posted on Nov, 18 2005 @ 10:28 AM
Taking a look at
Nexus, what kind of magazine and material it covers, I wouldn't be
surprised to find scam machines inside as advertisements. Are there other devices besides medical which look suspicous, say free energy/alternative
energy?
Have you compared the advertisements to what the articles are about or compared this magazine to say, JAMA, Nature, or Science or other nonspecific
medical/science journal?
It is also a magazine and not a journal so I would be suspicious as to who is doing the editing, what makes them qualified to do so and their
intentions.
Take a look at the first question of their FAQ:
#1. The most commonly-asked question sounds something like: "If what you publish is true, why haven't you been closed down?" The answers
that spring to mind are: (a) Somebody 'up there' likes us; (b) Nobody 'up there' gives a damn; (c) We are too big to close down without attracting
yet more attention; (d) We are too small to worry about; (e) Maybe we are accidentally following some secret sociomanipulative agenda of somebody's;
or (f) 'They' have never heard of NEXUS.
I haven't logged on to any of the sites of the above mentioned journals but I am almost 100% sure that in their FAQ section they have nothing like
this at all. This question made no sense, answering it made no sense and posting it on a website made no sense. The person answering the question (and
probably creating it) did so in order to attract those interested in paranormal (the pseudo), not facts, who believe there is an undefinible entity
called 'they' who seek to supress knowledge.
Science and JAMA are filled with many facts and, uh, they haven't been shut down to my knowledge. There have been many science journals for over
hundreds of years which have existed and have never been shut down for publishing reports.. I don't understand why they would be.
I am surprised (no I am not, they make the questions) that not one of the questions is about the staff at NEXUS.
[edit on 18-11-2005 by Frosty]