robotoidy syntetytki wyglądające jak możejko chimiak beata i elżbieta buksa
CLONES / SYNTHETICS / ORGANIC ROBOTOIDS
These past few weeks we have been learning more and more things that have
been hidden or not so plain to see in the public eye. As we near the end of the
age of grace God said that knowledge shall increase. (Daniel 12:4) I am hoping by
exposing the things that I have been speaking about, our knowledge not only of
God’s Word and His plan for our lives is increasing, but also of what the enemy is
up to.
Peter David Beter (June 21, 1921 – March 1987) was an American attorney and
financier.
Dr. Peter David Beter
He ran for governor in 1968 in the Republican Party primary in the state of West
Virginia (although he was formerly a Democrat), but lost. Politically, he was a
staunch admirer of ex-Alabama governor George Wallace for his ethics; Beter also
drafted Wallace as the American party candidate in 1973 but numerous
republicans opposed such efforts. Nonetheless, he later became a member of his
Draft-Wallace committee.
Beter is a native of Huntington, son of Lebanese immigrants who became
grocers after coming to the United States in 1899. He graduated from West
CLONES / SYNTHETICS / ORGANIC ROBOTOIDS
These past few weeks we have been learning more and more things that have
been hidden or not so plain to see in the public eye. As we near the end of the
age of grace God said that knowledge shall increase. (Daniel 12:4) I am hoping by
exposing the things that I have been speaking about, our knowledge not only of
God’s Word and His plan for our lives is increasing, but also of what the enemy is
up to.
Peter David Beter (June 21, 1921 – March 1987) was an American attorney and
financier.
Dr. Peter David Beter
He ran for governor in 1968 in the Republican Party primary in the state of West
Virginia (although he was formerly a Democrat), but lost. Politically, he was a
staunch admirer of ex-Alabama governor George Wallace for his ethics; Beter also
drafted Wallace as the American party candidate in 1973 but numerous
republicans opposed such efforts. Nonetheless, he later became a member of his
Draft-Wallace committee.
Beter is a native of Huntington, son of Lebanese immigrants who became
grocers after coming to the United States in 1899. He graduated from West
Letter # 46
My friends, since World War II and before, scientists the world over have been
probing for the basic secrets of life itself; and in this field as in others, progress
has been much faster than the public has been led to believe. Today it’s common
knowledge that heredity is governed by something called genes, yet barely a
generation ago this relationship was only beginning to be suspected. When it
was suggested in 1944 by a theoretical physicist, Erwin Schrodinger, it was a
novel idea. Beyond that no one was too certain what genes were aside from
huge molecules or clusters of molecules. Some thought they were molecular
chunks of protein, some thought they were something else. When Schrodinger’s
ideas about genes were published, World War II was still raging and basic
scientific research was on a back burner; and yet, barely a half a dozen years
later, researchers were zeroing in on a building block of life even more basic than
genes.
The solution was found to this revolutionary puzzle in April 1953 at Cambridge
University in England. Scientists James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice
Wilkins were later to share the Nobel Prize for solving the puzzle. Organic robotoids are remarkable creatures, but they have many drawbacks.
They don’t grow or reproduce but must be manufactured one by one in the
desired form. They also have a very limited life span, measured in months or
even weeks, depending upon how they are utilized. This is due to the fact that
their metabolism, while it resembles that of humans, is very inefficient. A
robotoid can be manufactured on very short notice, a matter of hours; but after
a few weeks or months it suddenly begins to degenerate physically and mentally.


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