Spokane Reflections: A Journey of Change

Spokane Convention Center, site of the Ag Expo
Spokane Convention Center, site of the Ag Expo

MEAD, WA — I started this post a week ago in Biggs Junction, Oregon, as I prepared to make the last leg of my trip to Spokane. However, to settle in comfortably and write would have meant spending several hours, and then resuming the drive.

I finished the last 200 miles of an 1800 mile drive on February 1, arriving in Spokane, in what is now the heartbreak state of Washington, just before Superbowl XLIX which, by the grace of an  interception in the waning seconds, was won by the New England Patriots over the Seattle Seahawks, 28-24. So much for the diversion of the game and its commercials, which I’ll leave for others to comment on. I came to exhibit our Rainmaker H2O products Feb. 3-5 at the Ag Expo.

Rainmaker H2O units for irrigation and commercial lines.
Rainmaker H2O units for irrigation and commercial lines.

The show is now history, and I achieved the primary goal, which was to plant “seeds of thought” into the minds of interested farmers and growers, about how they could get far more productivity from an overlooked — actually underlooked at — asset, which is their ground and well water, through the auspices of the Rainmaker H2O technology. For me, it was an opportunity to develop and deliver a concise presentation that made what these devices do, which appears to be very little, meaningful. Results show that they do something to change the state of the water that passes through, but the explanations have, until recently, been somewhat shrouded in mystery.

My description of what Rainmaker H2O devices do to water, given in roughly 3 minutes, worked well, not only for the farmers and growers that listened, but also to teenage students, and children “future farmers” that stopped by. Those seeds of thought will take some time to germinate before sprouting into sales and business relationships, but I will give my presentation on camera soon, and it will help others — actually anyone — see just how essential these devices are for “water well-being.”

I now write this prior to starting my return journey, not home just yet, but back to California.

Like a child in a new and big world.

I can relate to the little boy pictured above next to the huge tire. I grew up in Chicago, Illinois, when “second city” referred to its population, relative to New York City, which remains the most populous city in America. The closest contact I had with farming was the produce section of the supermarket, and I had even less interest.

When I moved to the Los Angeles area in 1979, it was becoming the “second city” in population. It was there that i first encountered “raw” milk, which I steered clear of, preferring instead to buy the pasteurized brands that were familiar to me, that I trusted.

Spokane Ag Expo 2015
“I’ll have a dozen of those, please.”

 

That shows how deeply we’ve been sucked down the “babel hole” to embrace, prefer, and even defend products and practices that are not only inferior to natural products, but even detrimental to our health. We even allow public agencies to make such products hard to get, or adulterate them (such as the now myth of healthy “organic” foods). Then when our health inevitably declines, we to go lie-sensed health care practitioners and allow them to give us, and our children, even more detrimental chemical products. They are detrimental because they have been denatured just like our crops, livestock, poultry, and foods. They provide synthetic or disruptive substitutes to “combat” perceived villainous elements, such as “weeds” or bacteria, when Nature produces no villainous lifeforms.

We have bought these adult fairy tales for generations. We thought they were true. We trusted the messengers, who themselves were just doing what they were told, themselves taught not to question the “authorities.”

I have much more to share, but it will have to come in its own time, as I want to get ready to roll once again. Looks like I’ll be traveling through rain much of the day. Better that than snow.

Daniel Smith
Daniel Smith concentrates intently at his computer screen, preparing for another interview.

I will say that I visited with Daniel Smith, whose trial for his role in selling MMS begins March 3. He has been doing quite a few interviews recently, through “alternative” media outlets, such as Kerry Cassidy’s Project Camelot.

Daniel gets a vote of confidence from one of Nature’s life-sensitive representatives.

We recorded a conversation about the case as well, which I have yet to watch or listen to.

Daniel Smith and Adam Abraham discuss DoJ/FDA case against MMS.
Discussing the nature and implications of the DoJ/FDA case.

This interview may get out before I produce mine since we had multiple cameras running, but I will get mine out pretty soon.

More people are learning of this case and its implications. As I mentioned in our conversation, support given is not simply “for’ Daniel. It is one of the few ways that “voting” is still meaningful in America, as people express their voice through people who are actually expressing their own voice. “Standing by Daniel” is actually, taking a Stand through Daniel, as the system, as it presently operates, has neither Daniel’s, nor yours or my best interests at heart.

I can’t blame the system if we don’t care about what’s happening enough to lift our voices and take actions, in any small way that we can, to improve life for everyone.

I also want to thank Verne Fallstrom, of Strawberry Hill Nutrition Farm, who was my gracious host while in the area, and who represents our product to his amazing clientele.

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One Thought to “Spokane Reflections: A Journey of Change”

  1. interesting technology…however is this indicating we are loosing faith in nature supplying our needs…naturally…something to ponder >> to the increasing degree we believe in need for purifiers, is the increasing degree of our impurity…

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