Could this free energy device, thats advertised by RIU, actually work? Thanks!

Nevaeh420

Well-Known Member
This free energy device is advertised on Rollitup.org, so can anyone debunk it?

Better yet, why doesnt someone purchace the kit and try it for theirself and let us all know the results.

http://www.karpengenerator.com/vsl/?src=BEN-CB

This invention would help a lot of growers if its legit, but how do we know unless someone tries it?

I'm really interested in what you guys have to say. I'm sure lots of you will say its a fake, but others will say it works, but what can be proven about it?

~PEACE~
 

Chief Walkin Eagle

Well-Known Member
It was interesting until I seen the money grab... And some of the pictues of the people giving reviews looked like they were taken from a magazine.

It does look quite familiar though. Heres a deeper look at free energy and its history. This is a clip from the documentary Thrive.

MP, it doesnt list any missing scientists but it lists one that was beaten to death and a handful of scientists that were suppressed and sabotaged by the government.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2Abuj53Y6E
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
This free energy device is advertised on Rollitup.org, so can anyone debunk it?

Better yet, why doesnt someone purchace the kit and try it for theirself and let us all know the results.

http://www.karpengenerator.com/vsl/?src=BEN-CB

This invention would help a lot of growers if its legit, but how do we know unless someone tries it?

I'm really interested in what you guys have to say. I'm sure lots of you will say its a fake, but others will say it works, but what can be proven about it?

~PEACE~
1. Yes. It claims to be a perpetual motion device. Automatically know it's 100% bullshit.

2. Because it would be a waste of money to try it.

3. We know because the laws of physics. The device is not possible.

4. It can be proven to be a hoax. A scam. It will not slash your electricity bills.
 

Beefbisquit

Well-Known Member
1. Yes. It claims to be a perpetual motion device. Automatically know it's 100% bullshit.

2. Because it would be a waste of money to try it.

3. We know because the laws of physics. The device is not possible.

4. It can be proven to be a hoax. A scam. It will not slash your electricity bills.

Too right, my friend.

The closest thing we have to a perpetual motion machine is (correct me if I'm wrong) NASA's advanced flywheel. Shit is cray.....


v
 

thepenofareadywriter

Well-Known Member
1. Yes. It claims to be a perpetual motion device. Automatically know it's 100% bullshit.

2. Because it would be a waste of money to try it.

3. We know because the laws of physics. The device is not possible.

4. It can be proven to be a hoax. A scam. It will not slash your electricity bills.
why doesn't the power company use them and a family named dracula
 
....but what can be proven about it?
Well, for one thing, we can prove that nobody has won a Nobel prize for demonstrating how it works.

Which pretty much marks it as pure bullshit.... If the second law of thermodynamics was proven faulty, you wouldn't have to be reading about it on some scammer's website, it would be plastered over every physics journal on the planet, and making headline news everywhere.
 

Nevaeh420

Well-Known Member
They say that energy cannot be created or destroyed but only change forms. Or something like that.

But the thing is that RIU is advertising it, so whats up with that?

~PEACE~
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
BTW I have complained in the staff section about the misleading scam advertisements currently shown on RIU. The post was met with complete indifference, IOW no one responded.

Here is the post:

Many of the new ads play on gullibility, ignorance and sensationalism. I realize the admins do not pick each individual ad, but simply displaying them on the site is a form of endorsement. We have many sick people that come to this site to see if cannabis can help them. I think it is a great disservice to show them pseudoscientific ads for things like green coffee diet which claims to be "a magic weight-loss cure for everybody", male hormone treatments which claim that you have something wrong if you are not waking up with an erection each morning, and claims for muscle building substances that "they" don't want you to know about. This is quackery, plain and simple. It would seem to represent a conflict of interest for anyone who uses this site and has ever been harmed by the misinformation and pseudoscience involved in anti-cannabis propaganda.

I understand this site costs money to operate and needs to generate revenue, but there must be a way to do this that doesn't take advantage of the sick and uninformed.

http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/...linical-trial/

http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/...aging-panacea/
 

Nevaeh420

Well-Known Member
BTW I have complained in the staff section about the misleading scam advertisements currently shown on RIU. The post was met with complete indifference, IOW no one responded.

Here is the post:

Many of the new ads play on gullibility, ignorance and sensationalism. I realize the admins do not pick each individual ad, but simply displaying them on the site is a form of endorsement. We have many sick people that come to this site to see if cannabis can help them. I think it is a great disservice to show them pseudoscientific ads for things like green coffee diet which claims to be "a magic weight-loss cure for everybody", male hormone treatments which claim that you have something wrong if you are not waking up with an erection each morning, and claims for muscle building substances that "they" don't want you to know about. This is quackery, plain and simple. It would seem to represent a conflict of interest for anyone who uses this site and has ever been harmed by the misinformation and pseudoscience involved in anti-cannabis propaganda.

I understand this site costs money to operate and needs to generate revenue, but there must be a way to do this that doesn't take advantage of the sick and uninformed.

http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/...linical-trial/

http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/...aging-panacea/
Good post Heisenberg!

~PEACE~
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
They say that energy cannot be created or destroyed but only change forms. Or something like that.

But the thing is that RIU is advertising it, so whats up with that?

~PEACE~
I doubt RIU picks the ads. close to 100% of ads on the internet are pure garbage. I have trained myself to not even look at internet ads, for anything, under any circumstances. I would advise everyone else do the same.
 

Nevaeh420

Well-Known Member
I actually bought an electronic cigarette that was advertised on RIU and it was going for 5 bucks and I believe THAT was a good deal.

~PEACE~
 
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