Detection of a Bipolar Chemical and a Reflection on the Murder of Harvey Milk
by
Dan Montgomery
July 29, 2003
On July 21, 2003, I bought a bottle of Safeway Select brand vitamin E pills at the Safeway store in Crescent City, California. It was marked down 33 percent. The next day, I discovered that it was reacting adversely in my polarity test. I had bought this brand at other Safeway stores before and had never found anything like this.
I emptied a few of the pills into a clean plastic bottle cap. I added one tespoon of distilled water. I let it soak for one minute. I poured off the water as the starter for a homeopathic titration. I used polarity testing. This method uses acupoints and the polarity of the fingers. For this test sample, the polarity was reactive using the third finger of the left hand on the midline.
The midline includes the du mai and the ren mai meridians.
The original oil mixture tested very negative on the midline of the head. Each dilution was prepared as a one percent solution and given 150 succussions. The first dilution, 1C, evoked a neutral reaction in the segment of the midline from the top of the head to the hairline. On the rest of the midline, 1C caused a very negative reaction.
As the titration continued, the segment of negative reaction became smaller and the segment of neutral reaction became larger. The last negative segment was from the tailbone to the small of the back. The entire midline was neutral at 15C and remained so until 19C. At 19C, this same segment from the tailbone to the small of the back reacts positive. In successive dilutions, the segment of positive reaction becomes larger and the segment of neutral reaction becomes smaller. At 21C, the remedy was positive from the tailbone to the point midway between the crown and occiput and was ready for testing.
The bipolar chemical appears to be a receptor chemical so that a false impression of bipolar disease can be created. The chemical only causes depression when it is activated by an electromagnetic wave from a remotely controlled system.
The presumption of bipolar illness, also known as manic-depression, can hide criminal intent. A person can be programmed with mind control to commit a crime. By timing an episode of depression to occur at the time of the crime, organized crime makes the fall guy look like he was temporarily insane. The crime then appears to be nothing more than an unfortunate coincidence.
I suspect this is what happened in the case of the murder of Harvey Milk. Harvey was elected to the San Francisco board of supervisors. He was the first openly gay politician. Dan White had been the chief of police before being elected to the board of supervisors in the same election. People assumed White was motivated by homophobia.
Dan White confessed to killing Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone one hour after the shootings on November 27, 1978. He started talking to the police about political and financial pressures and a sense betrayal, but ". . . he had no plan when he went to City Hall and faltered when he tried to explain why he had worn his Smith & Wesson." He didn't know why he put it on.
White went to Mayor Moscone's office first. White didn't want to embarass the subordinate police officer who ran the metal detector at City Hall, so he entered through the window. Moscone poured him a drink after telling he would not be reappointed to a position. White thought he was "hearing strange noises: 'It was like a roaring in my ears . . . '" After shooting Moscone, White ran over to Milk's office to explain it to him, but shot him instead. It is typical of mind control training suggestions to bind a good reason to a bad deed.
One psychiatrist said Dan White was manic-depressive and just happened to have low blood sugar that day. The unpredictability of bipolar disease seemed so plausible that no one thought of such things as posthypnotic suggestions.
Reference:
Shilts, Randy, The Mayor of Castro Street: The Life and Times of Harvey Milk, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1982. pp. 312-317.
Copyright © 2003 Daniel A. Montgomery
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