Sepp Hasslberger: Electrostatic Charges Reverse Monsanto Genetic Engineering — But Congress Still Immunizing Monsanto from Legal Redress

01 Agriculture
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Sepp Hasslberger
Sepp Hasslberger

It is apparently possible to reverse genetic modifications – by simply exposing seeds to a static electric field for some time before germination and growth. The recently added genetic traits will vanish, giving way to a plant or animal close to its origins…

Electrostatic Zapping of Seeds & Embroyos

The “Primeval Code” is restored, overcoming genetic engineering.

In laboratory experiments the researchers, Dr. Guido Ebner and Heinz Schurch, exposed cereal seeds and fish eggs to an “electrostatic field” — in other words, to a high voltage field, in which no current (or hardly any) flows. Typically a high voltage but low amperage DC current is used to charge two metal plates, separated by air. The plates create an electrostatic field and this influences the changes they observed.

Unexpectedly primeval organisms grew out of these seeds and eggs: a fern that no botanist was able to identify; primeval corn with up to twelve ears per stalk; wheat that was ready to be harvested in just four to six weeks. And giant trout, extinct in Europe for 130 years, with so-called salmon hooks. It was as if these organisms accessed their own genetic memories on command in the electric field, a phenomenon which the English biochemist, Rupert Sheldrake, believes is possible.

The Swiss pharmaceutical group patented the process — and then stopped the research in 1992. Why? Because “primeval cereals” generated by an electric field, in contrast to modern strains of seeds, require hardly any fertilizers or pesticides — i.e. crop protection agents, sold as priority products by Ciba at that time. The discovery was soon forgotten, without the global scientific community taking any notice.

Read full article with photos and links.

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