Description
This session continues the story of UKACO and their success in ridding crops of pests by projecting a photo of the field to be tested, along with a small sample of the pest treatment, which was also placed on the "collector plate" used for projectiing the photo. A highly place Pennsylvania agricultural official was convinced of the effectiveness of their strange process, but officials at the US Dept of Agriculture were not. Apparently they were afraid the same process could be used to kill humans in a war. Despite the solid evidence of its success, they declared the process was a fraud and eventually the company was forced to close. The key takeaway here is that, in their patent application, UKACO pointed out that every material thing has its own unique frequency, a point emphasized by Betty White in 1939 after she died, while speaking to her husband through a medium (see the early episodes).
At the end of the 19th century, Dr. Albert Abrams in San Francisco, a quite wealthy man, traveled to Europe for advanced medical studies. During that trip he watched the famous Italian tenor Enrico Caruso tap a glass to produce a pure tone, then sing the same note to shatter the glass. This led...
Published 07/28/24
More than 70 years ago, three Princeton graduates with scientific/technical skills created a company named UKACO to kill crop pests without the use of insecticides. A tiny amount of poison, along with a photo of the field to be treated, was placed on a "collector plate" of their invention, which...
Published 07/08/24