being, since you
like me, who wants to get behind something risky and worthwhile, short
of Templeton's search for the God particle?
* [A prior version of this question was purged because it contained
identifying info.] |
Clarification of Question by
scotttygett-ga
on
04 May 2005 09:03 PDT
This post was removed by a Google editor, so I'm glad to see it back,
and I'm a little surprised to be clarifying it. I feel like the Peyton
Place of Google ads.
P1. self-explanatory
P2. There is no upper-limit on tips at Google, or when one gives them.
Or if one wants to give them to groupies like sucker5-ga . In
California, however, there are laws that affect giving tips for
finding money, especially if one wants to expense them later on. I'd
like to properly reward everyone, and I'm sharing that I believe this
is possible.
P3. Guilty as charged -- I forgot to refer to the invention. We all
know what it is. Something that takes its power from gravity, like
rain does, and closed systems that produce something akin to rain are
on the list of things I'd like to nail down.
P4. "Blue skying" -- more laws affecting investments (and tips). I
suppose I'm saying here that the law favors finding a well-heeled
investor. Really badly put (in a way, I didn't miss this question when
it was pulled).
P5. If I could have gotten this one down to seventeen syllables, it
would have made one heck of a haiku.
P6. "So, for $35 and my continuing interest in your well-being, since you
like me, who wants to get behind something that is risky BUT MORE
WORTHWHILE THAN ANYTHING ELSE, short of Templeton's search for the God
particle?"
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Clarification of Question by
scotttygett-ga
on
04 May 2005 17:04 PDT
One banner ad was even in the ballpark of what I'm looking for: a list
of email addresses for accredited investors experienced with private
placements.
A lot of different things might answer this question: a link that
didn't want to clean my clock, a name, some pages at Edgar maybe, an
outreach program, an email from Bill Gates, a better approach. I've
left it pretty open.
Your hard work will then be used for me to send whoever it is a
completely incomprehensible executive summary.
Okay, not that funny.
I have only recently heard that I can post not-yet-constructed details
of devices up here, and thereby start a two year countdown in the US
while losing non-US patent rights, so I don't talk details, at least,
not here. If you read my past posts, you will find that I indeed come
across as a high schooler with huge ideas.
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