How you can help

Submitted by esaruoho on
MERLib - Modern Energy Research Library.

 


Call for help

It has come to our attention that during the past 30-70 years there have been numerous magazines, newsletters and journals released via multiple sources and authors. These articles are hard-to-get, the magazines are often out-of-print, and never pop up on the internet. We must ask this. We are going to ask this like this: I, Esa, am very interested in all these articles that pop up on MERLib via the archives of KeelyNET, RexResearch, Energy21, etc. I'm very happy to read articles, and keep delving deeper into achieving an understanding of resonance and how the still Light is divided into the two Lights which are then in motion in the visible universe.

I really want to see these articles. I have found nothing about these magazines, apart from mentions.

For MERLib to be a true library, we ask that these out-of-print and hard-to-get magazines are donated to this library, we will have them scanned in, OCR'd, and made available (and crosslinked with the other articles). Would you like to help? Here is a list of sources:
Causes (Walter Baumgartner)
Energy Unlimited (Walter Baumgartner)
Fulcrum (Walter Russell/University of Science and Philosophy)
Light Waves (Walter Russell/University of Science and Philosophy)
Journal of Borderland Science Research (Borderlands Science Research Foundation)
Round Robin
Implosion (Klaus Rauber)
Infinite Energy
If any of you personally know the publishers of these journals/magazines, or actually are one of them - please consider:

these are difficult to find. what is more important to you as of right now, this very moment, that you have a nice paper library - or that this information is widespread worldwide, online, the object of new discussions, the combination of say Russell-based articles on transmutation crosslinked with what Les Brown and Joel McClain have accomplished using frequencies? KeelyNET and all of these magazines can be put together and used. I believe this would be an unprecedented gift to the free energy community. I was going to suggest something akin to this in 2006, during Tesla's 150th birth-day area, but I never had the guts to formulate it.


What do you say? That there would be an actual Modern Energy Research Library online that would have available for reading and discussion, whole magazines of material released in the past 40 years? Please?

Yours faithfully, Esa Ruoho.