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  • Its time to use that hacker´s Knowledge, This is not a copyrighted material, IT MUST be published over world!

  • This would be more convincing to me if a non-metal tool was used to pick up the objects.

  • @denplaza I think it's even more convincing because the metal of the tweezers is somehow interacting with the bug shells and creates what's called an Eddy Current.

    WE need to do some more experiments to validate this!

    All I know is that I encountered the Same phenomenon while playing with a bees body.

    I filmed it and took pictures too.

    See the first few links in the video description.

    Really Really weird stuff!

    Also look into how sacred Beetles and Bees were in Ancient Egypt.

  • the videos are crearly fake.. there is some kind of small motor in the firs part (why didnt he used a niddle for example..?) and non visable wire in the second video i dont think it's real

    in video 5 you can clearly see there are 2 wires connected from each side of the of the piece and someone is picking it up in the air ,the movement is not natural look again..

  • @vinshbrief Well to me they're real because I've seen a similar phenomenon while playing with bees bodies.

    The movement IS natural if you've seen reactions from eddy currents, magnets, static electricity, etc.

    I don't see any wires at all.

    And there is no motor attached in the first video.

    He has 1 half of the shell attached to a razor blade handle and simply touches it to the other half of the shell.

    At the end of the first video you can see the shell drop from the handle. No motor.

  • @TheRealVerbz2

    please look again carfully in video 5 - this is not natural movement of the shell look how it raises up, with like 2 magic trick wires that attached to both side of the shell, and after it's in the air it moves from side to side..that exactly what would happen if 2 string are connected to it from both sides. video 5 shows it's fake

  • @vinshbrief That IS a natural action!

    That's the very phenomenon Viktor Grebbenikov called the Cavernous Structure Effect.

    Energy is bumping randomly around us.

    When the atoms of a material are aligned a certain way, they act as a diode for that random energy and put it in uniform motion.

    The atoms making up the bug shell are arranged in a Very unique way which directs magnetic energy.

    When atoms are aligned in a cone or concave surface... weird things happen.

    See video description.

  • @vinshbrief Let me ask you this... IF you were to see that in person and saw there were definitely no strings... how would you explain it?

  • Jason you need to find one of these bugs and validate this!! Also I find it amazing that you seem to be the only one that noticed that bees hindquarters are magnetic. You'd think someone else would of stumbled upon this.

  • @curtsher11 People who use the Scientific Method might Never discover it because all these things were discovered by accident and going against normal procedure.

    People are so stuck in specific routines they don't notice the subtle things.

    It almost slipped my mind when I went to grab the bee's body and it ran away from the tweezers. Easy to dismiss as "the wind blew it."

    Now that I look back, I realize I've encountered this MANY times growing up, but didn't realize it.

  • @curtsher11 And the phenomenon is so inconsistent, that it can run away from your tweezers... you get excited and then it just doesn't do it again.

    So you consider it a fluke and dismiss it.

    Especially if you aren't aware of "paranormal" abilities, or different electrical / "psychic" phenomenon, then you'd never even think to run experiments like this.

    Scientists aim towards an end result while experimenting.

    If they don't believe in the end result, they won't even bother.

  • it looks like a large roach. Probably a mutant from a Russian nuke test site.

  • elitre translated to english from italian means sheath, so it is probably not the name of the beatle.

    The beatle in question may be Hydrophilus triangularis

    JB

  • I was wondering if we'd ever find out what bug it's supposed to be. Even if it isn't the same one, this is close enough.

  • Thanks Jason, great work!

    Downloaded this because it will help with my research into bees as well.

    No kidding, you are seriously one of the coolest people alive! Keep it up!

  • Fascinating!!!

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