Of course, I was curious as I never dismiss some claim off hand. I always prefer doing reasonable research to see if there is any validity to the claims.
What was really interesting to me is that on the surface there are actual valid scientific principles at play here (cold plasma reactions, electrical charges, magnetic fields and whatnot AND most importantly, my friend had already purchased 2-3 Keshe plasma generator devices to test and was inviting me to assist him in checking it all out and see if it is really (or not) hands on.
How can I pass this up right?
So first thing I did was to do a cursory "credibility sweep" of Mr. Keshe (he has no doctorate from what I can tell so not sure why people call him Dr... unless as a sign of respect).
He had applied for multiple patents, has published a number of books and papers.... published in this case meaning that he released to the public some ideas and documents explaining things, not the scientific publication I was expecting which would have been peer-reviewed....
This means that aside from the provided blueprints and the actual devices that are shipped from the Keshe Foundation, there is little to no way for anyone to evaluate the validity of the claims made by the Keshe Foundation.
I talk about much of this at length in my vlog below:
As far as I can tell, the man is either delusional or a clumsy visionary. I guess he could be a scam artist, but since he's distributing devices and seems to have sold a few recently, its a pretty risky way to continue a scam.
He's also made some truly outrageous claims from out of nowhere such as:
- He's the Messiah declared in religious scriptures
- There will be a 10-20 Richtor scale earthquake coming to Panama which will split North and South America in 2
- The fundamental way our scientists see the subatomic particles within Neutrons/Protons is wrong. He claiming 40 years experience and research in the field would be right.
At least that's something we do agree on. Though I think many other pre-existing technologies can be leveraged fully to bring about world peace... without the requirement of Free Energy devices. i.e. nowadays each house can generate their own power using existing technologies like solar, wind, water etc...
In any case, we will see if we receive the generator devices, then do the necessary tests and also pick them apart to see if there is any funny business within... and then I'll report back in a blog.
I'll then get back to this topic in a few weeks when all this is done with a verdict:
Fact or Fiction..... ?
Dear Sylvain, I don't have the money to buy the Keshe generator but I want to see it and test it. Please invite me to see the generator when your friend will receive it. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteNo problem. I have your contact info.
DeleteOk. I'll make another post about it when the tests are done, for sure and I'll make sure to communicate with you about it and a few others directly that have requested it as well. No problem.
ReplyDeleteDear Sylvain, can you take a look on http://swissindo.net/ ?
ReplyDeleteI will look into it, and may do a blog and video on this next week and report my analysis to all. Thanks for the idea Alain
DeleteMy advice: stay FAR away from swissindo.net . Its a clear scam. Only claims to have fortunes on hand and there is no logical evidence that these funds exist.
DeleteHi Sylvain
ReplyDeleteAppreciate what you are doing.
Why not build a Magrav Power system yourself and 'tear it apart' if you will?
The blueprint for building one is out and here is the link to download it....
http://blueprint.keshefoundation.org/blueprint.html
Looking forward to your honest review ... prove to us it is all a scam.
Thank you.
ewoon
We've already purchased a few generators and are waiting for their arrival. Once we have them, our test engineer (20 year professional) will do tests and also dismantle one of them to see how they are built and make sure there is no fake power in there (batteries, power cells etc....). We'll then collaborate with people to help create the blueprint if everything checks out and validates as "the real deal". Fear not! :)
ReplyDelete