Skip to main content

The Rodin Coil: Is It The Greatest Discovery of All Time?

Free energy is easily one of the hottest topics in the world within alternative news. While mainstream news continues to ignore the growing interest around the subject, alternative news outlets are providing new information about the inventions, science, mathematics and suppression of free energy technologies. We even covered the subject in our new documentary The Collective Evolution III: The Shift. The trouble with the advancement of free energy as it stands now lies in a couple clear areas. 1. The current corporate powers and systems of our world would lose mass amounts of profit and control over people if they no longer required them for their energy needs. We're talking about using this technology in cars, homes and businesses. This leads to mass suppression of the technology. 2. Certain devices do in fact defy the currently understood “laws” of physics. Many are having a very tough time opening their minds up to the idea that what we once understood about something could have changed or is now updated. This same issue is prevalent in other areas of science as well. 3. Many inventors are either being killed or silenced and some are too concerned with credit, patents and profits for devices to really come into fruition more easily. However, these hang ups are not stopping the spread of information surrounding not only the science but also the reality of these devices. In what could be one of the greatest discoveries of all time, Marko Rodin has created a 3-dimensional model of the mathematical language of nature. “They say mathematics is the language of god, but until now nobody has been speaking god’s language”. As stated by Marko Rodin and his volunteers, the Rodin Coil has the ability to completely transform our world given what it is capable of. The challenge is, regardless of the fact that his work has been peer-reviewed by some of greatest and most prestigious names in science, there is still a tremendous lack of attention being put toward their work. But there is a silver lining to this, one of the reasons why is because Marko and his team do not want to sell out to private interests and corporations who might suppress, change or think only about profit when it comes to this work. Practical Implications Of This Technology Inexhaustible free energy An end to all disease Produce unlimited food Travel anywhere in the universe Build the ultimate supercomputer Obsolete all existing technology “Our goal to create a grassroots energy and technology revolution by turning this knowledge over to the public in an open-source project. Science museum exhibits for kids, a simple book, a simple DVD, that's all we’re looking to do. We want to turn it into the hands of the people to produce and save the whole world”. -Marko Rodin

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Einstein’s Lost Theory Describes a Universe Without a Big Bang

Einstein with Edwin Hubble, in 1931, at the Mount Wilson Observatory in California, looking through the lens of the 100-inch telescope through which Hubble discovered the expansion of the universe in 1929.  Courtesy of the Archives, Calif Inst of Technology. In 1917, a year after Albert Einstein’s  general theory of relativity  was published—but still two years before he would become the international celebrity we know—Einstein chose to tackle the  entire universe . For anyone else, this might seem an exceedingly ambitious task—but this was Einstein. Einstein began by applying his  field equations of gravitation  to what he considered to be the entire universe. The field equations were the mathematical essence of his general theory of relativity, which extended Newton’s theory of gravity  to realms where speeds approach that of light and masses are very large. But his math was better than he wanted to believe—...

There’s a Previously Undiscovered Organ in Your Body, And It Could Explain How Cancer Spreads

Ever heard of the interstitium? No? That’s OK, you’re not alone  —  scientists hadn’t either. Until recently. And, hey, guess what  —  you’ve got one! The interstitium is your newest organ. Scientists identified it for the first time because they are better able to observe living tissues at a microscopic scale, according to a recent study published  in  Scientific Reports , Scientists had long believed that connective tissue surrounding our organs was a thick, compact layer. That’s what they saw when they looked at it in the lab, outside the body, at least. But in a routine endoscopy (exploration of the gastrointestinal tract), a micro camera revealed something unexpected: When observed in a living body, the connective tissue turned out to be “an open, fluid-filled space supported by a lattice made of thick collagen bundles,” pathologist and study author Neil Theise  told  Research Gate . This network of channels is present throughout ...

Where the Swastika Was Found 12,000 Years Before Hitler Made Us Uncomfortable About I

Minoan pottery from Crete. The Minoan civilization flourished from 3,000 to 1,100 B.C. (Agon S. Buchholz/Wikimedia Commons) ) Swastika from a 2nd century A.D. Roman mosaic. (Maciej Szczepańczyk/Wikimedia Commons A srivatsa (swastika) sign at Nata-dera Temple, Japan. (Cindy Drukier/Epoch Times) From the Sican/Lambayeque civilization in Peru, which flourished 750 to 1375 A.D. (Wikimedia Commons) Ancient Macedonian helmet with swastika marks, 350-325 B.C., found at Herculanum. (Cabinet des Medailles, Paris/Wikimedia Commons) A Buddha statue on Lantau Island, Hong Kong with a swastika symbol on the chest. (Shutterstock*) A 3,000-year-old necklace found in the Rasht Province of Iran. (Wikimedia Commons) The aviator Matilde Moisant(1878-1964) wearing a swastika medallion in 1912; the symbol was popular as a good luck charm with early aviators. (Wikimedia Commons) A mandala-like swastika, composed of Hebrew letters and surrounded by a circle and a mystica...