Question:

Steron: A ploy to discredit Free Energy?

by Guest58859  |  earlier

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steorn, with all their big ads and slick PR totally proved to be a scam.

I suspect a plot to discredit free energy, what else would explain such an expensive well publicized fraud like that. PR stunt, maybe, but why? whos going to deal with them at this point.

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5 ANSWERS


  1. I waited to watch the Steorn demo, and of course nothing came of it.  It's not because it was a plot to discredit free energy.  It's because there's simply no such thing as free energy.


  2. I never heard of Steron before you mentioned, so I guess it isn't all that well publicized. And it doesn't take a plot to discredit free energy. There is no free energy. There is no getting around the conservation of energy principle, which has been proved again and again for what, 200 or 300 years now?

  3. Why would anyone need a ploy to discredit free energy?

    What you are referring to as free energy had been discredited long before Steron came alone.  Actual free energy does exist but it isn't what you think it is (nor is it going to solve our CO2 problems).

    As for what could explain such an expensive PR stunt, could it be that they were hoping for some gullible investors (like you would have been if you had money) to fall for it before they were shown to be just a scam.

  4. there is no free lunch .   .   .

  5. There is no such thing as free energy.  Steron was a scam from the start, and anyone with half a brain knew that.  Similar scams have been perpitrated in the past, and I'm sure that we will see them again in the future.  As P.T. Barnum said, "There's a sucker born every minute."

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