Ash Palise And The Spider
The Screw-up That Caused The Worst Floods In Australian History
by Joel Carlinsky
Here, copied from a video posted by Ash Palise, is a picture of the so-called "spider unit" device he used to cause atmospheric energy changes to test out a new orgone energy field meter he had purchased from James DeMeo.
The spider unit was developed by Trevor Constable. It consists of small orgone accumulators mounted on a wheel that spins around. The rapid motion of the accumulators through the energy field of the earth causes excitation of the earth's field, and in stagnant conditions, can break up the stagnation, restoring normal pulsation, and allowing usual rainfall patterns to resume.
But if the stagnation is too strongly entrenched it will take much more time to get results, and if the device is kept spinning too long in an effort to get results, the excitation will only increase the drought tendencies, up to the point of the capacity level of the atmospheric system. Then the atmosphere will contract sharply and suddenly in a reaction to the over-expansion caused, and prolonged, heavy rains will be the result.
In the case of the recent rains in Queensland, Ash Palise was testing his new field meter, and was not aware the spider device could affect the weather. He thought of it only as a way to change the readings on his meter. So he was not expecting any great effect on the weather, and was not looking for any. When it came, he did not recognize it as a result of his own operations.
The effect was rendered much greater than usual because of another thing he did not know. Any strong source of electrical current is contra-indicated near any form of orgone equipment. Electrical voltage excites orgone energy in a way that differs only in degree from that of nuclear energy, which has a much stronger effect on orgone devices, rendering them highly toxic.
To rotate the device, Ash used an electric motor, visible in the photograph, underneath the center of the device, which had two harmful effects.
First, it increased the over-excitation of the orgone atmosphere surrounding the unit, making the atmosphere expand more than it would otherwise have before sharply contracting, more than it normally would have, so the rain that resulted was more than it would have been otherwise.
Second, the field of an operating cloudbuster has effects on humans who stay too near it for two long, which is why many of the most well-informed cloudbuster operators use remote-controlled cloudbusters so they can operate them from a safe distance without having to remain close to them. Ash was not aware of this, nor was he aware that electrical excitation would make the toxic effects on the operator even stronger than in the case of a cloudbuster alone, without any associated electrical voltage.
The effects caused by strong electrical stimulation of orgone devices are the same type, though less intense, as the oranur effects caused by introducing radioactivity into an accumulator. The oranur effect is typified by a high degree of variability, hitting each individual at his weakest spot, bringing up into noticeable symptomatology any latent illnesses and sub-clinical weaknesses an individual might have.
In some people, this might mean having a stroke or heart attack many years earlier than they would otherwise have had it. In others, the weakest spot might be behavioral, and a latent predisposition to mental illness might manifest. That seems to be what has happened to Ash Palise.
Spider device used by Ash Palise to start the catastrophic rains in Queensland, Australia, January, 2011. This photo from his own posted material shows that he had and was using this type of equipment within the time-frame that would produce the results I have described.
Once the rain had started, Ash, still not realizing he had caused it in the first place, tried to stop it, using a standard, water-grounded cloudbuster. He asked advice via e-mail from his contacts in America, but either because of their advice, or in spite of it, he drew from too high an angle, closely aproximating a vertical draw, causing the already sharply-contracted atmosphere to contract still more, increasing the strength and duration of the rains he was trying to stop.
The rest is already well-known.