6 min read

The Equilibrium

this means, your cells can no longer cycle out dead or damaged water that it is composed of. A natural cyclic feature given by life, inhibited. Exchange the impure with the fresh, life bearing fruits of energy-rich water. The answer? Potassium.
The Equilibrium
Where it all started.

The question:

It begins when it hits you. "Something isn't right", your mind screams to you one day. You look up and see these grid patterns, just loaded with a toxic soup -unbeknownst to you at that time, which you have no idea could possibly be for. I mean, it's just ice crystals, right? They put this everywhere you learn. It's condensation from temperature differences, right? Now you see a trail that stops and starts and stops and starts again multiple times at a flat, level trajectory. Your common sense might say, "well maybe it's turbulence pockets?". Now, you notice, there are two planes... one with a trail, one without... they're at the same altitude. You hit a moment, "I'm going to figure this out, somebody is full of shit. I won't let it be me!". You download an app to watch the radar. You watch it for a month, two... now a year. You are fully aware that they're doing it. But why, and how is UPS and FedEx in on it?

What the hell?

The Doubt:

Now you know, but everything around you tells you that you're wrong. All the "science". All your friends and colleagues. Everything "sane" or deemed "legitimate" by all of our institutions and education systems. Who can I raise a realistic, rational conversation about this with? It's like I broke away from some powerful trance. They are all so confident in what they've been given, force-fed. Brainwashing disguised as cognition. This layer of impermeable ignorance... written, programmed onto the hard drive of their minds. How do I get through to them!? Or... is it me? Am I desperate to find a bad guy? What does it matter? Even if I prove it, what can I do about it?

I can do what I've always done... build.

The Observation:

The atmosphere is charged. Through the sun, everything airborne becomes charged... polarized. This is how water molecules bond to each other to form vaporous clouds. So, this means there are charged particles of some sort, being used as a scaffold for water vapor to adhere to. What could that be? We've all heard of barium, strontium, aluminum oxide etc... graphene however... this is new. They do not mention it's use in the creation of the new E-Fuels designed by Shell and Exxon.

https://pub.mdpi-res.com/gels/gels-10-00626/article_deploy/html/images/gels-10-00626-g002.png?1727602212

An article from 2021: https://www.graphene-info.com/graphene-oxide-could-improve-aircraft-fuel

The Purpose:

Now we are on to something. Let's think for a second. Our entire medical industry is built on the idea of the preservation ( desperation ) of health. People will pay anything to live just a little longer... The old model - poison everything, but make it unrecognizable.

https://www.anl.gov/argonne-scientific-publications/pub/127802

  1. Barium

Barium as a substrate, creates a galvanic surface over human or any other organic (water based) cell structures. This itself creates a hydrophobicity - to the lay, this means, your cells can no longer cycle out dead or damaged water that it is composed of. A natural cyclic feature given by life, inhibited. Exchange the impure with the fresh, life bearing fruits of energy-rich water. The answer? Potassium. A supplement I've personally tried was potassium bicarbonate. Instantly refreshed. However, I did not drink the dead, stagnant, mineral stripped, lactobacillus/Bifidobacterium/Pseudomonas bacterias (beneficial) destroyed by Ozone treatment and chlorination. I mixed it with well water, directly from the earth. Here is how long this element has been used in SAI (stratospheric aerosol injection).

  1. NOAA's ERB Program: Since 2020, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has been conducting research on solar geoengineering, including atmospheric modeling, stratospheric observations, and laboratory activities to understand the impacts of stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) and marine cloud brightening (MCB). This program has also coordinated with NASA for long-range crewed and autonomous in situ atmospheric observational capabilities, such as the Stratospheric Aerosol processes, Budget and Radiative Effects (SABRE) project, which uses the NASA WB-57 high-altitude research aircraft for sampling aerosols in the lower stratosphere.
  2. EPA's Office of Air and Radiation (OAR): In April 2025, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sent a request to a startup called "Make Sunsets," which claims to be geoengineering the planet by releasing balloons filled with sulfur dioxide (SO2) and selling "cooling credits." As of May 2025, Make Sunsets reported releasing about 0.1 tons of SO2 into the stratosphere.
  3. NSF NCAR's Research on SAI: An international team of scientists led by the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR) has published recommendations for evaluating proposals to inject sulfur dioxide, known as stratospheric aerosol intervention (SAI), into the stratosphere. This research is aimed at understanding the potential cooling effects and risks of SAI, such as impacts on the stratospheric ozone layer and global precipitation patterns.
  4. Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) Research: Research has been conducted on the use of reflective aerosols, including barium titanate, for solar radiation management (SRM) geoengineering. This approach involves spraying reflective sulfate aerosol particles into the stratosphere using high-altitude aircraft, tethered balloons, high-altitude blimps, or artillery. The idea is to reflect sunlight into space to cool the planet, with the concept first proposed by the Russian climatologist Mikhail Ivanovich Budyko in 1974.
  5. Project Drawdown's Analysis: Project Drawdown has analyzed the potential of deploying stratospheric aerosol injection as a climate solution, highlighting the uncertainties and potential risks, such as impacts on global ozone levels and stratospheric heating, when using solid particles like alumina and calcite as alternatives to sulfate aerosols.

Bone marrow and red cell creation inhibited
  1. Strontium - metal

As we know, there are more detrimental effects of such initiatives, and that is by far, organic life as the recipient. This is how they sell it. Laying in a hospital bed with cancer is how you bought it.

  1. Strontium has been used in the context of solar geoengineering, particularly in the form of strontium titanate, which has been proposed as an aerosol for stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) to reflect sunlight and cool the planet. This method aims to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions by introducing reflective particles into the stratosphere. The use of strontium in this context is part of ongoing research and discussions about the potential and risks of solar radiation management (SRM) as a climate intervention strategy. The concept of using aerosols, including strontium-based compounds, for SAI has been explored in various studies and is a subject of interest in the scientific community, with research activities and funding increasing in recent years.
  2. NOAA's ERB Program: Since 2020, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has been conducting research on solar geoengineering, including atmospheric modeling, stratospheric observations, and laboratory activities to understand the impacts of stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) and marine cloud brightening (MCB). This program has also coordinated with NASA for long-range crewed and autonomous in situ atmospheric observational capabilities, such as the Stratospheric Aerosol processes, Budget and Radiative Effects (SABRE) project, which uses the NASA WB-57 high-altitude research aircraft for sampling aerosols in the lower stratosphere.
  3. EPA's Office of Air and Radiation (OAR): In April 2025, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sent a request to a startup called "Make Sunsets," which claims to be geoengineering the planet by releasing balloons filled with sulfur dioxide (SO2) and selling "cooling credits." As of May 2025, Make Sunsets reported releasing about 0.1 tons of SO2 into the stratosphere.
  4. NSF NCAR's Research on SAI: An international team of scientists led by the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR) has published recommendations for evaluating proposals to inject sulfur dioxide, known as stratospheric aerosol intervention (SAI), into the stratosphere. This research is aimed at understanding the potential cooling effects and risks of SAI, such as impacts on the stratospheric ozone layer and global precipitation patterns.
  5. Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) Research: Research has been conducted on the use of reflective aerosols, including strontium titanate, for solar radiation management (SRM) geoengineering. This approach involves spraying reflective sulfate aerosol particles into the stratosphere using high-altitude aircraft, tethered balloons, high-altitude blimps, or artillery. The idea is to reflect sunlight into space to cool the planet, with the concept first proposed by the Russian climatologist Mikhail Ivanovich Budyko in 1974.
  6. Project Drawdown's Analysis: Project Drawdown has analyzed the potential of deploying stratospheric aerosol injection as a climate solution, highlighting the uncertainties and potential risks, such as impacts on global ozone levels and stratospheric heating, when using solid particles like alumina and calcite as alternatives to sulfate aerosols.

End story on strontium... it destroys bone marrow and the ability to regenerate new, healthy red blood cells. I would continue on with aluminum oxide or cesium et cetera but I'm really anxious to give you a review on graphene. This however, I will save for another agonizingly long read... please subscribe even for free, There is much more to come.

Thanks for being here, sincerely,

Shane Repasky