reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Andrew Marino, a physicist and a lawyer who worked for doctor Robert Inkbeck, is the guy who made good on Albert St. Georgie’s prediction that proteins were semiconductors. He worked for the military and did studies on the sanguine antenna built in Wisconsin to track submarines, and found out they caused problems. Information was delivered to the military in 1973, and then Becker found out there were a lot more problems with electromagnetic pollution that’d be uncovered between Niagara Falls and New York City with power lines. When the military wouldn’t listen to him, he went on TV with 60 Minutes with Mike Wallace, polled the nation, and literally a couple weeks after that, his lab was completely defunded and all the military money was taken away.
Marino was three times nominated for the Nobel Prize. The reason it never made waves is that back then nobody had a cell phone, nobody had a microwave oven, only the RIP. This was on the front page of the Boston Globe in 1977. Marino was the physicist in his lab who actually gave congressional testimony in the early seventies, telling the government, published in the archives, that satellites above the earth affected the magnetosphere 80,000 kilometers from base stations on the surface of the earth. The proof is there, but they've ignored it. If you read his book, Going Somewhere, written by Andrew Marino, you’ll understand. When scientists tell me that non-ADVMF can affect us because it's not ionizing radiation, that book alleviates all of them.
Roland Van de Wick’s book is cited as beautiful for laying out biophotons and the biophoton research done by the Russians, and the Japanese and the Europeans. It’s well researched, and all the stuff about quantum mechanics in biology from 2007 to current has happened; we know it’s operational in photosynthesis. There are books Life at the Edge by Jim L. Callely and John Joy McFadden, which discuss the Klitschko experiments with European robins to figure out how birds navigate utilizing lead meter reception and free radical signaling in their eyes through cryptocrons.
In other words, this science is well laid out, but not well known. The reason it’s not well known, as laid out in the podcast, is because if you really knew what’s published, you probably wouldn’t put your iPhone next to your head and read Isaacson’s biography and realize why Jobs didn’t let his own kids use it. Jobs died from a retroperitoneal cancer. The story of the iPad had an infrared detector built in that Apple never marketed, because when a child touched it to their leg, you would turn off RF and microwave emission. That suggests Apple knew what was going on. The reason is simple: most young people’ s digital babysitter is the iPhone and iPad handed to kids, and they’re causing brain damage in every child because blue light is ruining melanopsin signaling everywhere in their body, which, the argument goes, is good because it’s making obedient idiots to make TikTok videos in the future.