“Green” Hoax — “Green” Farce — “Green” Trick — Cheap Products Made Worse On Purpose, To Fail Sooner — The Lightbulb Conspiracy – Phoebus cartel (still exists) limited lifetime, caused incompatibilities, designed to fail — Planned Obsolescence

Livermore California, home of longest-burning lightbulb in world…burning continuously since 1901, already outlasted two webcams.  Was 100 years old in 2001.   https://www.bitchute.com/video/IEKlhzXcG7YN/     Werner Philips supposedly leading a charge for Philips to make a 25-year lifespan LED bulb.   Ghandi — World is big enough to satisfy everyone’s need but will always be … Read more

Our Hijacked Timeline with Michelle Gibson

Rings true.  Michelle Gibson is one of those exceedingly rare researchers whose findings — if even one sentence of which is true — inexorably causes rethink and rewrite of all “known” history.  However, we must always beware the confounding and misleading layers in the profound “onion of lies” constructed over such long time to do … Read more

FREQUENCIES (2013) movie premieres memes of sing-song sounds, lyrical control words, and ancient aural technologies

Far more deeply interesting than the shallow, mindless write-ups and reviews would indicate. This movie touches on themes of mind, body, and soul as relating to resonance, vibration, speech and lyrical control. Dissonance between two erstwhile kindred spirits is finally overcome with old technology (made new again) that applies trigger words, sounds, and two-syllable phonemes … Read more

Dr. Joseph Farrell – Hidden Metaphysics, History & Philosophy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Y18k5mZtYQ

Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music

Mark Katz, a professor at the Peabody Conservatory of Music at The Johns Hopkins University, discussed his book, “Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music.” The event was sponsored by the Library’s John W. Kluge Center, the Music Division and the Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division. According to Katz, who teaches in the … Read more

Birth of Technology from Spirit of Alchemy

In ‘The Birth of Technology’ (1970), Simondon argues that “scientific spirit” (the lógos, as such, of technè) developed in the West as a result of the meeting and mingling of Eastern, Near-Eastern, orEgyptian technics on the one hand and the [principally Greek] contemplative and theoretical sciences onthe other (Alexandria — with its Ptolemaïc Pharos — … Read more

The Hallelujah Effect: Philosophical Reflections on Music, Performance Practice, and Technology

Abstract   ‘[E]ven if one does not follow this book to its conclusion, one should at least keep in mind from the start that it is Nietzsche’s extraordinary and complex conception of the becoming-human of dissonance that drives this exploration of the Hallelujah effect. Hence Nietzsche’s conception of the becoming-human of dissonance is present from … Read more