TJC: The ether moves a priori. The ether is a moving physical
presence. If you have a mind accustomed to the fixity beloved of
orthodoxy in so many ways, stay out of weather engineering or get out
of it. A mobility of thought is vital to this work, because what you
are dealing with, the continuum of primary force or ether, moves all
the time. Vast rivers of this force move across the face of the earth,
according to latitude, season and other factors. In addition, the
earth more or less "breathes" this force in and out in a mighty
diurnal cycle. Successful weather engineering harnesses all this
movement to the objective desired.
TB: Then an experiment like the famous MichelsonMorely experiment of a
century ago, which attempted to prove that the earth dragged a
stationary ether along with it, could not have much hope of success?
TJC: Not in my view, and not based on my more than 20 years of
experience with this continuum at first hand. Rather does the ether
drag the earth! Weather engineering experience does not permit one to
entertain long the canard of a stationary ether. In the temperate
zones, the motion of the etheric continuum is definitely west to east,
like an inconceivably vast tide of force. If you can head a ****p
directly into this tide, and use a simple device that the ether "sees"
- that is, reacts to and with - you can readily cause a local damming
of this immense flow. It's immense but incredibly subtle.
TB: How do you know you're damming it? You can't see the ether can
you?
TJC: Because the created damming effect is a substantial rise in the
normal potential of the ether, just like a wave at the beach is raised
in height by a backwash of water from the sand. In the case of the
heightened etheric potential, atmospheric water va**** is drawn as
though by magnetic action to this region of higher etheric potential.
Thus you see clouds form "out of nothing" in quite specific ways and
on bearings that you can determine in advance. That is how I have been
able in my time lapse video tapes to have the rain accretions come
right up in the middle of the camera frame - without ****fting the
camera orientation from first to last. By these simple engineering
procedures you translate the ether into ponderable happenings that
would otherwise not appear, and which are often wildly anomalous.
TB: To make happenings like this visible on video time lapse, as you
have done, should have brought more attention to the whole ether thing
- to its existence and im****tance. Would you agree with that?
TJC: Certainly I agree that it should do that. I had that in mind when
I set out on that particular path. To depart from what I was already
doing in the early 1970's, and bring even-thing down to horizon
distance - so to speak - was something I felt I just had to do if I
were to avoid spending my life in solitary splendor on weather
engineering operations that were going on scores and sometimes
hundreds of miles distant. I was already doing that 20 years ago.
Getting something to show at horizon distance seemed to me to be a
stepping stone, for forward-looking people, who yet could not buy or
grasp the sheer immensity of what is possible with the crudest
cloudbusters.
TB: Do you consider that you were successful, or have been successful
in this?
TJC: Not yet. But in the long run, developing the methods at sea by
which I could show things actually happening - showing process - in
maritime weather, will be acknowledged generally as sound pioneering.
My opinion is nevertheless that it will be some considerable length of
time before people are able to take the principles shown in all my
horizon distance work, and magnify them up to where they are
applicable to, say, continental weather and then world weather. Worth
remembering is that modern man's consciousness is point based in the
center of his head, and you have to deal with that. Hence the many
years of horizon distance work. Human preference for point-based
activity is structural and not easy to overcome. In some respects, I
made a rod for my own back with this.
TB: How do you mean that, exactly?
TJC: Well, we have a financial associate in Singa****e, not George Wuu,
but a close friend of his. This gentleman simply loves and adores new
things, and weather engineering almost intoxicated him with its
novelty and potential. However, he was introduced to the subject
through horizon-distance time-lapse videotape, without any real
background in etherian physics. So we have had a hell of a time
dissuading him from pinpoint style rain operations, such as the
wretched operation to fill that dam in Malaysia. He got to think that
you filled the dam with strings of deluges such as those shown on time
lapse video - like using a hose. The reality was that virtually every
rain engineering effort we made in Melaka covered the entire state of
Melaka and sometimes thousands of square miles of adjacent states.
Huge rains occurred north of Melaka as the south-north summer primary
flow carried vortical action up the Malay Peninsula. This subject and
mode of engineering is very vast, occurs on a huge scale, and the
horizon distance demonstrations that I have put on video and released
http://www.borderlands.com/weathercontrol.html


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