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ORMES Makes Water Lighter

The email forum on the WhiteGold web site is supported by a number of experienced alchemists. The following is the report of Barry Carter a major alchemist on the forum. It regards running water through a magnetic trap. This device produces water with a high concentration ORMES from water sources that contain ORMES such as springs and deep ocean water:

I have weighed water from three different magnetic traps and compared the weight to the same water before the trap. The trap water consistently weighs .3% less than the ordinary water. Trap water from one of these traps has been converted to gold and other metals so we strongly suspect that the magnetic trap concentrates some type of m-state material in water.

A colleague recently told me that some water from a small town in Mexico has also been found to be lighter than ordinary water and that this water has healing properties. Another colleague sent me the following article.

Come Back to Earth; We Go Now to Mexico

Faithful Seek Miracles in Light Water

From: Washington Post: Foreign Journal
By Edward Cody Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, January 27, 1992 ; Page A10 Section: A SECTION Word Count: 973

TLACOTE, MEXICO -- By the thousands they waited, men, women and children, equipped with plastic jerrycans, patience and the tranquil faith in miracles that has adorned Mexican history since pre-Hispanic times.

Their line stretched alongside a dusty road for more than a quarter of a mile one day last week. On other days it has strung out for more than a mile as hundreds of thousands of sick and lame line up for the "light water" in Jesus Chahin's well -- the miracle water that is said to cure everything from AIDS and cancer to obesity or a high cholesterol count.

"For me, all of these things are God's miracles," said Maria Guadalupe Aguilar, a Dominican nun who drove 175 miles from Puebla along with a fellow nun and a priest, the Rev. Juan Crespo, who has prostate cancer.

Chahin, a wealthy heir whose passion used to be golf, has been making the water available free to the public since May, when, he said, he accidentally discovered its healing properties by observing the swift recovery of a farm dog who had lapped some up.

The curative power requires "movements" of the water from one metal tank to another, Chahin said in an interview. Despite references to religious faith by many in the long wait for his water, Chahin described the process as strictly scientific, but secret.

"This water weighs less than H2O," he said. "It is a mystery for science, why it weighs less," he added, predicting that scientists will study its properties for "two or three billion years" before fully understanding them.

Word of the water has spread swiftly throughout Mexico and even into the United States. Sergio Velazquez, who runs a Spanish-language newspaper in Santa Ana, Calif., traveled here after a number of Santa Ana residents of Mexican origin returned from Tlacote claiming that they had been helped by the water. On his flight from Los Angeles, Velazquez said, he encountered nine persons on their way to get water from Tlacote.

As the news has spread by word of mouth and radio, Chahin's hacienda in this little village 10 miles west of Queretaro has turned into an overcrowded place of pilgrimage rivaling the Virgin of Guadalupe's basilica in Mexico City -- even though Chahin makes no claim that his water enjoys divine power.

"The water is scientific," declared Chahin, who described himself as a Roman Catholic, "but man is a creation of God."

The Queretaro state health director, Rene Martinez Gutierrez, told local reporters that his tests show the water is normal for wells in this region, safe to drink and without particular characteristics. But since the hundreds of thousands of pilgrims to Chahin's hacienda break no law, he said, state authorities have not intervened except to regulate traffic and sanitary conditions.

By August, people were showing up for a canful at a rate of more than 10,000 a day, according to conservative estimates. They have slept on the ground or in cars and vans, sometimes for two nights in a row, while they moved slowly toward the gate for a chance to fill their containers at faucets behind the hacienda walls.

Serapio Robles, a cowhand who lives near Zacatecas, 200 miles north of here, said he endured a two-day wait to get water for his 75-year-old father who lies near death from cancer. "He can't come himself because he hurts too much," Robles explained. "It's too far along, and he can't walk. . . . We'll see if God will grant him relief."

To speed access, Chahin has set up a triage system, with personnel who say they are doctors assigning people with serious illnesses such as cancer to one line and those with less serious problems such as migraine headaches to another, longer line.

As the number of pilgrims grew, Chahin also reduced to 2 1/2 gallons the amount automatically accorded. With special entreaties or powerful friends, however, some seriously ill people have been able to get 10 gallons.

"I hope this lasts, because with all these people it is becoming more and more difficult," cautioned Maria Luisa Peres, 63, a restaurant owner from Mexico City who secured 10 gallons to help her sister, who has diabetes, high blood pressure and heart trouble.

Meanwhile, a dry riverbed alongside the dirt road leading to Chahin's hacienda has become a flow of debris, the detritus of hundreds of thousands of picnics. Nayel Aleman, who staffs a local health clinic, said one of the campers died of a heart attack recently and a number of others have been dispatched in ambulances to Queretaro hospitals after giving out in the cold of the night.

Police direct traffic to a muddy field turned parking lot, where drivers pay a dollar each to leave their cars. Dozens of roadside eateries have sprung up, turning out tacos and grilled chicken. Merchants have set up stands to sell plastic containers and tents. Unemployed farm hands have found jobs pushing wheelbarrows to help the elderly get cans of water back to their vehicles.

More than 50 charter buses a day have been showing up from cities as distant as Mexicali on the U.S.-Mexican border, more than 1,000 miles to the north, and as close as Irapuato, just down the road. As they wait, the hopeful have exchanged stories that Magic Johnson paid a visit one day or that the water has kept the local bishop alive for months even though he was moribund from cancer.

Chachin said he never talked to Magic Johnson personally. "But I did see a couple of tall black men one day," he added with a twinkle. Many famous Mexicans have shown for water, he asserted, including some members of President Carlos Salinas de Gortari's staff. Asked for names, he smiled and said only that they were as highly placed as "the stars."

Articles appear as they were originally printed in The Washington Post and may not include subsequent corrections.

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