PartSkeptic’s Thread for Predictions and Other Matters of Interest

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New to me too. I know switch mode supplies can take a very wide range on input voltages, but output autoconfig? I'm guessing a mistake, and if not, a revelation :D

Those old output-selectable supplies were notoriously badly designed. A single multitap transformer of dubious origins, multipole switch, cheap wiring, a couple of rectifier diodes and a smoothing cap. Show them any load close to 80% of max rating and they folded like a cheap suit.


Quite right. I had a couple and they were very bad. This one has an aluminium case for heat sinking and is clearly electronic with a flat design - no transformer except maybe high frequency toroids. The voltage selection probably is digital. A row of leds show the setting.
 
According to Wikipedia, some of the side effects of ciprofloxacin may be more likely in the over 60s.


Like most illnesses, older cells have a lowered repair system. Many are probably not capable of repair.

So the side effects of any harmful toxin (cipro or emfs) is much more noticeable.

This is one of the problem with the testing regimes. They use health animals and healthy humans.

Are you learning some basics of living cells on this thread so far?
 
You don't know any such thing.



No. A court properly laughed at a laughable request that the defendant must undertake experiments at the plaintiff's request to provide the evidence the plaintiff should have had in hand before going to court.



Wow. There's shifting the burden of proof, and then there's flinging it haphazardly in all directions. There's only one person on the hook to prove your claims: you. If you can't or won't, then your claims deserve all the laughter they're getting.


You make assumptions that are almost laughable. On what do you base your first blunt statement? That all executives are honorable people that act in the best interests of the world and their clients? :boggled:

I have the legal proof I need.The evidence is in their submittals. I intend to press for perjury charges with the police. I considered suing a couple of the ones that perjured themselves, but the system is captured by big corporations.

I did not make a request. I made a statement that they would not take part in a test to prove no harm. Their response speaks volumes. Like you, they wiggle out of it.
 
Cosmic Yak;1311765(snip) [B said:
An electromagnetic field survey was carried out at your house. The levels were found to be 700 times lower than the recommended exposure level limit.
[/B]
(snip)

Recommended by which organization? (Answer - ICNIRP)

And which industry funds them? (Answer - The Telcos.)

And based on what? (Answer- Heating only and no duration.)

And do all countries have the same level? (Answer - NO.)

And why are they NOT wrong about the interference of the VGCC in cells? (Answer - They ARE wrong. Check their latest literature. They are starting to get very cagey in making admissions that the science may yet show harm - and that they are proceeding on the basis of NO provable harm AT THE MOMENT. To heck with caution and testing.)

Why are so many scientists concerned about harm and rolling out so quickly on such a massive scale? (Answer - because far too many credible tests indicate cellular harm in so many ways.)

Where is your skepticism? (Answer - You are selective. You just blindly follow the industry disinformation websites that make out that questioning cell phone radiation is a conspiracy theory.)
 
Okay. If the tests on the WiFi fail I would want to know why.

There is one factor that I am starting to realize might be at play. The emfs affect cells that are already compromised or are borderline dysfunctional. If I was to be in very good shape one day, I might not feel the effects. What I will be doing to get round this is that if I do not feel anything, I will stay longer until I am certain it is either on or off.
If your test does fail, will you even consider the possibility that it's because your hypothesis that your symptoms are produced by the wifi is incorrect?
 
<snip for brevity>
[END derail]

Can't say I have particularly looked in detail as to how it operates, but there are no switches on the pair I have. They will merrily power any lappy at any voltage, simply select the right size/polarity of connector and off it goes. No faffing about with fiddly switches. Since the matter has arisen, I took a careful look. There is only one switch on them 14-17 v or 17-21v and that's it.

After that nothing matters. it just gets on with it.

All this is merely a diversion from the notion that PS wants to file down the plug rather than seeking a connector of correct size. That act in itself will compromise the insulation between the inner and outer sleeves of the plug.

If you want to nerd out, both are Kensington 33403 models. Enjoy the user manual if you wish. Damned if I know why you would.
 
One more point: you are demanding that the Telko employees undergo a test in which they are exposed to the radiation from the towers for 3 months.
We already have such a test group: it's called 'everyone else in the world'. We are all exposed to EMF from cellphone towers, all day, every day. Only a tiny minority of people develop any kind of symptoms.


And when that minority is tested, no causal relationship is found between the EMF and the symptoms. See the systematic reviews that Pixel42 recently posted.
 
If you want to nerd out, both are Kensington 33403 models. Enjoy the user manual if you wish. Damned if I know why you would.

All good! I was just a little unsure on your auto-adjusting output voltage statement, but it's been cleared up.

Sorry for the derail.
 
Originally Posted by PartSkeptic View Post
I know that the Telco executive know there is harm.
You don't know any such thing.
...

You make assumptions that are almost laughable. On what do you base your first blunt statement? That all executives are honorable people that act in the best interests of the world and their clients? :boggled:
...

The projection and flat-out CT paranoia in that post are pretty amazing (and part of what makes this whole thread so laughable). Seriously, PS- what about your assumptions? What Jay is trying to tell you is that your "I know that the Telco executive know there is harm" argument is nothing but an assumption- unless you're either one of them or a mind-reader, it would have to be; which makes it a circular argument you're putting forward to prove the harm that must first assume both the harm and the executive's knowledge of it. And it's so similar to the 9/11 CTist mantra, that anyone who rejects their "theory" that, in that particular case, the US government was either an active or passive participant in a conspiracy, must of necessity believe that all governments are always honorable, etc.- that a specified case can be proven by pretending that an opposing non-specific strawman to be scorned somehow applies and is all that is necessary to confirm the desired specific. Consider this, PS- it's not, in fact, necessary to think that "all the executives are honorable people that act in the best interests of the world" in order to say that you can't assume anything about them. You, OTOH, need every single one of those executives to silently acquiesce in the plot- you have to assume they are all the soulless Dr Evils your plot requires.
 
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You make assumptions that are almost laughable.

I'm not making any assumptions. You've taken issue with me because I refuse to make the same assumptions you evidently have.

On what do you base your first blunt statement?

On the long-established fact that no one person can know whether another person knows a thing or not. And despite your previous claims to superhuman abilities, I do not believe you can read minds.

That all executives are honorable people that act in the best interests of the world and their clients? :boggled:

I never made that argument, but you evidently expected that's what I was thinking. Thank you for proving my previous point in spades. You're evidently bad at knowing what other people are thinking, but that doesn't stop you from making things up to make it seem as if you do.

You habitually argue by assuming things that aren't known to be true. Then you respond emotionally when the eventual facts don't bear you out. If those assumptions regard some other person, and that person's behavior doesn't bear out those assumptions, you then regard that person as evil and behave accordingly to them. This pattern is likely to land you in hot water at some point. People here at ISF generally have a thick skin and walk away from these debates with little if any effect from such abuse as you're dishing out. But people whom you take to court and whose time you waste with your paranoid accusations may not be so indulgent.

I made absolutely no representation about the character of the people you're trying to accuse. Their character is irrelevant. Be they good or evil, you don't know what they're thinking. But you aren't willing to listen to the argument your critics are actually making. You have to invent easy straw-man arguments that fit your conspiracy theory, and shove them in your critics' mouths instead so that you can keep pretending those critics are silly, irrational, or ill-intentioned, and therefore persecuting you. In court you will be required to address your opponents' actual argument, not what you pretend they're thinking or what you assume their reasons are. The system is not rigged when it forces you to either make suitable arguments or accept failure.

I considered suing a couple of the ones that perjured themselves, but the system is captured by big corporations.

You already have the standard excuses prepared for your inevitable failure. And like every disgruntled and unsuccessful plaintiff, that reason is never insufficient evidence and flimsy argument. It's always someone else's fault. This has been your pattern since I've observed you. You run away from every meaningful test of your claims, and then when you can no longer evade the inevitable failure, you lash out and blame everyone else. This is why the legal system is probably not the best way for you to obtain satisfaction.
I made a statement that they would not take part in a test to prove no harm.

What you did was tantamount to a superficially unobjectionable request that you expected to be declined precisely so that you could pretend the denial was for the reason you supposed. Quibbling over whether it was a "request" or a "statement" doesn't make your legal strategy any less ham-fisted.

You foisted an argument upon the defense, begged the question that it was self-evidently orderly and rational, then supposed the reason why they would not agree to adopt that particular argument. And you're clinging to your supposition tenaciously as if it were proven fact. You are so tightly bound up in circular reasoning that you ignore how this is the oldest and least-convincing rhetorical stunt in the book. Rather than accept that your clumsy attempt failed, you're pouting.

Their response speaks volumes.

No, it doesn't. You read volumes of assumption into their completely justified behavior and pretend that it's all part of a big conspiracy against you.

Like you, they wiggle out of it.

"Wiggle out" of what? Your laughable attempts at foisting elaborate obligations on all who doubt you, and then heaping shame and scorn upon them when they see through your scheme? You seem to think your critics are stupid enough to fall for such an obviously contrived dilemma. Pointing out where your thinking has gone awry does not carry with it a duty to perform whatever pops into your head to prescribe as proof of the ultimate point you're trying to make. Nor is it ever the case that a claimant gets to set the only terms by which effective rebuttal must proceed. Rational people easily see you frantically laying conspicuous rhetorical traps when reason fails you. Nor is rebuttal undertaken -- as you insinuate -- from a position where people secretly believe you're right. If you hope to prevail in court, you will need an argument that isn't so blatantly paranoid, theatrical, and devoid of fact.

You're trying to set a very high bar to someone even questioning your claims and the patently circular reasoning you've constructed around it. You're trying to give unpleasant consequences to the mere act of questioning your beliefs as a substitute for the facts that prove it. Shaming people when they don't jump through your arbitrary hoops is not winning legal strategy. Prepare to fail spectacularly in court, by your own fault. And don't be surprised if this ends more badly for you than you previously considered.
 
Radioactive...
Not according to the standard definition: "emitting or relating to the emission of ionizing radiation or particles."

But it is according to this definition: "emitting or relating to the emission of radiation or particles that are harmful to living cells."

So if you understand the difference between ionizing and non-ionizing radiation, why are you trying to draw a parallel between cell phone radio-frequency emissions and ionizing radiation such as found in nuclear fission or diagnostic x-rays? Do you understand that those are fundamentally different kinds of effects? You once claimed to be an engineer so skilled as to be able to solve problems that no other engineers could. But now you're making elementary mistakes in basic principles of physics. This does not bode well for the premise that you are competent to understand the science that relates to your claims.
 
An argument precisely and concisely sliced, diced and fricaseed by JayUtah, the nemesis of science deniers and science ignoramuses.

Always a pleasure to read and a lesson in logic for the grandson.
Hope it keeps up.:)
 
Yes, I always look forward to people like Jay and STS-60 entering one of these threads. I think the people they're addressing rarely get the point, but we hangers-on may end up learning thing or two.
 
Thanks for the vote of confidence and the praise, but I really only dropped in. I have no desire to wade through 20 pages of PartSkeptic's pseudoscience and address it in depth. Others who are equally if not more capable appear to have done that already.
 
Thanks for the vote of confidence and the praise, but I really only dropped in. I have no desire to wade through 20 pages of PartSkeptic's pseudoscience and address it in depth. Others who are equally if not more capable appear to have done that already.

Except there is no depth to his arguments. It's a wading pool of logic. Make an unfounded claim, determine the cause without doing a shred of investigating and then demand others prove him right. Rinse and repeat.

I wonder now if hes placed you in the "THEY" club? Can I join too?
 
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Yes, I always look forward to people like Jay and STS-60 entering one of these threads. I think the people they're addressing rarely get the point, but we hangers-on may end up learning thing or two.

Absolutely: I'll sit back and watch the ..... a bit of barcalacide* which will be enjoyable to watch.

* new word from the Latin
 
Except there is no depth to his arguments. It's a wading pool of logic. Make an unfounded claim, determine the cause without doing a shred of investigating and then demand others prove him right. Rinse and repeat.

I wonder now if hes placed you in the "THEY" club? Can I join too?

I think we are all in that club. In the classic CT mindset pretty much the entire world is in on it. PS is one man against the entire world's Justice system, Police, Insurance, Health care, Communications, Academia, etc., etc.

Oh wait I don't think food service industry is part of plot against him - yet.
 
I think we are all in that club. In the classic CT mindset pretty much the entire world is in on it. PS is one man against the entire world's Justice system, Police, Insurance, Health care, Communications, Academia, etc., etc.

Oh wait I don't think food service industry is part of plot against him - yet.

Have you not seen the Five Guys logo? A nefarious p.ot I'd say. Once I told people about that when I went to a McDonald's drive through there was no secret sauce on my Big Mac when we got home and opened the box.

Suspicious as hell.
 
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