Re: Anyone remember this thing?

Starhawk ( (no email) )
Thu, 9 Jul 1998 18:46:22 -0400

Hmmm,
Strange....Voodoo and black magic work on the same priciples. If you have
hair or fingernails of your victum you can cast a spell on them.

Now one of my favorite hobbies is metal detecting and I get a catalog from
Kellyco Inc. out of Fla.. One of the biggest sellers of detecting machines
around. They sell everything from cheap detectors to the kind that you tow
behind boats costing thousands of dollars.

Anyway in this catalog are devices using this prinicle and also mixing in
the dowsing trick. The devices are a hand grip unit with a shaft attached to
a rotating joint at the top of the handle. The shaft has what they call a
LOAD in a chamber near the revolving joint. The load is either gold or
silver or something else. These units cost 199.00 or more.

And Kellyco doesn't put stuff in their catalog that they havn't tested and
are assured it WORKS. They gaurantee everything they sell, if your not
satified, send it back and get your money back or a trade down or up to
something else.
Interesting tho huh?
Billy M. Williams

-----Original Message-----
From: Charles Wilde <charles.wilde@aton.com>
To: 'KeelyNet-L@lists.kz' <KeelyNet-L@lists.kz>
Date: Thursday, July 09, 1998 12:27 PM
Subject: RE: Anyone remember this thing?

>Sounds a lot like a radionic device. The human operating the box is part
>of the instrument as with dowsing. Radionic devices developed for
>medical purposes use a spot of blood or hair in conjunction with an
>electrical/mechanical device and a trained operator to diagnose or
>photograph medical conditions in patients located miles away.
>
>Operates on the concept that the universe is a type of a hologram. If
>you have one piece of it, you can get access to the whole via the piece.
>The small piece of blood, hair or drug in the radionic instrument is
>used as the vibrational "signature" to allow the operator to tune into
>the universal hologram in the correct way in order to extract the
>desired information such as a diseased area, a photograph of an organ,
>or the location of a substance.
>
>The radionic box may not be essential to process, but rather provides a
>ritual prop to get the operator in the frame of mind or level of
>consciousness necessary for perceiving the desired result. After
>training, some operators can dispense with the prop.
>
>A very cogent description of radionics along with many other alternative
>medical systems is described by Richard Gerber, MD in a currently
>available book "Vibrational Medicine" ISBN 1-879181-28-2. David V.
>Tansley, DC has also written quite a series of books on Radionics.
>
>Note that Radionics is not an accepted part of mainstream AMA style
>medicine!
>
>Charles
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Matthew Redmond [SMTP:adze@clear.net.nz]
>> Sent: Thursday, July 09, 1998 12:47 AM
>> To: KeelyNet-L@lists.kz
>> Subject: Anyone remember this thing?
>>
>> Hello everybody!
>>
>> Right anyone remember this thing, or know how it might work.
>>
>> This must have been a year or so back now, but I was watching an
>> episode of
>> "Hard Copy" (how shameful admitting that!) and there was one article
>> about a
>> group of people that made a device (description to follow) that
>> pointed
>> towards any substance that you were looking for (ie coccain in school
>> cafateria).
>>
>>
>