Stanley for U.S. Senate 2002 - Colorado


"This time make your vote count!" - Rick Stanley, Libertarian for U.S. Senate 2002 - CO

Fluorescent Properties Of Chemtrail Filament Contamination & How to Confirm Exposure

From: "KD Weber"
Fluorescent Properties Of Chemtrail Filament Contamination & How to
Confirm Exposure

Fluorescent Properties Of Chemtrail Filament
Contamination & How to Confirm Exposure

*Inexpensive BLACK LITE TEST*

The fluorescing characteristics of each are fascinating. They start glowing
about their complete portion long before they are even directly in the light
path, and will do so even if you have a moderate-wattage incandescent bulb lit
simultaneously (just for inspection purposes). They also "respond" very quickly
to black light "stimuli" - meaning they need no "charge" time, they "peak" as
fast as you can bring the light over - and put forth an amazing glow for
something so absolutely invisible under normal sunlight illumination - or for
that matter, under standard household or office lighting.

PRE-REQS:

- You'll need a very dark room, or a room at night with a standard-type light
which can be switched off.

- You'll need some type of black light source - either a fluorescent tube-type
fixture, or an incandescent "screw-in" bulb, both of which are readily available
through lighting and novelty stores.

- Your skin should amply magnify the light difference of these patches and
filaments if they're present; for clothing, however, dark clothes are best;
light clothes tend to reflect a lot of the light on their own, reducing the
effective contrast and making it virtually impossible to see the glowing patches
or microfilaments.

- A good mirror is essential as well, for personal inspection.

Give yourself a few minutes to "get used" to looking at things under the black
light - everything appears kind of "weird" - eye and skin color, you'll notice
unusual "markings" on yourself that disappear under normal light, colors may
change completely, etc. You may even notice the familiar "soap scum" left from
waxy/oily residues in the soaps you may use. Not to worry, just give your eyes
time to adjust.

Things that stand out:

- How the microfilaments "migrate" about your person and living space, turning
up in well-lived-in areas, but being almost completely absent in others;

- How the "web-like" imagery used to describe the airborne trails (as they are
dropped and begin to spread out) still holds up; the microfilaments, when you
study them quite closely, are remarkably similar in size and general
characteristics -- they look like very tiny, crooked parts of a cobweb which
simply have "broken apart" and blown onto your clothing with the wind.

- How very, very "fluorescing" these tiny patches and filaments seem to be,
keeping in characteristic with BaTiO3's almost unique abilities to virtually
"magnify" certain wavelengths of light.

- How "tenacious" some of the filaments are, and how extraordinarily
"persistent" some of the patches are, as if they had been formulated or mixed
originally in a solvent base.


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