DWQA QuestionsCategory: Human PotentialIs the Infinity Coil, described as something that actually works as advertised: an inexpensive, do-it-yourself, home-made device I could make, which would supply my home’s electrical power using a Nikola Tesla-inspired idea? Is it sinister?
Nicola Staff asked 11 months ago
The only drawback to this idea is that it is too fantastic sounding to be believed by many, many, people. Only freethinkers will bite unless the word spreads by word-of-mouth itself from friend to friend, so there is a level of trust and direct experience needed by people known to a person, who vouch for the validity and utility of the device from personal experience. That, as you know, takes a great deal of time. So as fantastic and tremendous an opportunity like this is, it will be slow to catch on. But this is something that actually works and you would find it quite fascinating and enjoyable to try this for yourself. Whether it will save your life and that of your family is certainly not a prediction we can say will play out according to the dark scenario they paint. But that is only one reason to take an interest to experiment with this. As you know, there will be increasing strain on the power grid with government manipulation through policy edicts restricting access to energy sources and thus driving up the costs and creating greater strain on energy production. You have already seen that this leads to periodic blackouts in wide areas of the country, and less reliability with a premature and inefficient reliance on alternative energy sources that also have a downside from being not only costly to establish the infrastructure, but sources of vulnerability and weakness that will make their performance quite uneven. So this approach and the device it instructs you to build, have our blessing. It is not sinister but divinely inspired.