199 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
199 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
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(word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
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Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
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Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
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PO BOX 1031
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Mesquite, TX 75150
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January 31, 1991
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SPON1.ASC
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This is from FATE magazine - August 1959 - page 120
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In the regular column, Report from the Readers, the following
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letter was found.
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Tons of Goldfish
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I read the letter from Helen L. McGill with a great deal of
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interest. It was the first I had learned of farmer's ponds seeding
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themselves with fish. True, I had heard of individual cases here
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and there, but I did not know that it was general.
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Her explanation of the phenomenon is novel, to say the least. I am
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curious as to how birds carry spawn on bits of water plant or moss
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or on their feet. A bit of water plant conceivably might adhere to
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a bird's foot for a while, but in sustained flight I fear it would
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dry and get blown off. Fish eggs out of water do not last long. If
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birds are doing this seeding it would seem that game commission men
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would be aware of it.
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Orogrande, New Mexico, in 1941 or 1942, was the scene of a fish-
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seeding incident. A real heller of a rain filled up a low place in
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the desert, forming a large lake. Within a short time, too short
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for natural development, goldfish, some eight inches in length were
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found in the water. Not juse a few; tons of them.
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Goldfish-fry parties were commonl until the lake dried up. As the
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water lowered, farmers came with tanks and barrels, hauling the fish
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to their own tanks. Tons of dead fish still remained when the lake
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finally dried up.
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Nevertheless, I was please to see Helen's letter. If enough
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interest is generated, we might learn something yet. I am not quite
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ready to accept the theory that where conditions are favorable life
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will occur spontaneously.
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Waite's Lake some 50 miles north of Spokane, Washington, has a bit
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of a mystery. The lake has no outlet, was never planted - but is
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populated with salmon. Jim Fortner, Long Beach, California
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Vangard note....
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Spontaneous Generation is supposed to have been disproved under
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laboratory conditions. In a natural environment, there are
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many factors which could produce such rapid growth.
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There are still some interesting arguments for and against the
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Page 1
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case of spontaneous generation. One is that of Antoine
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Bechamp, a contemporary of Pasteur and the discoverer of
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MICROZYMAS. As a matter of fact, Pasteur was a proponent of
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the theory of spontaneous generation.
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Bechamp's work is much too extensive to cover in this paper so
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a simple description will be included. He discovered so many
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things and carried out such original research that a full paper
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would serve our readers well.
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The term Microbes is the modern equivalent of the original
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MicroZymas. These were found to be present in abundant
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quantities in the air as well as in water and earth.
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Microzymas are physiologically imperishable. They are not
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germs of the air nor are the pre-existent in the air, they are
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the LIVING REMAINS of organisms which have disappeared and been
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destroyed.
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After all natural organic matters, their tissues and cellules
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are reduced to their mineral form, there still remain only the
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Microzymas. They are the agents of the changes which take
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place in living tissues through pleomorphic reorganizations.
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In other words, they can "project" themselves into higher
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orders of being from the initial seed patterns inherent in the
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Microzyma. Bechamp goes on to find that these Microzymas can
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become corrupted to the point of inflicting disease in the host
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body to the point of death.
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The point is that Microzymas of all dead beings are omnipresent
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in nature. We are continually exposed to them and susceptible
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the their influence once they are given the proper conditions
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to awaken and exert their influence.
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To that extent, the appearance of the fish in the newly formed
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lakes in a very low area of land might be because at one point,
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that area was a lake or part of a larger body of water. If so,
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then the concentration of Microzymas in the area would
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necessarily be extremely high, accounting for the abundance of
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the fish and the speed of their appearance.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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If you have comments or other information relating to such topics
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as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
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Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
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Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.
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Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
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Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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If we can be of service, you may contact
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Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 242-9346
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Page 2
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Page 3
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