Electric Universe Theory redefining energy, medicine, & Uplifting Society w/ Wallace Thornhill pt. 2

Published: July 26, 2017, 6:19 p.m.

b'Part 2: Chief Science Advisor for the Thunderbolts Project, Wallace Thornhill, joins the program to many more amazing aspects of the Electric Universe theory. We discuss the what they believe is the real history of the Earth, Mars, Venus, Saturn, the Sun, and dwarf stars and planets (which there are many in our solar system claims Wallace). We also discuss the possibility of life on other planets now and in the past. This is an amazing episode you do not want to miss.\\xa0

We finish the interview discussing the speakers and topics for\\xa0the upcoming Electric Universe conference being held this year in Phoenix Arizona, August 17th-20th.

You can learn more about Wallace Thornhill, the Electric Universe theory, and the 2017 Conference at\\xa0www.ElectricUniverse.info

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Words from Wallace Thornhill
\\u201cWe live in an electric world. Our cities are visible from space at night, blazing with electric lights. The electricity courses invisibly in the darkness over great distances along thin power lines. We find electricity indispensable. Nature does the same since all matter is electrical. Yet astronomy is stuck in the gas-light era, unable to see that stars are simply electric lights strung along invisible cosmic power lines that are detectable by their magnetic fields and radio noise.

It is now a century since the Norwegian genius Kristian Birkeland proved that the phenomenal \\u2018northern lights\\u2019 or aurora borealis is an earthly connection with the electrical Sun. Later, Hannes Alfv\\xe9n the Swedish Nobel Prize winning physicist, with a background in electrical engineering and experience of the northern lights, drew the solar circuit. It is no coincidence that Scandinavian scientists led the way in showing that we live in an Electric Universe.

Why have they been ignored? The answer may be found in the inertia of prior beliefs and the failure of our educational institutions. We humans are better storytellers than scientists. We see the universe through the filter of tales we are told in childhood and our education systems reward those who can best repeat them. Dissent is discouraged so that many of the brightest intellects become bored and drop out. The history of science is sanitized to ignore the great controversies of the past, which were generally \\u2018won\\u2019 by a vote instead of reasoned debate. Today NASA does science by press release and investigative journalism is severely inhibited. And narrow experts who never left school do their glossy media \\u2018show and tell,\\u2019 keeping the public in the dark in this \\u2018dark age\\u2019 of science. It is often said, \\u201cextraordinary claims require extraordinary proof.\\u201d History shows otherwise that entrenched paradigms resist extraordinary disproof.\\u201d

Before earning his BSc in physics & electronics from Melbourne University in 1964, Wallace Thornhill had been inspired by Immanuel Velikovsky\\u2019s iconoclastic best-selling book, \\u2018Worlds in Collision\\u2019. Velikovsky\\u2019s ideas taught him to be sceptical of expert opinions. Wal worked at IBM Australia for 11 years, first as a scientific programmer, then a systems engineer specializing in operating systems and compilers. Moving to Canberra in 1967, he was IBM\\u2019s systems engineer for the Research Schools at the Australian National University, which gave him excellent access to their libraries and scientists during the Apollo missions to the Moon.

Wal was invited to attend the 1974 international Velikovsky conference at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario on the subject of \\u2018The Recent History of the Solar System.'