Monday, November 2, 2015

Keshe Technologies - Part 2 - Scam Detection Tips

Since last week there were several comments about the Keshe Technology plasma energy generator post, I decided to do a Part 2 specifically to help people discern what is "scammy" and what isn't.  

Most of the comments here and on Youtube were about people trying to figure out if this is real or not and I've had several questions from people here and there about other opportunities for change out there and whether or not they are "real".

Here are the tips in rough format but, as always, for more details and explanations, watch the video below:


Just a quick note to let you know that we haven't received the generators from the Keshe Foundation yet so before I post any result and further analysis on the validation or feasibility of Free Energy using this technology (as well as the reverse engineering, blueprinting etc....), me and my science and engineering friends will want to receive and do a battery of tests on those babies.  We'll also dismantle them to make sure we understand the guts of it, and ferret out any misleading energy sources that may be hidden etc...

I do a summary of the Keshe Technology evaluation after we go through the Scam Detection Tips below:

1.   Validation - 3rd party checks and balances: 

First, check if the product is in large physical retail stores somewhere like North America, Europe or advanced Asian countries where regulatory bodies check things out.  Large retail stores depend on regulatory bodies to validate new products in order to avoid lawsuits and other problems.  If the product has passed this test, it means its not harmful or scammy.  This does NOT guarantee the product will provide any significant benefit to you or your family, just that it is generally "safe" and a real product.  Online stores don't apply here.  Needs to be real shelves of a well known reputable store (or chain).

If you can't find the product on shelves, then you look for validation from experts.  This means 3rd party research firms or other unrelated well organized people that did proper testing.  By proper testing, I mean double blind study or reverse engineering.  Double blind means there is a first sample group of people given the product and told what it does and the other group that receives a placebo product and told the exact same thing.  If the first group with the actual product see a difference, then the product is necessary real since that's the only difference between the groups.  The placebo group may see results but due to their own imagination....  however the "real deal" will be noticeably different.  In the case of hard engineering, like M. Keshe's reactor, 3rd party testing by professional engineers is needed like what we'll be attempting directly after we receive the devices.

2.   Check the hype:

If you can't validate as per point 1, its possible that the product has just been invented, or the owner of the product has just started to try to release it to the public recently.  NO product that has been out for years should pass point #1.  With time, everything good will be properly validated as described.  Don't be fooled by .... pure hype.

Hype is an attempt by fake or scammy product owners to pass their product as valid by getting people excited about it by using big words and big promises.  This creates an effect where people simply believe its all true and thus are affected by the aforementioned "Placebo Effect".  They believe that it works for them, ergo, it does (in their mind).  If confronted by a double blind study, it would break their enthusiasm some and if reverse engineered and seen that it doesn't work, most would still believe in it.  Its often Hope that creates this illusion in our psyche and many of us will stick to it like there is no tomorrow.

Scam artists use words like Miracle, Proven technology, research says etc..... and use titles like Doctor as well as the number of people that have been helped or served by the product in an attempt to lull people into a sense of security that the product is valid and works well.  I mean, if this Doctor says 100,000 people have tried it and it worked for them, it should be good for me... right?

WRONG !!!

Anyone can get a doctorate from any university.  Its not that simple.  And many "doctors" don't even bother to do that.  This notwithstanding, numbers don't matter thanks to the placebo effect. 

Stay away from shiny words and large promises that this product will make all your problems go away.  Look for reasonable reproducible research by people that know what they are doing and that have no financial incentive in telling you the product is good or bad.  Product users are biased.  Don't fall into that trap!

And for your own sake, avoid the "get in on the ground floor!" comment.  This is to get your money before you figure out too late its a scam, drawing on your excitement and desire/hope for a better future.

3.   If its too good to be true, it probably is:

If all else fails, and you're still unsure, just say that a thousand times in 24 hours so you stop yourself from making a mistake.  Give the product and company some time on ice until there is (1.  Good validation, or 2.  the tone of the promotion is more fact and less hype), then you can check it out.  The real deals will get validated with a bit of time... people like me and actual large companies will validate the whole thing for you, and you can enjoy it.


KESHE PLASMA GENERATORS
Point by point.
1.  This is currently not validated technology.  But since lots of information is out and some equipment is being sold, 3rd party validation will be forthcoming.... unless of course we all got scammed on purchasing the devices....  But in my team's case, we chose to take the risk for now, so that we can share results with you all.  We feel pretty confident that we'll receive something though... we'll see soon enough.

2.  There is some hype about this, but frankly this is not the typical hype.  M. Keshe is spending 90% of his time talking about world peace and how to distribute the technology to the world as easily as possible, for the most part, for free or at soon-to-be-reduced prices (down to about $100 from my reckoning).  The power of the device is reasonable and the reasoning on the impact of free energy in every home is fairly accurate based on my extensive analysis of the world energy consortiums and how things work internationally... yeah, it'll be a huge shit disturbance and yes, it could lead to peace (or at least it could be used as leverage to give it a really good shot).

3.  Its not that far-fetched that we'd figure this out... generating energy in self-contained device could have been imagined years ago, so why not now.  I do have doubts on how Magrav tech can be applicable to Health and curing disease though... THAT sounds quite far-fetched.   But that can be properly tested as per above when the time comes.  Testing and reverse engineering the devices trumps any hype or outlandish claims since we'd have it working in our hands and we can do proper research then to check every other claim out.  My spidey senses tell me that the Health benefits of the tech is hogwash but that the rest (space travel, energy generation, transportation applications etc....) are quite valid and reasonable.

Hope this helps everyone make their minds a bit more about the Keshe plasma generator as well as any other product based offering you may encounter.

Avoid scams, focus your energy on the "good ones".

Peace out !!!!

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